You are on a site hosted and operated by SheetMusicDirect according to its terms and conditions. The information you provide will be handled according to its privacy policy. The information you provide here may be shared with and handled according to the terms of its privacy policy.
Unlimited access to over 1 million arrangements for every instrument, genre & skill levelStart Your Free Trial Get your unlimited access PASS!Get started free!
This easy arrangement for low brass trio was adapted to be simple to perform and understand the structure of the original work for various levels of musical knowledge. It can be played freely by beginning students due to the ease imposed on the piece; however, this does not preclude it from being played by professionals and music teachers. It is also ideal for academic recitals, weddings, student method and ceremonies that are arranged in the same way as the piece contains. The Cantata 156 (BWV 156) was written for the third Sunday after Epiphany in 1729, and was first performed on January 23 of that year. The text is by Picander, one of Bach's favorite librettists. of the four cantatas written by Bach for the feast, it was the last and only one scored for solo voice. This is a choral cantata, employing a choral melody in several movements. Cantata 156, in fact, employs two different choral melodies and texts in the second and sixth movements. A cantata is a sung symphony consisting of several parts, one of which is the Arioso, which is the initial instrumental part.
This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.
Bach
Brass Ensemble
Brass Quintet
Trumpet Quartet
Trombone Trio
Bobby Darin
Lady Gaga
Milton Ager, Jack Yellen
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Kenneth L. Ascher
John Lennon And The Plastic Ono Band
Adele
Harry Styles
New Zealand Folksong
White Stripes
Eric Whitacre
Stephen Schwartz
We value your privacyYour opt-out preference signal (GPC) has been honored.