This is the second book of The Adventures of Madame Flutterby series. This story takes us way back in time to meet Madame Flutterby's Great Great Grandmother. Her gift was a beautiful singing voice which she used to inspire and bring joy to all who heard her. She was given her biggest challenge when she and Grandfather Flutterby were carried away by a mysterious human and depends on her God and her God given talents to see them through.
Commissioned for the 2014 Mississippi All-State Jr. High Womens Honor Choir, "Hope is the Breath of Music" fully displays Victor Johnsons Commissioned for the 2014 Mississippi All-State Jr. High Womens Honor Choir, Hope is the Breath of Music fully displays Victor Johnsons natural ability to write for womens voices. With text that speaks of the power that music has to lift our spirits, this exquisite selection is impactful from start to finish. ability to write for womens voices. With text that speaks of the power that music has to lift our spirits, this exquisite selection is impactful from start to finish.
What a happy day! Zachary’s baby sister will have her naming ceremony. In the temple! With his moms, the congregation, and all their friends! He’s so excited he can barely contain it. On the walk from their home, they meet neighbor after neighbor who want to know the baby’s name. But – not yet! – his mothers tell him. The tradition is to have a great reveal at the ceremony. So they invite each neighbor to come along. A colorful, diverse parade blooms along the route, until…At last it’s time, and Zachary gets to reveal his sister’s name…What is it? A truly joyful moment for everyone.
"Jesus is the song of life, the song of joy, the song of love." Mary McDonalds powerful accompaniment beautifully complements her lyrically arranged vocals in this highly expressive musical testament to the power and grace of our Lord and Savior.
"Let me tell you a secret--if you have a heart song, anything is possible. Even magic " Kaya is looking for her heart song--the song that happy hearts sing. Her search takes her on a journey deep into the jungle where a broken down carousel waits for a very special song to make it turn again.
Sing! has grown from Keith and Kristyn Getty’s passion for congregational singing; it’s been formed by their traveling and playing and listening and discussing and learning and teaching all over the world. And in writing it, they have five key aims: • to discover why we sing and the overwhelming joy and holy privilege that comes with singing • to consider how singing impacts our hearts and minds and all of our lives • to cultivate a culture of family singing in our daily home life • to equip our churches for wholeheartedly singing to the Lord and one another as an expression of unity • to inspire us to see congregational singing as a radical witness to the world They have also added a few “bonus tracks” at the end with some more practical suggestions for different groups who are more deeply involved with church singing. God intends for this compelling vision of His people singing—a people joyfully joining together in song with brothers and sisters around the world and around his heavenly throne—to include you. He wants you,he wants us, to sing.
This tender original anthem from Ruth Elaine Schram and Aren Newell Williams is excellent for Thanksgiving or throughout the rest of year. Voiced for two-part mixed or SAB choirs, it is an easy-to-prepare anthem that serves many purposes.
A roiling chronicle of motherhood and colonization from a writer who “alternates between a dramatic, high-octane style and a terse and humorous frankness” (Sheila Heti) Recipient of the 2021 Camões Prize, the most important award for literature in the Portuguese language A potent whirl of history, mythology, and grapevine chatter, The Joyful Song of the Partridge absorbs readers into its many hiding places and along the wandering paths of its principal characters, whose stark words will stay with you long after the journey is done. No one knows where Maria des Dores came from. Did she ride in on the armored spines of crocodiles, was she carried many miles in the jaws of fish? The only clear fact is that she is here, sitting naked in the river bordering a town where nothing ever happens. The townspeople murmur restlessly that she is possessed by perverse impulses. They interpret her arrival as an omen of crop failure or, in more hopeful tones, a sign that womankind will soon seize power from the greedy hands of men. As The Joyful Song of the Partridge unfolds, Paulina Chiziane spirals back in time to Maria’s true origins: the days of Maria’s mother and father when the pressure to assimilate in Portuguese-controlled Mozambique formed a distorting bond on the lives of black Mozambicans.