Cardinal Feather - Treble Chorus and Piano, Full Score (PDF Edition) and Accompaniment Track

$34.95

Ensemble: Treble Youth Chorus (Unison) and Piano

Duration: 2 Minutes

Written: Fall 2018

Text by Composer

Purchase includes:

  1. PDF of full score, 8 Pages, 8.5x11 Format.

  2. MP3 file for accompaniment

Vocal sheet for students also available.

Add To Cart

Ensemble: Treble Youth Chorus (Unison) and Piano

Duration: 2 Minutes

Written: Fall 2018

Text by Composer

Purchase includes:

  1. PDF of full score, 8 Pages, 8.5x11 Format.

  2. MP3 file for accompaniment

Vocal sheet for students also available.

Ensemble: Treble Youth Chorus (Unison) and Piano

Duration: 2 Minutes

Written: Fall 2018

Text by Composer

Purchase includes:

  1. PDF of full score, 8 Pages, 8.5x11 Format.

  2. MP3 file for accompaniment

Vocal sheet for students also available.

Program Note:

Cardinal Feather was written for my elementary choirs at both Swift and Campbell Elementary Schools in New Bedford, MA. The song was written for a specific concert performance, where of course, the bulk of the audience was at least a generation apart from every student in the ensemble.

I wanted a musical landscape full of the anticipation and innocence I had felt in the late 20th Century, and to fill the text with things I had imparted to all my students. Birdsong, being appreciative, less concern with consumerism, and creating moments to be with yourself and your thoughts, rather than looking for quick distractions.

How does experience and tradition change from generation to generation? Is there any way to know, secondhand? Our century is much quicker than the last, and while it’s easy to record and capture just about anything, there’s no way any of us will know exactly how the quiet moments of winter felt for those here before us.

I wanted my students to question how tradition changes, and understand while they may never REALLY know the answer, it's still important to ask, exercise curiosity, contemplate, and hopefully their parents and guardians in the audience would do the same.

Over the course of our winter concert rehearsals I brought in random objects to show the students, asked them what and where the objects were in the past, and where they may end up in the future to get them in the mindset of visualizing and questioning these kinds of things. The title “Cardinal Feather,” refers to the act of seeing something, and wondering what it was, and what it could be; the cardinal, where it had been, and where it went.