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If you sing/use this song, please contact the composer and say thank you to Matt Astle!
Voicing/Instrumentation: TTBB
We also have other 21 arrangements of "Oh Come, Oh Come Emmanuel".
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More about Matt Astle:
Matt Astle currently lives in Sammamish, Washington (just outside Seattle) with his wife and four daughters. He's on his third or fourth stint as a ward choir director (who can keep count?), and enjoys arranging music for them. He's been a musician from a very early age, and has sung with the Mormon Choir of Washington DC; his law school a cappella group, the Scales of Justice; and currently with the Northwest Sound, a championship-level barbershop chorus. Many of his most powerful spiritual experiences have a musical element to them.
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If you sing/use this song, please contact the composer and say thank you to Matt Astle!
Voicing/Instrumentation: TTBB
We also have other 21 arrangements of "Oh Come, Oh Come Emmanuel".
See more from Matt Astle.
No user ratings for this song yet. Leave yours by clicking the button above!
More about Matt Astle:
Matt Astle currently lives in Sammamish, Washington (just outside Seattle) with his wife and four daughters. He's on his third or fourth stint as a ward choir director (who can keep count?), and enjoys arranging music for them. He's been a musician from a very early age, and has sung with the Mormon Choir of Washington DC; his law school a cappella group, the Scales of Justice; and currently with the Northwest Sound, a championship-level barbershop chorus. Many of his most powerful spiritual experiences have a musical element to them.
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This arrangement can be sung in a quartet or in a small men's ensemble, but it should always be sung a cappella. Hopefully it can add some variety to your ward's Christmas program. Generally, I'm not in favor of singing in different languages in sacrament meeting, but I have to confess that I think the Latin words that start off this arrangement (which should either be sung by all singers in unison or by a soloist) are simply awesome. It recalls the plainsong heritage of the carol. I've performed it with the Latin verse in two different wards with no negative repercussions, but if you're less daring, you can just start where the English starts.
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