Isle of Man (Manx) National Anthem for Brass Quintet (arr. Keith Terrett) by Keith Terrett Sheet Music for Brass Ensemble at Sheet Music Direct
Log In
842950
Isle of Man (Manx) National Anthem for Brass Quintet (arr. Keith Terrett) Digital Sheet Music
Cover Art for "Isle of Man (Manx) National Anthem for Brass Quintet (arr. Keith Terrett)" by Keith Terrett PASS

Isle of Man (Manx) National Anthem for Brass Quintet (arr. Keith Terrett)by Keith Terrett Brass Ensemble - Digital Sheet Music

A$13.99
Taxes/VAT calculated at checkout.
Free access with trial. A$ 14.99/month after. Cancel anytime.
Cart purchase includes:
Official publisher PDF download (printable)
Access anywhere, including our free app

This item is not eligible for PASS discount.

Audio Preview

Product Details


Product Description

(Manx: Arrane Ashoonagh) of the Isle of Man, known in Manx as Arrane Ashoonagh Vannin, was written and composed by William Henry Gill (18391923), with the Manx translation by John J. Kneen (18731939). The English title is normally O Land of Our Birth. The anthem is sung to an adaptation of the traditional Manx melody of Mylecharaine, which had been described as the 'Manx national melody' long before Gill's composition. The words that accompanied the melody date to around 1800 and concern the impoverishment of a father in order to pay a dowry. However, those curious words have been identified as disparate pieces of older songs amalgamated together incompletely. The first verse of the song is: O Vylecharaine, c'raad hooar oo dty stoyr? / Nagh dooar mee 'sy Churragh eh dowin, dowin dy liooar? / My lomarcan daag oo mee (O Mylecharaine, where did you get your store? / Did I not get it in the Curragh, deep, deep enough? / Alone you left me). First performed at the Manx Music Festival on Thursday 21 March 1907, there are eight verses in total, but the first verse is usually sung.[1] The anthem was given official status by the Isle of Man's legislature Tynwald at a sitting on 22 January 2003, with God Save the Queen, being designated as the Royal Anthem. The National Anthem is used on official and ceremonial occasions and in schools, the Royal Anthem is normally reserved for use additionally on those occasions when the Sovereign, members of the Royal Family or the Lieutenant Governor are present. The song Ellan Vannin had up to this point vied to be an equal unofficial national anthem. In March 2015, the anthem was mistakenly played instead of the National Anthem of El Salvador at a friendly football match between El Salvador and Argentina at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland, United States. For more of my original music, great arrangements and all the national anthems of the world, check out my on-line stores: http://www.scoreexchange.com/profiles/keith_terret http://musicforalloccasions.org.uk http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/search?Ntt=keith+terrett Need an anthem fast? They are ALL in my store! All my anthem arrangements are also available for Orchestra, Recorders, Saxophones, Wind, Brass and Flexible band. If you need an anthem urgently for an instrumentation not in my store, let me know via e-mail, and I will arrange it for you FOC if possible! keithterrett@gmail.com

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.