Larry and Carla will be adding handbell music to this concert by the Zeeland Community Band, for residents and guests at Royal Park Place.
Tag Archives: Handbells
Now Available from our Music Site – Gift Vouchers!
UPDATE for 2024:
We regret that we’re currently unable to offer gift vouchers for the Choraegus site, because of a technical issue that’s outside our control. Thank you to everyone who purchased them! We do hope to be able to bring them back at some future date.
We’re excited to introduce something new on our music site – gift vouchers! You can now purchase and download a gift voucher for $10, $20, $50 or $100, give it to a friend, and let them choose their own music from the wide selection of pieces available on our site. It could be an ideal Christmas or birthday gift for the handbell musician in your life!

There’s so much music to choose from!
There are so many handbell titles on Choraegus that it’s sometimes difficult to choose. We have solo handbell arrangements, music for just 6 bells and piano, 8-bell music… all the way up to full-choir music for 5-8 octaves. There’s straightforward music for beginning or improving ensembles. You’ll also find pieces that will challenge even the most skilled and experienced handbell ensembles. There’s something for everyone!
The Bass Ringer’s Notebook
Don’t forget The Bass Ringer’s Notebook (Second Edition), which is also a great choice for any bass handbell musician or aspiring bucket-slinger. Unlike the gift vouchers and music scores, the book isn’t a downloadable file; it’s an actual book which we will lovingly package up and send to you – so order a copy soon if you need it delivered in time for Christmas!

Any questions?
If you have any questions about Choraegus gift vouchers, or about our music in general, please get in touch with us and we’ll be happy to help.
Book us for the 2017 Christmas and Holiday Season!
The 2017 Christmas and holiday season will soon be upon us! Handbells can bring a magical and festive atmosphere to any Christmas or holiday event. We can give a seasonal performance of carols and holiday music, or provide background music to add that special, welcoming touch to your corporate event, community group celebration, winter wedding, or holiday gathering. Nothing says Christmas quite as well as the traditional sound of English handbells – and our duet performances can bring the sounds of the season to hotel lobbies, department stores, shopping boutiques, community groups and private house parties alike.
The 2017 holiday season is fast approaching. We’re looking forward to performances in Jenison, South Olive, East Lansing, Grand Rapids, Marne and Holland, Michigan. We’ll be playing our handbell duets at “Christmas by Candlelight” events, corporate holiday parties, Christmas luncheons, and worship services. We’ll also be performing with the Zeeland Community Band in their Christmas concert on December 11th.
We’re probably the smallest community handbell choir in West Michigan. That means we take up far less room than a traditional bell choir would. We’re ideal for venues where space is limited, such as small church sanctuaries, community halls, hotel lobbies, and private homes.
A handbell performance could be exactly what you need for the 2017 Christmas and holiday season! Contact us to request our current fee schedule, ask questions, or book us to enhance your Christmas event with the traditional sound of handbells!

Accompanied Christmas Pieces – for 12 Bells and Piano
Here are two newly-available arrangements for 12 bells and piano accompaniment. Larry arranged these pieces for a UK group led by Meg Hostler of Finchampstead Handbell Ringers. Their debut performances were in England on Christmas Eve 2015.
The arrangements are less challenging than our other 12-bell pieces. Larry arranged them to be easy for a small group to learn and perform with minimal rehearsal time!
Both these demo recordings were made during an all-too-brief “Christmas in February” rehearsal session when we got together with Meg for an Inspiration International reunion during our most recent visit to England in February 2016. The first piece is In the Bleak Midwinter:
The second is the Austrian carol Still, Still, Still:
The piano accompaniment score for Still, Still, Still is the same as the accompaniment that goes with the solo version of this carol.
Would you like to play these pieces?
If you’d like to play either (or both!) of these pieces for 12 bells and piano, the sheet music is available for purchase and download from Choraegus.
Choraegus handbell music is designed to be downloaded and printed at home. You’ll be responsible for printing your own scores, and you won’t receive anything in the mail. If you’re new to buying our music, please look at the step-by-step guide. We designed this to help make the process stress-free!
Please read our licensing agreement before making your purchase, and read our guide to how many copies your purchase allows you to print. Don’t pay for more copies than you need!
Any questions?
If you have any questions about buying or playing our music, please check our Frequently-Asked Questions. If you don’t find the answers you’re looking for, please contact us, and we’ll be happy to help!

A Fall Handbell Festival at First Congregational Church in Saginaw
We recently celebrated our 5th Wedding Anniversary. What better way to celebrate than by spending a day at a handbell festival? First Congregational Church in Saginaw hosted a Fall Handbell Festival – Ringing in a New Season, and invited us to take part in the fun.

Someone somewhere forgot to push the “It’s the fall season now!” button. That meant the weather was hot, hot, hot! Around 40 intrepid handbell musicians from churches around the area attended. We gathered together in a very warm church to rehearse and perform under the baton of world-renowned pianist and composer Catherine McMichael. Catherine had written two original compositions for the event, and Dr. Quincy Dobbs was there to play the organ.
Handbell workshops with bass and treble bells
Larry enjoyed the opportunity to get his hands on some bass handbells again. He led workshops for festival participants to find out more about bass bell techniques. Carla led well-attended workshops exploring some of the techniques and challenges involved in playing treble bells. We all enjoyed discussing the merits of various multiple bell techniques. Some of the treble ringers worked on weaving a series of bells without crossing their arms! That can be a challenge, but everyone did very well.
Our friend Kim Finison from Lansing (we know him from the Bay View Week of Handbells!) was on hand to help with handbell maintenance and repairs. We all enjoyed a wonderful lunch and great hospitality.

Thanks to all involved in making this festival happen!
We had a very enjoyable day at the festival. Our thanks go to Jeri at FCC and everyone involved with the huge task of organising the event. We hope to do it all again someday!

Thanks to the Zeeland Community Band!
Thanks to the Zeeland Community Band and their director Rose Wiersma! We were happy to be invited to be part of another of their community concerts. We enjoyed performing for residents and guests at Freedom Village, a senior living community here in Holland, Michigan. It’s exciting to find out how much the sound of handbells can add to a band performance! The band had put in many hours of rehearsal for this concert, and their hard work paid off. It was an interesting and varied performance, with many positive comments from the audience afterwards.
The Zeeland Community band is a community ensemble in every sense. Its mission is to encourage adults to pick up their band instruments and make music! Even people who haven’t played in many years can find a place in this welcoming ensemble. The band rehearses on Monday evenings in Zeeland. You can find out more on their website, and get in touch if you have questions.

As you can see from the smiling faces, the band members enjoyed this performance too. We look forward to working with this talented group again!

New Music for Handbells – O Morning Star, How Fair and Bright
We’re starting 2017 with a new arrangement for eight handbells. This is the German hymn O Morning Star, How Fair and Bright.
“O Morning Star, how fair and bright
thou beamest forth in truth and light,
O Sovereign meek and lowly!
Thou Root of Jesse, David’s Son,
my Lord and Master, thou hast won
my heart to serve thee solely!
Thou art holy,
fair and glorious,
rich in blessing,
rule and might o’er all possessing.”
Over the years, this hymn has been popular for weddings and funerals in Germany. However, in the USA it’s now more often sang at Epiphany.
More information about this arrangement
This arrangement isn’t too challenging to play, and would be also be very suitable as a quartet piece. If you’d like to play it, the music is available for purchase and download from Choraegus.
When you purchase music from Choraegus, it will come to you as a PDF file. That means you’ll be responsible for printing your own music, and you won’t receive anything in the mail. Your purchase of this 8-bell arrangement entitles you to print up to 4 copies for your handbell choir.
If you haven’t bought music from Choraegus before, you might like to look at our step-by-step guide. We designed the guide to take you through the purchase process in a stress-free way.
Any questions?
If you have any questions about buying or playing our music, you might like to look at our Frequently-Asked Questions. If you don’t find the answers you seek, please contact us and we’ll be happy to help.

Handbell Duets at the Salvation Army Red Kettle
Since 2012, we’ve supported the Salvation Army in the San Francisco Bay Area by playing our handbell duets during their annual Red Kettle campaign. Now that we’re no longer living in California, we’re pleased to be able to help with the fundraising at the Red Kettle here in Holland, Michigan instead.

This holiday season, we’ll be playing Christmas carols and holiday music at D&W Fresh Market. The store is located at 50 Douglas Ave, Holland, MI 49424. We’ll be there between 10:00am and 12:00pm on the following dates:
- Friday, November 18
- Saturday, November 26
- Wednesday, November 30
- Monday, December 5
- Thursday, December 15
- Tuesday, December 20
Do you ever get fed up with the sound of the Salvation Army bell ringers? We’ll be playing real Christmas music – carols and traditional tunes from all over the world. It’s a little different from the usual sound you hear in stores at this time of year!
We hope you’ll drop by if you’re shopping for groceries at that time. Please help the Salvation Army provide food, shelter and social services to those in need throughout the year. Contact us here or on our Facebook page if you have any questions!
Back from the 2016 Bay View Week of Handbells
This week we’re back home in Holland, Michigan, concentrating on getting back to “normal life” after our trip to Petoskey for the 2016 Bay View Week of Handbells.
“What is normal life?”, you may ask. For us, it means unpacking more boxes and finding places to put everything in our new home. It means cutting the grass that grew taller while we were away. Sadly, it also means filing away the music we rehearsed for the Week of Handbells concert. We need to get back into practising our duet music instead!
More about the Week of Handbells
This event takes place every year, in August, at the John M. Hall Auditorium in Bay View, Michigan. The event was first held in 1978. Donald E. Allured (1922-2011) was the founding director, and the event started with around 30 particpants. Since then, the Week of Handbells has grown! Over a hundred handbell musicians now take part every year.
The current director is Carl Wiltse, who has a long history with the event, going as far back as the very first Bay View Handbell Workshop. Don Allured passed the baton to Carl in 2002.

As with last year’s event, Fred Gramann assisted Carl in directing. He conducted four pieces in this years concert.

The Week of Handbells is always a demanding event, both physically and mentally, but the rewards are worth it. We started rehearsals at midday on Monday, and rehearsals continued at 9:00am on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. There was an extra 8:00am session each morning. These were for the super-enthusiastic or anyone who wanted to do additional work on those tricky sections in some of the music.
Some very challenging pieces!
The most-challenging pieces in this year’s repertoire were Michael Mazzatenta’s Allegretto – an entirely malleted piece, with fiendish chromatic passages and unexpected accidentals to catch us out at times, Alex Guebert’s All Creatures of our God and King, which Fred renamed All Meters… for obvious reasons, and Fred’s own Nollirac Carillon, with its many 7/8 passages and the occasional 4/4 or 9/8 thrown in. “Accent, accent… STRONG weak, STRONG weak, STRONG weak weak” quickly became a mantra for many of us during the week!
We were excited to hear Larry’s arrangement of Tico Tico performed in this year’s concert. Even though it’s a challenging piece, rehearsals went pretty smoothly from the very start of the week. A lot of preparation goes on before the event, of course. Participants are meant to come to the event “performance-ready”, having learned their music thoroughly in the weeks and months beforehand. Even though it takes a while to get more than a hundred musicians all playing together as one instrument, that advance preparation really makes all the difference!

Our history with the Week of Handbells
We’ve been attending the Bay View Week of Handbells together since 2010. It was the first place where we spent time together “in real life” after meeting online on a website for handbell musicians. We celebrated our engagement there in 2011, and it was also the place we went to after flying from England when Carla’s visa finally came through and we were able to close the distance and start our life together as a couple in the same continent. The exciting difference about this year’s Week of Handbells was that, for the first time, we were able to drive to the event instead of having to fly all the way from California! It was a scenic journey, but it rained heavily for almost the entire trip there, and part of the way back too. Knowing that we now live in Michigan made such a difference to us at the end of this year’s event; the goodbyes at the “farewell breakfast” were less painful when we weren’t facing a long flight and a change of time zone afterwards!
Our favorite handbell event
The Bay View Week of Handbells is by far our favorite handbell event ever, for so many reasons. We get the opportunity to play some great music under the baton of a dedicated and talented director. There’s all the beautiful scenery too. The auditorium is surrounded by pretty cottages, and the lake is just a few moments’ walk away. The event is full of memories for us, and carries great meaning because of the part it played in our relationship journey.
Above all, the Bay View Week of Handbells is a wonderful event because of the people there. Every year we’re reunited with old friends and we meet new ones. We feel as though we’re all part of a big, supportive and happy family. Each individual is welcomed, appreciated and supported. We all encourage each other as we share in the experience of working together to prepare for the Thursday night concert. We’re encouraged to work hard – not only to become the best musicians we can be, but the best people we can be – and we’re already looking forward to doing it all over again in August 2017!

The 2016 Bay View Week of Handbells Starts Today!
Today is the first day of the 2016 Bay View Week of Handbells! We’ll be spending the next four days playing some great music at the John M. Hall Auditorium in Bay View, Petoskey, as more than a hundred handbell musicians rehearse together under the direction of Carl Wiltse.

You can find out more about this event, and why it will always hold a special place in our hearts, by reading our article about the Bay View Week of Handbells and taking a look at our gallery of photos. This year is the first time we’ve been able to drive to the event – from our new home in Holland, Michigan!
At the end of this week’s rehearsals, there will be a concert, open to the public and free to attend. The concert will be held on Thursday, August 18, 2016 at 8:00pm in the John M. Hall Auditorium, 1715 Encampment Ave., Petoskey, Michigan. An offering will be taken to benefit the Bay View Association Music Scholarship Fund.
This year’s concert repertoire:
Processional by Arnold Sherman
Allegretto arr. Michael Mazzatenta
All Creatures of our God and King arr. Alex Guebert
Oblivion by Douglas Anderson
Sonata in Baroque Style by Michael Helman
Give Me Jesus arr. John Behnke
Toccata on King’s Weston arr. Matthew Compton
The Drunken Sailor arr. Carl Wiltse
Tico Tico no Fuba arr. Larry Sue
Autumn Leaves arr. Andrea Handley
Nollirac Carillon by Fred Gramann
Give Us Peace in Our Time arr. Donald E. Allured
Concerto for Handbells and Organ in Baroque Style by Michael Helman
The Lord Bless you and Keep You by Peter Lutkin (sung; not played)
The performance will be professionally recorded by Pierpont Productions, so if you can’t make it to the concert, you can order a DVD or CD by calling Pierpont Productions on 231-347-4488.
We’ll be posting updates and photos on our Facebook page as the week goes by. We’d love to see you at the concert!
