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30 Sep 2004
A Homecoming Celebration
![]() Arranger: Tom Fettke The new choral collection by Tom Fettke titled A Homecoming Celebration features 21 medley arrangements that include a grand total of 50 song titles. Pretty impressive for a 144 page book. Several years ago, Praise Gathering released a collection called Southern Convention Songbook that used the original Homecoming series tracks. I had hoped A Homecoming Celebration would adopt a similar approach, but instead, these tracks are new simplified versions. The tracks are good quality, don't misunderstand. They're just more on a basic level compared to the tracks used for these tunes on the Homecoming videos. One drawback to this book is the way the medley format is implemented. On songs that have multiple verses, you're only given the verse that's part of the medley. For example, on "Written In Red," only the first verse is printed in the book. There's no reason why the second verse couldn't have been printed in the book as an option for performance with church musicians. Which brings us to the medleys themselves . . . aside from "The Old Country Church," these arrangements aren't true medleys. Rather than transitioning from one song to the next smoothly, each song comes to an end, pauses, then proceeds to the intro for the next song. It feels awkward to sing "Marching To Zion," end it with a flourish, wait for a couple seconds of silence, and then go into the intro to "Freedom Band." Before you get the idea that I'm totally against A Homecoming Celebration , allow me to note a number of postive aspects about this release. I like the fact that the vocal arrangements are very easy. This makes the music very approachable for less accomplished choirs that want to sing the same songs they've heard on the Gaither videos.The spiral binding is also a nice touch on a 144 page book. In addition to the choral book and the CD accompaniment, Praise Gathering offers options like orchestrations and a keyboard accompaniment book that doubles as a soloist edition. Listening versions on cassette and CD are also available. The sheer number of songs in this collection (50) is also a mark it its favor. I would recommend A Homecoming Celebration to small church choirs who don't have the time or musical ability to learn more challenging arrangements. My overall rating for this product is 3 stars, which is about average. I'd suggest Fettke's Highway To Heaven collection as a preferable alternative. It shares all the advantages . . . easy vocal parts, spiral binding, Homecoming standards, medley format . . . and none of the drawbacks. It just lacks the Gaither name and the Homecoming association in the title. Highway To Heaven is published by Lillenas. Reader Comments |
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A Homecoming Celebration
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