Finding music you already have
- Scour the Church building. I have found choir music in piano benches, under the sacrament table, in the library, in storage closets, in filing cabinets in the primary room, in the clerk's office, and several other places. Talk to the former choir director(s), ward clerk, librarian, bishop, janitor, and others. I bet you'll find some copies hiding around the building somewhere.
- Look for stake resources: often the stake will have a collection of choir pieces. Contact the stake music chairman.
- Use the hymnal. There is no shame at all in simple hymns sung beautifully.
- Sally DeFord Music (click here for the website). She has numerous arrangements and original compositions free to download, and many of them have audio clips you can listen to, also. Her site is well-organized and easy to navigate. She is an accomplished pianist, and several of the piano parts are more challenging, so be sure to look through them to make sure your pianist can handle them, but the result is often a very dramatic piece.
- The Music of Craig Petrie (click here for the website). Again, several free arrangements of familiar hymns. These are often lovely arrangements, but not difficult to learn.
- The official LDS Church Music Website (click here for the website). You can download, adjust the key, and print hymns and children's songs from the interactive music player on the site. There are also links to downloading seminary and young women's songs, music published in Church magazines, and other Church songs from this website. You'll also find conducting resources, tips for rehearsals, quotes, and more.
- The Choral Public Domain Library (click here for the website). This site is a little less user-friendly, and not specically geared toward ward choirs. It is an online repository of choral music in the public domain. It is full of classical music, folk songs, hymns, anthems, and other works. It sometimes requires specialized music software toe download some pieces, but it's worth some time exploring.
- A quick Google search of "free LDS choir music" will yield several other sites by saintly composers and arrangers who are putting their music up for free. I can't vouch for them personally, but I'd spend some time looking through them.
- Jackman Music Express (click here for the website). Jackman is one of the larger publishers of LDS choral music. This new site allows you to download digital copies of the music instantly, without shipping fees, and buy the rights to copy the number that you need. It saves on time and shipping costs, and allows saints everywhere access to music traditionall sold only in Utah and the surrounding areas.
- LDSMusicsource.com (click here for the website). This website gives you access to some really beautiful arrnagments by wonderful LDS arrangers which you can print and copy as many times as you need. You purchase a green sticker for every copy you make, signifying a legal copy.
- Again, there are several other for-profit websites out there specifically for LDS ward choirs, but I haven't used many of them. Feel free to look around.