Teresa Young’s Published Sheet Music

Teresa Young’s sheet music

Welcome to the home page for Teresa Young’s growing collection of downloadable sheet music. Genres includes pop, rock, jazz, traditional and sacred pieces. A majority are instructional, for pianists and vocalists in training of all ages. Instructional piano pieces include fingerings.

Lead sheets/fake book pieces in all genres are here too. Many arrangements of all types also include guitar chord diagrams.

— PIANO & VOCAL —

Anywhere ~ JP Saxe

Don’t Cry ~ Guns N’ Roses

Free Bird ~ Lynyrd Skynyrd

Golden Hour ~ JVKE

Great Balls of Fire ~ Miles Teller

Green Eyes ~ Coldplay

I Go to the Barn Because I Like The ~ Band of Horses

I’ll Stand by You ~ The Pretenders

Little Saint Nick ~ The Beach Boys

Love Like You (End Credits) ~ Steven Universe

Ophelia ~ The Lumineers

Roar ~ Katy Perry

Shoo Fly (Easy Piano)

(Somewhere) Over the Rainbow ~ Judy Garland

The 30th ~ Billie Eilish

The Rainbow Connection ~ Jim Henson

This Little Light of Mine ~ Traditional

Waterloo Sunset ~ The Kinks

Wintertime is Jam Time ~ Blues for Kids

— SOLO PIANO —

All the Way ~ Frank Sinatra

Fragile ~ Sting

Forever for Now ~ LP

Girls ~ Marina

Jingle Bells (Easy Piano)

Nights in White Satin ~ The Moody Blues

Ode to Joy (Easy Piano)

Once Upon a Time in the West

Perfect Day ~ Lou Reed

Shoo Fly ~ Easy Piano

The State of Dreaming ~ Marina and the Diamonds

Trumpet Voluntary ~ Easy Piano

Waterloo Sunset ~ The Kinks

We Own the Night ~ Zombies 2

— LEAD SHEETS/FAKE BOOK —

Anywhere ~ JP Saxe

Clocks ~ Coldplay

Everything Happens for a Reason ~ Madison Beer

Forever for Now ~ LP

Freedom Fight Song (lead sheet)

Gee Baby, Ain’t I Good to You ~ Ella Fitzgerald

Glittery ~ Kacey Musgraves

I Go to the Barn Because I Like The ~ Band of Horses

I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight ~ Bob Dylan

I’m Just a Lucky So and So

If He Change My Name ~ Marian Anderson

Is You Is or Is You Ain’t My Baby

Let It Rain ~ Eric Clapton

Long Time Gone ~ Crosby, Stills & Nash

Lover Man

Maybe You’ll Be There

Ophelia ~ The Lumineers

Perfect Day ~ Lou Reed

Summertime ~ George Gershwin

To Catch a Thief ~ Nathaniel Merriweather

Walkin’ After Midnight ~ Patsy Cline

Waterloo Sunset ~ The Kinks

Wintertime is Jam Time ~ Blues for Kids

World on Fire ~ Dolly Parton

You Sent Me Flying ~ Amy Winehouse

— SACRED/CHORAL —

Psalm 69 ~ Lord, in Your Great Love

Spirit Psalm ~ Psalm 104

Psalm 126 ~ The Lord Has Done Great Things for Us

Acclamations to Accompany the Stations of the Cross

Three Acclamations to Accompany the Reading of the Passion

Were You There

Easter Morning Song

If He Change My Name ~ Marian Anderson

— OTHER —

 

Teresa Young's music reader cheat sheet

 

Teresa’s growing collection of published sheet music includes a wide range of genres and skill levels.

You’ll find pop, rock, jazz, traditional, and sacred pieces in her collection, from Steven Universe, Billie Eilish , LP, and Marina to Bob Dylan, The Moody Blues, David Crosby, JVKE, Lou Reed, Miles Teller from Top Gun: Maverick, Frank Sinatra, and Psalm 126!

So keep checking back here for more.

Be sure to check back here for more of Teresa Young’s downloadable sheet music published regularly.

Or get in touch!

Also, if you’re looking for a favorite piece to interpret and not finding an existing version that feels right for you, get in touch with Teresa here to request a custom arrangement.

 

Music is life itself.
—Louis Armstrong

 

Finally, an intriguing excerpt follows from The Benefits of Playing Music Help Your Brain More Than Any Other Activity, by John Ramptan, Entrepreuner and Investor, published in Inc. Magazine, August 21, 2017


Why Being a Musician Is Good for Your Brain

Science has shown that musical training can change brain structure and function for the better. It can also improve long-term memory and lead to better brain development for those who start at a young age.

Furthermore, musicians tend to be more mentally alert, according to new research from a University of Montreal study.

“The more we know about the impact of music on really basic sensory processes, the more we can apply musical training to individuals who might have slower reaction times,” said lead researcher Simon Landry.

“As people get older, for example, we know their reaction times get slower,” said Landry. “So if we know that playing a musical instrument increases reaction times, then maybe playing an instrument will be helpful for them.”

Previously, Landry found that musicians have faster auditory, tactile, and audio-tactile reaction times. Musicians also have an altered statistical use of multisensory information. This means that they’re better at integrating the inputs from various senses.”Music probably does something unique,” explains neuropsychologist Catherine Loveday of the University of Westminster. “It stimulates the brain in a very powerful way because of our emotional connection with it.”

Unlike brain games, playing an instrument is a rich and complex experience. This is because it’s integrating information from the senses of vision, hearing, and touch, along with fine movements. This can result in long-lasting changes in the brain. These can be applicable in the business world.

Changes in the Brain

Brain scans have been able to identify the difference in brain structure between musicians and non-musicians. Most notably, the corpus callosum, a massive bundle of nerve fibers connecting the two sides of the brain, is larger in musicians. Also, the areas involving movement, hearing, and visuospatial abilities appear to be larger in professional keyboard players.

Initially, these studies couldn’t determine if these differences were caused by musical training or if anatomical differences predispose some to become musicians. Ultimately, longitudinal studies showed that children who do 14 months of musical training displayed more powerful structural and functional brain changes.

These studies prove that learning a musical instrument increases gray matter volume in various brain regions, It also strengthens the long-range connections between them. Additional research shows that musical training can enhance verbal memory, spatial reasoning, and literacy skills.

Continue this great article here.

 

A composer is a guy who goes
around forcing his will on
unsuspecting air molecules,
often with the assistance
of unsuspecting musicians.

—Frank Zappa