Click on the photo or the button below to download your own copy of Carol of the Bells as an easy piano version! The link will take you to google drive, and from there you can either save it to your own drive or download it as a PDF.

Carol of the Bells is a super fun and easy song to learn on the piano! I hope you enjoy learning it with this free and easy sheet music! Check out Away in a Manger, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, The First Noel, or We Wish You a Merry Christmas next!


Carol Of The Bells Piano Mp3 Download


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Lisa Witthas been teaching piano for more than 20 years and in that time has helped hundreds of students learn to play the songs they love. Lisa received classical piano training through the Royal Conservatory of Music, but she has since embraced popular music and playing by ear in order to accompany herself and others. Learn more about Lisa.

Its that time of year again and i love this song and i know i arranged it last year but this year i tried arranging it for solo piano. A bit of a different feel to it but i like it. Could be better but i only spent about an hour on it cuz i was bored. Enjoy!

Merry Christmas Medley, is an upbeat easy piano trio by Kris Skaletski that features Good King Wenceslas, God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, and the Ukrainian Bell Carol. Includes a stacked score and separated parts. This showcase ensemble will brighten up your next holiday recital!

"Carol of the Bells" is a popular Christmas carol, which is based on the Ukrainian New Year's song "Shchedryk." The music for the carol comes from the song written by the Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovych in 1914; the English-language lyrics were written in 1936 by Peter Wilhousky.[1][2]

The music is based on a four-note ostinato and is in 3

4 time signature, with the B-flat bell pealing in 6

8 time. The carol is metrically bistable, and a listener can focus on either measure or switch between them. It has been adapted for musical genres that include classical, heavy metal, jazz, country music, rock, trap, and pop. The music has featured in films, and television shows.

Two other settings of the composition were also created by Leontovych: One for the women's choir (unaccompanied) and another for the children's choir with piano accompaniment. These are rarely performed or recorded.

Wilhousky rearranged the melody for the orchestra with new lyrics for NBC radio network's symphony orchestra, centred around the theme of bells because the melody reminded him of handbells,[5] which begins "Hark! How the bells".[7] It was first aired during the Great Depression,[5] and Wilhousky secured copyright to the new lyrics in 1936 and also published the song, despite the song having been published almost two decades earlier in the Ukrainian National Republic.[3] Its initial popularity stemmed largely from Wilhousky's ability to reach a wide audience in his role as arranger for the NBC Symphony Orchestra. It is now strongly associated with Christmas because of its new lyrics, which reference bells, carolling, and the line "merry, merry, merry, merry Christmas".[3]

"Ring, Christmas Bells", an English-language variant featuring nativity-based lyrics, was written by Minna Louise Hohman in 1947.[8] Two other versions exist by anonymous writers: one from 1957 titled "Come Dance and Sing" and one from 1972 that begins "Hark to the bells".[7]

The next step to playing this beloved Ukrainian holiday carol in a jazz piano style is to vary the rhythms in the melody. For example, John likes to alternates between starting the 4-note melodic fragment on the beat and then off the beat. The result is playful and catchy. Check it out:

Another hip technique that John includes in his arrangement of the Ukrainian holiday carol is polychords, (also called upper structures or upper structure triads). While this jazz piano technique sounds complicated, it actually presents jazz piano students with a more accessible way to discover and recall advanced jazz harmonies.

NoobNotes.net is a collection of songs written with the letter notes along side the lyrics, designed for fun and easy music practice - all free =) Perfect for novices on most instruments, including flute, piccolo, recorder, piano, oboe, clarinet, trumpet, guitar, hand bells, ukulele, kalimba, harp, tin whistle, keyboard, violin, xylophone, chimes, steel drums, even singing and karaoke, and much more! More about NoobNotes 

Welcome to another easy tutorial with yours truly, Mantius Cazaubon. In this tutorial, you will learn how to play the Christmas song, Carol Of The Bells (on piano and keyboard). I have created a video for you where I play the melody of the song as well as an easy left hand part. The notes can be seen at the top of the video. ff782bc1db

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