Magazine 9 songs
Get healthy, get singing!
Songs for Recycle Week
For each song, you will find:
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This is a beautiful Gujarati devotional song. Its melody is based on the Bhairavi Raag. It has a very strong pulse which could inspire movement and choreography.
This is a traditional Jewish song for the Festival of Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year, which takes place for two days between the middle of September and early October. The two-day holiday is considered to represent one very long day (a High Holy day), which gives it special importance in the Jewish calendar. Apples and honey are part of the unique Rosh Hashana dinner - they symbolise hope for a sweet year to come.
This is a song for the Jewish festival of Chanukkah (Festival of Lights), celebrated over a period of 8 days every December.
This beautiful setting of well-known Latin words will encourage really gentle singing.
This beautiful hymn was written by a baptist minister in 1860.
This beautiful, atmospheric song celebrates the triumph of light over darkness — it is for the major Indian festival Diwali, which is particularly significant in Hinduism
This is a joyful song that would be lovely for a whole-school assembly. For class work it is more suitable for KS2 children.
This is an uplifting song for the Jewish festival of Purim, which celebrates the time when Jewish people were saved by the courage of a brave young woman called Esther.
A lovely, thought-provoking song that could be used to support the Religious Education curriculum, to stimulate project work in other subjects, or as part of the daily act of collective worship.
An uplifting South African hymn that has become very popular in North American church music. The title is Zulu for 'we are marching' or 'we are singing'.