Below is a concise, practical guide to prepare a new choral edition (spartito) of Mons. Marco Frisina’s hymn "Rallegrati, Gerusalemme" (commonly used in liturgy). Assumptions: you want a clean, singable SATB (or flexible) choral arrangement and a printable score.
If you have a brass player, do not skip the trumpet part. The final "Osanna" is deeply awkward on piano alone. The trumpet part in the new edition is written in B-flat and C (dual notation) to accommodate any player. rallegrati gerusalemme frisina spartito new
Frisina uses a syncopated rhythm (quarter-note, half-note, eighth-note tie) that mimics the ringing of church bells. Practice the opening phrase slowly with a metronome. Do not let the choir rush the "Ral-le-gra-ti" triplet feel. The trumpet part in the new edition is
Given the keyword’s emphasis on new, avoiding low-quality PDF scans from old photocopies is critical. Here are the legitimate sources for the updated score: rallegrati gerusalemme frisina spartito new