Declutter Guide · Free Albuquerque Pickup

What to Do With Old Sheet Music & Hymnals

A piano bench stuffed with yellowed sheet music, a box of old hymnals from a closed church. Most of it is common — but the lithographed covers can be small works of art. Here's how to tell, and how to clear the rest for free.

Most old sheet music and hymnals are common and worth little, but early illustrated song sheets and rare hymnals can be genuinely collectible — and playable music is one of the most reusable donations there is. I accept sheet music, songbooks, and hymnals of any kind and condition in Albuquerque with free pickup, send playable music to musicians and congregations, and set aside the vintage pieces. If you're clearing a piano bench, a music teacher's studio, or a closed church's library, here's what to do.

Published June 2026 · By Josh Eldred, New Mexico Literacy Project · Free pickup: 702-496-4214

The hard truth about sheet music values

Sheet music was once the dominant form of home entertainment, so it was printed in staggering quantities — which means most of it is extremely common today. The mid-century pop standards, the piano-lesson method books, the photocopied choir folders, the boxes of "100 Best-Loved Songs" — these have little or no resale value. The same is true of most 20th-century hymnals, which were printed by the pew-load for congregations across the country.

Which sheet music and hymnals have value

Early illustrated song sheets. The real collectible field is the cover art. Late-1800s and early-1900s song sheets with lithographed, hand-colored, or notable illustrated covers are collected as graphic art and social history — Tin Pan Alley covers, ragtime, wartime songs, and pieces with famous illustrators or historically charged imagery.

First appearances and signed copies. The first publication of a famous song, or a copy signed by a notable composer or performer, steps into collector territory.

Rare and shape-note hymnals. Early hymnals, denominationally significant editions, and shape-note songbooks (the Sacred Harp tradition) can interest both collectors and active singers. Regional and New Mexico–connected music ties into the broader field documented in the guide to New Mexico folk music and corridos.

Don't toss the old covers. If a song sheet has a striking illustrated cover and looks genuinely old, set it aside — that's where the value lives. Not sure? Hand me the box; I flag the collectible covers and keep the playable music in circulation.

The good news: music gets reused

Unlike encyclopedias, playable sheet music and usable hymnals have a real second life. Piano and voice students, school and church music programs, community choirs, and amateur musicians all need affordable music, and a box of standards or a stack of hymnals can directly supply them. This is one of the most genuinely useful donation categories there is — which is exactly why it shouldn't end up in a landfill.

Why it's still hard to give away

Thrift stores rarely know how to handle or price music and often decline it; libraries seldom want donated sheet music. So perfectly playable music becomes oddly hard to re-home — the same gap that affects every "looks like trash but isn't quite" category I take.

I accept every piece

Sheet music, songbooks, method books, choir folders, hymnals, a single piano bench or a whole church library — any condition, free pickup anywhere in the Albuquerque metro. Playable music and usable hymnals go to students, teachers, congregations, and community musicians; collectible illustrated covers and rare editions are set aside; only the truly unusable is recycled.

Frequently asked questions

Is old sheet music worth anything?

Most isn't. Value concentrates in early illustrated song-sheet covers, first appearances of famous songs, and signed copies.

Are old hymnals worth anything?

Most modern hymnals are common; early, rare, denominational, and shape-note hymnals can have value — and usable ones are great for congregations.

Where can I donate old sheet music and hymnals?

I accept them all, any condition, free pickup — call or text 702-496-4214.

Cite This Guide

Eldred, J. (June 2026). What to Do With Old Sheet Music & Hymnals. New Mexico Literacy Project.

https://newmexicoliteracyproject.org/what-to-do-with-old-sheet-music

Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

Piano bench or choir loft to clear?

I'll pick up your sheet music & hymnals free.

Any kind, any condition, anywhere in the Albuquerque metro. Playable music goes to students, teachers, and congregations; collectible covers are saved; only the unusable is recycled.

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