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Piano and voice - Digital Download

SKU: LV.16315

Composed by James Perring. Portraits, Balconies, Mountains, Clothing & dress. Lester S. Levy Collection. 6 pages. Published by Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries (LV.16315).

I'd Be A Bloomer. Written By Ernest H. Reed, Esqr. The Music Composed By James Perring (Composer of The Maids of Merry England). Published [n.d.] by T.E. Purday, 50 St. Pauls Church Yard in London. Composition of through-composed with piano and voice instrumentation. Subject headings for this piece include Portraits, Balconies, Mountains, Clothing & dress. First line reads I'd be a Bloomer dashing and light..

About The Lester S. Levy Collection

The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music consists of over 29,000 pieces of American popular music. Donated to Johns Hopkins University Sheridan Libraries, the collection's strength is its thorough documentation of nineteenth-century American through popular music. This sheet music has been provided by Project Gado, a San Francisco Bay Area startup whose mission is to digitize and share the world's visual history.

WARNING: These titles are provided as historical documents. Language and concepts within reflect the opinions and values of the time and may be offensive to some.

I'd Be A Bloomer
Piano, Voix
Ernest H Reed, Esqr
$5.99 5.75 € Piano, Voix PDF SheetMusicPlus

Ernest Chausson : Sept mélodies, Opus 2 - N° 6 Hébé, chanson grecque dans le mode phrygien Voix seule
Téléchargez la partition Chant Sept mélodies, Opus 2 - N° 6 H&eac…
4.99 € Voix seule PDF Tomplay

Choral Choir (SATB) - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.828704

Composed by Giovanni Bononcini, Giovanni Battista Bononcini. Arranged by Guido Menestrina. Baroque,Contemporary,Sacred. Octavo. 44 pages. Guido Menestrina #368381. Published by Guido Menestrina (A0.828704).

Anthem which was performed in King Henry the Seventh's Chappel at the Funeral of the most Noble & Victorious Prince John Duke of Marlborough By Giovanni Bononcini (1670-1747) transcribed by Guido Menestrina Il padre, Giovanni Maria Bononcini (Buononcini) (1642-1678), era stato violinista e compositore: attivo alla corte di Modena, aveva scritto un trattato, Musico prattico, pubblicato nel 1673. Il fratello minore di Giovanni, Antonio Maria, fu anch'egli musicista. Proprio dal padre Giovanni ricevette la prima educazione musicale; quando questi morì, nel 1678, divenne studente di Giovanni Paolo Colonna a Bologna, dove vennero eseguiti i suoi primi lavori. Proprio grazie al Colonna entrò a far parte dell'Accademia dei Filarmonici in veste di compositore. Nel 1685 aveva già preparato e pubblicato le sue prime opere. Ottenne nel 1688 il posto di musicista presso la basilica di San Petronio, e più tardi divenne maestro di cappella nella chiesa di San Giovanni in Monte. Sempre a Bologna fece la conoscenza del librettista Silvio Stampiglia, assieme al quale, tra il 1692 e il 1696, produrrà cinque opere. A partire dal 1692 si recò a Milano, Roma (dove fu apprezzato e sostenuto da Filippo II Colonna e dalla sua consorte Olimpia Pamphilj) e Venezia; infine, dal 1698 al 1711 si stabilì a Vienna, dove godette i favori degli imperatori Leopoldo I e Giuseppe I. Di passaggio a Berlino nel 1702, incontrò Georg Friedrich Händel, di quindici anni più giovane di lui, di cui riconobbe il talento precoce: lo avrebbe rincontrato alcuni anni più tardi. Dal 1714 al 1719 fu di nuovo a Roma, al servizio di Johann Wenzel, Conte di Gallas, Ambasciatore dell'Imperatore d'Austria a Roma, molto noto per il suo amore per la musica. Al Conte di Gallas, Bononcini dedicò la Favola Pastorale Erminia, rappresentata al Teatro della Pace nella Stagione del Carnevale del 1719. Il dramma musicale ebbe grandissimo successo sia per la musica, sia per gli interpreti, fra cui si segnalarono Domenico Gizzi (1687-1758), Musico Soprano della Real Cappella di Napoli ed il celebre contralto napoletano Francesco Vitale. Sempre nella Stagione del Carnevale 1719 al Teatro della Pace, Bononcini rappresentò il dramma per musica L'Etearco, dal librettista Silvio Stampiglia dedicato alla Contessa Ernestina di Gallas, moglie dell'Ambasciatore austriaco. Anche in questo dramma per musica Domenico Gizzi e Francesco Vitale fecero apprezzare tutte le spezie più ricercate del virtuosismo canoro. Poi, dal 1720 si stabilì a Londra, sotto la protezione del John Churchill, I duca di Marlborough. Qui si esibì anche al violoncello in numerosi concerti, molto apprezzati dall'aristocrazia inglese. Divenne membro della prestigiosa Royal Academy of Music.[senza fonte] Il pubblico londinese era, all'epoca, totalmente ignorante dell'opera italiana, e Händel stava muovendo i primi passi della sua prestigiosa carriera. Fra i due compositori si accese un forte spirito di competizione, sia che collaborassero alla realizzazione della medesima impresa (i tre atti dell'opera Muzio Scevola furono composti il primo da Filippo Amadi, il secondo da Bononcini, il terzo da Händel, al fine di soddisfare tutti e tre gli artisti), sia che, più spesso, si impegnassero in produzioni rivali. Le opere di maggior successo di Bononcini in quegli anni furono Astarto (1720), Crispo (1722), Griselda (1722), che si rivelò un vero e proprio trionfo, Erminia (1723), Calfurnia (1724). A favore dell'italiano era anche una certa ostilità verso Händel dovuta alle sue origini tedesche e alla contemporanea presenza sul trono inglese della poco amata dinastia di Hannover. Ma nel 1727-1728 scoppiò uno scandalo che compromise il successo di Bononcini e lo costrinse a lasciare Londra: il compositore Antonio Lotti accusò il madrigale di Bononcini In una siepe ombrosa di essere un plagio di un brano dei suoi Duetti, terzetti e madrigali. Fuggito a Parigi nel 1733, a causa di speculazion.

Giovanni Bononcini - Anthem (for the Funeral of John Duke of Marlborough)
Chorale SATB
Giovanni Bononcini (1670-1747) transcribed by Guido Menestrina Il padre, Giovanni Maria Bononcini (Buononcini) (1642-1678), era stato violinista e compositore: attivo alla corte di Modena, aveva scritto un trattato, Musico prattico, pubblicato nel 1673 Il fratello minore di Giovanni, Antonio Maria, fu anch'egli musicista
$9.99 9.59 € Chorale SATB PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.697577

Composed by H. Ernest Nichol. Arranged by Sandy McIntire. Instructional,Multicultural,Praise & Worship,Sacred,Traditional,World. Score. 4 pages. Sandy McIntire #5709129. Published by Sandy McIntire (A0.697577).

We've a Story to Tell to the Nations by H. Ernest Nichol is a Protestant hymn written to celebrate missionaries and the missionary movement. It has enjoyed popularity since its publication in the first decade of the 20th Century and is arranged here as an Intermediate Piano Solo. Appropriate for worship services, programs and recitals, it is in McIntire's series, Gospel Piano Classics. Other hymns in the series include: The Church in the Wildwood, Bring Them In, Wonderful Words of Jesus, Whispering Hope, When We All Get to Heaven and Jesus Is Calling.

We've a Story to Tell to the Nations
Piano seul

$5.50 5.28 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

String Orchestra - Level 5 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.942953

Composed by Geoffrey Peterson. Contemporary. Score and parts. 43 pages. Geoffrey Peterson #4267231. Published by Geoffrey Peterson (A0.942953).

Link to complete recording: https://soundcloud.com/geoffrey-peterson/sets/the-edmund-fitzgerald-concerto On November 9th, 1975, the S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald left port in Superior, Wisconsin. The 729-foot-long iron ore carrier, loaded with 26 thousand tons of taconite pellets for the auto industry, was bound for Detroit. Earlier that day, the weather service had issued a gale warning. This was not unusual, considering that gale storms are typical during November on Lake Superior. The Fitzgerald’s Captain, Ernest McSorley, and her 29-member crew headed northeast unaware of the maelstrom they would soon encounter. At around 2 a.m., Bernie Cooper, captain of the Arthur M. Andersen, another freighter which was following a few miles behind the Fitzgerald, radioed Captain McSorley to consult with him about the worsening storm. They had both decided to take a more northerly route along the Canadian shore, which they hoped would provide some shelter from the violent gale winds and waves. The Fitzgerald’s long-range radar stopped working the following day and was needed in order to avoid Six-Fathom Shoal, a shallow area of Lake Superior that could rupture the ship’s hull. McSorley soon radioed the Anderson to report that the Fitzgerald had sustained some topside damage...a fence rail down, two vents lost or damaged, and a starboard list. A list meant that the Fitzgerald was taking on too much water and was causing it to lean to one side. The short-range radar also stopped working, and the radio direction beacon from nearby Whitefish Point vanished. This would make it impossible for the Fitzgerald to reach the lee waters of Whitefish Bay and escape the 80 mph winds churning 20 to 30-foot waves. At 7:10 p.m. that night, First Mate Morgan Clark of the Andersen radioed the Fitzgerald to see how they were doing. Captain McSorley replied, We’re holding our own. This was the last contact anyone would have with the Fitzgerald. Shortly thereafter, the Edmund Fitzgerald disappeared from the Anderson’s radar screen. All 29 of her crew were lost on November 10th, 1975. The Edmund Fitzgerald chronicles the tragic final voyage of the well-known shipwreck in 4 movements; Embarkment, The Gales, Six-Fathom Shoal (We’re holding our own.) and Entombment-Dirge. The concerto makes use of several musical quotes. The first is Spanish Ladies, an English sea chantey, which appears in both the 1st and 3rd movements. The second is the funeral march theme from the 2nd movement of Beethoven’s 3rd Symphony which is heard in the 4th movement of the concerto. In addition, a chime is rung 29 times during the final bars of the concerto to memorialize the men who lost their lives. The Crew of the S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald: Michael E. Armagost, Frederick J. Beetcher, Thomas D. Bentsen, Edward F. Bindon, Thomas D. Borgeson, Oliver J. Champeau, Nolan S. Church, Ransom E. Cundy, Thomas E. Edwards, Russell G. Haskell, George J. Holl, Bruce L. Hudson, Allen G. Kalmon, Gordon F. MacLellan, Joseph W. Mazes, John H. McCarthy, Ernest M. McSorley, Eugene W. O'Brien, Karl A. Peckol, John J. Poviach, James A. Pratt, Robert C. Rafferty, Paul M. Riippa, John D. Simmons, William J. Spengler, Mark A. Thomas, Ralph G. Walton, David E. Weiss, Blaine H. Wilhelm.

The Edmund Fitzgerald - Concerto for Piano and Strings
Orchestre à Cordes

$9.99 9.59 € Orchestre à Cordes PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.1291857

By Sharon Wilson. By H. Ernest Nichol and Henry Ernest Nichol. Arranged by Sharon Wilson and Sharon Wilson Music. 19th Century,Christian,Easter,Religious,Sacred. Score. 6 pages. Sharon Wilson #882468. Published by Sharon Wilson (A0.1291857).

This energetic piano solo arrangement of the familiar hymn We've a Story to Tell to the Nations by Henry Ernest Nichol begins in the key of F major. After the first verse, the interlude transitions to the key of C major for the second verse.  Bold and enthusiastic throughout, this arrangement is ideal for a processional or postlude. Duration 2:30.

This arrangement is one of the 12 songs in the collection
On Our Way Rejoicing: Benedictions and Postludes (A Collection of 12 Piano Solo Combinations). 

Visit Sharon Wilson's website: https://www.sharonwilsonmusic.com/
Subscribe to her YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/@SharonWilsonMusic

Cover Image Credit: Pixabay.com.

We've a Story to Tell to the Nations Piano seul
Sharon Wilson
$4.99 4.79 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus




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