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Topic: 1829 in music


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  Romantic music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The era of Romantic music is defined as the period of European classical music that runs roughly from the early 1800s to the first decade of the 20th century, as well as music written according to the norms and styles of that period.
Romantic music is related to Romantic movements in literature, art, and philosophy, though the conventional periods used in musicology are now very different from their counterparts in the other arts, which define "romantic" as running from the 1780s to the 1840s.
Music was regarded as a quasi-religious experience, and the "Philharmonic" society became part of a concert as a time for deep engagement in the music, in contrast to the less formal manners of previous concert life.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Romantic_music   (3448 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Romantic music
In music and music theory, a chord (from the Middle English cord, short for accord) is three or more different notes or pitches sounding simultaneously, or nearly simultaneously, over a period of time.
Neoclassicism in music was a 20th century development, particularly popular in the period between the two World Wars, in which composers drew inspiration from music of the 18th century, though some of the inspiring canon was drawn as much from the Baroque period as the Classical period - for this reason...
A film score is the background music in a film, generally specially written for the film and often used to heighten emotions provoked by the imagery on the screen or by the dialogue.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Romantic-music   (8650 words)

  
 Lesson Tutor : Index of Music lesson plans, worksheets, puzzles ...
This can be seen in his music, which is always full of color and rhythm, beautifully orchestrated, dramatic even, but not often moving or thoughtful.
Music has this over painting Debussy is said to have declared in 1906, it can bring together all manner of variations of colour and light, and of course is always in motion as opposed to static as a painting can only be.
This was a genre which led toward the musical theatre of the 20th century, and a distinctly separate world of popular music.
www.lessontutor.com /musicgenhome.html   (1153 words)

  
 Archival papers in the Music Library of Yale University
Included are essentially all of his musical works (sketches, holographs, and published editions); about 300 letters, many with important musical personalities of the day; material dealing with the American Composers Alliance and the Yado festivals, with which he was highly active; photographs; programs, reviews, classroom notebooks; and photocopies or holographs of manuscripts of other composers.
Donovan (1891-1970) was on the faculty of the Yale School of Music from 1928 to 1960.
Smith (1874-1935) was a music critic for the New York Press (1903-1916) and the New York American (1916-1919, 1923) and a foreign music correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune.
www.library.yale.edu /musiclib/archival.htm   (7531 words)

  
 1830 in music - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also: 1829 in music, other events of 1830, 1831 in music, and the list of 'years in music'.
Music by Daniel Auber and libretto by Eugène Scribe.
Music by Gaetano Donizetti and libretto by Felice Romani.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1830_in_music   (80 words)

  
 1819 in music   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
See also: 1818 in music other events of 1819 1820 in music and the list of 'years in music'.
Edward Hodges,: Doctor in Music of Sydney Sussex College, Cambridge; organist of the Churches of St. James and St. Nicholas, Bristol, England, 1819-18...
The gem of this CD is Stern's 1959 account of the Berg Violin Concerto with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic...
www.freeglossary.com /1819_in_music   (172 words)

  
 SIR GEORGE ALEXANDER MACFARREN - LoveToKnow Article on SIR GEORGE ALEXANDER MACFARREN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
English composer, was born in London on the 2nd of March 1813, and entered the Royal Academy of Music in 1829.
A gradual failure of his eyesight, which had been defective from boyhood, resulted in total blindness in 865, but he overcame the difficulties by employing an amanuensis in composition, and made hardly a break in the course of his work.
He was made principal of the Royal Academy of Music in succession to Sterndale Bennett in February 1875, and in March of the same year professor of music in Cambridge University.
53.1911encyclopedia.org /M/MA/MACFARREN_SIR_GEORGE_ALEXANDER.htm   (1442 words)

  
 Felix Mendelssohn
But as a conductor and music organizer his most significant achievement was in Leipzig (1835-47), where to great acclaim he conducted the Gewandhaus Orchestra, championing both historical and modern works Bach, Beethoven, Weber, Schumann, Berlioz), and founded and directed the Leipzig Conservatory (1843).
Always a warm friend and valued colleague, he was devoted to his family; his death at the age of 38, after a series of strokes, was mourned internationally.
Less dependent on programmatic elements and at the same time formally innovatory, the concertos, notably that for violin, and the chamber music, especially some of the string quartets, the Octet and the two late piano trios, beautifully reconcile classical principles with personal feeling; these are among his most striking compositions.
w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de /cmp/mendelssohn.html   (585 words)

  
 Cue Sheet: The State of the Art
Making matters worse is the fact that musical funding has shifted away from a patron system, which was the norm in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, to a commercial system that depends on individual consumers rather than a state or wealthy benefactor.
The music of Johann Sebastian Bach was largely forgotten for almost a century after his death, known by only a few scattered composers and musicians.
Though his is certainly a name familiar to even the most musically illiterate person today, during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries he was remembered primarily (if at all) as a church organist.
www.musiconfilm.net /get_column.php?id=1   (817 words)

  
 Listing of open musical jam sessions
Contributed-by: Marc Sabatella [Oct 94] Denver, Colorado, USA: [Blues/Bluegrass] Swallow Hill Music Association has an open acoustic blues jam on the third Sunday of the month; the session is led by Mary Flower and takes place from 4 to 6 pm.
Music ranges from straight ahead jazz to blues and even big band if enough instrumentalists show up.
Contributed-by: Hyong-Joong Kim Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: [Celtic] An Irish music session is held at the Irish Club On Erin Street in Winnipeg on the first Tuesday of the month.
www.faqs.org /faqs/music/jam-sessions/index.html   (18134 words)

  
 1829 in music -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
(additional info and facts about list of 'years in music') list of 'years in music'.
(A drama set to music; consists of singing with orchestral accompaniment and an orchestral overture and interludes) Opera
Music by (additional info and facts about Gioacchino Rossini) Gioacchino Rossini and libretto by Étienne de Jouy, Florent Bis and Armand Marrast.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/1/18/1829_in_music.htm   (220 words)

  
 [humanities.music.composers.wagner] Wagner General FAQ
In addition to his talent for musical composition on the largest of scales, RW was a man of the theatre.
His music is still widely boycotted in Israel; although a recent performance of the 'Siegfried Idyll' by the Rishon Lezion SO attracted, among a large audience, only one protester.
But it has become fashionable in many recent performances to speculate that Alberich *is* the only survivor, and that he is plotting to steal the gold yet again...in other words, the stealing of the gold is a sort of 'eternal recurrence' in which events are doomed to repeat themselves throughout eternity.
www.faqs.org /faqs/music/wagner/general-faq   (12027 words)

  
 HISTORY OF LATIN MUSIC
As goods including people, were traded through the convenient and busy port of New Orleans, Louisiana, musically inclined workers on Caribbean ships were afforded the opportunity to exchange new rhythms, dances, and songs with the various Creole and African dancers and musicians at public performance spaces ice Congo Square.
Latin music is a popular art form developed in various Latin American countries, mainly Cuba, and is unique for the type of rhythmic structures it builds upon.
It is vocal and instrumental music, originally derived from African religious ceremonies, however viewed today primarily as dance music.
www.revels-bey.com /history_of_latin_music.htm   (850 words)

  
 Pat O'Reilly's 2000 years of Irish music
John Reidy, inventor of the bodhrán, is born in County Cork.
President Bill Clinton visits the North and states "the harp and the fiddle, the fife and the lambeg drum, two proud traditions are coming together in the harmonies of peace".
Unauthorized use of this mark for performing live or recorded music, or providing music-related information over the Internet, in interstate commerce in the United States, is prohibited.
www.standingstones.com /itm2000.html   (698 words)

  
 Giuseppe Verdi
When he was seven he was helping the local church organist; at 12 he was studying with the organist at the main church in nearby Busseto, whose assistant he became in 1829.
In 1832 he was sent to Milan, but was refused a place at the conservatory and studied with Vincenzo Lavigna, composer and former La Scala musician.
He might have taken a post as organist at Monza in 1835, but returned to Busseto where he was passed over as maestro di cappella but became town music master in 1836 and married Margherita Barezzi, his patron's daughter (their two children died in infancy).
w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de /cmp/verdi.html   (982 words)

  
 August Häser
August Ferdinand Häser (1779 - 1844), German conductor, choir-master, music teacher and composer; Son of Johann Georg Häser (1729-1809), the latter from 1785 music director at the university church and from 1800 university directors in Leipzig.
Alumnus at the Thomasschule in Leipzig; 1800-1806 Kantor in Lemgo; 1806-1813 in Italy; 1813-1817 in Lemgo again; from 1817 choir director at the Hoftheater Weimar, simultaneously music teacher of princess Augusta (the later empress).
From 1829 church music director and teacher of the seminary in Weimar.
members.chello.nl /c.vandervloed/haser.htm   (99 words)

  
 1829 in music - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
1829 in music - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
This encyclopedia, history, geography and biography article about 1829 in music contains research on
1829 in music, Events, Popular music, Classical music, Opera, Births and Deaths.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/1829_in_music   (139 words)

  
 Jubing's Guitar Compositions and Transcriptions
This music is dedicated for all beginner guitarists in the world.
I enjoy this music for the first time when listening a record by Michala Petri (the "Greensleeves" album).
The music is imitating the sound of windbell on a breezy day.
www.geocities.com /jubing/index2.html   (1352 words)

  
 Russian site is music to the ears - TheEdge - smh.com.au
You buy your music by the megabyte, at the rate of 500 MB for $US5 and you dial in the sort of encoding you want: MP3, MPEG4-AAC, OGG, MPC, WMA etc at various bit rates using different encoders _ say the LAME alt-presets.
We're using the material for private use, there is no restriction in this country on the parallel importing of recorded music and none of the artists seem to have been deprived of their rights.
While we suspect the recorded music industry would like to earn more from their music, we're in no position to judge the arrangements they might have made with Russia.
www.smh.com.au /articles/2004/04/26/1082831475556.html   (705 words)

  
 IMAF - The International Music and Art Foundation, Vaduz
The International Music and Art Foundation was established with Charitable Status (Gemeinnuetzigkeit) in Vaduz, Liechtenstein on February 12, 1988 for the purpose of receiving funds from individuals and corporations for distribution in support of worthy arts organizations worldwide.
Proposed projects should demonstrate support by appropriate organizations and/or governmental units in the community where the project is to be carried out.
The Foundation expects tangible outcomes from grantees, and all grants will require a written report from the recipient detailing how the Foundation's support was used and accounting for all expenditure of funds at the end of the grant period, or annually if the grant extends beyond one year. 
imafoundation.homestead.com   (410 words)

  
 Music   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Band Music from the Civil War Era, Library of Congress
Music of the Civil War, Dayle K. Music of the Civil War, Native Ground Music
Old Towne Brass, musical group from Huntsville, AL which performs in period costume with authentic period instruments
www.homepages.dsu.edu /jankej/civilwar/music.htm   (127 words)

  
 Keyboard Instruments at the National Music Museum
André P. Larson, Beethoven and Berlioz, Paris and Vienna: Musical Treasures from the Age of Revolution and Romance 1789-1848, with essay by John Koster, exhibition catalog, Washington Pavilion, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, September 12-November 2, 2003 (Vermillion: National Music Museum 2003), pp.
André P. Larson, Beethoven and Berlioz, Paris and Vienna: Musical Treasures from the Age of Revolution and Romance 1789-1848, with essay by John Koster, exhibition catalog, Washington Pavilion, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, September 12-November 2, 2003 (Vermillion: National Music Museum 2003), p.
Lit.: André P. Larson, Beethoven and Berlioz, Paris and Vienna: Musical Treasures from the Age of Revolution and Romance 1789-1848, with essay by John Koster, exhibition catalog, Washington Pavilion, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, September 12-November 2, 2003 (Vermillion: National Music Museum 2003), p.
www.usd.edu /smm/KEYBOARD.HTM   (7052 words)

  
 Indiana University SLIS: Seminar in Music Librarianship (L631)
The Dissemination of Music: Studies in the History of Music Publishing.
Music Publishers, Printers and Engravers: London, Provincial, Scottish, and Irish, from Queen Elizabeth’s Reign to George the Fourth’s, with Select Bibliographical Lists of Musical Works Printed and Published within That Period.
Music Publishing and Patronage: C. Peters, 1800 to the Holocaust.
www.music.indiana.edu /muslib/L631/2004/readings/publishing.html   (800 words)

  
 Greatest Hits, 1820-60 (Variety Music Cavalcade)
The hymn, "The Morning Light Is Breaking," by Samuel Francis Smith, the author of "America," was set to the music in Moses L. Scudder, The Wesleyan Psalmist, or, Songs of Canaan, D. King, Boston, cop.
The music, or the tune, was composed by Lady John Scott, née Alicia Ann Spottiswoode, wife of Lord John Montague-Douglas Scott, whom she married in 1836.
She was born in 1810 at Spottiswoode, Berwickshire, Scotland, and died there on Mar. 12, 1900.
lcweb2.loc.gov /ammem/sm2html/sm2great2.html   (1103 words)

  
 American Music Center Member: Heskel Brisman   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
He was also the director of the Joseph Achron conservatory in Israel, where he taught theory and chamber music.
He was on the editorial staff of Carl Fischer, and served as editor and consultant for Theodore Presser, International Music Co. and Guitar Review, among others.
Ensembles that have performed Brisman's music include the Rome Radio Orchestra, the Silesian Philharmonic, the Cracow Radio-TV Symphony Orchestra, the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Masterwork Chamber Orchestra, and the New York University Opera Theater.
www.amc.net /member/Heskel_Brisman/bio.html   (305 words)

  
 Music Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
You are listening to a MIDI sequence of the communion hymn, "Lord Jesus Christ, Life-Giving Bread" as arranged by Tim Bode.
I believe that music is one of God's gifts that is meant to be shared.
One of my favorite things to do musically is to take an old hymn (often 17th century or early) and explore its potential in contemporary styles.
home.earthlink.net /~timbode/music.htm   (802 words)

  
 July acquisitions in music   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
An anthology of secular polyphonic music of the 16th and 17th centuries / edited by Giovanni Acciai, Marco Berrini, and Marco Boschini.– Milano : Edizioni Suvini Zerboni, 1996.
--Composers of classical music of Jewish descent / Lewis Stevens ; foreword by Rabbi Julia Neuberger.– London ; Portland, Ore. : Vallentine Mitchell, 2003.
Music, popular culture, identities / edited by Richard Young.– Amsterdam : Rodopi, 2002.
www.library.nd.edu /colldev/subject_home_pages/music/Julyacquisitionsinmusic.shtml   (5984 words)

  
 All about Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829-1869): His life and times and music...
In recent years, there has been a steady growth of interest in Gottschalk´s music, and it is hoped that this website will help promote his music as well as provide information about his rather turbulent career.
He also was politically outspoken on issues such as slavery and the Civil War, and while a true American patriot, he did not spare his countrymen acrimonious criticism whenever he deemed it appropriate.
We also intend to provide an up-to-date documentation of books on Gottschalk and a discography of recordings of his music (concentrating on CDs and recordings that are currently available rather than on historic sources).
www.louismoreaugottschalk.com   (557 words)

  
 1828 in music   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
See also:1827 in music,other events of 1828, 1829 in music and thelist of 'years in music'.
All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
The little shepherd boy Findelkind--who repeated--"was sorely disturbed and distressed to see these.
www.termsdefined.net /18/1828-in-music.html   (82 words)

  
 Sociology of Music
This page is intended as a study help for thosetaking the Sociology of Music Course.
The effectof music on the performance of a task
Noteson Sociologyof Music by Dasilva, Blasi, and Dees
web.txwesleyan.edu /sociology/horsfall/Music.html   (697 words)

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