enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jean Sibelius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Sibelius

    The quinquennial International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition, instituted in 1965, the Sibelius Monument, unveiled in 1967 in Helsinki's Sibelius Park, the Sibelius Museum, opened in Turku in 1968, and the Sibelius Hall concert hall in Lahti, opened in 2000, were all named in his honour, as was the asteroid 1405 Sibelius.

  3. List of compositions by Jean Sibelius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by...

    The Finnish composer Jean Sibelius (1865–1957) wrote over 550 original works during his eight-decade artistic career. [1] This began around 1875 with a short miniature for violin and cello called Water Droplets (Vattendroppar), [2] and ended a few months before his death at age 91 with the orchestration of two earlier songs, "Kom nu hit, död" ("Come Away, Death") and "Kullervon valitus ...

  4. Music manuscript - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_manuscript

    For larger scale works, a copyist was often employed to hand-copy individual parts (for each musician) from a composer's musical score. With the advent of the personal computer in the late 1980s and beyond, music typesetting could now be accomplished by a graphics computer software made for this purpose, such as Dorico , Finale , Musescore , or ...

  5. Finlandia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finlandia

    Finlandia, Op. 26, is a tone poem by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.It was written in 1899 and revised in 1900. The piece was composed for the Press Celebrations of 1899, a covert protest against increasing censorship from the Russian Empire, and was the last of seven pieces performed as an accompaniment to a tableau depicting episodes from Finnish history. [6]

  6. Sibelius (scorewriter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibelius_(scorewriter)

    An example of sheet music created in Sibelius. Sibelius is a scorewriter program developed and released by Sibelius Software (now part of Avid).Beyond creating, editing and printing music scores, it can also play the music back using sampled or synthesised sounds.

  7. Ten Pieces, Op. 24 (Sibelius) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten_Pieces,_Op._24_(Sibelius)

    Sibelius composed the Andantino in F major (the only of the Ten Pieces to be called by its tempo marking) in 1899. In 9 4 time, it has a duration of about three minutes, and was first published in 1899 by Wasenius. [18] Afterwards, however, Sibelius revised the piece c. 1899, which necessitated a superseding edition by Wasenius in 1900. [19]

  8. Symphony No. 8 (Sibelius) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._8_(Sibelius)

    Sibelius repeatedly refused to release it for performance, though he continued to assert that he was working on it even after he had, according to later reports from his family, burned the score and associated material, probably in 1945. Much of Sibelius's reputation, during his lifetime and subsequently, derived from his work as a symphonist.

  9. Symphony No. 6 (Sibelius) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._6_(Sibelius)

    The Symphony No. 6 in D minor, Op. 104, is a four-movement work for orchestra written from 1914 to 1923 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.. Although the score does not contain a key attribution, the symphony is usually described as being in D minor; much of it is in fact in the (modern) Dorian mode, a scale that corresponds to a scale on the white keys on a piano starting on the note D. [4 ...