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This template is to help users write non-free use rationales for non-free album covers and other music cover art as required by WP:NFC and WP:NFURG.Include this in the File page before the {{Non-free album cover}} template, once for each time you insert the album cover art image into an article.
This image is of a cover of an audio recording, and the copyright for it is most likely owned by either the publisher of the work or the artist(s) which produced the recording or cover artwork in question. It is believed that the use of low-resolution images of such covers solely to illustrate the audio recording in question,
The album art of other musicians has been influenced by Blue Note's covers, including Elvis Costello's Almost Blue (1981), whose cover is an homage to Burrell's Midnight Blue (1963), Van Morrison's The Skiffle Sessions – Live in Belfast (1998), which has a cover inspired by Blakey's Free for All (1965), and Aesop Rock's Float (2000), whose ...
File:"Poland" by Lil Yachty cover art.jpg File:"Polly" West German picture sleeve.jpg File:"Rainy Day Women 12 and 35 "-"Pledging My Time" - 1966 Danish single.jpg
This art is artwork created for a music album and is one of the most representative techniques to show the changes and trends found within the music, art, culture, and technological industries. [2] As music became popularized, so did creating cover art. Throughout the years, cover art went through different stages and styles.
This page was last edited on 24 February 2021, at 03:21 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
File:The Jazz Theory Book cover.jpg; File:The Language of Music.jpg; File:The Little Show.jpg; File:The Longest Cocktail Party.jpg; File:The New Oxford Book of Carols book cover.jpg; File:The Record Guide.jpg; File:The Second Little Show.jpg; File:The Zulu and the Zayda (Sheet music) cover.jpg; File:The-encyclopedia-of-australian-rock-and-pop ...
In music, a thirty-second note (American) or demisemiquaver (British) is a note played for 1 ⁄ 32 of the duration of a whole note (or semibreve). It lasts half as long as a sixteenth note (or semiquaver ) and twice as long as a sixty-fourth (or hemidemisemiquaver ).