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  2. Pietro Domenico Paradies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pietro_Domenico_Paradies

    Pietro Domenico Paradies (also Pietro Domenico Paradisi) (1707 – 25 August 1791) was an Italian composer, harpsichordist and music teacher, most prominently known for a composition popularly entitled "Toccata in A", which is, in other sources, the second movement of his Sonata No. 6.

  3. List of online digital musical document libraries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Online_Digital...

    Links more than 6,100 documents on 37,300 coloured high-quality scans, 1,600 audio files (including music examples and audio letters), and 7,600 text files. Beethoven-Haus Bonn Digital Archives: Biblioteca Digital Hispanica: Spanish, JPEG: Downloadable color images. Biblioteca Nacional de España: Biblioteca Nacional Digital Brasil

  4. Choral symphony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choral_symphony

    Berlioz allowed text to dictate symphonic form in Roméo but allowed the music to supplant the text wordlessly. If, in the famous garden and cemetery scenes the dialogue of the two lovers, Juliet's asides, and Romeo's passionate outbursts are not sung, if the duets of love and despair are given to the orchestra, the reasons are numerous and ...

  5. Grand rights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Rights

    Grand rights is a type of music licensing, specifically covering the right to perform musical compositions within the context of a dramatic work. This includes stage performances such as musical theater , concert dance , and arrangements of music from a dramatic work.

  6. Charlotte's Web (musical) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlotte's_Web_(musical)

    Charlotte's Web is licensed by Dramatic Publishing to middle schools, high schools, colleges, and community theaters worldwide. [4] [3] Strouse noted that the musical's film rights were held by others and that no New York producer would invest in the show without the film rights, so the musical was produced in regional theaters. [1]

  7. Unfinished creative work - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unfinished_creative_work

    Schubert's symphony is the most famous, but Anton Bruckner's Ninth Symphony is performed without a finale, and in Karl Amadeus Hartmann's Gesangsszene, the final words of Jean Giraudoux's text, left unset at the composer's death, are simply spoken by the soloist. Some other well-known examples of unfinished works completed by other hands include:

  8. Glossary of music terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_music_terminology

    A musician who plays any instrument with a keyboard. In Classical music, this may refer to instruments such as the piano, pipe organ, harpsichord, and so on. In a jazz or popular music context, this may refer to instruments such as the piano, electric piano, synthesizer, Hammond organ, and so on. Klangfarbenmelodie (Ger.)

  9. An Sylvia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Sylvia

    An Sylvia" became one of three Shakespeare texts set to music by Schubert; the other two are "Ständchen" ("Hark, hark! the lark") and "Trinklied" ("Bacchus, feister Fürst des Weins", D 888). [ 3 ] Schubert's friend, Franz von Schober , kept the original manuscript and managed Schubert's music after the composer's death. [ 2 ]