Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SirsiDynix announced the BLUEcloud Library Services Platform (LSP) at the annual users group conference, COSUGI. It is a browser-based system that will integrate SirsiDynix's "administration, discovery, acquisition, and collection management applications."
Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae, standard abbreviation ILS, is a three-volume selection of Latin inscriptions edited by Hermann Dessau. The work was published in five parts serially from 1892 to 1916, with numerous reprints. Supporting material and notes are all written in Latin.
full title: Symphony for Cello and Orchestra Op. 68. Premiered 1964 Stephen Brown: The Northern Journey: Yevgeny Brusilovsky: 3: The Golden Steppe: 1944: 6: On a Theme of Kurmangazy: 1965: Anton Bruckner: 00: F minor: 00: student work written prior to No. 1 0: D minor: Nullte: written after No. 1 and before No. 2 2: C minor: Symphony of Pauses ...
In Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, a large part of the scherzo movement is recalled to end the finale's development section and lead into the recapitulation; the Ninth Symphony's finale rapidly presents explicit reminiscences of the three preceding movements before discovering the idea that is to be its own principal theme; while both the Piano ...
Symphony No. 3 (Saint-Saëns) or Organ Symphony This page was last edited on 30 September 2020, at 12:15 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The Symphony No. 3 in B minor "Ilia Mourometz", [1] Op. 42, is a large symphonic work by Russian composer Reinhold Glière. A program symphony, it depicts the life of Kievan Rus' folk hero Ilya Muromets. It was written from 1908 to 1911 and dedicated to Alexander Glazunov. [2]
The Symphony No. 3 in C major, Op. 52, is a three-movement work for orchestra written from 1904 to 1907 by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.. Coming between the romantic intensity of Sibelius's first two symphonies and the more austere complexity of his later symphonies, it is a good-natured, triumphal, and deceptively simple-sounding piece.
With the Fourth Symphony, Tchaikovsky hit upon a solution he would refine in his remaining two numbered symphonies and his program symphony Manfred—one that would enable to reconcile the more personal, more dramatic and heightened emotional statements he wished to make with the classical structure of the symphony, showing, as musicologist ...