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Funeral march of Francesco Porto used during Holy Week in Ruvo di Puglia. Funeral marches found their most common and regular expression in the Passiontide processions of the Spanish and Italian religious tradition which were propagated to Latin America especially Peru and Guatemala and all of Christianity. In southern Italy, popular funeral ...
Songs of Grace and Glory (1892) The Salute of the Nations (1893) Rose, Thistle and Shamrock (1901) In the Realm of the Dance (1902) A Day at Great Lakes (1915) On the 5:15 (1916) In Pulpit and Pew (1917) A Study in Rhythms (1920) An Old-Fashioned Girl (1922) Music of the Minute (1922) The Merry-Merry Chorus (1923) On With The Dance (1923)
Sousa quoted two songs to construct this march. The first strain quotes "When a Wooer Goes a-Wooing" from Gilbert and Sullivan's The Yeomen of the Guard. The trio quotes "Seeing Nellie Home", also known as "Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party" by Patrick S. Gilmore. The march is quite brief with only a short interlude between the second and trio strains.
– Beethoven’s Funeral March No 1. The stately, mournful piece was played at the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral in April 2021, as well as the procession to the lying in state of the Queen Mother ...
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Siegfried's Funeral March; Il Silenzio (song) Slonimsky's Earbox; Sonata for Violin and Cello (Ravel) Song for Athene; String Quartet No. 4 (Shostakovich) String Quartet No. 7 (Shostakovich) Symphonies of Wind Instruments; Symphony No. 2 (Milhaud)
College administrators proposed “Daughters of Texas March,” and that is the name by which it is performed today. (Another proposed name he rejected, thank goodness, was “March for the C.I.A.”)
Op. Posth. 108, March in D major for orchestra (1841) (MWV P 16) Op. Posth. 109, Song without words in D major for cello and piano (1845) (MWV Q 34) Op. Posth. 110, Piano Sextet in D major (1824) (MWV Q 16) Op. Posth. 111, Tu es Petrus in A major for five voices and orchestra (1827) (MWV A 4) Op. Posth. 112, 2 Sacred songs for voice and piano ...