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Cantata

Index Cantata

A cantata (literally "sung", past participle feminine singular of the Italian verb cantare, "to sing") is a vocal composition with an instrumental accompaniment, typically in several movements, often involving a choir. [1]

1228 relations: A Cambridge Mass, A cappella, A Ceremony of Carols, A Sermon, a Narrative and a Prayer, A Survivor from Warsaw, Aachener Bachverein, Abu Ghosh Vocal Music Festival, Academic cantatas (Sibelius), Accademia Filarmonica Romana, Aci, Galatea e Polifemo, Acis and Galatea (Handel), Adalbert von Goldschmidt, Adelaide (Beethoven), Adiemus (albums), Adolphe Deslandres, Adolphe Samuel, Advent, Affair of the Sausages, Agnes Giebel, Agrippina condotta a morire or Dunque sarà pur vero, Air (music), Alan Wilson (composer), Alba Quintanilla, Albéric Second, Alberich Mazak, Albert Dupuis, Albert Hay Malotte, Albert Visetti, Alberto Randegger, Aldo Bertocci, Alessandro Grandi, Alessandro Marcello, Alessandro Scarlatti, Alessandro Stradella, Alexander Goehr, Alexander Mackenzie (composer), Alexander Nevsky, Alexander Nevsky (film), Alexander Nevsky (Prokofiev), Alexander Pushkin, Alexander Uriah Boskovich, Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky, Alexey Verstovsky, Alexius of Rome, Alfrēds Kalniņš, Alfred Bruneau, Alfred Cellier, Alfred Gaul, Alfred P. 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Wilson Adams, Casavant Frères Ltée. Opus 1841 (Highland Arts Centre Organ), Cataldo Amodei, Catharina van Rennes, Catterino Cavos, Catulli Carmina, Catullus, Ceremonial use of lights, Chana Bloch, Chang hen ge (poem), Charles A. E. Harriss, Charles Gounod, Charles O'Neill (musician), Charles Ravier, Charles Villiers Stanford, Charles-Valentin Alkan, Charlotte Sainton-Dolby, Che vidi oh ciel, che vidi, Children's Crusade (disambiguation), Choir, Chor von St. Bonifatius, Choral concerto, Choral symphony, Chorale, Chorale cantata cycle, Chorale prelude, Chorale setting, Christ in the winepress, Christian Benjamin Uber, Christian Ehregott Weinlig, Christian Friedrich Witt, Christian Gottfried Krause, Christian Ritter, Christine Schäfer, Christmas cantata, Christmas Oratorio, Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse, Christoph Graupner, Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert, Christopher Bowers-Broadbent, Christopher Knowles, Christus Apollo, Church cantata, Church cantata (Bach), Circe in the arts, Clara Butt, Clara Louise Burnham, Classical music, Classical music of the United Kingdom, Claude Debussy, Claudio Fabi, Claudio Monteverdi, Clémence de Grandval, Clori, Tirsi e Fileno, Colin McAlpin, College of the Neophytes, Commemorative Cantata for the Centenary of the Birth of Pushkin, Concert pitch, Concerto, Conrad Beck, Consonance and dissonance, Constantin Christian Dedekind, Contemporary harpsichord, Cornelius Gurlitt (composer), Cristina Altamira, Cristoforo Caresana, Cultural legacy of Mazeppa, Czech Requiem, D. C. F. Moodie, Dalla guerra amorosa, Damien Top, Daniel Eberlin, Das ist je gewißlich wahr, Das klagende Lied, Dave Brubeck, David D'Or, David Jenkins (composer), David Lumsdaine, David Mills (bass), David Pohle, David Tunley, David Wynne (composer), Davide penitente, Désiré-Alexandre Batton, Deems Taylor, Del bell'idolo mio (Handel), Denn du wirst meine Seele nicht in der Hölle lassen, Der Herr ist mit mir (Buxtehude), Derek Ingram Hill, Deutsche Sinfonie, Dick Anthony (musician), Dictum, Die erste Walpurgisnacht, Dies Natalis (cantata), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Dietrich von Bausznern, Dimitri Nicolau, Dinesh Subasinghe, Dmitri Shostakovich, Dmitry Pokrass, Dmytro Bortniansky, Doctor Faustus (novel), Domenico Annibali, Domenico Cimarosa, Domenico Lalli, Dominick Argento, Dona nobis pacem (Vaughan Williams), Douglas Allanbrook, Duane A. Moody, Dudley Buck, Earl Robinson, Eaton Faning, Ed Di Lello, Eduard Flipse, Eduard Mertke, Edward Burlingame Hill, Edward Francis Fitzwilliam, Edward Loder, Edward Naylor, Egon Wellesz, Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld, Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld (Stölzel), Eitan Avitsur, Elegy on the Death of Daughter Olga, Elin Manahan Thomas, Elisabeth Lutyens, Elisabetta de Gambarini, Elizabeth Laurence, Elmer Samuel Hosmer, Emil Simon, Emily Davison, Emin Sabitoglu, Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Boston, Emmanuel Hiel, Emmanuel Trenque, Entsagen, WAB 14, Erhard Karkoschka, Eric Ball (composer), Eric W. Sawyer, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Erik Kurmangaliev, Ernest Boulanger (composer), Ernest Hilbert, Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Ero e Leandro, Es ist das Heil uns kommen her, Ester Mombelli, Esterházy, Eugène Bozza, Eugen Eckert, Eva Fogelman, Eva Mei, F. 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P. E. Bach), Magnificat Baroque Ensemble, Mahtra War, Majesty Music, Malcolm Sargent, Malvern Hills, Manuel García (tenor), Manuel José de Quirós, Marc Vaubourgoin, Marcel Dupré, Marcello Abbado, March 1968, Marco Marazzoli, Maria Theresia von Paradis, Marià Obiols, Mariem Hassan, Marietta Alboni, Marietta Brambilla, Marika Pečená, Marina Domashenko, Martin Krumbiegel, Martin Shaw (composer), Masaaki Suzuki, Masonic music, Mastropiero que nunca, Mats Lillhannus, Matteo Babini, Matteo Capranica, Maurice Goldman, Maurice Jacobson, Max Baumann, Max Butting, Max Vogrich, Mayer Cantata, WAB 60, Mátyás Seiber, Münchener Bach-Chor, Medieval lituus, Meeresstille und glückliche Fahrt (Beethoven), Meine Seele rühmt und preist, BWV 189, Melesio Morales, Melissa Dunphy, Membra Jesu Nostri, Merlin (metal band), Meyer Lutz, Michael Christian Festing, Michael Flanders, Michael Tippett, Michael William Balfe, Michel Corrette, Mihovil Logar, Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis, Mikhail Ivanov (composer), Milena Jesenská, Milka Stojanović, Milton Barnes (composer), Mixed youth choir Leiden orphanage, Mladen Stanev, Mme Papavoine, Moby Dick (cantata), Momente, Monody, Moscow (Tchaikovsky), Moses Sofer, Moshe Cotel, Motiejus Gustaitis, Moyse Alcan, Music based on the works of Oscar Wilde, Music history of Hungary, Music of Barbados, Music of Guatemala, Music of Norway, Music of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Musica Alta Ripa, Musica Florea, Musical historicism, Musical settings of The Seven Last Words of Christ, Myroslav Skoryk, Naïve (album), Naomi and Ruth, Ned Rorem, Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli, Niccolò Jommelli, Nicola De Giosa, Nicola Sala, Nicolas Isouard, Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux, Niels Gade, Nikolai Obukhov, Nikolai Roslavets, No-res, Nobuo Uematsu, Novo Mesto, Noye's Fludde, Nun laßt uns Gott dem Herren, Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren, O Fortuna, O lucenti, o sereni occhi (Handel), Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (Handel), Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne, Olaus Andreas Grøndahl, Ole Olsen (musician), Olga Elena Mattei, Oliver Friggieri, Olof Åhlström, Olympic Hymn, Oma maa, On Shore and Sea, Ophir, Oratorio, Orchestral song, Orchestral Suite No. 2 (Tchaikovsky), Orchestral suites (Bach), Oreste, Organ concertos, Op. 4 (Handel), Organ Sonata (Elgar), Origins of opera, Orlando Morgan, Osbert Sitwell, Osian Ellis, Ottorino Respighi, Our Little Secret, Outline of music, Overture, Owen Brannigan, P. 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Bach, Theo Altmeyer, Thespis (opera), Thomas Koppel, Thomas Quasthoff, Thomas Roseingrave, Thomas Thaarup, Thomas Traherne, Thomas Z. Shepard, Thomas-Louis Bourgeois, Thomaskantor, Three Russian Songs, Op. 41 (Rachmaninoff), Threni (Stravinsky), Timeline of music in the United States (1880–1919), Timeline of music in the United States (1920–49), Timpani, Tolia Nikiprowetzky, Tom Hurndall, Tom Taylor, Tono humano, Tornrak, Torquato Tasso, Tosca, Totentanz (Adès), Tra le fiamme (Il consiglio) (Handel), Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music, Trevor Pinnock, Trilogy: An Opera Company, Trionfi (Orff), Tristram Cary, Tromb-al-ca-zar, ou Les criminels dramatiques, Trombone, Tsolak Bekaryan, Types of trombone, Ulrich Cordes, Un Concert pour Mazarin, Un'alma innamorata (Handel), Union of Soviet Composers, Usavich, Vahram Sargsyan, Valentin Adamberger, Valery Borisov (conductor), Václav Dobiáš, Vítězslav Novák, Vítězslava Kaprálová, Venetian polychoral style, Verband Deutscher Konzertchöre, Vergißmeinnicht, WAB 93, Victor Herbert, Victor Massé, Victor Sieg, Vincent Lübeck, Vincenzo Manfredini, Viola d'amore, Virginia de' Medici, Vladimir Miller, Vox Christi, W. J. Sparrow Simpson, Walter Morse Rummel, Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan, Wendelin Weißheimer, Wer sucht die Pracht, wer wünscht den Glanz, BWV 221, Werde munter, mein Gemüte, Werner Wolf Glaser, Westminster Presbyterian Church (Alexandria, Virginia), When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd, Whitney Eugene Thayer, Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, Wie soll ich dich empfangen, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, Wilhelm Peterson-Berger, Wilhelm Stenhammar, Will Todd, William Edwin Haesche, William G. Whittaker, William Henry Harris, William Rhys-Herbert, William Sterndale Bennett, William Walton, Willy Burkhard, Wolfgang Schäfer, Women in music, Xavier Boisselot, Yellow River Cantata, Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus, Zdravitsa, Zenón Rolón, 1726 in music, 1727, 1857 in music, 1875 in music, 1913 in music, 1939 in music, 1943 in music, 1968 in British music, 1968 in the United Kingdom. Expand index (1178 more) »

A Cambridge Mass

A Cambridge Mass is a choral work in G major by Ralph Vaughan Williams written between 1898-99 as part of his studies in Cambridge for his Doctorate of Music.

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A cappella

A cappella (Italian for "in the manner of the chapel") music is specifically group or solo singing without instrumental accompaniment, or a piece intended to be performed in this way.

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A Ceremony of Carols

A Ceremony of Carols, Op.

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A Sermon, a Narrative and a Prayer

A Sermon, a Narrative and a Prayer is a cantata for alto and tenor singers, a narrator, chorus, and orchestra by Igor Stravinsky, composed in 1960–61.

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A Survivor from Warsaw

A Survivor from Warsaw, Op.

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Aachener Bachverein

Aachener Bachverein (often abbreviated as ABV) is a German oratorio choir of the Evangelical Church in the Rhineland in the city of Aachen that was founded in 1913 by Heinrich Boell.

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Abu Ghosh Vocal Music Festival

The Abu Ghosh Vocal Music Festival is a vocal music festival that takes place biannually during the Jewish holidays of Sukkot and Shavuot, at Our Lady of the Ark of the Covenant Church in Abu Ghosh, Israel and the surrounding area.

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Academic cantatas (Sibelius)

Academic cantatas are two cantatas for university graduation ceremonies by Jean Sibelius.

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Accademia Filarmonica Romana

The Accademia Filarmonica Romana is a musical institution based in Rome, Italy.

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Aci, Galatea e Polifemo

Aci, Galatea e Polifemo (HWV 72) is a dramatic cantata—also called a serenata—by George Frideric Handel.

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Acis and Galatea (Handel)

Acis and Galatea (HWV 49) is a musical work by George Frideric Handel with an English text by John Gay.

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Adalbert von Goldschmidt

Adalbert von Goldschmidt (5 May 1848, Vienna - 21 December 1906, Vienna) was an Austrian composer.

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Adelaide (Beethoven)

Adelaide, Op. 46, is a song for solo voice and piano composed in about 1795 by Ludwig van Beethoven.

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Adiemus (albums)

Caroline RecordsVirgin/EMI Records | associated_acts.

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Adolphe Deslandres

Adolphe Édouard Marie Deslandres (22 January 1840 – 30 July 1911) was a French composer and organist.

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Adolphe Samuel

Adolphe-Abraham Samuel (11 July 1824 – 11 September 1898) was a Belgian music critic, conductor and composer.

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Advent

Advent is a season observed in many Christian churches as a time of expectant waiting and preparation for the celebration of the Nativity of Jesus at Christmas as well as the return of Jesus at the second coming.

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Affair of the Sausages

The Affair of the Sausages (1522) was the event that sparked the Reformation in Zürich.

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Agnes Giebel

Agnes Giebel (10 August 1921 – 24 April 2017) was a German classical soprano.

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Agrippina condotta a morire or Dunque sarà pur vero

Agrippina condotta a morire or Dunque sarà pur vero, HWV110, is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano, two violins and continuo, composed by Georg Frideric Handel while he was in Italy, at some time between 1707 - 08.

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Air (music)

An air ("aria"; also ayr, ayre in French) is a song-like vocal or instrumental composition.

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Alan Wilson (composer)

Alan J. Wilson (born 1947), is a British composer of church music.

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Alba Quintanilla

Alba Quintanilla (born July 11, 1944) is a Venezuelan composer, harpist, harpsichordist, pianist, conductor, and pedagogue.

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Albéric Second

Pierre Albéric Second, (17 June 1817 - 2 June 1887) was a 19th-century French journalist, novelist and playwright.

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Alberich Mazak

Alberich Mazak, also Alberik Mazák (1609 – 9 May 1661) was a 17th-century Czech-Austrian composer.

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Albert Dupuis

Albert Dupuis (1 March 1877 – 19 September 1967) was a Belgian composer.

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Albert Hay Malotte

Albert Hay Malotte (May 19, 1895 – November 16, 1964) was an American pianist, organist, composer and educator.

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Albert Visetti

Albert Anthony Visetti (13 May 1846–10 July 1928) was a Dalmatian musician who moved to London where he was Professor of Singing at the Royal College of Music, becoming a Fellow in 1921.

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Alberto Randegger

Alberto Randegger (13 April 1832 – 18 December 1911) was an Italian-born composer, conductor and singing teacher, best known for promoting opera and new works of British music in England during the Victorian era and for his widely used textbook on singing technique.

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Aldo Bertocci

Aldo Bertocci (9 May 1915 – 1 april 2004) was an Italian operatic tenor who sang both comprimario and leading roles in a career spanning the late 1940s to the mid-1970s.

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Alessandro Grandi

Alessandro Grandi (1590 – after June 1630, but in that year) was a northern Italian composer of the early Baroque era, writing in the new concertato style.

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Alessandro Marcello

Alessandro Ignazio Marcello (1 February 1673 – 19 June 1747 in Venice) was an Italian nobleman and composer.

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Alessandro Scarlatti

Pietro Alessandro Gaspare Scarlatti (2 May 1660 – 22 October 1725) was an Italian Baroque composer, known especially for his operas and chamber cantatas.

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Alessandro Stradella

Alessandro Stradella (Nepi, 3 April 1639 – Genoa, 25 February 1682) was an Italian composer of the middle Baroque period.

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Alexander Goehr

Peter Alexander Goehr (born 10 August 1932) is an English composer and academic.

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Alexander Mackenzie (composer)

Sir Alexander Campbell Mackenzie KCVO (22 August 184728 April 1935) was a Scottish composer, conductor and teacher best known for his oratorios, violin and piano pieces, Scottish folk music and works for the stage.

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Alexander Nevsky

St.

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Alexander Nevsky (film)

Alexander Nevsky (Алекса́ндр Не́вский) is a 1938 historical drama film directed by Sergei Eisenstein.

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Alexander Nevsky (Prokofiev)

Alexander Nevsky (Александр Невский) is the score composed by Sergei Prokofiev for Sergei Eisenstein's 1938 film Alexander Nevsky.

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Alexander Pushkin

Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (a) was a Russian poet, playwright, and novelist of the Romantic eraBasker, Michael.

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Alexander Uriah Boskovich

Alexander (Sándor) Uriah Boskovich (אלכסנדר (שאנדור) אוריה בּוֹסְקוֹביץ; August 16, 1907 – November 5, 1964) was an Israeli composer.

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Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky

Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky (born 30 March 1945) is a Russian-born composer who lives in Switzerland.

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Alexey Verstovsky

Alexey Nikolayevich Verstovsky (Алексéй Никола́евич Верстóвский) was a Russian composer, musical bureaucrat and rival of Mikhail Glinka.

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Alexius of Rome

Saint Alexius or Alexis of Rome or Alexis of Edessa was an Eastern Saint whose veneration was later transplanted to Rome.

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Alfrēds Kalniņš

Alfrēds Bruno Jānis Kalniņš (23 August 1879 in Cēsis, Governorate of Livonia – 23 December 1951 in Riga, Latvian SSR) was a Latvian composer, organist, pedagogue, music critic and conductor; the founder of national Latvian opera.

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Alfred Bruneau

Louis Charles Bonaventure Alfred Bruneau (3 March 1857 – 15 June 1934) was a French composer who played a key role in the introduction of realism in French opera.

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Alfred Cellier

Alfred Cellier (1 December 184428 December 1891) was an English composer, orchestrator and conductor.

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Alfred Gaul

Alfred Robert Gaul (30 April 1837 — 13 September 1913) was an English composer, conductor and organist.

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Alfred P. Addaquay

Alfred Patrick Addaquay (born 17 September 1985) is a Ghanaian keyboardist, composer, arranger, conductor, and choral director.

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Alice Mary Smith

Alice Mary Smith, married name Alice Mary Meadows White (19 May 1839 – 4 December 1884) was an English composer.

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Alice Tegnér

Alice Charlotta Tegnér (12 March 1864 – 26 May 1943) was a Swedish music teacher, poet and composer.

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Allan Pettersson

Gustaf Allan Pettersson (19September 191120June 1980) was a Swedish composer.

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Allor ch'io dissi addio

Allor ch'io dissi addio (HWV 80) is a dramatic secular cantata (a vocal composition with an instrumental accompaniment) for soprano written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707–08.

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Alphonse Thys

Alphonse Thys (8 March 1807 – 1 August 1879) was a 19th-century French composer.

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Amandus Ivanschiz

Amandus (Matthias Leopold) Ivanschiz (bapt. 24 December 1727 – 1758) was an Austrian composer of the early classical period and a member of the Pauline order.

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Amarus

Amarus is a cantata composed by Czech composer Leoš Janáček, consisting of five movements.

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American Bach Soloists

The American Bach Soloists ("ABS") is an American baroque orchestra dedicated to preserving the heritage of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach and his contemporaries through historically informed performances on period instruments.

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And God Created Great Whales

And God Created Great Whales, Op.

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Andante Festivo

Andante Festivo is a single-movement composition by Jean Sibelius, originally scored for string quartet in 1922.

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André Bloch (composer)

André Bloch (14 January 1873, in Wissembourg – 7 August 1960, in Paris) was a French composer and music educator.

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André Campra

André Campra (baptized 4 December 1660 – 29 June 1744) was a French composer and conductor.

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André Cardinal Destouches

André Cardinal Destouches (sometimes called des Touches) (baptised 6 April 1672 – 7 February 1749) was a French composer best known for the opéra-ballet Les élémens.

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André Casanova

André Marcel Charles Casanova (12 October 1919 – 7 March 2009) was a French composer.

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André Jorrand

André Jorrand (27 November 1921 – 15 Decembre 2007) was a French composer and organist, 1st titular of the Sainte-Croix d'Aubusson church.

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André Messager

André Charles Prosper Messager (30 December 1853 – 24 February 1929) was a French composer, organist, pianist and conductor.

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Andrea Luchesi

Andrea Luca Luchesi (also spelled Lucchesi; 23 May 1741 – 21 March 1801) was an Italian composer.

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Andrea Salvadori

Andrea Salvadori (1591 – buried 25 August 1634) was an Italian poet and librettist.

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Andreas Hammerschmidt

Andreas Hammerschmidt (1611 or 1612 – 29 October 1675), the "Orpheus of Zittau," was a German Bohemian composer and organist of the early to middle Baroque era.

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Andreas Peter Berggreen

Andreas Peter Berggreen (March 2, 1801 – November 8, 1880) was a Danish composer, organist, and pedagogue.

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Andrejs Jurjāns

Andrejs Jurjāns (September 30, 1856 – September 28, 1922) was a Latvian composer and musicologist.

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Andrew Lloyd Webber

Andrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber Kt (born 22 March 1948) is an English composer and impresario of musical theatre.

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Andrzej Krzanowski

Andrzej Krzanowski (9 April 1951 in Czechowice-Dziedzice – 1 October 1990 in Czechowice-Dziedzice) was a Polish composer of classical music, accordionist, and teacher.

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Andrzej Panufnik

Sir Andrzej Panufnik (24 September 1914 – 27 October 1991) was a Polish composer and conductor.

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Ann Mounsey

Ann Sheppard Mounsey, or Ann Mounsey Bartholomew on marriage (1811–1891), was born on 17 April 1811 at 21 Old Compton Street, Soho, London, the eldest child of Thomas Mounsey, a licensed victualler, and his wife, Mary, née Briggs.

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Anna Kraus

Anna Kraus, Op.

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Anna Mombelli

Anna Mombelli, born Marianna Mombelli, (1795 – after 1817) was an Italian opera singer who sang both mezzo-soprano and contralto roles. She is primarily known for having created the role of Siveno in Rossini's first opera Demetrio e Polibio in 1812. Mombelli was born in Naples, the second of Domenico Mombelli and Vincenza Viganò-Mombelli's twelve children. She was trained in singing by her father who had been a prominent tenor in the 1780s and 90s. She often appeared in the Mombelli family's opera troupe along with her elder sister Ester in further productions of Demetrio e Polibio as well as in the premiere of Carlo Coccia's Evellina. She also appeared with her sister in the world premiere of Vincenzo Migliorucci's cantata Paolo e Virginia. According to Fétis, she sang with success in Milan during the 1814, 1815, and 1816 seasons and also appeared as Tisbe to Ester's Angelina in La Cenerentola at the Teatro Carignano in 1817. Mombelli retired from the stage shortly after her marriage in 1817 to the journalist Angelo Lambertini whom Henry Prunières described as "a savant and a fool, an excellent violin player and an intimate friend of Rossini's.".

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António Teixeira

António Teixeira (14 May 1707 – after 1769) was a Portuguese composer.

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Antônio Carlos Gomes

Antônio Carlos Gomes (Campinas, July 11, 1836 – Belém, September 16, 1896) was the first New World composer whose work was accepted by Europe.

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Anti-Formalist Rayok

The Little Antiformalistic Paradise (sometimes translated literally as "Antiformalist Rayok", also known as simply Rayok, The Peep-show, Little Paradise, The Gods and A Learner's Manual), without opus number, is a satirical cantata for four voices, chorus and piano by Dmitri Shostakovich.

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Antoine de La Fosse

Antoine de La Fosse (alias Sieur d'Aubigny; 1653 or 1658 – November 2, 1708), was a French playwright who wrote four tragedies, and was the last French author of tragedies to make a name for himself at the end of the 17th century. The son of a goldsmith and the nephew of painter Charles de La Fosse, Antoine served first as the secretary for the Envoy of France to Florence. La Fosse was then attached to the Marquis Francois Joseph Créquy (1662–1702) who died in the Battle of Luzzara on August 15, 1702, before he became secretary for the 2nd Duke of Aumont Louis-Marie-Victor d'Aumont (1632–1704). La Fosse translated the odes of Anacreon to French (Traduction nouvelle des odes d'Anacreon, sur l'original grec) in 1704, and popular with contemporaries the second edition was published in 1706. German classicist (1701–1756) praised the French verse translation. La Fosse's chef d'œuvre Manlius Capitolinus (1698) about Marcus Manlius Capitolinus (died), was imitated from the English dramatist Thomas Otway's play Venice Preserv'd, who in turn had taken his plot from César Vichard de Saint-Réal's Conjuration des Espagnols contre la République de Venise en l'Année M. DC. XVIII (1674). La Fosse's later plays were not as successful, but according to theater historian Phyllis Hartnoll in The Oxford Companion to the Theatre, many of his contemporaries thought he might have rivalled Jean Racine had he begun his dramatic career earlier. His collected plays were popular for more than a century and were re-published multiple times in the 18th and 19th century, e.g. in two quarto volumes in 1747 (Nouvelle edition - "new edition"), and in 1811 in two octavo volumes. Among his other works of elegies, odes, epigrams, poems, and cantatas is an ode written in Italian, a language he became fluent in while in Florence, which earned him a membership of. La Fosse is interred in St-Gervais-et-St-Protais, Paris.

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Anton Webern

Anton Friedrich Wilhelm (von) Webern (3 December 188315 September 1945) was an Austrian composer and conductor.

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Antonín Dvořák

Antonín Leopold Dvořák (8 September 1841 – 1 May 1904) was a Czech composer.

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Antonio Caldara

Antonio Caldara (1670 – 28 December 1736) was an Italian Baroque composer.

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Antonio Cesti

Pietro Marc'Antonio Cesti (baptism 5 August 162314 October 1669), known today primarily as an Italian composer of the Baroque era, was also a singer (tenor), and organist.

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Antonio Cifra

Antonio Cifra (1584? – 2 October 1629 in Loreto) was an Italian composer of the Roman School of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Antonio D'Antoni

Antonio D'Antoni (25 June 1801 – 18 August 1859) was an Italian opera composer and conductor.

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Antonio Lotti

Antonio Lotti (5 January 1667 – 5 January 1740) was an Italian Baroque composer.

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Antonio Maria Abbatini

Antonio Maria Abbatini (26 January 1595, or 1609 or 1610 – ? after 15 March 1679, or 1677) was an Italian composer, active mainly in Rome.

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Antonio Maria Bononcini

Antonio Maria Bononcini (18 June 1677 – 8 July 1726) was an Italian cellist and composer, the younger brother of the better-known Giovanni Bononcini.

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Antonio Sacchini

Antonio Maria Gasparo Sacchini (14 June 17306 October 1786) was an Italian composer, most famous for his operas.

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Antonio Sapienza

Antonio Sapienza (18 June 1794 – 1855) was an Italian composer and conductor.

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Antun Dobronić

Antun Dobronić (2 April 1878, Jelsa, Croatia – 12 December 1955, Zagreb, Croatia) was a Croatian composer and pupil of Vítězslav Novák.

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Apollo e Dafne (Handel)

Apollo e Dafne (Apollo and Daphne, HWV 122) is a secular cantata composed by George Frideric Handel in 1709–10.

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Archpoet

The Archpoet (1130 – c. 1165), or Archipoeta (in Latin and German),Jeep 2001: 21.

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Aria

An aria (air; plural: arie, or arias in common usage, diminutive form arietta or ariette) in music was originally any expressive melody, usually, but not always, performed by a singer.

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Ariadne auf Naxos (Benda)

Ariadne auf Naxos (Ariadne on Naxos) is a duodrama in one act by Czech composer Jiří Antonín Benda (also Georg Benda) with a German libretto by.

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Arioso

In classical music, arioso (also aria parlante) is a type of solo vocal piece, usually occurring in an opera or oratorio, falling somewhere between recitative and aria in style.

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Arleen Auger

Joyce Arleen Auger (September 13, 1939 – June 10, 1993) was an American soprano, admired for her coloratura voice and interpretations of works by Bach, Handel, Haydn, Monteverdi, Gluck, and Mozart.

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Arneth Cantata, WAB 61

The Arneth Cantata, WAB 61, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1852.

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Arthur Bliss

Sir Arthur Edward Drummond Bliss (2 August 189127 March 1975) was an English composer and conductor.

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Arthur Elwell Fisher

Arthur Elwell Fisher (29 May 1848 – after 1912) was an English composer, organist, violist, violinist, and music educatorLadislav Cselenyi-Granch.

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Arthur Shepherd

Arthur Shepherd (February 19, 1880 – January 12, 1958) was an American composer and conductor in the 20th century.

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Arthur Sullivan

Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan MVO (13 May 1842 – 22 November 1900) was an English composer.

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Artur Kapp

Artur Kapp (28 February 1878 – 14 January 1952) was an Estonian composer.

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Arturo Toscanini

Arturo Toscanini (March 25, 1867 – January 16, 1957) was an Italian conductor.

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Arvo Pärt

Arvo Pärt (born 11 September 1935) is an Estonian composer of classical and religious music.

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Atlanta Baroque Orchestra

The Atlanta Baroque Orchestra (ABO), founded in 1997 in Atlanta, Georgia, is the first and oldest professional orchestra in the Southeastern United States of America dedicated to historically informed performance, (also called "authentic performance practice") of music from the Baroque era on period instruments.

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Atlántida (opera)

Atlántida (Atlantis) is an opera (titled a 'cantata escénica') in a prologue and three parts, by Manuel de Falla, based on the Catalan poem L'Atlàntida by Jacint Verdaguer.

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August Brunetti-Pisano

August Brunetti-Pisano (24 October 1870 - 1 September 1943), was an Austrian composer.

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August Ferdinand Anacker

August Ferdinand Anacker (17 October 1790 – 21 August 1854) was a German composer.

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Auguste Blondeau

Pierre-Auguste-Louis Blondeau (15 October 1786 – 14 April 1863) was a 19th-century French composer, violinist, music theorist and historian.

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Auguste Vaucorbeil

Auguste Emmanuel Vaucorbeil, born Veaucorbeille, (15 December 1821 – 2 November 1884) was a French composer and theatre manager.

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Aure soavi e lieti (Handel)

Aure soavi e liete (HWV 84) ("Soft and Delightful Breezes") is a Baroque dramatic secular cantata in the key of E-flat major composed by George Frideric Handel in 1707 while he was serving as Kapellmeister to the Ruspoli family in Rome.

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Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre (full name Élisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre; born Élisabeth Jacquet, 17 March 1665, Paris – 27 June 1729, Paris) was a French musician, harpsichordist and composer.

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Émile Bienaimé

Paul Émile Bienaimé (6 July 1802 – 17 January 1869) was a 19th-century French composer.

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Émile Mathieu (composer)

Émile Louis Victor Mathieu (Lille, 18 October 1844 – Ghent, 20 August 1932) was a Belgian music teacher and composer of classical music.

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Émile Moreau (playwright)

Marie-Jules-Émile Moreau (8 December 1852 – 27 December 1922), better known as Émile Moreau, was a 19th–20th century French playwright and librettist.

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Émile Paladilhe

Émile Paladilhe (3 June 1844 – 6 January 1926) was a French composer of the late romantic period.

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Émile Pessard

Émile Louis Fortuné Pessard (29 May 1843 – 10 February 1917) was a French composer.

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Étienne Méhul

Étienne Nicolas Méhul (22 June 1763 – 18 October 1817) was a French composer, "the most important opera composer in France during the Revolution".

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Óscar Esplá

Óscar Esplá y Triay (5 August 1886 – 6 January 1976) was a Spanish composer.

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Česlovas Sasnauskas

Česlovas Sasnauskas (Ceslaus Sosnowski, Czesław Sosnowski) (19 July 1867, Kapčiamiestis – 18 January 1916, Saint Petersburg) was a Lithuanian composer.

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Bach family

The Bach family was of importance in the history of music for nearly two hundred years, with over 50 known musicians and several notable composers, the best-known of whom was Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750).

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Bach House (Eisenach)

The Bach House in Eisenach, Thuringia, Germany, is a museum dedicated to the composer Johann Sebastian Bach who was born in the city.

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Bachchor Wiesbaden

The Bachchor Wiesbaden is a mixed choir at the Protestant Lutherkirche in Wiesbaden, the state capital of Hesse.

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Ballad for Americans

"Ballad for Americans" (1939), originally titled "The Ballad for Uncle Sam", is an American patriotic cantata with lyrics by John La Touche and music by Earl Robinson.

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Barnabas Gunn

Barnabas Gunn (c. 1680 – 6 February 1753) was an English organist and composer.

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Baroque music

Baroque music is a style of Western art music composed from approximately 1600 to 1750.

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Basel Boys Choir

The Basel Boys Choir (Knabenkantorei Basel) is a Swiss boys' choir based in Basel; it grew out of the Boys' Choir of the Protestant Church of Basel-City, founded by Hermann Ulbrich in 1927.

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Basil Harwood

Basil Harwood (11 April 1859 – 3 April 1949) was an English organist and composer.

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Bass trumpet

The bass trumpet is a type of low trumpet which was first developed during the 1820s in Germany.

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Bel canto

Bel canto (Italian for "beautiful singing" or "beautiful song"), along with a number of similar constructions ("bellezze del canto"/"bell'arte del canto"), is a term relating to Italian singing.

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Bell Witch

The Bell Witch or Bell Witch Haunting is a legend from Southern American folklore, centered on the 19th-century Bell family of northwest Robertson County, Tennessee.

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Belshazzar's Feast (Walton)

Belshazzar's Feast is a cantata by the English composer William Walton.

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Benedetto Marcello

Benedetto Giacomo Marcello ((31 July or 1 August 1686 – 24 July 1739) was an Italian composer, writer, advocate, magistrate, and teacher.

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Benjamin Cutter

Benjamin Cutter (Woburn, Massachusetts September 6, 1857 – Boston May 10, 1910) was an American violinist and composer.

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Benjamin Fondane

Benjamin Fondane or Benjamin Fundoianu (born Benjamin Wechsler, Wexler or Vecsler, first name also Beniamin or Barbu, usually abridged to B.; November 14, 1898 – October 2, 1944) was a Romanian and French poet, critic and existentialist philosopher, also noted for his work in film and theater.

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Benjamin Franklin Baker (musician)

Benjamin Franklin Baker (July 10, 1811 – March 11, 1889) was an American educator and composer.

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Beno Blachut

Beno Blachut (14 June 1913 – 10 January 1985) was a lauded Czech operatic tenor.

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Benson, Utah

Benson is a census-designated place (CDP) in Cache County, Utah, United States.

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Bernard de Bury

Bernard de Bury or Buri (20 August 1720 – 19 November 1785) was a French musician and court composer of the late Baroque era.

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Bernard Herrmann

Bernard Herrmann (born Max Herman; June 29, 1911December 24, 1975) was an American composer best known for his work in composing for motion pictures.

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Bernard Rogers

Bernard Rogers (4 February 1893 – 24 May 1968) was an American composer.

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Bernardo Pasquini

Bernardo Pasquini (Massa e Cozzile, 7 December 1637 Rome, 21 November 1710) was an Italian composer of operas, oratorios, cantatas and keyboard music.

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Bernhard Klein

Bernhard Joseph Klein (6 March 1793 – 9 September 1832) was a German composer.

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Bernhard Lichtenberg

The Blessed Bernhard Lichtenberg (3 December 1875 – 5 November 1943) was a German Roman Catholic priest and theologian, who died while in the custody of forces of the Third Reich.

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Big Children's Choir

The V. S. Popov Big Children's Choir of Russia Today Media (r) is one of the most popular children's choirs from the former USSR and Russia.

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Björgvin Guðmundsson

Björgvin Guðmundsson (16 April 1891 – 4 January 1961) was an Icelandic composer.

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Black knight

The black knight is a literary stock character who masks their identity and that of their liege by not displaying heraldry.

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Blegdamsvej Prison

Blegdamsvej Prison (Danish: Blegdamsvejens Fængsel) is a prison operated by Københavns Flngsler on Blegdamsvej in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark.

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Bo Nilsson

Bo Nilsson (1 May 1937 – 26 June 2018) was a Swedish composer and lyricist.

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Bob Chilcott

Robert "Bob" Chilcott (born 9 April 1955) is a British choral composer, conductor, and singer, based in Oxfordshire, England.

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Bojan Šober

Bojan Šober (born 1957 in Rijeka, Croatia) is a bass-baritone opera singer and manager.

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Boris Papandopulo

Boris Papandopulo (Honnef am Rhein, today's Bad Honnef, February 25, 1906 – Zagreb, October 16, 1991) was a Croatian composer and conductor of Russian Jewish descent.

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Boyhood's End

Boyhood's End is a cantata for tenor and piano composed by Michael Tippett in 1943, based on text by William Henry Hudson.

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Boys' choir

A boys' choir is a choir primarily made up of choirboys who have yet to begin puberty or are in the early to middle stages of puberty and so retain their more highly pitched childhood voice type.

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Brandenburg Concertos

The Brandenburg Concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach (BWV 1046–1051, original title: Six Concerts à plusieurs instruments)Johann Sebastian Bach's Werke, vol.

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Bread and Wine (novel)

Bread and Wine is an anti-fascist and anti-Stalinist novel written by Ignazio Silone.

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Brigida Banti

Brigida Giorgi, better known by her husband's surname and her stage-name, as Brigida Banti (1757–1806) was an Italian soprano.

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Bronislava Nijinska

Bronislava Nijinska (Bronisława Niżyńska; Бронисла́ва Фоми́нична Нижи́нская, Bronislava Fominichna Nizhinskaya, Браніслава Ніжынская); (– February 21, 1972) was a Polish ballet dancer, and an innovative choreographer.

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Bruno Bjelinski

Bruno Bjelinski (born Bruno Weiss; 1 November 1909 – 3 September 1992) was one of a most influential Croatian composers in the 20th century.

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Bruno Rossignol

Bruno Rossignol (born 1958 in Nanterre) is a French composer, choral conductor and conductor, pianist and music educator.

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Camargo Guarnieri

Mozart Camargo Guarnieri (February 1, 1907 – January 13, 1993) was a Brazilian composer.

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Camille Zeckwer

Camille W. Zeckwer (June 26, 1875–August 7, 1924) was an American composer.

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Cantata Cycle 1716–1717 (Telemann)

The Cantata Cycle 1716–1717 (also known as the Concertante Cycle) is a series of cantatas written by Georg Philipp Telemann while he was Frankfurt's Director of Municipal Music.

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Cantata for the 20th Anniversary of the October Revolution (Prokofiev)

The Cantata for the 20th Anniversary of the October Revolution, Op.

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Cantata misericordium

Cantata misericordium, op. 69, is a 1963 musical composition by British composer Benjamin Britten.

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Cantata on the Death of Emperor Joseph II

Ludwig van Beethoven's Cantata on the Death of Emperor Joseph II, WoO 87 is a cantata with a libretto by Severin Anton Averdonk, written in 1790 and intended for the funeral of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor.

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Cantata Profana

Cantata Profana (subtitled A kilenc csodaszarvas, Sz 94) is a work for double mixed chorus and orchestra by the Hungarian composer Béla Bartók.

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Cantata Singers and Ensemble

A singular desire to bring to Boston’s listeners music that isn’t being heard anywhere else has inspired Cantata Singers’ programming for 50 years.

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Cantatas (Bruckner)

Anton Bruckner composed eight cantatas during his life, the earliest ''Vergißmeinnicht'', in 1845, the last, ''Helgoland'', in 1893.

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Canticles (Britten)

The five Canticles constitute a series of five musical works by composer Benjamin Britten.

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Canzonetta

In music, a canzonetta (pl. canzonette, canzonetti or canzonettas) is a popular Italian secular vocal composition that originated around 1560.

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Capella de Ministrers

Capella de Ministrers is an early music group formed in 1987 in Valencia, Spain by Carles Magraner.

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Captain Noah and His Floating Zoo

Captain Noah and His Floating Zoo (1970) is a cantata by Joseph Horovitz composed in a popular style for unison or two-part voices and piano, with optional bass and drums.

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Caratacus

Caratacus (Brythonic *Caratācos, Middle Welsh Caratawc; Welsh Caradog; Breton Karadeg; Greek Καράτακος; variants Latin Caractacus, Greek Καρτάκης) was a 1st-century AD British chieftain of the Catuvellauni tribe, who led the British resistance to the Roman conquest.

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Carey Bonner

Carey Bonner, Rev (1 May 1859 – 16 June 1938) was a Baptist minister who served as the General Secretary of the National Sunday School Union from 1900 until 1929 and as Joint Secretary of the World Sunday School Association.

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Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf

Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf (2 November 1739 – 24 October 1799) was an Austrian composer, violinist and silvologist.

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Carl Frühling

Carl Frühling (28 November 186825 November 1937) was an Austrian composer and pianist.

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Carl Friedrich Zelter

Carl Friedrich Zelter (11 December 1758 15 May 1832)Grove/Fuller-Maitland, 1910.

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Carl Loewe

Johann Carl Gottfried Loewe (30 November 1796 – 20 April 1869), usually called Carl Loewe (sometimes seen as Karl Loewe), was a German composer, tenor singer and conductor.

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Carl Nielsen

Carl August Nielsen (9 June 18653 October 1931) was a Danish musician, conductor and violinist, widely recognized as his country's most prominent composer.

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Carl Orff

Carl Heinrich Maria Orff (–) was a German composer, best known for his cantata Carmina Burana (1937).

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Carl Orff's O Fortuna in popular culture

In 1935–36, the 13th-century poem "O Fortuna" was set to music by the German composer Carl Orff for his twenty-five-movement cantata Carmina Burana.

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Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (8 March 1714 – 14 December 1788), also formerly spelled Karl Philipp Emmanuel Bach, was a German Classical period musician and composer, the fifth child and second (surviving) son of Johann Sebastian Bach and Maria Barbara Bach.

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Carl Venth

Carl Venth (February 16, 1860 – January 29, 1938) was a German-American composer, violinist, conductor, music educator, and scholar.

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Carl Vine

Carl Vine, (born 8 October 1954), is an Australian composer of contemporary classical music.

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Carlo Ambrogio Lonati

Carlo Ambrogio Lonati also Lunati; (c.1645 – c.1712) was an Italian composer, violinist and singer.

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Carlo Caproli

Carlo Caproli or Caprioli (before 1620 – after 1675?), also called Carlo del Violino, was an Italian violinist, organist, and a leading composer of cantatas in mid-17th-century Italy.

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Carlo Francesco Cesarini

Carlo Francesco Cesarini, also known as Carlo del Violino, (1666 – after 2 September 1741) was an Italian composer and violinist born near Urbino and active in Rome from 1690.

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Carlo Gimach

Carlo Gimach (2 March 1651 – 31 December 1730) was a Maltese architect, engineer and poet who was active in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

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Carlo Milanuzzi

Carlo Milanuzzi (c. 1590 – c. 1647) was an Italian composer of the early Baroque era.

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Carlos Salzedo

Carlos Salzedo (6 April 1885 – 17 August 1961) was a French harpist, pianist, composer and conductor.

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Carmelo Pace

Maestro Chev.

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Carmen Bunster

Carmen Bunster (6 January 1918 – 23 April 2012) was a Chilean film and theatre actress.

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Carmina Burana (Orff)

Carmina Burana is a scenic cantata composed by Carl Orff in 1935 and 1936, based on 24 poems from the medieval collection Carmina Burana.

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Carrie B. Wilson Adams

Carrie Belle (Wilson) Adams (1859–1940) was the first American woman to conduct a public performance of Handel’s oratorio, “Messiah.”"Death Claims Song Writer" and "Carrie Adams' Works Many".

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Casavant Frères Ltée. Opus 1841 (Highland Arts Centre Organ)

Casavant Frères Ltée.

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Cataldo Amodei

Cataldo Amodei (6 May 164913 June 1693) was an Italian Baroque musician.

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Catharina van Rennes

Catharina van Rennes (2 August 1858, Utrecht – 23 September 1940, Amsterdam) was a Dutch music educator, soprano singer and composer.

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Catterino Cavos

Catterino Albertovich Cavos (Italiano: Catarino Camillo Cavos; Катери́но Альбе́ртович Ка́вос) (October 30, 1775 – May 10 (OS April 28), 1840), born Catarino Camillo Cavos, was an Italian composer, organist and conductor settled in Russia.

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Catulli Carmina

Catulli Carmina (Songs of Catullus) is a cantata by Carl Orff dating from 1940–1943.

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Catullus

Gaius Valerius Catullus (c. 84 – c. 54 BC) was a Latin poet of the late Roman Republic who wrote chiefly in the neoteric style of poetry, which is about personal life rather than classical heroes.

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Ceremonial use of lights

The ceremonial use of lights is found in the practice of many religions.

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Chana Bloch

Chana Bloch (March 15, 1940 – May 19, 2017) was an American poet, translator, and scholar.

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Chang hen ge (poem)

The Chang hen ge (長恨歌; lit. "The Song of Everlasting Regret/Sorrow") is a Tang dynasty poem by Bai Juyi (772-846) retelling the story of Yang Guifei (719-756), concubine of the Emperor Xuanzong of Tang.

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Charles A. E. Harriss

Charles Albert Edward Harriss (16 or 17 December 1862 – 31 July 1929) was an English then Canadian composer, impresario, educator, organist-choirmaster and conductor.

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Charles Gounod

Charles-François Gounod (17 June 181817 or 18 October 1893) was a French composer, best known for his Ave Maria, based on a work by Bach, as well as his opera Faust.

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Charles O'Neill (musician)

Charles O'Neill (31 August 1882 – 9 September 1964) was a Canadian bandmaster, composer, organist, cornetist, and music educator of Scottish birth and Irish parentage.

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Charles Ravier

Charles Ravier (5 June 1934 – 5 March 1984) was a 20th-century French composer, music director and choral conductor.

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Charles Villiers Stanford

Sir Charles Villiers Stanford (30 September 1852 – 29 March 1924) was an Irish composer, music teacher, and conductor.

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Charles-Valentin Alkan

Charles-Valentin Alkan (30 November 1813 – 29 March 1888) was a French-Jewish composer and virtuoso pianist.

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Charlotte Sainton-Dolby

Charlotte Helen Sainton-Dolby (17 May 182118 February 1885), was an English contralto, singing teacher and composer.

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Che vidi oh ciel, che vidi

Che vidi oh Ciel, che vidi is a cantata da camera written by Domenico Scarlatti for soprano, two violins, and basso continuo.

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Children's Crusade (disambiguation)

The Children's Crusade was a crusade to conquer the Holy Land in the year 1212.

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Choir

A choir (also known as a quire, chorale or chorus) is a musical ensemble of singers.

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Chor von St. Bonifatius

The Chor von St.

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Choral concerto

The choral concerto (Russian: хоровой концерт, khorovoy kontsert, Ukraininan: Хоровий концерт, khorovyj kontsert, occasionally known as "vocal concerto" or "church concerto") is a genre of sacred music which arose in Russian Empire in the middle of the seventeenth century and remained popular into the early nineteenth century.

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Choral symphony

A choral symphony is a musical composition for orchestra, choir, and sometimes solo vocalists that, in its internal workings and overall musical architecture, adheres broadly to symphonic musical form.

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Chorale

Chorale is the name of several related musical forms originating in the music genre of the Lutheran chorale.

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Chorale cantata cycle

Johann Sebastian Bach's chorale cantata cycle is the year-cycle of church cantatas he started composing in Leipzig from the first Sunday after Trinity in 1724.

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Chorale prelude

In music, a chorale prelude is a short liturgical composition for organ using a chorale tune as its basis.

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Chorale setting

Chorale settings refer to a wide variety of musical compositions, almost entirely of Protestant origin, which use a chorale as their basis.

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Christ in the winepress

Christ in the winepress or the mystical winepress is a motif in Christian iconography showing Christ standing in a winepress, where Christ himself becomes the grapes in the press.

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Christian Benjamin Uber

Christian Benjamin Uber (20 September 1746 – 1812) was a German jurist, composer and lover of music.

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Christian Ehregott Weinlig

Christian Ehregott Weinlig (September 30, 1743 – March 14, 1813) was a German composer and cantor of Dresden's Kreuzkirche.

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Christian Friedrich Witt

Christian Friedrich Witt, or Witte (c. 1660 – 13 April 1716) was a German composer, music editor and teacher.

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Christian Gottfried Krause

Christian Gottfried Krause (17 April 1717 – 4 May 1770) was a German lawyer, composer and music commentator.

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Christian Ritter

Christian Ritter (born probably 1645–1650, died probably after 1725) was a composer and organist of the North German organ school.

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Christine Schäfer

Christine Schäfer (born March 3, 1965) is a German soprano.

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Christmas cantata

A Christmas cantata or Nativity cantata is a cantata, music for voice or voices in several movements, for Christmas.

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Christmas Oratorio

The Christmas Oratorio,, is an oratorio by Johann Sebastian Bach intended for performance in church during the Christmas season.

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Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse

Christoph(er) Ernst Friedrich Weyse (5 March 1774 – 8 October 1842) was a Danish composer during the Danish Golden Age.

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Christoph Graupner

Christoph Graupner (13 January 1683 in Kirchberg – 10 May 1760 in Darmstadt) was a German harpsichordist and composer of high Baroque music who was a contemporary of Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann and George Frideric Handel.

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Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert

Christophe Le Menu de Saint-Philbert (c.1720 – 1774 in Paris) was a French music publisher who also composed some short cantatas in the rococo style known as cantatilles.

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Christopher Bowers-Broadbent

Christopher Bowers-Broadbent is an English organist and composer.

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Christopher Knowles

Christopher Knowles (born 1959) is an American poet and painter.

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Christus Apollo

Christus Apollo: Cantata Celebrating the Eighth Day of Creation and the Promise of the Ninth is a cantata in four movements for narrator, mezzo-soprano, choir, and orchestra, based on a text by the science fiction author Ray Bradbury and composed by the American composer Jerry Goldsmith.

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Church cantata

A church cantata or sacred cantata is a cantata intended to be performed during a liturgical service.

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Church cantata (Bach)

Throughout his life as a musician, Johann Sebastian Bach composed cantatas for both secular and sacred use.

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Circe in the arts

The sorceress Circe is a figure from Greek mythology whose father was the sun (Helios) and whose mother was an ocean nymph.

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Clara Butt

Dame Clara Ellen Butt, DBE (1 February 1872 – 23 January 1936) was an English contralto.

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Clara Louise Burnham

Clara Louise Burnham (May 25, 1854 – June 20, 1927) was a 19th-century American novelist from Massachusetts.

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Classical music

Classical music is art music produced or rooted in the traditions of Western culture, including both liturgical (religious) and secular music.

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Classical music of the United Kingdom

Classical music of the United Kingdom is taken in this article to mean classical music in the sense elsewhere defined, of formally composed and written music of chamber, concert and church type as distinct from popular, traditional, or folk music.

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Claude Debussy

Achille-Claude Debussy (22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918) was a French composer.

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Claudio Fabi

Claudio Fabi (born 29 July 1940) is an Italian record producer, composer, conductor, pianist and arranger.

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Claudio Monteverdi

Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi (15 May 1567 (baptized) – 29 November 1643) was an Italian composer, string player and choirmaster.

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Clémence de Grandval

Clémence de Grandval (21 January 1828 – 15 January 1907), born as Marie Félicie Clémence de Reiset and also known as Vicomtesse de Grandval and Marie Grandval, was a French composer of the Romantic era.

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Clori, Tirsi e Fileno

Clori, Tirsi, e Fileno, Cantata a tre, HWV 96, subtitled Cor fedele in vano speri ("A faithful heart hopes in vain"), is a 1707 comic cantata by George Frideric Handel.

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Colin McAlpin

Colin McAlpin (9 April 1870 – 13 May 1942) was an English composer of songs, operas and ballet music, an organist and a writer of critical essays on music.

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College of the Neophytes

The College of the Neophytes, in Italian Collegio dei Neofiti (Latin Collegium Ecclesiasticum Adolescentium Neophytorum or Pia Domus Neophytorum) was a Roman Catholic college in Rome founded in 1577 by Gregory XIII for education of young men, in an institution for converts from Judaism and Islam that itself been started in 1543 by Pope Paul III.

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Commemorative Cantata for the Centenary of the Birth of Pushkin

Commemorative Cantata for the Centenary of the Birth of Pushkin (Торжественная кантата в память 100-летней годовщины А. С. Пушкина), Op.

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Concert pitch

Concert pitch is the pitch reference to which a group of musical instruments are tuned for a performance.

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Concerto

A concerto (plural concertos, or concerti from the Italian plural) is a musical composition usually composed in three movements, in which, usually, one solo instrument (for instance, a piano, violin, cello or flute) is accompanied by an orchestra or concert band.

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Conrad Beck

Conrad Arthur Beck (16 June 1901, Lohn, Schaffhausen – 31 October 1989, Basel) was a Swiss composer.

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Consonance and dissonance

In music, consonance and dissonance are categorizations of simultaneous or successive sounds.

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Constantin Christian Dedekind

Constantin Christian Dedekind (2 April 1628 – 1715) was a German poet, dramatist, librettist, composer and bass singer of the Baroque era.

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Contemporary harpsichord

The harpsichord was largely obsolete, and seldom played, during a period lasting from the late 18th century to the early 20th.

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Cornelius Gurlitt (composer)

Cornelius Gurlitt (10 February 1820 – 17 June 1901) was a German composer born in Altona, Schleswig-Holstein.

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Cristina Altamira

Cristina Altamira (born 2 February 1953 Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a mezzo-soprano specializing in baroque and Latin American music.

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Cristoforo Caresana

Cristofaro or Cristoforo Caresana (ca. 1640–1709) was an Italian Baroque composer, organist and tenor.

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Cultural legacy of Mazeppa

*The spelling "Mazepa" refers to the historical person; the double-p "Mazeppa" is used for the artistic and literary works. Ivan Mazepa (1639–1709) was a significant figure in the history of Ukraine.

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Czech Requiem

České requiem: Smrt a spasení ("Czech Requiem: Death and Redemption," Op.24) is a 1940 choral cantata for soprano, alto, baritone, chorus and orchestra by Ladislav Vycpálek.

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D. C. F. Moodie

Duncan Campbell Francis Moodie (24 January 1838 – 11 February 1891), commonly referred to as D. C. F. Moodie, was a South African writer, historian and linguist who published a newspaper The Portonian in Port Adelaide, South Australia, from 1871 to 1879.

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Dalla guerra amorosa

Dalla guerra amorosa (HWV 102) is a secular chamber cantata for either bass (HWV 102a) or soprano (HWV 102b) written by Georg Frideric Handel in Italy during 1708–9.

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Damien Top

Damien Top (born 13 July 1963 in Rouen) is a French tenor, musicologist and conductor, and is artistic director of the International Albert Roussel Festival.

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Daniel Eberlin

Daniel Eberlin (4 December 1647 – c. 1715) was a German Baroque composer and Kapellmeister.

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Das ist je gewißlich wahr

Das ist je gewißlich wahr (This is now the gospel truth), TWV 1:183, is a cantata by Georg Philipp Telemann.

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Das klagende Lied

Das klagende Lied (Song of Lamentation) is a cantata by Gustav Mahler, composed between 1878 and 1880 and greatly revised over the next two decades.

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Dave Brubeck

David Warren Brubeck (December 6, 1920 – December 5, 2012) was an American jazz pianist and composer, considered to be one of the foremost exponents of cool jazz.

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David D'Or

David D'Or (דוד ד'אור; born David Nehaisi on October 2, 1965) is an Israeli singer, composer, and songwriter.

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David Jenkins (composer)

David Jenkins (30 December 1848 – 10 December 1915) was a Welsh composer, best known for his choral works and hymn tunes.

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David Lumsdaine

David Newton Lumsdaine (born 31 October 1931) is an Australian composer.

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David Mills (bass)

David Mills (born 29 January 1929, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan) is a Canadian bass singer, poet, composer and actor.

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David Pohle

David Pohle (1624 – 20 December 1695) was a German composer of the Baroque era.

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David Tunley

David Evatt Tunley AM (born 1930) is an Australian musicologist and composer noted for his work on French music in the 17th and 18th centuries.

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David Wynne (composer)

David Wynne (2 June 1900 – 23 March 1983) was a prolific Welsh composer, who taught for many years at Cardiff University and wrote much of his best-known music in retirement.

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Davide penitente

Davide penitente, K. 469 (also Davidde penitente), is a cantata by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, to texts by Saverio Mattei.

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Désiré-Alexandre Batton

Désiré-Alexandre Batton (born Paris, January 2, 1798 - died Versailles, October 15, 1855) was a French composer.

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Deems Taylor

Joseph Deems Taylor (December 22, 1885 – July 3, 1966) was an American composer, music critic, and promoter of classical music.

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Del bell'idolo mio (Handel)

Del bell'idolo mio (HWV 104) is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707-09.

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Denn du wirst meine Seele nicht in der Hölle lassen

Denn du wirst meine Seele nicht in der Hölle lassen (For you shall not leave my soul in hell), JLB 21, BWV 15, is a church cantata spuriously attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach but most likely composed by Johann Ludwig Bach.

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Der Herr ist mit mir (Buxtehude)

Der Herr ist mit mir (The Lord is on my side), BuxWV 15, is a cantata by Dieterich Buxtehude.

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Derek Ingram Hill

Canon Derek Ingram Hill (11 September 1912 – 20 October 2003) was an Anglican priest, notable as a pastor, administrator and historian, active mainly in the south-east of England and particularly in the city of Canterbury and its cathedral.

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Deutsche Sinfonie

Deutsche Sinfonie, Op.

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Dick Anthony (musician)

Dick Anthony (born December 8, 1932) is an American musician who composed, conducted, produced, sang"Sacred Reviews".

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Dictum

In general usage, a dictum (from Latin, "something that has been said"; plural dicta) is an authoritative or dogmatic statement.

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Die erste Walpurgisnacht

Die erste Walpurgisnacht (The First Walpurgis Night) is a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, telling of the attempts of Druids in the Harz mountains to practice their pagan rituals in the face of new and dominating Christian forces.

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Dies Natalis (cantata)

Dies Natalis (Latin: "Natal Day" or "Day of Birth"), Op.

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Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (28 May 1925 – 18 May 2012) was a German lyric baritone and conductor of classical music, one of the most famous Lieder (art song) performers of the post-war period, best known as a singer of Franz Schubert's Lieder, particularly "Winterreise" of which his recordings with accompanist Gerald Moore and Jörg Demus are still critically acclaimed half a century after their release.

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Dietrich von Bausznern

Dietrich von Bausznern (March 19, 1928 – January 20, 1980) was a German composer, cantor, organist and music teacher.

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Dimitri Nicolau

Dimitri Nicolau (21 October 1946 in Keratea, Greece - 29 March 2008 in Rome, Italy) was a composer, stage director, conductor, musicologist, writer and professor.

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Dinesh Subasinghe

Dinesh Subasinghe (born 10 July 1979, Colombo) is a Sri Lankan composer, violinist, and music producer.

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Dmitri Shostakovich

Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich (Дми́трий Дми́триевич Шостако́вич|Dmitriy Dmitrievich Shostakovich,; 9 August 1975) was a Russian composer and pianist.

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Dmitry Pokrass

Dmitry Yakovlevich Pokrass (Дми́трий Я́ковлевич Покра́сс) (7 November 1899, in Kiev – 20 December 1978, in Moscow) was a Soviet composer of Jewish origin.

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Dmytro Bortniansky

Dmytro Stepanovych Bortniansky (Дмитро Степанович Бортнянський) or Dmitry Stepanovych Bortniansky (Дмитрий Степанович Бортнянский,; alternative transcriptions of names are Dmitri, Bortnianskii, and Bortnyansky; 28 October 1751, Hlukhiv, Cossack Hetmanate) was a Ukrainian composer and conductor of Rusyn descent.

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Doctor Faustus (novel)

Doctor Faustus is a German novel written by Thomas Mann, begun in 1943 and published in 1947 as Doktor Faustus: Das Leben des deutschen Tonsetzers Adrian Leverkühn, erzählt von einem Freunde ("Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkühn, Told by a Friend").

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Domenico Annibali

Domenico Annibali (c. 1705 – 1779) was an Italian castrato who had an active international career from 1725–1764.

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Domenico Cimarosa

Domenico Cimarosa (17 December 1749, Aversa, Kingdom of Naples, now Province of Caserta – 11 January 1801, Venice) was an Italian opera composer of the Neapolitan school.

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Domenico Lalli

Sebastiano Biancardi (27 March 1679 – 9 October 1741), known by the pseudonym Domenico Lalli, was an Italian poet and librettist.

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Dominick Argento

Dominick Argento (born October 27, 1927) is an American composer known for his lyric operatic and choral music.

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Dona nobis pacem (Vaughan Williams)

Dona nobis pacem, (Grant us peace), is a cantata written by Ralph Vaughan Williams in 1936 and first performed on 2 October 1936.

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Douglas Allanbrook

Douglas Allanbrook (April 1, 1921 – January 29, 2003) was an American composer, concert pianist and harpsichordist.

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Duane A. Moody

Duane Adolph Moody (born 3 December 1970) is an American tenor solo artist and also a member of the African-American trio Three Mo' Tenors.

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Dudley Buck

Dudley Buck (March 10, 1839October 6, 1909) was an American composer, organist, and writer on music.

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Earl Robinson

Earl Hawley Robinson (July 2, 1910 – July 20, 1991) was a composer, arranger and folk music singer-songwriter from Seattle, Washington.

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Eaton Faning

Joseph Eaton Faning (20 May 1850 – 28 October 1927), known as Eaton Faning, was an English composer and teacher.

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Ed Di Lello

Ed Di Lello (born 1952) is an American composer, choreographer, theatre director, dancer, and actor who made work during the 1970s and 1980s.

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Eduard Flipse

Eduard Flipse (26 February 1896 in Wissenkerke – 12 September 1973 in Breda) was a Dutch conductor and composer, the son of Cornelis Flipse and Geertje Kruis.

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Eduard Mertke

Eduard Mertke (17 June 1833–25 September 1895) was a Baltic German composer.

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Edward Burlingame Hill

Edward Burlingame Hill (September 9, 1872 in Cambridge, Massachusetts – July 9, 1960 in Francestown, New Hampshire) was an American composer.

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Edward Francis Fitzwilliam

Edward Francis Fitzwilliam (1824– 20 January 1857, aged 32) was an English composer and music director.

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Edward Loder

Edward James Loder (10 July 1809 – 5 April 1865) was an English composer and conductor.

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Edward Naylor

Edward Woodall Naylor (February 9, 1867 – May 7, 1934) was an English organist and composer.

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Egon Wellesz

Egon Joseph Wellesz (Vienna, 21 October 1885 – Oxford, 9 November 1974) was an Austrian, later British composer, teacher and musicologist, notable particularly in the field of Byzantine music.

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Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld

"Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld" (A Lambkin goes and bears the guilt) is a Lutheran hymn for Passiontide by Paul Gerhardt.

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Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld (Stölzel)

Ein Lämmlein geht und trägt die Schuld, also known by the title of its earliest extant printed libretto, Die leidende und am Creutz sterbende Liebe Jesu, is a Passion oratorio by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel, composed in 1720.

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Eitan Avitsur

Eitan Avitsur (Hebrew: איתן אביצור; 15 September 1941, Jerusalem – 24 February 2018) was a music composer and conductor.

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Elegy on the Death of Daughter Olga

Elegy on the Death of Daughter Olga, JW 4/30 (also translated as the Elegy on the Death of My Daughter Olga; in Czech: Elegie na smrt dcery Olgy) is a cantata for tenor solo, mixed choir and pianoforte, written by the Czech composer Leoš Janáček in 1903.

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Elin Manahan Thomas

Elin Manahan Thomas is a Welsh soprano.

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Elisabeth Lutyens

Agnes Elisabeth Lutyens, CBE (9 July 190614 April 1983) was an English composer.

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Elisabetta de Gambarini

Elisabetta de Gambarini (7 September 1731 – 9 February 1765) was an English composer, mezzo-soprano, organist, harpsichordist, pianist, orchestra conductor and painter of the 18th century.

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Elizabeth Laurence

Elizabeth Laurence (born Elizabeth Jane Scott, 22 November 1949, Harrogate, England) is a classical mezzo-soprano singer.

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Elmer Samuel Hosmer

Elmer Samuel Hosmer (1862 – 1945) was an American composer.

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Emil Simon

Emil Simon (24 Sept 1936 – 25 February 2014) was a Romanian conductor and composer.

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Emily Davison

Emily Wilding Davison (11 October 1872 – 8 June 1913) was a suffragette who fought for votes for women in the United Kingdom in the early twentieth century.

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Emin Sabitoglu

Emin Sabitoglu (Emin Sabitoğlu, real name Emin Sabit oglu Mahmudov Emin Sabit oğlu Mahmudov; 2 November 1937, Baku — 18 November 2000, Baku) was an Azerbaijani composer, author of a lot of well-known Azerbaijani songs and music for films.

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Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Boston

Emmanuel Episcopal Church, a historic church at 15 Newbury Street in Boston, Massachusetts, was founded in 1860 as part of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts.

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Emmanuel Hiel

Emmanuel Hiel (30 May 1834 – 27 August 1899), was a Flemish-Dutch poet and prose writer.

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Emmanuel Trenque

Emmanuel Trenque is a contemporary French choir conductor.

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Entsagen, WAB 14

The cantata (Renunciation), WAB 14, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in.

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Erhard Karkoschka

Erhard Karkoschka (March 6, 1923 – June 26, 2009), is a German composer, scholar and conductor.

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Eric Ball (composer)

Eric Walter John Ball OBE (31 October 1903 – 1 October 1989) was an English composer, arranger and conductor of brass band music, described as "one of the most prolific writers and influential figures in the brass band and choral world".

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Eric W. Sawyer

Eric W. Sawyer or Eric Sawyer (born June 2, 1962 in Brookhaven, New York) is an American orchestral composer, pianist and professor of music at Amherst College.

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Erich Wolfgang Korngold

Erich Wolfgang Korngold (May 29, 1897 – November 29, 1957) was an Austrian-born composer and conductor.

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Erik Kurmangaliev

Erik Kurmangaliev (January 2, 1959 – November 13, 2007) was a Russian-Kazakh opera singer, actor and a leading public figure in Russia's perestroika music scene.

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Ernest Boulanger (composer)

Ernest Henri Alexandre Boulanger (16 September 1815 – 14 April 1900 in Paris) was a French composer of comic operas and a conductor.

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Ernest Hilbert

Ernest Hilbert is an American poet, critic, opera librettist, and editor born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1970.

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Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Ernest II (German: Ernst August Karl Johann Leopold Alexander Eduard; 21 June 1818 – 22 August 1893) was the sovereign duke of the Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, reigning from 1844 to his death.

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Ero e Leandro

Ero e Leandro, also known after its first line as Qual ti reveggio, oh Dio (HWV 150), is a 1707 Italian-language cantata by George Frideric Handel, composed during his stay in Rome to a libretto believed to be written by Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni.

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Es ist das Heil uns kommen her

"Es ist das Heil uns kommen her" (originally: "Es ist das heyl vns kommen her", English: "Salvation now has come for all" or more literally: It is our salvation come here to us) is a Lutheran hymn in 14 stanzas by Paul Speratus.

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Ester Mombelli

Maria Ester Mombelli (1792 – after 1827) was an Italian opera singer particularly known for her performances in operas by Rossini and Donizetti.

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Esterházy

Esterházy (also spelled Eszterházy) is a Hungarian noble family with origins in the Middle Ages.

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Eugène Bozza

Eugène Joseph Bozza (4 April 1905 in Nice – 28 September 1991 in Valenciennes) was a French contemporary composer and violinist.

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Eugen Eckert

Eugen Eckert (born 1954) is a German social worker, minister, singer-songwriter and academic teacher.

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Eva Fogelman

Eva Fogelman is a licensed psychologist, writer, filmmaker and a pioneer in the treatment of psychological effects of the Holocaust on survivors and their descendants.

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Eva Mei

Eva Mei (born 1967) is an Italian coloratura soprano.

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F. Flaxington Harker

Frederick Flaxington Harker (1876–1936) was an American organist and composer of sacred music.

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Fanny Crosby

Frances Jane van Alstyne (née Crosby; March 24, 1820 – February 12, 1915), more commonly known as Fanny Crosby, was an American mission worker, poet, lyricist, and composer.

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Farinelli

Farinelli (24 January 170516 September 1782), was the stage name of Carlo Maria Michelangelo Nicola Broschi, celebrated Italian castrato singer of the 18th century and one of the greatest singers in the history of opera.

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Feliciano Strepponi

Feliciano Cristoforo Bartolomeo Strepponi (26 October 1793 – 13 January 1832) was an Italian composer and conductor.

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Felicity Tree

Felicity, Lady Cory-Wright (née Felicity Constance Tree: 7 December 1894 – 15 September 1978) was an English baronetess and high society figure.

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Feodor Koenemann

Feodor Feodorovich Koenemann (Russian: Фёдор Фёдорович Кёнеман; sometimes transliterated as Fyodor Keneman) (Moscow, Russia, – 29 March 1937) was Russian pianist, composer and music teacher.

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Ferdinando Bertoni

Ferdinando Bertoni (15 August 1725 – 1 December 1813) was an Italian composer and organist.

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Ferdinando Fontana

Ferdinando Fontana (30 January 1850 – 10 May 1919) was an Italian journalist, dramatist, and poet.

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Ferdinando Paer

Ferdinando Paer (1 July 17713 May 1839) was an Italian composer known for his operas and oratorios.

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Fernando Remacha

Fernando Remacha Villar (15 December 1898 – 21 February 1984) was a Spanish composer, part of the Group of Eight which formed a sub-set of the Generation of '27.

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Festgesang

The Festgesang, also known as the Gutenberg Cantata, was composed by Felix Mendelssohn in the first half of 1840 for performance in Leipzig at the celebrations to mark the putative quatercentenary of the invention of printing with movable type by Johannes Gutenberg.

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Festgesang an die Künstler

Felix Mendelssohn composed the cantata Festgesang an die Künstler, Op.

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Festgesang, WAB 15

The Festgesang (Festive song), WAB 15, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1855.

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Festive Cantata (Bruckner)

The italic, WAB 16, is a festive cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1862 for the celebration of the laying of the foundation stone of the new ''Mariä-Empfängnis-Dom'' of Linz.

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Figure humaine

Figure humaine (Human Figure), FP 120, by Francis Poulenc is a cantata for double mixed choir of 12 voices composed in 1943 on texts by Paul Éluard including "'Liberté".

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Florence Carpenter Dieudonné

Florence Carpenter Dieudonné (September 25, 1850 – April 17, 1927) was an early speculative fiction writer, active in America in the late 1800s.

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Flourish, Mighty Land (Prokofiev)

Flourish, Mighty Land, Op.

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Four last things

In Christian eschatology, the Four Last Things or four last things of man (quattuor novissima) are Death, Judgment, Heaven, and Hell, the four last stages of the soul in life and the afterlife.

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Fran Lhotka

Fran Lhotka (25 December 1883 – 26 January 1962) was a Czech-born Croatian composer of classical music.

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François Bazin (composer)

François Emmanuel Joseph Bazin (4 September 1816 in Marseille – 2 July 1878 in Paris) was a well-known French opera composer during the nineteenth century.

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François Benoist

François Benoist (10 September 1794 – 6 May 1878) was a French organist, composer, and pedagogue.

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François Colin de Blamont

François Colin de Blamont (22 November 1690 – 14 February 1760) was a French composer of the Baroque era.

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François Giroust

François Giroust (10 April 1737 – 28 April 1799) was a French composer.

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Francesco Azopardi

Francesco Azopardi (or Azzopardi) (Notabile, May 5, 1748 - Rabat, Feb. 1809) was a Maltese composer and music theorist.

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Francesco Bartolomeo de Leone

Francesco Bartolomeo DeLeone (July 28, 1887 – December 10, 1948) was an American composer of Italian descent.

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Francesco D'Auria

Francesco Mariano D'Auria (1841- after 1913) was an Italian conductor, composer, and music educator.

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Francesco Florimo

Francesco Florimo (12 October 1800 – 18 December 1888) was an Italian librarian, musicologist, historian of music, and composer.

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Francesco Mancini (composer)

Francesco Mancini (16 January 1672 – 22 September 1737) was a Neapolitan composer.

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Francesco Saverio Quadrio

Francesco Saverio Quadrio (1 December 1695 – 21 November 1756)Waller & Eadie 1863,.

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Francis Poulenc

Francis Jean Marcel Poulenc (7 January 189930 January 1963) was a French composer and pianist.

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Franco Leoni

Franco Leoni (24 October 1864 – 8 February 1949) was an Italian opera composer.

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Frank Edwin Ward

Frank Edwin Ward (October 7, 1872 – 1953) was an American composer and organist.

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Frank Martin (composer)

Frank Martin (15 September 1890 – 21 November 1974) was a Swiss composer, who lived a large part of his life in the Netherlands.

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Frans de Potter

Frans de Potter (4 January 1834, Ghent – 15 August 1904) was a Belgian writer.

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František Brixi

František Xaver Brixi (2 January 1732 – 14 October 1771) was a Czech classical composer of the 18th century.

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Franz Bornschein

Franz Carl Bornschein (February 10, 1879 – June 8, 1948) was an American composer, teacher, and music critic.

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Franz Kalchmair

Franz Kalchmair Franz Kalchmair (December 22, 1939 in Thalheim bei Wels, Austria) is an operatic bass and interpreter of Bach cantatas along with other sacred or clerical music.

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Franz Krenn

Franz Krenn (26 February 1816 – 18 June 1897) was an Austrian composer and composition teacher born in Droß.

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Franz Schubert

Franz Peter Schubert (31 January 179719 November 1828) was an Austrian composer of the late Classical and early Romantic eras.

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Frederic Clay

Frederic Emes Clay (3 August 1838 – 24 November 1889) was an English composer known principally for his music written for the stage.

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Frederic Hymen Cowen

Sir Frederic Hymen Cowen (29 January 1852 – 6 October 1935), was a British pianist, conductor and composer.

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Frederic King

Frederic King (1853 – 20 May 1933) was a baritone best known for his performances in the works composed by Arthur Sullivan for the Leeds Festivals of 1880 and 1886.

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Frederic Lord

Frederic Lord (15 November 1886 – 15 August 1945) was an English choral conductor, organist, composer, and music educator.

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Frederick Grant Gleason

Frederick Grant Gleason (born 17 December 1848 in Middletown, Connecticut - died Chicago, 6 December 1903) was an American composer, and director of the Chicago Conservatory from 1900-1903.

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Frederick Ranalow

Frederick Ranalow (7 November 18738 December 1953) was an Irish baritone who was distinguished in opera, oratorio, and musical theatre, but whose name is now principally associated with the role of Captain Macheath in the ballad opera The Beggar's Opera, which he sang close to 1,500 times.

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Friedrich Christian Hermann Uber

Friedrich Christian Hermann Uber (April 22, 1781 – March 2, 1822) was a German composer, who also served as the cantor of the Kreuzkirche in Dresden.

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Friedrich Heinrich Himmel

Friedrich Heinrich Himmel (November 20, 1765 – June 8, 1814) was a German composer.

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Friedrich Hofmeister Musikverlag

Friedrich Hofmeister Musikverlag (abbreviated to Hofmeister) is a publisher of classical music, founded by Friedrich Hofmeister in Leipzig in 1807.

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Friedrich Schneider

Johann Christian Friedrich Schneider (3 January 1786 in Alt-Waltersdorf – 23 November 1853 in Dessau) was a German pianist, composer, organist, and conductor.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Rust

Friedrich Wilhelm Rust (6 July 173928 February 1796) was a German violinist, pianist and composer.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow

Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow or Zachau (14 November 1663, Leipzig – 7 August 1712, Halle) was a German musician and composer of vocal and keyboard music.

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Frithiof's Saga

Frithiof's Saga (Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna) is a legendary saga from Iceland which in its present form is from ca.

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Fritz Geißler

Fritz Geißler (or Geissler) (16 September 1921 in Wurzen, Saxony – 11 January 1984 in Bad Saarow, Brandenburg) was one of the most important composers of the German Democratic Republic.

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Fritz Werner

Fritz Werner (15 December 1898 – 22 December 1977) was a German choral conductor, church music director, conductor, organist and composer.

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Gabriel Cusson

Gabriel Cusson (2 April 1903, Roxton Pond, Quebec - 18 Apr 1972, Montreal) was a Canadian composer and music educator.

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Gabriela Moyseowicz

Gabriela Maria Moyseowicz (born May 4, 1944 in Lwów) is a Polish composer and pianist.

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Gabrielle Krauss

Marie-Gabrielle Krauss (24 March 18426 January 1906) was an important 19th century Austrian-born French operatic soprano.

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Gara Garayev

Gara Abulfaz oghlu Garayev (Qara Əbülfəz oğlu Qarayev, Кара́ Абульфа́зович Кара́ев (Kara Abulfazovich Karayev), February 5, 1918 in Baku – May 13, 1982 in Moscow), also spelled as Qara Qarayev or Kara Karayev, was a prominent Soviet Azerbaijani composer.

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Gary Cooper (musician)

Gary Cooper is an English conductor and classical keyboardist who specialises in the harpsichord and fortepiano.

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Gaspare Pacchierotti

Gaspare Pacchierotti (21 May 1740 in Fabriano (Marche) – 28 October 1821 in Padua) was a great mezzo-soprano castrato, and one of the most famous singers of his time.

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Gaston Serpette

Henri Charles Antoine Gaston Serpette (4 November 1846 – 3 November 1904) was a French composer, best known for his operettas.

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Günter Kochan

Günter Kochan (2 October 1930 – 22 February 2009) was a German classical composer.

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Gedenke, Herr, wie es uns gehet, BWV 217

Gedenke, Herr, wie es uns gehet (Be mindful of our condition, Lord), BWV 217, is a church cantata, formerly attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Geistliches Konzert

Geistliches Konzert (plural Geistliche Konzerte) or "spiritual concerto" is a broad term for various genres of chamber concerto for a small number of voices and instruments popular in Germany during the 17th Century and prefiguring the late baroque church cantata and solo spiritual cantata forms.

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Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ

"italic" ("Praise be to You, Jesus Christ") is a Lutheran hymn, written by Martin Luther in 1524.

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Georg Christian Lehms

Georg Christian Lehms (1684 – 15 May 1717) was a German poet and novelist who sometimes used the pen-name Pallidor.

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Georg Friedrich Kauffmann

Georg Friedrich Kauffmann (14 February 1679 – 24 March 1735) was a Baroque composer and organist from northern-central Germany who composed primarily sacred works for the organ and voice.

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Georg Gebel (the elder)

Georg Gebel (1685–1750) was a German composer, organist, and innovator in the construction of keyboard instruments.

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Georg Gebel (the younger)

Georg Gebel (25 October 1709 – 24 September 1753) was a German musician and composer.

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Georg von Bertouch

Georg von Bertouch (19 June 1668 – 14 September 1743) was a German-born Baroque composer and military officer who dwelt during most of his adult life in Norway.

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George Balch Nevin

George Balch Nevin (March 15, 1859 – April 17, 1933) was an American composer and businessman.

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George Dyson (composer)

Sir George Dyson KCVO (28 May 188328 September 1964) was an English musician and composer.

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George Frederick Boyle

George Frederick Boyle (June 29, 1886June 20, 1948) was an Australian, later American pianist, composer and pedagogue.

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George Frederick Root

George Frederick Root (August 30, 1820August 6, 1895) was an American songwriter, who found particular fame during the American Civil War, with songs such as Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! and The Battle Cry of Freedom.

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George Frideric Handel

George Frideric (or Frederick) Handel (born italic; 23 February 1685 (O.S.) – 14 April 1759) was a German, later British, Baroque composer who spent the bulk of his career in London, becoming well-known for his operas, oratorios, anthems, and organ concertos.

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George Halford (musician)

George John Halford (13 February 1858 – 11 February 1933) was an English pianist, organist, composer and conductor.

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Georges Bizet

Georges Bizet (25 October 18383 June 1875), registered at birth as Alexandre César Léopold Bizet, was a French composer of the romantic era.

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Georges Hüe

Georges Adolphe Hüe (6 May 1858 – 7 June 1948) was a French composer of classical music.

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Georges Lonque

Georges Lonque (Ghent, 8 November 1900 – Brussels, 3 March 1967) was a Belgian composer, music teacher, conductor and violinist.

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Georgina Weldon

Georgina Weldon (24 May 1837 – 11 January 1914) was a British campaigner against the lunacy laws, a celebrated litigant and noted amateur soprano of the Victorian era.

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Gerald Finzi

Gerald Raphael Finzi (14 July 1901 – 27 September 1956) was a British composer.

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Germanenzug

Germanenzug (WAB 70) is a secular, patriotic cantata composed in 1863–1864 by Anton Bruckner on a text by August Silberstein.

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Gert Potgieter (tenor)

Gerhardus Petrus "Gert" Potgieter (14 November 1929 – 2 July 1977) was a South African opera tenor and actor who had a great influence on Afrikaans culture.

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Giacomo Antonio Perti

Giacomo Antonio Perti (6 June 1661 – 10 April 1756) was an Italian composer of the Baroque era.

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Giacomo Carissimi

Giacomo Carissimi (baptized 18 April 160512 January 1674) was an Italian composer and music teacher.

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Giacomo Cordella

Giacomo Cordella (Naples, 25 July 1786 – Naples, 8 May 1847) was an Italian composer.

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Gian Carlo Menotti

Gian Carlo Menotti (July 7, 1911 – February 1, 2007) was an Italian-American composer and librettist.

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Gian Francesco de Majo

Gian Francesco de Majo (24 March 1732 – 17 November 1770) was an Italian composer.

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Gian Francesco Malipiero

Gian Francesco Malipiero (18 March 1882 – 1 August 1973) was an Italian composer, musicologist, music teacher and editor.

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Gilbert and Sullivan

Gilbert and Sullivan refers to the Victorian-era theatrical partnership of the dramatist W. S. Gilbert (1836–1911) and the composer Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900) and to the works they jointly created.

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Gilberto Mendes

Gilberto Mendes (13 October 1922 – 1 January 2016) was a Brazilian composer.

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Gillian Knight

Gillian Knight (born 1 November 1934) is an English singer and actress, known for her performances in the contralto roles of the Savoy operas.

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Gioachino Rossini

Gioachino Antonio Rossini (29 February 1792 – 13 November 1868) was an Italian composer who wrote 39 operas as well as some sacred music, songs, chamber music, and piano pieces.

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Giorgos Hatzinasios

Giorgos Hatzinasios (also spelled Hadjinasios; Γιώργος Χατζηνάσιος,; born 19 January 1942) is a Greek songwriter and composer.

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Giovanni Ambrogio Migliavacca

Giovanni Ambrogio Migliavacca (1718 – c. 1795) was an Italian poet and librettist.

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Giovanni Battista Maccioni

Giovanni Battista Maccioni (floruit 1651 – 1674) was an Italian composer, librettist, and musician.

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Giovanni Battista Pergolesi

Giovanni Battista Draghi (4 January 1710 – 16 or 17 March 1736), often referred to as Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, was an Italian composer, violinist and organist.

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Giovanni Buonaventura Viviani

Giovanni Buonaventura Viviani (15 July 1638 Florence –about 1693 Pistoia) was an Italian composer and violinist.

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Giovanni Filippo Apolloni

Giovanni Filippo Apolloni (1620 – 15 May 1688) was an Italian poet and librettist.

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Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger

Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger (also: Johann(es) Hieronymus Kapsberger or Giovanni Geronimo Kapsperger; c. 1580 – 17 January 1651) was a German-Italian virtuoso performer and composer of the early Baroque period.

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Giovanni Paolo Colonna

Giovanni Paolo Colonna (16 June 1637 – 28 November 1695) was an Italian composer, teacher, organist and organ builder.

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Giulio Cesare Rubino

Giulio Cesare Rubino was an Italian composer of whom little biographical information is known.

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Giuseppe Balducci

Giuseppe Balducci (2 May 1796 – 1845) was an Italian composer, primarily of operas.

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Giuseppe Farinelli

Giuseppe Farinelli (7 May 1769 – 12 December 1836) was an Italian composer active at the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century who excelled in writing opera buffas.

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Giuseppe Gazzaniga

Giuseppe Gazzaniga (October 5, 1743 – February 1, 1818) was a member of the Neapolitan school of opera composers.

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Giuseppe Millico

Vito Giuseppe Millico, called "Il Moscovita" (19 January 1737 – 2 October 1802) was an Italian soprano castrato, composer, and music teacher of the 18th century who is best remembered for his performances in the operas of Christoph Willibald Gluck.

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Giuseppe Verdi

Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi (9 or 10 October 1813 – 27 January 1901) was an Italian opera composer.

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Glenn Gould

Glenn Herbert Gould (September 25, 1932October 4, 1982) was a Canadian pianist who became one of the best-known and celebrated classical pianists of the 20th century.

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Gli Angeli Genève

Gli Angeli Genève is a Baroque ensemble based in Geneva, Switzerland.

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Gloria (Handel)

George Frideric Handel's Gloria is a sacred solo cantata, a setting of the Gloria, the liturgical part of the Mass, for soprano and strings.

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Glossary of musical terminology

This is a list of musical terms that are likely to be encountered in printed scores, music reviews, and program notes.

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God Moves in a Mysterious Way

"God Moves in a Mysterious Way" is a Christian hymn, written in 1773 by William Cowper from England.

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God Only Knows

"God Only Knows" is a song written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher for American rock band the Beach Boys, released in May 1966 as the eighth track on the group's album Pet Sounds.

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Gordon Crosse

Gordon Crosse (born 1 December 1937) is an English composer.

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Gottfried August Homilius

Gottfried August Homilius (2 February 1714 – 2 June 1785) was a German composer, cantor and organist.

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Gottfried von Einem

Gottfried von Einem (24 January 1918 – 12 July 1996) was an Austrian composer.

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Gottlieb Konrad Pfeffel

Gottlieb Konrad Pfeffel (28 June 1736 – 1 May 1809) was a French-German writer and translator, whose texts were put to music by Ludwig van Beethoven, Joseph Haydn and Franz Schubert.

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Great Mass in C minor, K. 427

Great Mass in C minor (Große Messe in c-Moll), K. 427/417a, is the common name of the last musical setting of the mass by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (not counting his Requiem Mass left unfinished at his death).

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Gregory W. Brown

Gregory W. Brown is an American composer whose works have been performed across the United States and Europe, including Carnegie Hall in New York City, Cadogan Hall in London, and the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam.

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Grigor Palikarov

Bulgarian Conductor, Pianist, Composer and Music EducatorGrigor Palikarov (Plovdiv; born in 1971) is a Bulgarian conductor, composer, pianist, music educator and member of MENSA.

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Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki

Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki (ca. 1665 to 1667 – 30 April 1734) was a Polish Baroque composer.

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Guatemalan literature

Guatemalan literature is literature written by Guatemalan authors, whether in the indigenous languages present in the country or in Spanish.

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Gurre Castle

Gurre Castle (Gurre Slot) was a royal castle in North Zealand in Denmark which lies on the outskirts of Helsingør towards the town of Tikøb on the lake at Gurre (Gurre Sø).

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Gurre-Lieder

is a large cantata for five vocal soloists, narrator, chorus and large orchestra, composed by Arnold Schönberg, on poems by the Danish novelist Jens Peter Jacobsen (translated from Danish to German by Robert Franz Arnold).

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Gustav Gunsenheimer

Gustav Gunsenheimer (born 10 March 1934) is a German director of church music and a composer of mostly sacred music and chamber music.

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Gustav Leonhardt

Gustav Leonhardt (30 May 1928 16 January 2012) was a Dutch keyboard player, conductor, musicologist, teacher and editor.

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Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler (7 July 1860 – 18 May 1911) was an Austro-Bohemian late-Romantic composer, and one of the leading conductors of his generation.

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Gustave Charpentier

Gustave Charpentier (25 June 1860 – 18 February 1956) was a French composer, best known for his opera Louise.

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Gustave Chouquet

Gustave Chouquet (16 April 1819 – 30 January 1886)Grove & Charlton 2001.

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Gustave Huberti

Gustave Huberti (14 April 1843 in Brussels – 28 June 1910 in Schaarbeek) was a Flemish composer.

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György Deák-Bárdos

György Deák-Bárdos (1905 in Budapest – 1991) was a Hungarian composer, organist, singer and music teacher.

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György Kósa

György Kósa (24 April 1897, in Budapest – 16 August 1984, in Budapest) was a Hungarian composer.

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Haldor Lillenas

Haldor Lillenas (19 November 1885 – 18 August 1959) was "one of the most important twentieth-century gospel hymn writers and publishers" and is regarded as "the most influential Wesleyan / Holiness songwriter and publisher in the 20th century".

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Hall Johnson

Francis Hall Johnson (March 12, 1888 – April 30, 1970) was an American composer and arranger of African-American spiritual music.

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Hamilton Clarke

James Hamilton Siree Clarke (25 January 1840 – 9 July 1912), better known as Hamilton Clarke, was an English conductor, composer and organist.

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Hamilton Harty

Sir Herbert Hamilton Harty (4 December 1879 – 19 February 1941) was an Irish composer, conductor, pianist and organist.

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Hamish MacCunn

Hamish MacCunn (22 March 18682 August 1916) was a Scottish late Romantic composer, conductor and teacher.

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Hanns Eisler

Hanns Eisler (6 July 1898 – 6 September 1962) was an Austrian composer (his father was Austrian, and Eisler fought in a Hungarian regiment in World War I).

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Hanoch Jacoby

Hanoch (Heinrich) Jacoby (March 2, 1909 - 13 December 1990) was an Israeli composer and viola player.

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Hans Krieger

Hans Krieger (born 13 March 1933) is a German writer, essayist, journalist of influential weekly papers such as Die Zeit, broadcaster and poet.

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Hans Münch (conductor)

Hans Münch (9 March 1893 - 7 September 1983) was a Swiss conductor, composer, cellist, pianist, organist, and music educator of Alsatian birth.

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Hans Vogt (composer)

Hans Vogt (14 May 1911 – 19 May 1992) was a German composer and conductor.

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Harmonia Caelestis

Harmonia Caelestis is a cycle of 55 sacred cantatas attributed to the Hungarian composer Paul I, 1st Prince Esterházy of Galántha (1635–1713) and published in 1711.

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Harpsichord Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052

The Harpsichord Concerto in D minor, BWV 1052, is a concerto for harpsichord and string orchestra by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Harry Crane Perrin

Harry Crane Perrin (1865–1953) was a cathedral organist, who served at Canterbury Cathedral.

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Harry Lawrence Freeman

Harry Lawrence Freeman (October 9, 1869 – March 24, 1954) was a United States opera composer, conductor, impresario and teacher.

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Harry Rowe Shelley

Harry Rowe Shelley (June 8, 1858 – September 12, 1947) was an American composer, organist (church and concert), and professor of music.

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Harvey Lisberg

Harvey Brian Lisberg (born 2 March 1940) discovered Herman's Hermits in 1963, and established himself as a British music manager.

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Harvey Milk

Harvey Bernard Milk (May 22, 1930 – November 27, 1978) was an American politician and the first openly gay elected official in the history of California, where he was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.

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Hélène-Louise Demars

Hélène-Louise Demars (c. 1736 – ?) was a French composer and music teacher.

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Heart Sutra

The Heart Sūtra (Sanskrit or Chinese 心經 Xīnjīng) is a popular sutra in Mahāyāna Buddhism.

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Heavy Metal Kings

Heavy Metal Kings is an underground hip hop duo which consists of veteran rappers Ill Bill (formerly of Non Phixion, currently of La Coka Nostra) and Vinnie Paz (Jedi Mind Tricks and Army of the Pharaohs).

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Heavy Metal Kings (song)

"Heavy Metal Kings" is a single by hip hop duo Jedi Mind Tricks, released in 2006 through Babygrande Records.

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Hector Berlioz

Louis-Hector Berlioz; 11 December 1803 – 8 March 1869) was a French Romantic composer, best known for his compositions Symphonie fantastique, Harold en Italie, Roméo et Juliette, Grande messe des morts (Requiem), L'Enfance du Christ, Benvenuto Cellini, La Damnation de Faust, and Les Troyens. Berlioz made significant contributions to the modern orchestra with his Treatise on Instrumentation. He specified huge orchestral forces for some of his works, and conducted several concerts with more than 1,000 musicians. He also composed around 50 compositions for voice, accompanied by piano or orchestra. His influence was critical for the further development of Romanticism, especially in composers like Richard Wagner, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Franz Liszt, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler.

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Hedy Graf

Hedy Graf (12 October 1926 – 31 January 1997) was a Spanish-born Swiss classically trained soprano.

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Heinrich Albert (composer)

Heinrich Albert (also Heinrich Alberti) (28 June 1604 – 6 October 1651) was a German composer and poet of the 17th century.

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Heinrich Marschner

Heinrich August Marschner (16 August 1795 – 14 December 1861) was the most important composer of German opera between Weber and Wagner.

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Heinrich Schwemmer

Heinrich Schwemmer (28 March 1621 – 31 May 1696) was a German music teacher and composer.

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Heinrich von Herzogenberg

Heinrich Picot de Peccaduc, Freiherr von Herzogenberg (10 June 1843 – 9 October 1900) was an Austrian composer and conductor descended from a French aristocratic family.

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Helen A. Clarke

Helen Archibald Clarke (November 13, 1860 – February 8, 1926) was an American literary critic, book editor, composer and lyricist, and the co-founder of the journal Poet Lore.

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Helgoland (Bruckner)

Helgoland, WAB 71, is a secular, patriotic cantata for male choir and orchestra, composed by Anton Bruckner in 1893.

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Henri Desmarets

Henri Desmarets (February 1661 – 7 September 1741) was a French composer of the Baroque period primarily known for his stage works, although he also composed sacred music as well as secular cantatas, songs and instrumental works.

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Henri Dutilleux

Henri Dutilleux (22 January 1916 – 22 May 2013) was a French composer active mainly in the second half of the 20th century.

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Henri Miro

Henri Enrique Miro (13 November 1879 – 19 July 1950) was a Canadian composer/arranger, conductor, pianist, and music critic of Catalan birth.

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Henri Rabaud

Henri Rabaud (10 November 187311 September 1949) was a French conductor and composer, who held important posts in the French musical establishment and upheld mainly conservative trends in French music in the first half of the twentieth century.

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Henry Bishop (composer)

Sir Henry Rowley Bishop (18 November 178630 April 1855) was an English composer.

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Henry Forbes (composer)

Henry Forbes (1804–1859) was an English pianist, organist and composer.

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Henry Holmes (composer)

Henry Holmes (7 November 18399 December 1905) was an English violinist, composer, and music educator.

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Henry Kimball Hadley

Henry Kimball Hadley (20 December 1871 – 6 September 1937) was an American composer and conductor.

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Henry Purcell

Henry Purcell (or; c. 10 September 1659According to Holman and Thompson (Grove Music Online, see References) there is uncertainty regarding the year and day of birth. No record of baptism has been found. The year 1659 is based on Purcell's memorial tablet in Westminster Abbey and the frontispiece of his Sonnata's of III. Parts (London, 1683). The day 10 September is based on vague inscriptions in the manuscript GB-Cfm 88. It may also be relevant that he was appointed to his first salaried post on 10 September 1677, which would have been his eighteenth birthday. – 21 November 1695) was an English composer.

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Henry Smart

Henry Thomas Smart (26 October 1813 – 6 July 1879) was an English organist and composer.

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Herbert Blendinger

Herbert Blendinger (born 3 January 1936) is an Austrian composer and viola player of German origin.

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Herman Bemberg

Herman Emanuel Bemberg Ocampo (29 March 1859 – 21 July 1931) was a German-Argentinean composer.

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Herman Spielter

Herman Spielter (April 20, 1860 – November 10, 1925) was an American composer born in Germany who came to the United States in 1880.

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Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn

"italic" (Lord Christ, the Only Son of God) is a Lutheran hymn by Elisabeth Cruciger.

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Herzlich lieb hab ich dich, o Herr

"" (From my heart I hold you dear, o Lord) is a Lutheran hymn in German by the Protestant theologian and reformer Martin Schalling, written in Amberg in 1569 and first printed in 1571.

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Hezekiah Butterworth

Hezekiah Butterworth (December 22, 1839 – September 5, 1905) was an American author and poet.

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Hildegard Laurich

Hildegard Laurich (15 January 1941 – 11 February 2009), was a German classical contralto singer.

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Hippolyte et Aricie

Hippolyte et Aricie (Hippolytus and Aricia) was the first opera by Jean-Philippe Rameau.

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History of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1648–1764)

History of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1648–1764) covers a period in the history of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, from the time their joint state became the theater of wars and invasions fought on a great scale in the middle of the 17th century, to the time just before the election of Stanisław August Poniatowski, the last king of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

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Hjalmar Borgstrøm

Hjalmar Borgstrøm (23 March 1864 – 5 July 1925) was a Norwegian composer and music critic who played a prominent role in the musical life of his country in the first quarter of the 20th century.

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Hodie

Hodie (This Day) is a cantata by Ralph Vaughan Williams.

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Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra

The Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra (Chinese: 香港室樂團) was founded in 1976 by a small group of musicians who felt that there was a need in Hong Kong for a chamber-sized orchestra aiming at a high standard of music making.

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Horatio Parker

Horatio William Parker (September 15, 1863 – December 18, 1919) was an American composer, organist and teacher.

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Hoste da Reggio

Hoste da Reggio (also L'Hoste, L'Osto, Oste, and Bartolomeo Torresano) (c. 1520–1569) was an Italian composer of the Renaissance, active in Milan and elsewhere in northern Italy.

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Houston Bright

Houston Bright (1916–1970) was a composer of American music, known primarily for his choral works.

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Howard Talbot

Richard Lansdale Munkittrick, better known as Howard Talbot (9 March 1865 – 12 September 1928), was an American-born, English-raised conductor and composer of Irish descent.

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Huang Tzu

Huang Tzu (23 March 1904 - 9 May 1938), courtesy name Jinwu, was a Chinese musician of the early 20th century.

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Hubert Parry

Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, 1st Baronet (27 February 18487 October 1918) was an English composer, teacher and historian of music.

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Humfrey Anger

Joseph Humfrey Anger (3 June 186211 June 1913) was a Canadian organist, pianist, conductor, composer, and music educator of English birth.

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I Don't Give A

"I Don't Give A" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter Madonna for her twelfth studio album MDNA (2012).

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I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes

Adolphus Hailstork’s “I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes” is a cantata for a tenor soloist in three sections.

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Ida Lilliard Reed

Ida Lilliard Reed (November 30, 1865 – July 8, 1951) was an American religious writer and music composer from West Virginia.

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Ignacy Feliks Dobrzyński

Ignacy Feliks Dobrzyński (15 February 1807 – 9 October 1867) was a Polish pianist and composer.

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Ignaz von Seyfried

Ignaz Joseph Ritter von Seyfried (15 August 1776 – 27 August 1841) was an Austrian musician, conductor and composer.

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Igor Stravinsky

Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (ˈiɡərʲ ˈfʲɵdərəvʲɪtɕ strɐˈvʲinskʲɪj; 6 April 1971) was a Russian-born composer, pianist, and conductor.

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Igor Stravinsky discography

This is a listing of all of Igor Stravinsky's commercially released studio recordings as a conductor or as a pianist; it also includes recordings conducted by Robert Craft "under the supervision of the composer." Works are arranged in chronological order by date of composition.

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Il Bellerofonte

Il Bellerofonte is an 18th-century Italian opera in three acts by the Czech composer Josef Mysliveček.

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Il canto sospeso

Il canto sospeso (The Suspended Song) is a cantata for vocal soloists, choir, and orchestra by the Italian composer Luigi Nono, written in 1955–56.

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Ilja Zeljenka

Ilja Zeljenka (21 December 1932 – 13 July 2007) was a Slovak composer.

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Imants Kalniņš

Imants Kalniņš (born 26 May 1941 in Riga, Latvian SSR) is a Latvian composer, musician and politician.

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In dulci jubilo

In dulci jubilo ("In sweet rejoicing") is a traditional Christmas carol.

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Inno delle nazioni

(Hymn of nations), a cantata in a single movement, is one of only two secular choral works composed by Giuseppe Verdi.

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Intimations of Immortality

Intimations of Immortality, Op.

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Iphigenia

In Greek mythology, Iphigenia (Ἰφιγένεια, Iphigeneia) was a daughter of King Agamemnon and Queen Clytemnestra, and thus a princess of Mycenae.

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Isidore de Lara

Isidore de Lara, born Isidore Cohen (9 August 18582 September 1935), was an English composer and singer.

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Islossningen i Uleå älv

Islossningen i Uleå älv (The Breaking of the Ice on the River Oulu), Op.

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Itaipu (Glass)

Itaipu is a four-movement symphonic cantata by Philip Glass.

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Itaipu Dam

The Itaipu Dam (Barragem de Itaipu, Represa de Itaipú) is a hydroelectric dam on the Paraná River located on the border between Brazil and Paraguay.

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Ivan Moody (composer)

Ivan Moody, British composer, was born in London in 1964, and studied composition with Brian Dennis at London University, William Brooks at York University and privately with John Tavener.

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Ivan Zajc

Ivan Zajc (also plemeniti Zajc, Giovanni di Zayitz;; August 3, 1832 – December 16, 1914), was a Croatian composer, conductor, director and teacher who for over forty years dominated Croatia's musical culture.

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Ivanhoe

Ivanhoe is an historical novel by Sir Walter Scott, first published in 1820 in three volumes and subtitled A Romance.

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Ivanhoe (opera)

Ivanhoe is a romantic opera in three acts based on the novel by Sir Walter Scott, with music by Sir Arthur Sullivan and a libretto by Julian Sturgis.

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Iván Erőd

Iván Erőd, also Iván Eröd (Erőd Iván; born 2 January 1936, Budapest) is a Hungarian-Austrian composer and pianist.

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Ivo Petrić

Ivo Petrić (born 16 June 1931) is a Slovenian composer of European classical music.

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J. Aldrich Libbey

James Aldrich Libbey (29 February 1864 – 29 April 1925), known as J. Aldrich Libbey, was an American vaudeville performer, actor, singer and songwriter, best known for launching the song "After the Ball".

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Jabberwocky (album)

Jabberwocky is a progressive rock album released in 1999 by British keyboardists Clive Nolan and Oliver Wakeman.

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Jakob Greber

Johann Jakob Greber (? – buried 5 July 1731) was a German Baroque composer and musician.

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James Cutler Dunn Parker

James Cutler Dunn Parker (June 2, 1828 in Boston – November 27, 1916 in Brookline, Massachusetts) was an American organist, educator and composer.

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James Hotchkiss Rogers

James Hotchkiss Rogers (Fair Haven, Connecticut, February 7, 1857 – Pasadena, California, November 28, 1940) was an American organist, composer, teacher, music critic, and publisher.

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James MacMillan

Sir James Loy MacMillan, CBE (born 16 July 1959) is a Scottish classical composer and conductor.

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Jami Rogers-Anderson

Jami Rogers-Anderson (born September 2, 1970) is an American soprano opera singer.

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Jan Brandts Buys

Jan Willem Frans Brandts Buijs (Zutphen, 12 September 1868 – Salzburg, 7 December 1933) was a Dutch-Austrian composer who came from a long line of Dutch organists and composers of protestant church music.

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Jan Pogány

Jan Pogány (real name Jan Maślankiewicz-Pogány, born 23rd of June 1960 in Kołobrzeg, Poland) is a Polish classical composer, conductor and cellist.

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Jan van Gilse

Jan Pieter Hendrik van Gilse (Rotterdam, 11 May 1881 – Oegstgeest, 8 September 1944) was a Dutch composer and conductor.

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Jaroslav Řídký

Jaroslav Řídký (25 August 1897 – 14 August 1956) was a Czech composer, conductor, harpist, and music teacher.

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Jean Françaix

Jean René Désiré Françaix (23 May 1912 in Le Mans – 25 September 1997 in Paris) was a French neoclassical composer, pianist, and orchestrator, known for his prolific output and vibrant style.

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Jean Hubeau

Jean Hubeau (22 June 191719 August 1992) was a French pianist, composer and pedagogue known especially for his recordings of Gabriel Fauré, Robert Schumann and Paul Dukas, which are recognized as benchmark versions.

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Jean-Baptiste Labelle

Jean-Baptiste Labelle (September 1825 - 9 September 1898) was a Canadian composer, organist, pianist, and conductor.

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Jean-Baptiste Morin (composer)

Jean-Baptiste Morin (2 February 1677 – 27 April 1745) was a French composer and the Ordinaire de la Musique to Philippe, Duke of Orléans before and perhaps during his regency.

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Jean-Baptiste Stuck

Jean-Baptiste Stuck (also known by the single moniker "Baptistin," "Batistin" or "Battistin") (6 May 16808 December 1755) was an Italian-French composer and cellist of the Baroque era.

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Jean-Jacques-Joseph Debillemont

Jean-Jacques-Joseph Debillemont (12 December 1824, Dijon – 14 February 1879, Paris), was a 19th-century French musician, both a composer, music critic, and conductor who devoted himself mainly to incidental music (operettas and ballets).

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Jean-Philippe Rameau

Jean-Philippe Rameau (–) was one of the most important French composers and music theorists of the 18th century.

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Jean-Théodore Radoux

Jean-Théodore Radoux (9 November 1835 – 20 March 1911) was a Belgian composer and bassoonist.

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Jeanette Wässelius

Marie Jeanette Wässelius (23 August 1784 – 5 December 1853) was a Swedish opera singer.

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Jeanne Ellison Shaffer

Jeanne Ellison Shaffer (née Butcher; May 25, 1925 – April 9, 2007)Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014.

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Jerry Goldsmith

Jerrald King "Jerry" Goldsmith (February 10, 1929July 21, 2004) was an American composer and conductor most known for his work in film and television scoring.

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Jessie Gaynor

Jesse L. Smith Gaynor (February 17, 1863 - February 20, 1921) was an American composer of children's music.

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Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring

Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring is the most common English title of a piece of music derived from the 10th and last movement of the cantata ''Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben'', BWV 147 ("Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life"), composed by Johann Sebastian Bach in 1716 and 1723.

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Jimmy Webb

Jimmy Layne Webb (born August 15, 1946) is an American songwriter, composer, and singer.

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Joachim Nicolas Eggert

Joachim Nicolas Eggert (22 February 1779 – 14 April 1813) was a Swedish composer and musical director.

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Joaquín García de Antonio

Joaquín García Sanchís (1710 in Anna, Valencia - 15 September 1779 in Las Palmas) was a Valencian composer and maestro de capilla.

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Johan Helmich Roman

Johan Helmich Roman (26 October 1694 – 20 November 1758) was a Swedish Baroque composer.

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Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann

Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann (14 May 1805 – 10 March 1900) was a Danish composer.

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Johann Abraham Peter Schulz

Johann Abraham Peter Schulz (31 March 1747, Lüneburg – 10 June 1800,Schwedt) was a German musician.

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Johann Admoni

Johánn Admóni (original surname: Krasny, Rot, Иоганн Григорьевич Адмони; 1906, Dessau – 1979, Leningrad) is a Soviet composer, pianist, teacher, and public person, the son of the famous St. Petersburg historian, publicist, and Jewish community leader Gregor Red-Admoni (Григорий Яковлевич Красный-Адмони).

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Johann Andreas Herbst

Johann Andreas Herbst (baptized June 9, 1588 – January 24, 1666) was a German composer and music theorist of the early Baroque era.

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Johann Baptist Schenk

Johann Baptist Schenk (30 November 1753 – 29 December 1836) was an Austrian composer and teacher.

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Johann Carl Friedrich Rellstab

Johann Carl Friedrich Rellstab (27 February 1759 – 19 August 1813) was a German composer, writer, music publisher, and critic living in Berlin.

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Johann Christoph Altnickol

Johann Christoph Altnickol, or Altnikol, (1 January 1720 – 25 July 1759; dates of baptism and burial) was a German organist, bass singer, and composer.

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Johann Christoph Kellner

Johann Christoph Kellner (15 August 1736 – 1803) was a German organist and composer.

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Johann Ernst Eberlin

Johann Ernst Eberlin (27 March 1702 – 19 June 1762) was a German composer and organist whose works bridge the baroque and classical eras.

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Johann Friedrich Agricola

Johann Friedrich Agricola (4 January 1720 – 2 December 1774) was a German composer, organist, singer, pedagogue, and writer on music.

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Johann Friedrich Fasch

Johann Friedrich Fasch (15 April 1688 – 5 December 1758) was a German violinist and composer.

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Johann Georg Ebeling

Johann Georg Ebeling (8 July 1637 – 4 December 1676) was a German composer who was born in Lüneburg and died in Stettin.

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Johann Gottfried Müthel

Johann Gottfried Müthel (January 17, 1728 – July 14, 1788) was a German composer and noted keyboard virtuoso.

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Johann Gottfried Vierling

Johann Gottfried Vierling (January 25, 1750 – November 22, 1813) was a German organist and composer.

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Johann Gottlieb Goldberg

Johann Gottlieb Goldberg (baptized 14 March 1727 – 13 April 1756) was a German virtuoso harpsichordist, organist, and composer of the late Baroque and early Classical period.

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Johann Hermann Kufferath

Johann Hermann Kufferath (12 May 1797 in Mülheim an der Ruhr – 28 July 1864 in Wiesbaden) was a German composer.

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Johann Krieger

Johann Krieger (28 December 1651 – 18 July 1735) was a German composer and organist, younger brother of Johann Philipp Krieger.

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Johann Ludwig Bach

Johann Ludwig Bach (– 1 May 1731) was a composer and violinist.

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Johann Mattheson

Johann Mattheson (28 September 1681 – 17 April 1764) was a German composer, singer, writer, lexicographer, diplomat and music theorist.

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Johann Melchior Molter

Johann Melchior Molter (10 February 1696 – 12 January 1765) was a German baroque composer and violinist.

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Johann Michael Bach

Johann Michael Bach (baptised, Arnstadt, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen –, Gehren) was a German composer of the Baroque period.

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Johann Michael Heineccius

Johann Michael Heineccius (14 December 1674 – 11 September 1722) was a well-known German preacher and theologian, the brother of Johann Gottlieb Heineccius.

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Johann Otto Uhde

Johann Otto Uhde (born Insterburg 12 May 1725; died Berlin 20 December 1766) was a German composer and violinist.

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Johann Peter Kellner

Johann Peter Kellner (variants: Keller, Kelner) (28 September 1705 – 19 April 1772) was a German organist and composer.

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Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach (28 July 1750) was a composer and musician of the Baroque period, born in the Duchy of Saxe-Eisenach.

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Johann Wilhelm Petersen

Johann Wilhelm Petersen (July 1, 1649 in Osnabrück – January 31, 1727 in Zerbst) was a German theologian, mystic, and Millennialist.

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Johannes Eccard

Johannes Eccard (1553–1611) was a German composer and kapellmeister.

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Johannes Erasmus Iversen

Johannes Erasmus Iversen (1713 – 28 February 1755) was a Danish Baroque composer.

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Johannes Matthias Sperger

Johannes Matthias Sperger, also often Johann, (Czech: Jan Matyáš Sperger; 23 March 1750 – 13 May 1812) was an Austrian contrabassist and composer.

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Johannes Ringk

Johannes Ringk, or Ringck (26 June 1717 – 24 August 1778), was a German composer and organist.

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John Amis

John Preston Amis (17 June 1922 – 1 August 2013) was a British broadcaster, classical music critic, music administrator, and writer.

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John Fawcett (organist)

John Fawcett the younger (1825?–1857), was an English organist.

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John Francis Barnett

John Francis Barnett (16 October 183724 November 1916) was an English music composer and teacher.

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John Hill Hewitt

John Hill Hewitt (July 11, 1801, New York City—October 7, 1890, Baltimore) was an American songwriter, playwright, and poet.

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John Hughes (poet)

John Hughes (born 29 January 1677 in Marlborough, Wiltshire, died of tuberculosis in London on 17 February 1720) was an English poet, essayist and translator.

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John La Touche (lyricist)

John Treville Latouche (La Touche) (November 13, 1914, Baltimore, Maryland – August 7, 1956, Calais, Vermont) was a lyricist and bookwriter in American musical theater.

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John Rees (musician)

John Thomas Rees (1857–1949) was a Welsh musician and composer who was notable for winning a prize at the National Eisteddfod in 1895.

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John S. Beckett

John Stewart Beckett (5 February 1927 – 5 February 2007) was an Irish musician, composer and conductor; cousin of the famous writer and playwright Samuel Beckett.

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John Sanders (musician)

John Derek Sanders OBE, FRCO (23 November 1933 – 23 December 2003) was an English organist, conductor, choir trainer and composer.

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John Stainer

Sir John Stainer (6 June 1840 – 31 March 1901) was an English composer and organist whose music, though not generally much performed today (except for The Crucifixion, still heard at Passiontide in many churches of the Anglican Communion), was very popular during his lifetime.

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John Stanley (composer)

Charles John Stanley (17 January 1712 Old Style – 19 May 1786) was an English composer and organist.

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John W. Peterson

John Willard Peterson (November 1, 1921 – September 20, 2006) was a songwriter who had a major influence on evangelical Christian music in the 1950s through the 1970s.

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John Wesley Work III

John Wesley Work III (July 15, 1901 – May 17, 1967) was a composer, educator, choral director, musicologist and scholar of African-American folklore and music.

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Jonathan Manson

Jonathan Manson is a Scottish cellist and viol player.

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José Antônio Rezende de Almeida Prado

José Antônio Rezende de Almeida Prado or Almeida Prado (February 8, 1943 – November 21, 2010) was an important Brazilian composer of classical music and a pianist.

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José de Nebra

José Melchor Baltasar Gaspar Nebra Blasco (January 6, 1702 – July 11, 1768) was a Spanish composer.

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José de Torres

José de Torres y Martínez Bravo (16701738) was a Spanish composer, organist, music theorist and music publisher.

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José Eulalio Samayoa

José Eulalio Samayoa (1781–ca. 1866) was a Guatemalan classical composer.

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Josef Antonín Plánický

Josef Antonín Plánický (27 November 1691 – 17 September 1732) was a Czech composer, musician and singer of the Baroque era.

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Josef Lammerz

Josef Lammerz (1930 – 8 January 2014) was a German composer, choral director and organist.

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Josef Proksch

Josef Proksch or Joseph Proksch (4 August 1794, Reichenberg (now Liberec) – 20 December 1864, Prague) was a Bohemian-German pianist and composer.

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Josef Rheinberger

Josef Gabriel Rheinberger (17 March 1839, in Vaduz – 25 November 1901, in Munich) was an organist and composer, born in Liechtenstein and resident for most of his life in Germany.

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Josef Vorel

Josef Vorel (also Worel) (13 November 1801 – 19 December 1874) was a Czech priest and composer.

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Josep Prades i Gallent

Josep Prades i Gallent (José Pradas Gallén) (1689–1757; born and died in Villahermosa del Río, Castelló) was a Spanish organist and composer at Valencia Cathedral during the Baroque period.

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Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is a musical with lyrics by Tim Rice and music by Andrew Lloyd Webber.

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Joseph Bennett (critic)

Joseph Bennett (29 November 1831 – 12 June 1911) was an English music critic and librettist.

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Joseph Bodin de Boismortier

Joseph Bodin de Boismortier (23 December 1689 – 28 October 1755) was a French baroque composer of instrumental music, cantatas, opéra-ballets, and vocal music.

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Joseph Costa (evangelist)

Joseph Massoud Costa (June 7, 1931 in Beirut, Lebanon – May 8, 1989) was a Lebanese evangelical preacher.

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Joseph Daussoigne-Méhul

Joseph Daussoigne-Méhul (10 June 1790 – 10 March 1875) was a French composer and music educator.

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Joseph Leopold Eybler

Joseph Leopold Eybler (8 February 1765 – 24 July 1846) was an Austrian composer and contemporary of Mozart.

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Joseph Pustylnik

Jóseph Pustýlnik (1905 in Balta – 1991 in Moscow) - Soviet composer, violinist, teacher, music theorist, active associate of Johann Admoni on organization of the Seminar of Amateur composers at the composers' House in Leningrad.

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Joseph Ryelandt

Joseph Ryelandt (7 April 1870 – 29 June 1965) was a Belgian classical composer.

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Joseph Schwantner: New Morning for the World; Nicolas Flagello: The Passion of Martin Luther King

Joseph Schwantner: New Morning for the World; Nicolas Flagello: The Passion of Martin Luther King is a classical music album by the Oregon Symphony under the artistic direction of James DePreist, released by Koch International Classics in 1995.

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Joshua Rifkin

Joshua Rifkin (born April 22, 1944 in New York) is an American conductor, keyboard player, and musicologist, and is currently a Professor of Music at Boston University.

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Josip Hatze

Joseph Hatze (1879–1959) was one of the first and most prominent Croatian composers in the Mediterranean style in the first half of last century.

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Jovan Rajić

Jovan Rajić (Јован Рајић; September 21, 1726 – December 22, 1801) was a Serbian writer, historian, traveller, and pedagogue, considered one of the greatest Serbian academics of the 18th century.

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Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga

Juan Crisóstomo Jacobo Antonio de Arriaga y Balzola (January 27, 1806January 17, 1826) was a Spanish Basque composer.

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Juan José Castro

Juan José Castro (March 7, 1895September 3, 1968) was an Argentine composer and conductor.

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Jubilate Agno

Jubilate Agno (Latin: "Rejoice in the Lamb") is a religious poem by Christopher Smart, and was written between 1759 and 1763, during Smart's confinement for insanity in St. Luke's Hospital, Bethnal Green, London.

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Jules Massenet

Jules Émile Frédéric Massenet (12 May 184213 August 1912) was a French composer of the Romantic era best known for his operas, of which he wrote more than thirty.

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Julia Hamari

Julia Hamari (born 21 November 1942) is a Hungarian mezzo-soprano and alto singer in opera and concert, appearing internationally.

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Julian Grant

Julian Grant (born 3 October 1960) is an English-born classical composer best known for a series of operas.

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Julian Lloyd Webber

Julian Lloyd Webber (born 14 April 1951) is a British cellist, conductor and the principal of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire.

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Julius Benedict

Sir Julius Benedict (27 November 1804 – 5 June 1885) was a German-born composer and conductor, resident in England for most of his career.

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Julius de Geyter

Julius De Geyter (Lede, 25 April 1830 – Antwerp, 18 February 1905) was a Flemish writer born in Lede, Belgium.

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Julius Sabbe

Julius Ludovicus Maria Sabbe (14 February 1846 in Ghent – 3 July 1910 in Bruges) was a Flemish publisher and an active member of the Flemish movement.

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July 1968

The following events occurred in July 1968.

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Justin Heinrich Knecht

Justinus or Justin Heinrich Knecht (30 September 1752 – 1 December 1817) was a German composer, organist, and music theorist.

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Kašpar Mašek

Kašpar Mašek or Gašpar Mašek (6 January 1794 – 13 May 1873) was a Czech-Slovenian composer.

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Kanto (music)

Kanto (Kanto, Κάντο) is a popular genre of Turkish music.

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Karel Miry

Karel Miry (14 August 1823 Ghent - 3 October 1889 Ghent) was a Belgian composer.

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Karl Amadeus Hartmann

Karl Amadeus Hartmann (2 August 1905 – 5 December 1963) was a German composer.

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Karl Marx (composer)

Karl Marx (12 November 1897, Munich8 May 1985, Stuttgart) was a German composer, conductor, and educator.

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Karl Ristenpart

Karl Ristenpart (January 26, 1900 – December 24, 1967) was a German conductor.

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Karlheinz Stockhausen

Karlheinz Stockhausen (22 August 1928 – 5 December 2007) was a German composer, widely acknowledged by critics as one of the most important but also controversial composers of the 20th and early 21st centuries.

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Karolju

Karolju is a suite of original Christmas carols for choir and orchestra by the American composer Christopher Rouse.

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Kaspar Förster

Kaspar Förster (also Caspar Foerster) (baptized 28 February 1616 in Danzig – 2 February 1673 in Oliva, near Danzig) was a German singer and composer.

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Köthen (Anhalt)

Köthen (Anhalt) is a city in Germany.

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Kenilworth

Kenilworth is a town and civil parish in Warwickshire, England, about south-west of the centre of Coventry, north of Warwick and north-west of London.

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Kenilworth Castle

Kenilworth Castle is located in the town of the same name in Warwickshire, England.

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Kent State shootings

The Kent State shootings (also known as the May 4 massacre or the Kent State massacre)"These would be the first of many probes into what soon became known as the Kent State Massacre.

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Kent State shootings in popular culture

This is a list of depictions of and references to the Kent State shootings in popular culture.

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Keyboard concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach

The harpsichord concertos, BWV 1052–1065, are concertos for harpsichord, strings and continuo by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Khayyam Mirzazade

Khayyam Hadi oglu Mirzazade (Xəyyam Hadı oğlu Mirzəzadə) – is an Azerbaijani composer and professor.

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King René's Daughter

Kong Renés Datter (King René’s Daughter) is a Danish verse drama written in 1845 by Henrik Hertz.

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Kip Williams

Kip Williams is an Australian theatre director.

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Kirke Mechem

Kirke Mechem (born August 16, 1925) is an American composer.

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Klaus Martin Ziegler

Klaus Martin Ziegler (23 February 1929 – 22 September 1993) was a German choral conductor, organist and Protestant church musician.

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Konstantin Eiges

Konstantin Romanovich Eiges (surname sometimes spelt Eyges, Russian Константин Романович Эйгес, 24 May (Old Style)/ 5 June 1875—2 Dec 1950) was a Russian composer, teacher and pianist.

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Kristo Kono

Kristo Kono (1907–1991) was an Albanian composer, and recipient of the People's Artist title in 1961, the highest artistic recognition title during the communist era.

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Kurt Hessenberg

Kurt Hessenberg (17 August 1908 – 17 June 1994) was a German composer and professor at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Frankfurt am Main.

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Kurt Thomas (composer)

Kurt Georg Hugo Thomas (25 May 1904 – 31 March 1973) was a German composer, conductor and music educator.

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L'arpa festante

italic is a German chamber orchestra, specializing in the revival and performance of unknown works, especially from the Baroque era.

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L'enfant prodigue

L'enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son) is a scène lyrique or cantata in one act by Claude Debussy with a text by Édouard Guinand.

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L'impresario delle Isole Canarie

(The impresario from the Canary Islands), also known as L'impresario delle Canarie or Dorina e Nibbio, is a satirical opera intermezzo libretto by Metastasio (Pietro Antonio Domenico Trapassi), written in 1724 to be performed between the acts of his opera seria Didone abbandonata.

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La damnation de Faust

La damnation de Faust (English: The Damnation of Faust), Op.

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La Damoiselle élue

La Damoiselle élue (The Blessed Damozel), L. 62, is a cantata for two soloists, female choir, and orchestra, composed by Claude Debussy in 1887–1889 based on a text by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.

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La descente d'Orphée aux enfers

La descente d'Orphée aux enfers (English: The Descent of Orpheus to the Underworld) is a chamber opera in two acts by the French composer Marc-Antoine Charpentier.

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La fedeltà premiata

(Fidelity Rewarded), Hob. XXVIII/10, is an opera in three acts by Joseph Haydn first performed at Eszterháza on 25 February 1781 to celebrate the reopening of the court theatre after a fire.

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La Tosca

La Tosca is a five-act drama by the 19th-century French playwright Victorien Sardou.

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Laßt Jubeltöne laut erklingen

Laßt Jubeltöne laut erklingen (Let exultation sound loudly), WAB 76, is a festive song composed by Anton Bruckner in 1854.

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Ladislav Vycpálek

Ladislav Vycpálek (Vršovice, Prague, 23 February 1882 – Prague, 9 January 1969) was a Czech composer and violist.

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Land der Berge, Land am Strome

"Land der Berge, Land am Strome" (Land of mountains, land by the river) is the national anthem of Austria.

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Langlois Bridge at Arles

The Langlois Bridge at Arles is the subject of four oil paintings, one watercolor and four drawings by Vincent van Gogh.

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Laurence Traiger

Laurence Traiger (born October 16, 1956) is an American composer and musicologist.

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Lélio

Lélio, ou Le retour à la vie (English: Lélio, or the Return to Life) Op.

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Léon Jongen

Léon Jongen (2 March 1884 – 18 November 1969) was a Belgian composer and organist.

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Léopold Aimon

Pamphile Léopold François Aimon (4 October 1779, L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue – 2 February 1866, Paris) was a French cellist and composer.

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Le chalet

is an opéra comique in one act by Adolphe Adam to a French libretto by Eugène Scribe and Mélesville after the singspiel by Goethe.

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Le roi des étoiles

Igor Stravinsky's cantata Le roi des étoiles (The King of the Stars; Russian: Звездоликий, Zvezdoliki) was composed in 1911–12.

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Le Soleil des eaux

Le Soleil des eaux (The Sun of waters) is a cantata for soprano, choir and orchestra by Pierre Boulez.

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Le Visage nuptial

Le Visage nuptial (The Nuptial Face) is a secular cantata for soprano, contralto, choir of women and orchestra by Pierre Boulez.

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Leevi Madetoja

Leevi Antti Madetoja (17 February 1887, Oulu – 6 October 1947, Helsinki) was a Finnish composer, music critic, conductor, and teacher of the late-Romantic and early-modern periods.

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Lena McLin

Lena Mae McLin (née Johnson; September 5, 1929) is an American music teacher, composer, author, and pastor.

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Leo Schulz

Leo Schulz (28 March 1865 – 12 August 1944) was a German-born American cellist.

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Leo Sowerby

Leo Salkeld Sowerby (May 1, 1895 – July 7, 1968), American composer and church musician, was the winner of the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1946, and was often called the “Dean of American church music” in the early to mid 20th century.

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Leoš Janáček

Leoš Janáček (baptised Leo Eugen Janáček; 3 July 1854 – 12 August 1928) was a Czech composer, musical theorist, folklorist, publicist and teacher.

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Leopold Koželuch

Leopold Koželuch (born Jan Antonín Koželuh, alternatively also Leopold Koželuh, Leopold Kotzeluch) (26 June 1747 – 7 May 1818) was a Czech composer and teacher of classical music.

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Leroy Jenkins (jazz musician)

Leroy Jenkins (Chicago, March 11, 1932 – February 24, 2007, New York City) was an American composer and violinist/violist.

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Les Arts Florissants (ensemble)

Les Arts Florissants is a Baroque musical ensemble in residence at the Théâtre de Caen in Caen, France.

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Les francs-juges

Les francs-juges (translated as "The Free Judges" or "The Judges of the Secret Court") is the title of an unfinished opera by the French composer Hector Berlioz written to a libretto by his friend Humbert Ferrand in 1826.

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Les Luthiers

Les Luthiers is an Argentine comedy-musical group, very popular also in several other Spanish-speaking countries including Paraguay, Guatemala, Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Spain, Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay, Bolivia, Cuba, Costa Rica and Venezuela.

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Liberté (poem)

"Liberté" (Liberty) is a 1942 poem by the French poet Paul Éluard.

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Libretto

A libretto is the text used in, or intended for, an extended musical work such as an opera, operetta, masque, oratorio, cantata or musical.

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Liceu

The Gran Teatre del Liceu, or simply Liceu in Catalan, is an opera house on La Rambla in Barcelona, Catalonia.

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Lili Boulanger

Marie-Juliette Olga ("Lili") Boulanger (21 August 189315 March 1918) was a French composer, and the first female winner of the Prix de Rome composition prize.

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Linda Bouchard

Linda Bouchard (born 21 May 1957) is a Canadian composer and conductor.

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List of artworks known in English by a foreign title

The following is an alphabetical list of works of art that are often called by a non-English name in an English context.

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List of Bach cantatas

This is a sortable list of the Bach cantatas, the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach.

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List of compositions by Anton Bruckner

This is a list of compositions by Anton Bruckner.

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List of compositions by César Cui

The following is a list of compositions by the Russian composer César Cui.

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List of compositions by Clémence de Grandval

This is a list of musical compositions by Clémence de Grandval (1828–1907), also known as Marie Grandval and Marie Félicie Clémence de Reiset, Vicomtesse de Grandval.

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List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude

The Buxtehude-Werke-Verzeichnis ("Buxtehude Works Catalogue", commonly abbreviated to BuxWV) is the catalogue and the numbering system used to identify musical works by the German-Danish Baroque composer Dieterich Buxtehude (c. 1637 – 9 May 1707).

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List of compositions by Einojuhani Rautavaara

This is a list of compositions by Einojuhani Rautavaara.

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List of compositions by Ennio Morricone

This is a list of compositions by composer, orchestrator and conductor Ennio Morricone.

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List of compositions by Ernest Chausson

This is a list of compositions by Ernest Chausson.

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List of compositions by Ethel Smyth

This is a list of musical compositions by Dame Ethel Smyth (1858–1944).

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List of compositions by Fabio Vacchi

This is a list of compositions by Fabio Vacchi.

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List of compositions by Felix Mendelssohn

This is a list of compositions by Felix Mendelssohn.

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List of compositions by Friedrich Kuhlau

This is a list of compositions by Friedrich Kuhlau.

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List of compositions by George Frideric Handel

George Frideric Handel (23 February 1685 – 14 April 1759) was a German–English Baroque composer who is famous for his operas, oratorios and concerti grossi.

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List of compositions by Georges Bizet

This is a list of musical works by the French composer Georges Bizet (1838–1875).

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List of compositions by Gustav Mahler

The musical compositions of Gustav Mahler (1860–1911) are almost exclusively in the genres of song and symphony.

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List of compositions by James MacMillan

This is a list of compositions list of compositions by James MacMillan (born 1959), a Scottish composer of contemporary classical music.

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List of compositions by Joseph Martin Kraus

This list of compositions by Joseph Martin Kraus is organized by number in Bertil H. van Boer's Die Werke von Joseph Martin Kraus: Systematisch-thematisches Werkverzeichnis, which gives each composition a VB number.

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List of compositions by Leo Sowerby

The following is a list of compositions by Leo Sowerby.

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List of compositions by Leopold Koželuch

The classical composer Leopold Koželuch left around 400 compositions.

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List of compositions by Malcolm Williamson

This is a list of the compositions of Malcolm Williamson.

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List of compositions by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky wrote several works well known among the general classical public—Romeo and Juliet, the 1812 Overture, and his three ballets: The Nutcracker, Swan Lake, and The Sleeping Beauty.

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List of compositions by Stanisław Moniuszko

This is a list of compositions by Stanisław Moniuszko.

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List of compositions by Vincent d'Indy

This is a list of compositions by Vincent d'Indy.

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List of compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791) was a prolific composer and wrote in many genres.

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List of concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach's Violin Concertos, BWV 1041–1043, and his six Brandenburg Concertos survive in their original instrumentation.

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List of cultural depictions of Cleopatra

Cleopatra has been the subject of literature, films, plays, television programs, and art.

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List of English words of Italian origin

This is a partial list of known or supposed Italian loanwords in English.

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List of general music articles in Rees's Cyclopaedia

The music articles in the Rees's ''Cyclopaedia'' were written by Charles Burney (1726–1814), with additional material by John Farey Sr (1766–1826), and John Farey Jr (1791–1851).The Cyclopædia was illustrated using 53 plates as well as a numerous examples of music typset within the articles.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/C

Category:Lists of words.

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List of Italian musical terms used in English

Many musical terms are in Italian, because many of the most important early composers from the Renaissance to the Baroque period were Italian, and that period is when numerous musical indications were used extensively for the first time.

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List of Latin words with English derivatives

This is a list of Latin words with derivatives in English (and other modern languages).

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List of Mongolian composers

Mongolia features a rich tradition of classical music and ballet.

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List of musical genres by era

This is a list of musical forms and genres organized according to the eras of Classical music.

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List of operas by Handel

George Frideric Handel's operas comprise 42 musical dramas that were written between 1705 and 1741 in various genres.

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List of operas by Mysliveček

This is a complete list of the operas of the Czech composer Josef Mysliveček (1737–1781).

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List of Portuguese words of Italian origin

A list of loanwords from the Italian language into the Portuguese language, also called italianisms.

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List of program music

Program music is a term usually applied to any musical composition on the classical music tradition in which the piece is designed according to some preconceived narrative, or is designed to evoke a specific idea and atmosphere.

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List of repertoire pieces by Ferruccio Busoni

Many of Ferruccio Busoni's compositions and adaptations kept repertoire after the composer's death in 1924.

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List of Romantic-era composers

This is a list of Romantic-era composers.

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List of secular cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach

Apart from his hundreds of church cantatas Johann Sebastian Bach wrote secular cantatas in Weimar, Köthen and Leipzig, for instance for members of the Royal-Polish and Prince-electoral Saxonian family (e.g. Trauer-Ode), or other public or private occasions (e.g. Hunting Cantata).

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List of Shevchenko National Prize laureates

List of all Shevchenko National Prize laureates ordered by year of reception including the Soviet period.

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List of Spanish words borrowed from Italian

This is a list of Spanish words of Italian origin.

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List of styles of music: A–F

A B C D E F ----.

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List of U.S. state songs

Forty-nine of the fifty U.S. states that make up the United States of America have one or more state songs, which are selected by each state legislature, and/or state governor, as a symbol (or emblem) of that particular U.S. state.

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List of works premiered at the Teatro Capranica

This is a chronological list of works known to have premiered at the Teatro Capranica in Rome.

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Lobt ihn mit Herz und Munde, BWV 220

Lobt ihn mit Herz und Munde (Praise him with heart and voice), BWV 220, is a church cantata by an unknown composer, formerly attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Lodovico Giustini

Lodovico Giustini (12 December 1685 – 7 February 1743) was an Italian composer and keyboard player of the late Baroque and early Classical eras.

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Lorraine Hunt Lieberson

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (March 1, 1954 – July 3, 2006) was an American mezzo-soprano.

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Louis Andlauer

Louis Andlauer (7 September 1876 – 18 July 1915) was a French composer and organist.

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Louis Coerne

Louis Adolphe Coerne (February 27, 1870 – September 11, 1922) was an American composer and music educator.

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Louis Fourestier

Louis (Félix André) Fourestier (31 May 1892 – 30 September 1976) was a French conductor, composer and pedagogue, and was one of the founders of the Orchestre Symphonique de Paris.

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Louis Gallet

Louis Gallet (14 February 1835 in Valence, Drôme – 16 October 1898) was a French writer of operatic libretti, plays, romances, memoirs, pamphlets, and innumerable articles, who is remembered above all for his adaptations of fiction—and Scripture— to provide librettos of cantatas and opera, notably by composers Georges Bizet, Camille Saint-Saëns and Jules Massenet.

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Louis Lacombe

Pierre Louis Trouillon-Lacombe (November 26, 1818, Bourges (Cher)– September 30, 1884, Saint-Vaast-la-Hougue, (Manche) was a French pianist and composer.

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Louis Lambillotte

Louis Lambillotte (born La Hamaide, (Hainaut, Belgium), 27 March 1796; died Paris, 27 February 1855) was a Belgian Jesuit, composer and palaeographer of Church music, associated with the restoration of Gregorian music, which he inaugurated and promoted by his scientific researches and publications.

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Louis Théodore Gouvy

Louis Théodore Gouvy (July 3, 1819April 21, 1898) was a French/German composer.

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Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray

Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray (2 February 1840 – 4 July 1910) was a French Breton composer, pianist, and professor of music history/theory at the Conservatoire de Paris as well as a Prix de Rome laureate.

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Louis-Antoine Dornel

Louis-Antoine Dornel (ca. 1685 in Béthemont-la-Forêt – 1765 in Paris) was a French composer, harpsichordist, organist and violinist.

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Louis-Claude Daquin

Louis-Claude Daquin (or D'Aquino, d'Aquin, d'Acquin; July 4, 1694 – June 15, 1772) was a French composer of Jewish ancestry, writing in the Baroque and Galant styles.

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Louis-Nicolas Clérambault

Louis-Nicolas Clérambault (19 December 1676 – 26 October 1749) was a French musician, best known as an organist and composer.

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Louise Bertin

Louise-Angélique Bertin (Les Roches, Essonne, 15 January 1805Paris, 26 April 1877) was a French composer and poet.

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Louise Kirkby Lunn

Louise Kirkby Lunn (8 November 1873 – 17 February 1930) was an English contralto.

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Lower Rhenish Music Festival

The Lower Rhenish Music Festival (German: Das Niederrheinische Musikfest) was one of the most important festivals of classical music, which happened every year between 1818 and 1958, with few exceptions, at Pentecost for 112 times.

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Luca Antonio Predieri

Luca Antonio Predieri (13 September 1688 – 3 January 1767) was an Italian composer and violinist.

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Luci Shaw

Luci Shaw (born 1928 in London, England) is a Christian poet.

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Ludger Rémy

Ludger Rémy (4 February 1949 – 21 June 2017) was a German harpsichordist, conductor and musicologist.

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Ludvig Norman

Ludvig Norman (28 August 183128 March 1885) was a Swedish composer, conductor, pianist, and music teacher.

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Luigi Mancinelli

Luigi Mancinelli (5 February 1848, Orvieto – 2 February 1921, Rome) was a leading Italian orchestral conductor.

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Luigi Rossi

Luigi Rossi (c. 1597 – 20 February 1653) was an Italian Baroque composer.

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Lutz Landwehr von Pragenau

Lutz Landwehr von Pragenau (born 1963) is a German composer of classical music.

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MacArthur Park (song)

"MacArthur Park" is a song written and composed by Jimmy Webb.

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Madrigal

A madrigal is a secular vocal music composition of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Magali Léger

fr in 2016 Magali Léger is a contemporary French light soprano.

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Magda László

Magda László (14 June 1912 – 2 August 2002) was a Hungarian operatic soprano particularly associated with 20th-century operas.

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Magnificat (C. P. E. Bach)

The Magnificat, Wq 215, H.772, by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach is a musical setting of the biblical canticle Magnificat as an extended composition for voices and orchestra in nine movements, composed in Berlin in 1749.

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Magnificat Baroque Ensemble

The Magnificat Baroque Ensemble, or Magnificat, is an early music ensemble of voices and instruments specializing in the Baroque music of the 17th century under the artistic direction of Baroque cellist Warren Stewart.

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Mahtra War

Mahtra War (Mahtra sõda) was a peasant insurgency at the Mahtra estate (now in Rapla County, 60 km from Tallinn) in Estonia, in the then Russian Empire in May-July 1858.

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Majesty Music

Majesty Music is a conservative evangelical Christian music publisher in Greenville, South Carolina, perhaps best known for its children's adventure-story character Patch the Pirate.

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Malcolm Sargent

Sir Harold Malcolm Watts Sargent (29 April 1895 – 3 October 1967) was an English conductor, organist and composer widely regarded as Britain's leading conductor of choral works.

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Malvern Hills

The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and a small area of northern Gloucestershire, dominating the surrounding countryside and the towns and villages of the district of Malvern.

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Manuel García (tenor)

Manuel del Pópulo Vicente Rodriguez García (also known as Manuel García the Senior; 21 January 1775 – 10 June 1832) was a Spanish opera singer, composer, impresario, and singing teacher.

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Manuel José de Quirós

Manuel José de Quirós (died 1765) was an 18th-century Guatemalan composer.

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Marc Vaubourgoin

Jean Joseph Marc Vaubourgoin (19 March 1907 in (today a western neighbourhood of Bordeaux) – 1 April 1983 in the 10th arrondissement of Paris) was a 20th-century French composer.

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Marcel Dupré

Marcel Dupré (3 May 1886 – 30 May 1971) was a French organist, composer, and pedagogue.

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Marcello Abbado

Marcello Abbado (born 7 October 1926, Milan) is an Italian composer and pianist.

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March 1968

The following events occurred in March 1968.

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Marco Marazzoli

Marco Marazzoli (1602? – 26 January 1662) was an Italian priest and Baroque music composer.

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Maria Theresia von Paradis

Maria Theresia Paradis (also von Paradies) (May 15, 1759 – February 1, 1824), was an Austrian musician and composer who lost her sight at an early age, and for whom Mozart may have written his Piano Concerto No. 18 in B-flat major.

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Marià Obiols

Marià Obiols (26 November 1809 – 10 December 1888), also known as Mariano Obiols, was a Catalan composer, conductor, and professor of music.

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Mariem Hassan

Mariem Hassan (مريم حسن‎; 31 May 1958 – 22 August 2015) was a Sahrawi singer and lyricist from Western Sahara.

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Marietta Alboni

Marietta Alboni (6 March 1826 – 23 June 1894) was a renowned Italian contralto opera singer.

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Marietta Brambilla

Marietta Brambilla (6 June 1807 – 6 November 1875) was an Italian contralto who sang leading roles in the opera houses of Europe from 1827 until her retirement from the stage in 1848.

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Marika Pečená

Marika Pečená is a Czech choirmaster and organizer of musical life focused on early music.

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Marina Domashenko

Marina Domashenko is a Russian operatic mezzo-soprano.

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Martin Krumbiegel

Martin Krumbiegel (born 1963) is a German classical tenor, conductor and musicologist.

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Martin Shaw (composer)

Martin Edward Fallas Shaw (9 March 1875 – 24 October 1958) was an English composer, conductor and (in his early life) theatre producer.

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Masaaki Suzuki

is an award-winning Japanese organist, harpsichordist and conductor, and the founder and musical director of the Bach Collegium Japan.

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Masonic music

Masonic music has been defined as "music used in connection with the ritual and social functions of freemasonry".

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Mastropiero que nunca

Mastropiero que nunca was a theatrical humour/music show by Les Luthiers.

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Mats Lillhannus

Mats Lillhannus (born 1972 Korsholm, Finland) is a Finnish tenor singer.

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Matteo Babini

Matteo Antonio Babini (–), also known by the family name of Babbini, was a leading Italian tenor of the late 18th-century, and a teacher of singing and stage art.

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Matteo Capranica

Matteo Capranica (26 August 1708 – c. 1776) was an Italian composer.

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Maurice Goldman

Maurice Goldman (1910–1984) was an internationally known composer and conductor.

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Maurice Jacobson

Maurice Jacobson OBE (1896-1976) was an English pianist, composer, music publisher and music festival judge.

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Max Baumann

Max Georg Baumann (20 November 1917, Kronach – 17 July 1999, Berlin) was a German composer.

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Max Butting

Max Butting (6 October 1888 in Berlin, German Empire – 13 July 1976 in Berlin, East Germany) was a German composer.

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Max Vogrich

Max (Wilhelm Carl) Vogrich (24 January 185210 June 1916) was an Austrian pianist and composer.

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Mayer Cantata, WAB 60

The Mayer Cantata, WAB 60, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1855.

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Mátyás Seiber

Mátyás György Seiber (4 May 190524 September 1960) was a Hungarian-born composer who lived and worked in the United Kingdom from 1935 onwards.

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Münchener Bach-Chor

Münchener Bach-Chor is a mixed choir for concert and oratorio in Munich.

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Medieval lituus

The medieval lituus was a musical instrument of an indeterminate nature, known only from records which ascribe it various properties.

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Meeresstille und glückliche Fahrt (Beethoven)

Meeresstille und glückliche Fahrt ("Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage"), is a cantata for chorus and orchestra composed by Ludwig van Beethoven (op. 112), based on verses by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and dedicated to him.

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Meine Seele rühmt und preist, BWV 189

Meine Seele rühmt und preist (My soul extols and praises),, is a church cantata credited to Johann Sebastian Bach and Melchior Hoffmann.

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Melesio Morales

Melesio Morales (sometimes spelled Melisio Morales) (December 4, 1838 – May 12, 1908) was a Mexican composer.

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Melissa Dunphy

Melissa Dunphy (born 1980) is an Australian-American composer of classical music.

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Membra Jesu Nostri

Membra Jesu Nostri (English: The Limbs of our Jesus), BuxWV 75, is a cycle of seven cantatas composed by Dieterich Buxtehude in 1680, and dedicated to Gustaf Düben.

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Merlin (metal band)

Merlin is a death metal band from Russia formed in 1992 by one of pioneering female growling vocalists and bassist Mary Abaza.

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Meyer Lutz

Wilhelm Meyer Lutz (19 May 1829 – 31 January 1903) was a German-born British composer and conductor who is best known for light music, musical theatre and burlesques of well-known works.

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Michael Christian Festing

Michael Christian Festing (29 November 1705 – 24 July 1752) was an English violinist and composer.

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Michael Flanders

Michael Henry Flanders OBE (1 March 1922 – 14 April 1975) was an English actor, broadcaster, and writer and performer of comic songs.

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Michael Tippett

Sir Michael Kemp Tippett (2 January 1905 – 8 January 1998) was an English composer who rose to prominence during and immediately after the Second World War.

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Michael William Balfe

Michael William Balfe (15 May 1808 – 20 October 1870) was an Irish composer, best-remembered for his opera The Bohemian Girl.

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Michel Corrette

Michel Corrette (10 April 1707 – 21 January 1795) was a French organist, composer and author of musical method books.

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Mihovil Logar

Mihovil Logar (Миховил Логар; Rijeka, Croatia, 6 October 1902 – Belgrade, Serbia, 13 January 1998) was a composer and music writer.

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Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis

Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis (Mikołaj Konstanty Czurlanis; –) was a Lithuanian painter, composer and writer.

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Mikhail Ivanov (composer)

Mikhail Mikhailovich Ivanov (Михаи́л Миха́йлович Ива́нов) (23 September 184920 October 1927) was a Russian composer, critic and writer on music.

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Milena Jesenská

Milena Jesenská (10 August 1896 – 17 May 1944) was a Czech journalist, writer, editor and translator.

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Milka Stojanović

Milka Stojanović (Milka Stojanović.; 13 January 1937) is a Serbian soprano opera singer, who achieved international success.

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Milton Barnes (composer)

Milton Barnes (16 December 1931 – 27 February 2001) was a Canadian composer, conductor, and jazz drummer.

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Mixed youth choir Leiden orphanage

The Mixed youth choir Leiden orphanage was the choir of the Heilige Geest- of Arme Wees- en Kinderhuis ("Heilige Geest Orphanage") in the city of Leiden in the Netherlands between 1796 and 1802.

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Mladen Stanev

Mladen Stanev (Младен Станев) (born 1974) is a Bulgarian conductor.

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Mme Papavoine

Madame Papavoine née Pellecier (born c. 1735, fl. 1755-61) was a French composer.

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Moby Dick (cantata)

Moby Dick is a dramatic cantata for two tenors, two basses, male chorus, and orchestra by the American composer Bernard Herrmann with a libretto by Clark Harrington based on Herman Melville's eponymous novel.

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Momente

Momente (Moments) is a work by the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, written between 1962 and 1969, scored for solo soprano, four mixed choirs, and thirteen instrumentalists (four trumpets, four trombones, three percussionists, and two electric keyboards).

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Monody

In poetry, the term monody has become specialized to refer to a poem in which one person laments another's death.

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Moscow (Tchaikovsky)

Moscow (translit) is a cantata composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky in 1883 for the coronation of Alexander III of Russia, to a Russian libretto by Apollon Maykov.

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Moses Sofer

Moses Schreiber (1762–1839), known to his own community and Jewish posterity in the Hebrew translation as Moshe Sofer, also known by his main work Chatam Sofer, Chasam Sofer or Hatam Sofer, (trans. Seal of the Scribe and acronym for Chiddushei Torat Moshe Sofer), was one of the leading Orthodox rabbis of European Jewry in the first half of the nineteenth century.

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Moshe Cotel

Moshe Cotel (February 20, 1943 – October 24, 2008) was a pianist and composer whose music was strongly influenced by his Jewish roots.

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Motiejus Gustaitis

Motiejus Gustaitis (Мотеюс Густайтис, 27 February 1870 – 23 December 1927) was a Lithuanian Symbolist poet, who used numerous pseudonyms (among them Balandis, Bendrakelionis, Embė, G. M., K. M. G.). He was also a translator and educator, as well as Catholic priest.

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Moyse Alcan

Moyse Alcan (1817 – May 14, 1869 in Metz) was a French Jewish publisher and litterateur.

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Music based on the works of Oscar Wilde

This is an incomplete list of music based on the works of Oscar Wilde.

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Music history of Hungary

Little is known about Hungarian music prior to the 11th century, when the first Kings of Hungary were Christianized and Gregorian chant was introduced.

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Music of Barbados

The music of Barbados includes distinctive national styles of folk and popular music, including elements of Western classical and religious music.

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Music of Guatemala

The music of Guatemala is diverse.

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Music of Norway

Norway is a rather sparsely populated country in Europe (5 million inhabitants in an area of some excluding Svalbard and Jan-Mayen), but even so its music and its musical life are as complex as those of most other countries.

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Music of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

While the contributions of the Russian nationalistic group The Five were important in their own right in developing an independent Russian voice and consciousness in classical music, the compositions of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky became dominant in 19th century Russia, with Tchaikovsky becoming known both in and outside Russia as its greatest musical talent.

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Musica Alta Ripa

Musica Alta Ripa is a musical ensemble from Hanover, specializing in Baroque music on period instruments.

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Musica Florea

Musica Florea is Czech Baroque music ensemble, founded 1992 by conductor and cellist Marek Štryncl, located in Prague.

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Musical historicism

Musical historicism signifies the use of historical materials, structures, styles, techniques, media, conceptual content, etc., whether by a single composer or those associated with a particular school, movement, or period.

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Musical settings of The Seven Last Words of Christ

The Seven Last Words of Christ refers to the seven short phrases uttered by Jesus on the cross, as gathered from the four Christian Gospels.

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Myroslav Skoryk

Myroslav Skoryk (Мирослав Михайлович Скорик, born 13 July 1938 in Lviv, then a part of Poland) is a Ukrainian composer and teacher.

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Naïve (album)

Naïve is the fifth album by industrial rock group KMFDM.

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Naomi and Ruth

The cantata Naomi and Ruth, Op.

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Ned Rorem

Ned Rorem (born October 23, 1923) is an American composer and diarist.

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Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli

Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli (4 April 1752 – 5 May 1837) was an Italian composer, chiefly of opera.

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Niccolò Jommelli

Niccolò Jommelli (10 September 1714 – 25 August 1774) was a Neapolitan composer.

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Nicola De Giosa

Nicola De Giosa (3 May 1819 – 7 July 1885) was an Italian composer and conductor active in Naples.

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Nicola Sala

Nicola Sala (7 April 1713 – 31 August 1801) was an Italian composer and music theorist.

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Nicolas Isouard

Nicolas Isouard (also known as Nicolò, Nicolò Isoiar or Nicolò de Malte; 16 May 1773 in Porto Salvo, Valletta, Malta – 23 March 1818 in Paris) was a French (Maltese born) composer.

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Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux

Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux (1745–1797) was a French composer, born in Paris.

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Niels Gade

Niels Wilhelm Gade (22 February 1817 – 21 December 1890) was a Danish composer, conductor, violinist, organist and teacher.

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Nikolai Obukhov

Nikolai Borisovich Obukhov (Николай Борисович Обухов; Nicolai, Nicolas, Nikolay; Obukhow, Obouhow, Obouhov, Obouhoff) (22 April 189213 June 1954)Jonathan Powell.

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Nikolai Roslavets

Nikolai Andreevich Roslavets (Никола́й Андре́евич Ро́славец) (Surazh, then in Chernigov Governorate, Russian Empire, now in Bryansk Oblast, Russia23 August 1944, Moscow) was a significant Russian modernist composer of Russian origin.

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No-res

No-res, a Symphonic Tragedy in Two Parts (Catalan: Nothing, una tragèdia simfònica en dues parts), also known as No-res, an Agnostic Requiem (Catalan: Nothing, un rèquiem agnòstic) is a cantata for choir, orchestra, narrator and magnetic tape by Barcelonan composer Leonardo Balada.

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Nobuo Uematsu

is a Japanese video game composer, best known for scoring most of the titles in the Final Fantasy series by Square Enix.

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Novo Mesto

Novo Mesto (Novo mesto; also known by other alternative names) is the city on a bend of the Krka River in the City Municipality of Novo Mesto in southeastern Slovenia, close to the border with Croatia.

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Noye's Fludde

Noye's Fludde is a one-act opera by the British composer Benjamin Britten, intended primarily for amateur performers, particularly children.

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Nun laßt uns Gott dem Herren

"Nun lasst uns Gott dem Herren" (Now let us God, the Lord) is a Lutheran hymn of 1557 with words by Ludwig Helmbold.

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Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren

"" (Now praise, my soul, the Lord) is a Lutheran hymn written in German by the theologian and reformer Johann Gramann in 1525.

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O Fortuna

"O Fortuna" is a medieval Latin Goliardic poem written early in the 13th century, part of the collection known as the Carmina Burana.

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O lucenti, o sereni occhi (Handel)

O lucenti, o sereni occhi (HWV 144) is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707.

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Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (Handel)

Ode for St.

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Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne

Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne (HWV 74) is a secular cantata composed by George Frideric Handel to a libretto by Ambrose Philips, of which the first line, "Eternal source of light divine", provides an alternative title for the work.

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Olaus Andreas Grøndahl

Olaus Andreas Grøndahl (4 November 1847 — 31 December 1923) was a Norwegian conductor, singing teacher and composer.

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Ole Olsen (musician)

Ole Olsen (4 July 1850 – 4 November 1927) was a Norwegian organist, composer, conductor and military musician.

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Olga Elena Mattei

Olga Elena Mattei Echavarría (born 1933 in Arecibo) is a Puerto Rican-born Colombian poet.

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Oliver Friggieri

Oliver Friggieri (born 27 March 1947) is a Maltese poet, novelist, literary critic, and minor philosopher.

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Olof Åhlström

Olof Åhlström (15 August 1756 – 11 August 1835) was a Swedish civil servant, composer and music publisher.

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Olympic Hymn

The Olympic Hymn (Ολυμπιακός Ύμνος, Olympiakós Ýmnos), also known informally as the Olympic Anthem, is a choral cantata by opera composer Spyridon Samaras (1861-1917), with lyrics by Greek poet Kostis Palamas.

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Oma maa

Oma maa (My Own Land or Our Native Land, literally: Own land/country), Op.

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On Shore and Sea

On Shore and Sea is a "dramatic cantata" composed by Arthur Sullivan, with words by Tom Taylor.

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Ophir

Ophir is a port or region mentioned in the Bible, famous for its wealth.

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Oratorio

An oratorio is a large musical composition for orchestra, choir, and soloists.

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Orchestral song

The orchestral song (German) is a late romantic genre of classical music for solo voices and orchestra.

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Orchestral Suite No. 2 (Tchaikovsky)

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky composed his Orchestral Suite No.

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Orchestral suites (Bach)

The four orchestral suites (called ouvertures by their author), BWV 1066–1069 are four suites by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Oreste

Oreste ("Orestes", HWV A11, HG 48/102) is an opera by George Frideric Handel in three acts.

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Organ concertos, Op. 4 (Handel)

The Handel organ concertos Op 4, HWV 289–294, are six organ concertos for chamber organ and orchestra composed by George Frideric Handel in London between 1735 and 1736 and published in 1738 by the printing company of John Walsh.

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Organ Sonata (Elgar)

The Sonata in G major, Op.

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Origins of opera

The art form known as opera originated in Italy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, though it drew upon older traditions of medieval and Renaissance courtly entertainment.

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Orlando Morgan

Robert Orlando Morgan (1865 – 16 May 1956) was an English music teacher, composer and musicologist.

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Osbert Sitwell

Sir Francis Osbert Sacheverell Sitwell, 5th Baronet (6 December 1892 – 4 May 1969) was an English writer.

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Osian Ellis

Osian Gwynn Ellis CBE (born 8 February 1928) is a Welsh harpist and composer, known as the first harpist of the Melos Ensemble and for his musical association with Benjamin Britten.

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Ottorino Respighi

Ottorino Respighi (9 July 187918 April 1936) was an Italian violinist, composer and musicologist, best known for his three orchestral tone poems Fountains of Rome (1916), Pines of Rome (1924), and Roman Festivals (1928).

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Our Little Secret

Our Little Secret is the third studio album from Belgian electronic band Lords of Acid.

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Outline of music

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to music: Music – human expression in the medium of time using the structures of sounds or tones and silence.

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Overture

Overture (from French ouverture, "opening") in music is the term originally applied to the instrumental introduction to an opera.

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Owen Brannigan

Owen Brannigan OBE (10 March 19089 May 1973) was an English bass, known in opera for buffo roles and in concert for a wide range of solo parts in music ranging from Henry Purcell to Michael Tippett.

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P. D. Q. Bach

P.

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Paolo Giorza

Paolo Giorza (11 November 1832 – 4 March 1914) was an Italian-Australian composer of classical music and Romantic music.

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Parody

A parody (also called a spoof, send-up, take-off, lampoon, play on something, caricature, or joke) is a work created to imitate, make fun of, or comment on an original work—its subject, author, style, or some other target—by means of satiric or ironic imitation.

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Parsifal bell

A Parsifal bell (German: Parsifal Klavier Instrument) is a stringed musical instrument designed as a substitute for the church bells that are called for in the score of Richard Wagner's opera Parsifal.

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Pasquale Errichelli

Pasquale Errichelli (also Ericchelli or Enrichelli; 1730–1785) was an Italian composer and organist based in the city of Naples.

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Pastoral

A pastoral lifestyle (see pastoralism) is that of shepherds herding livestock around open areas of land according to seasons and the changing availability of water and pasture.

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Patricio Manns

Patricio Manns (born August 3, 1937) is a Chilean composer, author, poet, novelist, essayist, play writer and journalist.

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Patrick Cassidy (composer)

Patrick Cassidy is an Irish orchestral, choral, and film score composer.

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Patrick Hadley

Patrick Arthur Sheldon Hadley (5 March 1899 – 17 December 1973) was a British composer.

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Paul Collin

Paul Collin (12 July 1843, Conches-en-Ouche – 5 February 1915, Paris) was a French poet, writer, translator and librettist.

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Paul Gilson

Paul Gilson (Brussels, 15 June 1865 – Brussels, 3 April 1942) was a Belgian musician and composer.

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Paul I, Prince Esterházy

Paul I, Prince Esterházy of Galántha (full German name: Paul Fürst Esterházy von Galantha; full Hungarian name: galánthai herceg Esterházy Pál) (8 September 1635 – 26 March 1713) was the first Prince Esterházy of Galántha from 1687 to 1713, Palatine of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1681 to 1713, and an Imperial Field Marshal.

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Paul Lebrun

Composer Paul-Henri-Joseph Lebrun |title.

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Paul Siefert

Paul Siefert (variants: Syfert, Sivert, Sibert) (23 May 1586 – 6 May 1666) was a German composer and organist associated with the North German school.

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Paul Steinitz

Paul Steinitz OBE (25 August 1909 – 21 April 1988) was a pioneer in the post-war interpretation of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Pavel Křížkovský

Pavel Křížkovský (born as Karel Křížkovský) (January 9, 1820 - May 8, 1885) was a Czech choral composer and conductor.

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Pavla Vykopalová

Pavla Vykopalová (born 23 March 1972 in Prague) is a Czech soprano.

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Pentecost

The Christian feast day of Pentecost is seven weeks after Easter Sunday: that is to say, the fiftieth day after Easter inclusive of Easter Sunday.

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Peri

Peri (پری pari, plural پريان pariān) are exquisite, winged spirits renowned for their beauty.

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Peter Harvey (baritone)

Peter Harvey (born 1958) is an English baritone.

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Peter Madcat Ruth

Peter "Madcat" Ruth (aka "Madcat" Ruth, or Peter Ruth) is an American Grammy Award-winning virtuoso harmonica player, who lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.

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Peter Planyavsky

Peter Planyavsky (born) is an Austrian organist and composer.

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Peter Ritzen

Peter Ritzen (born 21 January 1956) is a Flemish pianist composer and conductor.

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Peter Tranchell

Peter Andrew Tranchell (14 July 1922–14 September 1993) was a British composer.

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Petit motet

The petit motet ("little motet") was a genre of domestic sacred chamber music popular in France during the baroque era.

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Phaedra (cantata)

Phaedra, Op.

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Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool

Liverpool Philharmonic Hall is a concert hall in Hope Street, in Liverpool, England.

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Philip Munger

Philip Munger is an American composer, music educator, political blogger, and environmentalist living in Alaska.

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Philipp Heinrich Erlebach

Philipp Heinrich Erlebach (25 July 1657 - 17 April 1714) was a German Baroque composer.

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Piano-vocal score

A vocal score or piano-vocal score is a music score of an opera, or a vocal or choral composition written for orchestral accompaniment, such as an oratorio or cantata.

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Picander

Christian Friedrich Henrici (January 14, 1700 – May 10, 1764), writing under the pen name Picander, was a German poet and librettist for many of the cantatas which Johann Sebastian Bach composed in Leipzig.

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Pier Francesco Tosi

Pier Francesco Tosi (c. 16531732) was a castrato singer, composer, and writer on music.

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Pierre-Ange Vieillard

Pierre-Ange Vieillard de Boismartin (17 June 1778 – 12 January 1862) was a 19th-century French poet, playwright and literary critic.

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Pietro Domenico Paradies

Pietro Domenico Paradies (also Pietro Domenico Paradisi) (170725 August 1791), was an Italian composer, harpsichordist and harpsichord teacher, most prominently known for a composition popularly entitled "Toccata in A", which is, in other sources, the second movement of his Sonata No.

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Pietro Filippo Scarlatti

Pietro Filippo Scarlatti (5 January 1679 – 22 February 1750) was an Italian composer, organist and choirmaster.

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Pietro Mascagni

Pietro Antonio Stefano Mascagni (7 December 1863 – 2 August 1945) was an Italian composer most noted for his operas.

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Pietro Metastasio

Pietro Antonio Domenico Trapassi, better known by his pseudonym of Pietro Metastasio (3 January 1698 – 12 April 1782), was an Italian poet and librettist, considered the most important writer of opera seria libretti.

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Piotr Perkowski

Piotr Perkowski (17 March 1901 in Oweczacze (Овечаче, Ovechache, now Druzhne), Vinnytsia Oblast, now in Ukraine – 12 August 1990 in Otwock) was a Polish composer.

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Piotr Rubik

Piotr Rubik (born 3 September 1968 in Warsaw) is a Polish composer of symphonic pop music for orchestra, films and theatre.

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Polish opera

Polish opera may be broadly understood to include operas staged in Poland and works written for foreign stages by Polish composers, as well as opera in the Polish language.

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Polyphonic Era

The Polyphonic Era is a term used since the mid-19th century to designate an historical period in which harmony in music is subordinate to polyphony.

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Prayers of Kierkegaard

Prayers of Kierkegaard is an extended one-movement cantata written by Samuel Barber between 1942 and 1954.

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Prelude and Fugue on a Theme of Vittoria

Prelude and Fugue on a Theme of Vittoria is a work for solo organ composed by Benjamin Britten in 1946.

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Prix de Rome cantatas (Berlioz)

The French composer Hector Berlioz made four attempts at winning the Prix de Rome music prize, finally succeeding in 1830.

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Prométhée

Prométhée (Prometheus) is a tragédie lyrique (grand cantata) in three acts by the French composer Gabriel Fauré with a French libretto by the Symboliste poets Jean Lorrain and André-Ferdinand Hérold (1865-1940).

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Psalm 12

Psalm 12 is the 12th psalm from the Book of Psalms.

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Psalm 137

Psalm 137 (Greek numbering: Psalm 136) is the 137th psalm of the Book of Psalms, a Communal lament about being in exile after the Babylonian captivity, and yearning for Jerusalem.

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Psalm 146 (Bruckner)

Psalm 146 in A major (WAB 37) by Anton Bruckner is a psalm setting for double mixed choir, soloists and orchestra.

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Psalm 19

Psalm 19 is the 19th psalm in the Book of Psalms (the 18th in the Septuagint numbering).

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Psalm 97

Psalm 97 is the 97th psalm of the Book of Psalms, generally known in English by its first verse, in the King James Version, "The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice", also as "The Lord is King".

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Pygmalion (mythology)

Pygmalion (Πυγμαλίων, Pugmalíōn, gen.: Πυγμαλίωνος) is a legendary figure of Cyprus.

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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and The Five

In mid- to late-19th-century Russia, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and a group of composers known as The Five had differing opinions as to whether Russian classical music should be composed following Western or native practices.

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Quickening (MacMillan)

Quickening is a cantata for countertenor, two tenors, two baritones, children's choir, chorus, and orchestra by the Scottish composer James MacMillan.

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Rachel Corrie

Rachel Aliene Corrie (April 10, 1979 – March 16, 2003) from Olympia, Washington, was an American activist and diarist.

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Radu Marian

Radu Marian (born in 1977) is a Romanian/Moldovan male soprano or sopranist.

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Rafael Antonio Castellanos

Rafael Antonio Castellanos (c. 1725–1791) was a Guatemalan classical composer.

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Ralph Vaughan Williams

Ralph Vaughan Williams (12 October 1872– 26 August 1958) was an English composer.

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Rauf Hajiyev

Rauf Soltan oglu Hajiyev (Rauf Soltan oğlu Hacıyev; 15 May 1922 – 19 September 1995) was a Soviet and Azerbaijani composer and politician.

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Ray Bradbury

Ray Douglas Bradbury (August 22, 1920June 5, 2012) was an American author and screenwriter.

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Raymond Hanson (composer)

Raymond (Charles) Hanson AM (23 November 19136 December 1976) was an Australian composer and lecturer in composition at the NSW State Conservatorium of Music now known as the Sydney Conservatorium of Music.

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Raymond Pech

Raymond Jean Pech (4 February 1876 in Valenciennes – 3 July 1952 in Paris) was a French composer.

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Rayok

A rayok (p, "small paradise") was a Russian fairground peep show.

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Rūta Society

Rūta Society (Vilniaus lietuvių kultūros draugija „Rūta“) was a Lithuanian cultural society in Vilnius (Vilna, Wilno), then part of the Russian Empire, active from 1909 to the outbreak of World War I in 1914.

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Recitative

Recitative (also known by its Italian name "recitativo") is a style of delivery (much used in operas, oratorios, and cantatas) in which a singer is allowed to adopt the rhythms of ordinary speech.

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Reinhard Schwarz-Schilling

Reinhard Schwarz-Schilling (9 May 1904 in Hannover – 9 December 1985 in Berlin) was a German composer.

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Reinhold Glière

Reinhold Moritzevich Glière (Russian language: Рейнгольд Морицевич Глиэр, Ukrainian language: Ре́йнгольд Мо́ріцевич Гліер / Reingol'd Moritsevich Glier; born Reinhold Ernest Glier, which was later converted for standardization purposes; 23 June 1956), PAU, was a composer in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union, of German and Polish descent.

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Rejoice in the Lamb

Rejoice in the Lamb (Op. 30) is a cantata for four soloists, SATB choir, and organ composed by Benjamin Britten in 1943 and based on the poem Jubilate Agno by Christopher Smart (1722–1771).

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Renaud de Vilbac

(Alphonse Zoé Charles) Renaud de Vilbac (3 June 1829 – 19 March 1884) was a prolific French organist and composer.

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René Abjean

René Abjean (born 1937) is a French composer associated with Breton revivalist choral music.

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René de Galard de Béarn, Marquis de Brassac

René de Galard de Béarn, Marquis de Brassac (1699 – October 1771) was a French soldier and amateur composer of the Baroque era.

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René Leibowitz

René Leibowitz (17 February 1913 – 29 August 1972) was a Polish, later naturalised French, composer, conductor, music theorist and teacher.

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Requiem für einen jungen Dichter

(Requiem for a Young Poet) is an extended composition by Bernd Alois Zimmermann, written from 1967 to 1969 for two speakers, soprano and baritone soloists, three choirs, jazz band, organ, tapes and a large orchestra.

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Revolutionary opera

In China, revolutionary opera refers to the model operas planned and engineered during the Cultural Revolution by Jiang Qing, the wife of Chairman Mao Zedong.

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Rhapsody (music)

A rhapsody in music is a one-movement work that is episodic yet integrated, free-flowing in structure, featuring a range of highly contrasted moods, colour and tonality.

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Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon

Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon (born 1962, in Guadalajara, México) is a Mexican-American composer and chair of the composition department at Eastman School of Music.

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Richard Arnell

Richard Anthony Sayer ("Tony") Arnell (15 September 191710 April 2009) was an English composer of classical music.

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Rinaldo (cantata)

Rinaldo, a cantata for tenor solo, four-part male chorus and orchestra, was begun by Johannes Brahms in 1863 as an entry for a choral competition announced in Aachen.

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Rinaldo (opera)

Rinaldo (HWV 7) is an opera by George Frideric Handel, composed in 1711, and was the first Italian language opera written specifically for the London stage.

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Robert D. Levin

Robert D. Levin (born 13 October 1947) is a classical performer, musicologist and composer, and is the artistic director of the Sarasota Music Festival.

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Robert Herberigs

Robert Herberigs (9 June 1886 in Ghent – 20 September 1974 in Oudenaarde) was a Belgian painter, writer and musician.

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Robert Ward (composer)

Robert Eugene Ward (September 13, 1917 – April 3, 2013) was an American composer.

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Robert Watkin-Mills

Robert Watkin-Mills (March 4, 1849 – December 10, 1930) was an English bass-baritone concert singer of the late Victorian era who in his later career moved to Canada.

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Roberta Bitgood

Roberta Bitgood (Wiersma) (15 January 1908 – 15 April 2007) was an American organist, choir director, and composer.

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Roberto Lupi

Roberto Lupi (28 November 1908 – 17 April 1971) was an Italian composer, conductor, and music theorist.

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Rock opera

A rock opera is a collection of rock music songs with lyrics that relate to a common story.

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Rockdale Temple

The Rockdale Temple, K.K. Bene Israel, (19th century spelling K K. Benai Israel) is the oldest Jewish congregation west of the Allegheny Mountains, the oldest congregation in Ohio, the second oldest Ashkenazi congregation in the United States and one of the oldest synagogues in the United States.

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Roman Toi

Roman Toi (June 18, 1916 – May 7, 2018) was an Estonian-Canadian composer, choir conductor, and organist.

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Ron "Patch" Hamilton

Ronald Allen "Ron" Hamilton (born November 9, 1950), also known as "Patch the Pirate" is a Christian singer, songwriter, composer, preacher, voice actor, and personality.

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Rosa Giacinta Badalla

Rosa Giacinta Badalla (ca. 1660 – ca. 1710) was an Italian composer and Benedictine nun.

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Rostom Aramovic Alagian

Rostom Aramovic Alagian (1916–2009) was a Georgian composer and musician.

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Royal Albert Hall

The Royal Albert Hall is a concert hall on the northern edge of South Kensington, London, which has held the Proms concerts annually each summer since 1941.

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Royal Liverpool Philharmonic

The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Society is a society based in Liverpool, England, that manages a professional symphony orchestra, a concert venue, and extensive programmes of learning through music.

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Ruddigore

Ruddigore; or, The Witch's Curse, originally called Ruddygore, is a comic opera in two acts, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert.

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Rudolf Hans Bartsch

Rudolf Hans Bartsch (born 11 February 1873 in Graz, Styria – died 7 February 1952 in St. Peter in Graz), was an Austrian military officer, and writer.

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Russian Musical Society

The Russian Musical Society (RMS) (Русское музыкальное общество) was an organization founded in 1859 by the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna (a German-born aunt of Tsar Alexander II) and her protégé, pianist and composer Anton Rubinstein, with the intent of raising the standard of music in the country and disseminating musical education.

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Ruth Holton

Ruth Holton (born 1961)"Holton, Ruth" in David M. Cummings (ed.) International Who's Who in Classical Music, 2003", London, Europa Publications p.353.

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SACRA/PROFANA

SACRA/PROFANA is a California-based chamber choir founded in 2009.

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Said Rustamov

Said Rustamov (Səid Rüstəmov.), born Mir-Jabbar Ali oglu Seyid-Rustamzadeh (12 May 1907 in Erivan – 10 June 1983 in Baku), was an Azerbaijani composer and conductor.

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Saint Eigen

Saint Eigen, Eurgen, Eurgain or Eurgan was the legendary, and possibly historical first female Christian saint.

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Saint Nicolas (Britten)

Saint Nicolas is a cantata with music by Benjamin Britten and text by Eric Crozier, written in 1948.

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Saint Peter's Singers of Leeds

Saint Peter's Singers (SPS) is a chamber choir associated with Leeds Minster, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England that celebrated during the Season 2017/2018 the fortieth anniversary of the choir's formation by Harry Fearnley in 1977.

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Samaritan woman at the well

The Samaritan woman at the well is a figure from the Gospel of John, in.

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Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (15 August 18751 September 1912) was an English composer and conductor who was mixed-race; his father was a Sierra Leone Creole physician.

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Samuel Wesley

Samuel Wesley (24 February 1766 – 11 October 1837) was an English organist and composer in the late Georgian period.

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Santa María de Iquique (cantata)

Santa María de Iquique, cantata popular is a cantata composed in 1969 by the Chilean composer Luis Advis Vitaglich, combining elements of both classical and folkloric/indigenous musical traditions to produce what became known as a popular cantata and one of Quilapayún’s most acclaimed and popular music interpretation.

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Sara Mingardo

Sara Mingardo (born 2 March 1961) is an Italian classical contralto who has had an active international career in concerts and operas since the 1980s.

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Sécheresses (Poulenc)

Sécheresses (Drought), FP 90, is a cantata by Francis Poulenc for mixed choir (SATB) composed in 1937 on poems by Edward James who commissioned it.

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Secular Cantata No. 2: A Free Song

Secular Cantata No.

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Seiko Lee

Seiko Lee (born Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese soprano who began her musical studies at age four in Tokyo.

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Serenade

In music, a serenade (also sometimes called serenata, from the Italian) is a musical composition and/or performance delivered in honor.

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Sergei Prokofiev

Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev (r; 27 April 1891 – 5 March 1953) was a Russian Soviet composer, pianist and conductor.

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Sergei Taneyev

Sergei Ivanovich Taneyev (Серге́й Ива́нович Тане́ев, Sergey Ivanovich Taneyev,; –) was a Russian composer, pianist, teacher of composition, music theorist and author.

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Sergio Ortega

Sergio Ortega (February 2, 1938 - September 15, 2003) was a Chilean composer and pianist.

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Sergio Rendine

Sergio Rendine (Naples 7 September 1954) is an Italian composer of operas, symphonic, ballet and chamber music.

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Servaes de Koninck

Servaes de Koninck, or Servaes de Konink, Servaas de Koninck or Servaas de Konink, or Servaes de Coninck (1653/54 – c.1701) was a baroque composer from the Netherlands of motets, Dutch songs, chamber and incidental music, French airs and Italian cantatas.

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Seven, They Are Seven

Seven, They Are Seven (italic) (op. 30) is a cantata by Sergei Prokofiev composed in 1917 for large orchestra, chorus, and dramatic tenor soloist.

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Seymour Solomon

Seymour Solomon (May 23, 1922 – July 18, 2002) was an American music business executive who co-founded Vanguard Records in 1950, with his younger brother Maynard Solomon.

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Sheep may safely graze

Sheep May Safely Graze (German: Schafe können sicher weiden) is a soprano aria by Johann Sebastian Bach setting words by Salomon Franck.

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Sheet music

Sheet music is a handwritten or printed form of music notation that uses modern musical symbols to indicate the pitches (melodies), rhythms or chords of a song or instrumental musical piece.

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Shouka

Shouka is the second album of Sahrawi singer Mariem Hassan.

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Sidney Lanier

Sidney Clopton Lanier (February 3, 1842 – September 7, 1881) was an American musician, poet and author.

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Siegfried Köhler (composer)

Siegfried Köhler (March 2, 1927 in Meißen – July 14, 1984 in East Berlin) was a German composer in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany).

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Siegfried Strohbach

Siegfried Strohbach (born 27 November 1929 in Schirgiswalde, Lusatia) is a German composer and conductor.

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Siehe, es hat überwunden der Löwe

Siehe, es hat überwunden der Löwe (Behold, the lion has triumphed), TWV 1:1328, BWV 219, is a church cantata by Georg Philipp Telemann, written for Michaelmas in 1723.

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Signor Brocolini

John Clark, better known as Signor Brocolini (September 26, 1841 – June 7, 1906), was an Irish-born American operatic singer and actor remembered for creating the role of the Pirate King in the original New York City production of The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan, in 1879–80.

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Simon-Joseph Pellegrin

The abbé Simon-Joseph Pellegrin (1663 – 5 September 1745) was a French poet and playwright, a librettist who collaborated with Jean-Philippe Rameau and other composers.

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Sims Reeves

John Sims Reeves (21 October 1821 – 25 October 1900), usually called simply Sims Reeves, was the foremost English operatic, oratorio and ballad tenor vocalist of the mid-Victorian era.

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Sinfonia

Sinfonia is the Italian word for symphony, from the Latin symphonia, in turn derived from Ancient Greek συμφωνία symphōnia (agreement or concord of sound), from the prefix σύν (together) and ϕωνή (sound).

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Smile (The Beach Boys album)

Smile (stylized as SMiLE) is an unfinished album by American rock band the Beach Boys that was projected to follow their 11th studio album, Pet Sounds (1966).

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Socrate

Socrate is a work for voice and piano (or small orchestra) by Erik Satie.

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Soli Deo Gloria (record label)

Soli Deo Gloria is a British record label which releases recordings of the Monteverdi Choir and other ensembles conducted by Sir John Eliot Gardiner.

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Sonata

Sonata (Italian:, pl. sonate; from Latin and Italian: sonare, "to sound"), in music, literally means a piece played as opposed to a cantata (Latin and Italian cantare, "to sing"), a piece sung.

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Sonata form

Sonata form (also sonata-allegro form or first movement form) is a musical structure consisting of three main sections: an exposition, a development, and a recapitulation.

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Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin (Bach)

The sonatas and partitas for solo violin (BWV 1001–1006) are a set of six works composed by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Songs of Our Days (Prokofiev)

Songs of Our Days, Op.

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Soramimi

or;空 means "empty" (as in "karate") when read "kara".

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Spring (Rachmaninoff)

Spring (Vesna), Op.

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Sri Ramayana Darshanam

Sri Ramayana Darshana (ಶ್ರೀ ರಾಮಾಯಣ ದರ್ಶನ) is the most popular work and the magnum opus by Kuvempu in Kannada based on the Hindu epic Ramayana.

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St. John's Church, Copenhagen

St.

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St. Mary's Church, Lübeck

St.

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Stabat Mater (Dvořák)

Stabat Mater (Op. 58, originally Op. 28,Score, p. V B. 71) for soli, choir and orchestra is a religious cantata by the Czech composer Antonín Dvořák based on the text of the Stabat Mater.

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Stanisław Moniuszko

Stanisław Moniuszko (May 5, 1819, Ubiel, Minsk Governorate – June 4, 1872, Warsaw, Congress Poland) was a Polish composer, conductor and teacher.

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Stanyslav Lyudkevych

Stanyslav Pylypovych Lyudkevych (Станіслав Пилипович Людкевич, born January 24, 1879 in Jarosław - September 10, 1979 in Lviv) was a Ukrainian composer, theorist, teacher, and musical activist.

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Stasys Šimkus

Stasys Šimkus (23 January 1887, Motiškiai, now in Jurbarkas district municipality – 15 October 1943, Kaunas) was a Lithuanian composer.

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Statue of Liberty

The Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World; La Liberté éclairant le monde) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor in New York City, in the United States.

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Steve Davislim

Steve Davislim (born 1967) is a Malaysian-born Australian operatic tenor.

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Stjepan Šulek

Stjepan Šulek (5 August 1914 in Zagreb, Austria-Hungary – 16 January 1986 in Zagreb, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia) was a Croatian composer, conductor, violinist and music teacher.

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String Quartet (Webern)

The String Quartet, Op.

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Sturm und Drang

Sturm und Drang (literally "storm and drive", "storm and urge", though conventionally translated as "storm and stress") was a proto-Romantic movement in German literature and music that occurred between the late 1760s and the early 1780s.

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Summer's Last Will and Testament (Lambert)

Summer's Last Will and Testament is a choral masque or cantata by Constant Lambert, written between 1932 and 1935, and premiered in 1936.

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Susan Kinsolving

Susan Kinsolving is an American poet whose books include The White Eyelash, Dailies & Rushes (a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award) and Among Flowers.

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Sven Hansell

Sven Hostrup Hansell (23 October 1934 – 6 March 2014) was an American musicologist and Professor Emeritus of Musicology at the University of Iowa.

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Sven-Erik Bäck

Sven-Erik Bäck (16 September 1919 – 10 January 1994) was a Swedish composer of classical music.

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Sydney Grammar School

Sydney Grammar School (colloquially known as Grammar) is an independent, non-denominational, day school for boys, located in Darlinghurst, Edgecliff and St Ives, all suburbs of Sydney, Australia.

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Sylvain Dupuis

Joseph Michel Sylvain Dupuis (9 October 1856 – 28 September 1931) was a Belgian conductor, composer, oboist, and music educator.

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Sylvia Kersenbaum

Sylvia Haydée Kersenbaum (born 27 December 1945) is an Argentine pianist, composer and teacher.

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Sylvie Brunet

Sylvie Brunet is a contemporary French opera singer (mezzo-soprano).

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Symphony No. 1 (Hartmann)

The First Symphony of the German composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann was completed in 1955.

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Symphony No. 1 (Walton)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 12 (Shostakovich)

Dmitri Shostakovich composed his Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 13 (Shostakovich)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 4 (Brahms)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 8 (Mahler)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)

The Symphony No.

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Symphony No. 9 (Dvořák)

The Symphony No.

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Székelyfonó

Székelyfonó (The Spinning Room) is a one-act theatre piece with music by Zoltán Kodály from Hungarian folk songs.

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Tadeusz Szeligowski

Tadeusz Szeligowski (13 September 1896 - 10 January 1963) was a Polish composer, educator, lawyer and music organizer.

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Taillefer (Strauss)

Taillefer is a cantata for choir and orchestra composed by Richard Strauss in 1903, Op.

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Tarquinio Merula

Tarquinio Merula (24 November 1595 – 10 December 1665) was an Italian composer, organist, and violinist of the early Baroque era.

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Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! BWV 214

Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! (Resound, ye drums! Ring out, ye trumpets!), BWV 214, is a cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach, composed in 1733 as a congratulatory cantata for the birthday of Maria Josepha, Queen of Poland and Electress of Saxony.

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Te Deum Laudamus (Sullivan)

Arthur Sullivan's Te Deum Laudamus—A Thanksgiving for Victory, usually known as the Boer War Te Deum, is a choral work composed by Sullivan in the last few months of his life.

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Teatro Capranica

The Teatro Capranica is a theatre situated at 101 Piazza Capranica in the Colonna district of Rome.

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Telemann-Werke-Verzeichnis

The Telemann-Werke-Verzeichnis (Telemann Works Catalogue), abbreviated TWV, is the numbering system identifying compositions by Georg Philipp Telemann, published by Martin Ruhnke.

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Teresa Brambilla

Teresa Brambilla (23 October 1813 – 15 July 1895) was a celebrated Italian soprano most remembered today for having created the role of Gilda in Verdi's opera, Rigoletto.

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Teresina Brambilla

Teresina (Teresa) Brambilla (15 April 1845 – 1 July 1921) was an Italian soprano who sang in the major opera houses of Europe in a career spanning 25 years.

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Thanos Mikroutsikos

Athanasios "Thanos" Mikroutsikos (Αθανάσιος (Θάνος) Μικρούτσικος; born 13 April 1947) is a Greek composer and former politician.

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The Absent-Minded Beggar

"The Absent-Minded Beggar" is an 1899 poem by Rudyard Kipling, set to music by Sir Arthur Sullivan and often accompanied by an illustration of a wounded but defiant British soldier, "A Gentleman in Kharki", by Richard Caton Woodville.

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The Airborne Symphony

The Airborne Symphony (also known as Symphony: The Airborne) is a work by American composer Marc Blitzstein for narrator, vocal soloists, male chorus, and large orchestra that premiered April 1–2, 1946.

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The Bach Choir

The Bach Choir is a large independent musical organisation, founded in London, UK, in 1876 to give the first performance of J. S. Bach's Mass in B minor in Britain.

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The Ballad of the Brown King

The Ballad of the Brown King is a cantata composed by Margaret Bonds.

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The Baptism on the Savica

The Baptism on the Savica (Krst pri Savici) is a long two-part epic-lyric poem written by the Slovene Romantic poet France Prešeren.

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The Bards of Wales

The Bards of Wales (A walesi bárdok) is a ballad by the Hungarian poet János Arany, written in 1857.

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The Baroque Beatles Book

The Baroque Beatles Book is a record album created by the American keyboardist and conductor Joshua Rifkin.

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The Bells (symphony)

The Bells (Колокола, Kolokola), Op.

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The Black Knight (Elgar)

The Black Knight, Op.

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The Company of Heaven

The Company of Heaven is a composition for soloists, speakers, choir, timpani, organ, and string orchestra by Benjamin Britten.

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The Crucifixion (Stainer)

The Crucifixion: A Meditation on the Sacred Passion of the Holy Redeemer is an oratorio composed by John Stainer in 1887.

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The Death of Sardanapalus

The Death of Sardanapalus (La Mort de Sardanapale) is an oil painting on canvas by Eugène Delacroix, dated 1827.

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The Decision (play)

The Decision (Die Maßnahme), frequently translated as The Measures Taken, is a Lehrstück and agitprop cantata by the twentieth-century German dramatist Bertolt Brecht.

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The Elements of Style

The Elements of Style is a prescriptive American English writing style guide in numerous editions.

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The Golden Legend (cantata)

The Golden Legend is a cantata by Arthur Sullivan with libretto by Joseph Bennett, based on the 1851 poem of the same name by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

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The Healer (Jenkins)

The Healer, a Cantata for St Luke was written by Karl Jenkins in 2014.

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The Legend of the Red Lantern

The Legend of the Red Lantern is one of the Eight model plays, the only operas and ballets permitted during the Cultural Revolution in China.

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The Masque at Kenilworth

Kenilworth, A Masque of the Days of Queen Elizabeth (commonly referred to as "The Masque at Kenilworth"), is a cantata with music by Arthur Sullivan and words by Henry Fothergill Chorley (with an extended Shakespeare quotation) that premiered at the Birmingham Festival on 8 September 1864.

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The Mother (Brecht play)

The Mother is a play by the German modernist playwright Bertolt Brecht.

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The Music of Francis Poulenc

The Music of Francis Poulenc (1899–1963): A Catalogue, abbreviated FP, is a chronological catalogue of Francis Poulenc's works which was published by Carl B. Schmidt in 1995.

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The Origin of Fire

The Origin of Fire (Tulen Synty), Op.

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The Oxen

"The Oxen" is a poem (sometimes known by its first line, "Christmas Eve, and Twelve of the Clock") by the English novelist and poet Thomas Hardy (18401928).

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The Princely Pleasures, at the Court at Kenilworth

The Princely Pleasures, at the Court at Kenilworth (1576) by George Gascoigne, is an account of courtly entertainments held by Robert Dudley, the first Earl of Leicester upon Queen Elizabeth I’s three weeks visit to his Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire in 1575.

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The Sapphire Necklace

The Sapphire Necklace, or the False Heiress (completed by 1867, and at least mostly completed by 1864), was the first opera composed by Arthur Sullivan.

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The Severn Suite

The Severn Suite, Opus 87, is a musical work written by Sir Edward Elgar.

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The Skies are Weeping

The Skies are Weeping is a cantata by composer Philip Munger.

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The Song of Hiawatha

The Song of Hiawatha is an 1855 epic poem in trochaic tetrameter by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow that features Native American characters.

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The Song of Hiawatha (Coleridge-Taylor)

The Song of Hiawatha (full name: Scenes from The Song of Hiawatha by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow), Op.

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The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan

The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan is a 1953 British technicolor film that dramatises the story of the collaboration between W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan.

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The Whale (Tavener)

The Whale is a "dramatic cantata" written by the English composer John Tavener in 1966.

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The Wurst of P. D. Q. Bach

The Wurst of P. D. Q. Bach is a collection of works by Peter Schickele under his comic pseudonym of P. D. Q. Bach originally recorded on the Vanguard Records label by the composer.

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Theo Altmeyer

Theo Altmeyer (16 March 1931 – 28 July 2007) was a German classical tenor.

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Thespis (opera)

Thespis, or The Gods Grown Old, is an operatic extravaganza that was the first collaboration between dramatist W. S. Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan.

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Thomas Koppel

Thomas Koppel (27 April 1944 – 25 February 2006) was a versatile Danish classical music and avant-garde popular composer and musician.

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Thomas Quasthoff

Thomas Quasthoff (born November 9, 1959) is a German bass-baritone.

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Thomas Roseingrave

Thomas Roseingrave (1690 or 1691 – 23 June 1766) was an Irish composer and organist.

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Thomas Thaarup

Thomas Thaarup (August 21, 1749 – July 12, 1821) was a Danish poet. Thomas Thaarup was born in Copenhagen, where his father, Niels Thaarup, owned a hardware store. His mother's name was Anna Margaretha and her maiden name was Stupsack.

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Thomas Traherne

Thomas Traherne (1636 or 1637) was an English poet, clergyman, theologian, and religious writer.

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Thomas Z. Shepard

Thomas Z. Shepard is a prolific record producer who is best known for his recordings of Broadway musicals, including the works of Stephen Sondheim.

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Thomas-Louis Bourgeois

Thomas-Louis Bourgeois (Fontaine-l'Évêque, Hainaut, Belgium 24 October 1676 - Paris, January 1750 or 1751) was a Walloon composer and haute-contre.

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Thomaskantor

Thomaskantor (Cantor at St. Thomas) is the common name for the musical director of the Thomanerchor, now an internationally known boys' choir founded in Leipzig in 1212.

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Three Russian Songs, Op. 41 (Rachmaninoff)

The Three Russian Songs, Op.

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Threni (Stravinsky)

Threni: id est Lamentationes Jeremiae Prophetae, usually referred to simply as Threni, is a musical setting by Igor Stravinsky of verses from the Book of Lamentations in the Latin of the Vulgate, for solo singers, chorus and orchestra.

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Timeline of music in the United States (1880–1919)

This is a timeline of music in the United States from 1880 to 1919.

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Timeline of music in the United States (1920–49)

This is a timeline of music in the United States from 1920 to 1949.

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Timpani

Timpani or kettledrums (also informally called timps) are musical instruments in the percussion family.

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Tolia Nikiprowetzky

Tolia Nikiprowetzky (12 or 25 September 1916 – 5 May 1997) was a French composer and musicologist of Russian birth.

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Tom Hurndall

Thomas "Tom" Hurndall (27 November 1981 – 13 January 2004) was a British photography student, a volunteer for the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), and an activist against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories.

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Tom Taylor

Tom Taylor (19 October 1817 – 12 July 1880) was an English dramatist, critic, biographer, public servant, and editor of ''Punch'' magazine.

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Tono humano

The tono humano (secular song) was one of the main genres of 17th Century Spanish and Portuguese music.

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Tornrak

Tornrak is the third opera by Welsh composer John Metcalf.

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Torquato Tasso

Torquato Tasso (11 March 1544 – 25 April 1595) was an Italian poet of the 16th century, best known for his poem Gerusalemme liberata (Jerusalem Delivered, 1581), in which he depicts a highly imaginative version of the combats between Christians and Muslims at the end of the First Crusade, during the Siege of Jerusalem.

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Tosca

Tosca is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa.

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Totentanz (Adès)

Totentanz is a composition for baritone, mezzo-soprano, and orchestra by the British composer Thomas Adès.

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Tra le fiamme (Il consiglio) (Handel)

Tra le fiamme (Il consiglio) (HWV 170) is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano and instruments written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707.

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Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music

In the years centering on 1600 in Europe, several distinct shifts emerged in ways of thinking about the purposes, writing and performance of music.

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Trevor Pinnock

Trevor David Pinnock (born 16 December 1946) is an English harpsichordist and conductor.

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Trilogy: An Opera Company

Trilogy: An Opera Company (Trilogy: AOC) is a non-profit opera organization in Newark, New Jersey.

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Trionfi (Orff)

Trionfi is a trilogy of cantatas by German composer Carl Orff.

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Tristram Cary

Tristram Ogilvie Cary, OAM (14 May 192524 April 2008) was a pioneering English-Australian composer.

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Tromb-al-ca-zar, ou Les criminels dramatiques

Tromb-al-ca-zar, ou Les criminels dramatiques is a bouffonnerie musicale in one act of 1856 with music by Jacques Offenbach.

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Trombone

The trombone is a musical instrument in the brass family.

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Tsolak Bekaryan

Tsolak Vaghinag Bekaryan (Ցոլակ Բեքարյան; October 30, 1922 – August 22, 1980) was an Armenian composer, violinist, and pedagogue.

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Types of trombone

There are many different types of trombone.

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Ulrich Cordes

Ulrich Cordes (born 1980) is a German tenor.

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Un Concert pour Mazarin

is the title of a music recording released on compact disc in early 2004 by Virgin Classics.

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Un'alma innamorata (Handel)

Un'alma innamorata (HWV 173) is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano and instruments written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707.

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Union of Soviet Composers

Union of composers of Russian Federation — Russian public organization uniting professional composers and musicologists from 48 regions of Russia.

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Usavich

is a series of animated short films originally created for MTV's Japanese mobile service "Flux" and still being created for MTV Japan by Satoshi Tomioka and his studio Kanaban Graphics since 2006.

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Vahram Sargsyan

Vahram Sargsyan (alternate transliterations include Sarkissian or Sargissian, Armenian: Վահրամ Սարգսյան; born 28 May 1981, Yerevan, Armenia) is an Armenian Canadian composer, choral conductor and experimental vocalist currently living in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

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Valentin Adamberger

Valentin Adamberger, also known by his Italian name Adamonti, (22 February 1740 or 6 July 174324 August 1804) was a German operatic tenor.

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Valery Borisov (conductor)

Valery Borisov is a Russian conductor and twice recipient of the Zolotoy Sofit.

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Václav Dobiáš

Václav Dobiáš (22 September 1909 – 18 May 1978) was a Czech composer.

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Vítězslav Novák

Vítězslav Novák (5 December 1870 – 18 July 1949) was a Czech composer and pedagogue.

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Vítězslava Kaprálová

Vítězslava Kaprálová (January 24, 1915June 16, 1940) was a Czech composer and conductor.

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Venetian polychoral style

The Venetian polychoral style was a type of music of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras which involved spatially separate choirs singing in alternation.

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Verband Deutscher Konzertchöre

The Verband Deutscher KonzertChöre (VDKC, Association of German Concert Choirs) is a national association with seven state organisations.

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Vergißmeinnicht, WAB 93

(Forget-me-not), WAB 93, is a cantata composed by Anton Bruckner in 1845.

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Victor Herbert

Victor August Herbert (February 1, 1859 – May 26, 1924) was an Irish-born, German-raised American composer, cellist and conductor.

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Victor Massé

Victor Massé (born Félix-Marie Massé; 7 March 1822 – 5 July 1884) was a French composer.

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Victor Sieg

Charles-Victor Sieg (8 August 1837 – 6 April 1899) was a French composer and organist.

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Vincent Lübeck

Vincent Lübeck (c. September 1654 – 9 February 1740) was a German composer and organist.

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Vincenzo Manfredini

Vincenzo Manfredini (22 October 1737 – 5 or 16 August 1799) was an Italian composer, harpsichordist and a music theorist.

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Viola d'amore

The viola d'amore (Italian for "love viol") is a 7- or 6-stringed musical instrument with sympathetic strings used chiefly in the baroque period.

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Virginia de' Medici

Virginia de' Medici (29 May 1568 – 15 January 1615) was an Italian princess, a member of the House of Medici and by marriage Duchess of Modena and Reggio.

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Vladimir Miller

Vladimir Miller (Russian: Влади́мир Ми́ллер) is a Russian opera, folk and choir singer possessing a low-ranging basso profondo (oktavist) voice, one of the lowest voices in the world.

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Vox Christi

Vox Christi, Latin for Voice of Christ, is a setting of Jesus' words in a vocal work such as a Passion, an Oratorium or a Cantata.

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W. J. Sparrow Simpson

William John Sparrow Simpson (20 June 1859 – 13 February 1952) was an English Anglican priest and writer.

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Walter Morse Rummel

Walter Morse Rummel (July 19, 1887May 2, 1953) was a prominent pianist, especially associated with Claude Debussy's works, as well as a composer and music editor.

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Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan

"italic" (What God does, that is done well) is a Lutheran hymn written by the pietist German poet and schoolmaster Samuel Rodigast in 1675.

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Wendelin Weißheimer

Wendelin Weißheimer (26 February 1838, Osthofen – 16 June 1910) was a 19th-century German composer, conductor, essayist, teacher and music writer.

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Wer sucht die Pracht, wer wünscht den Glanz, BWV 221

Wer sucht die Pracht, wer wünscht den Glanz (Who seeks the splendour, who desires the radiance), BWV 221, is a cantata by an unknown composer, formerly attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Werde munter, mein Gemüte

"italic" (Become cheerful, my mind) is a Lutheran evening hymn by Johann Rist in twelve stanzas of eight lines each, printed in 1642.

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Werner Wolf Glaser

Werner Wolf Glaser (14 April 1910, Cologne – 29 March 2006, Västerås, Sweden) was a German-born Swedish composer, conductor, pianist, professor, music critic, and poet.

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Westminster Presbyterian Church (Alexandria, Virginia)

Westminster Presbyterian Church of Alexandria, Virginia, U.S. located at the corner of Cameron Mills Road and Monticello Boulevard in the city's North Ridge section.

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When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd

"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" is a long poem in the form of an elegy written by American poet Walt Whitman (1819–1892) in 1865.

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Whitney Eugene Thayer

Whitney Eugene Thayer (December 11, 1838, Mendon, Massachusetts – June 27, 1889, Burlington, Vermont) was an American organist and composer.

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Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern

"" (How lovely shines the morning star) is a hymn by Philipp Nicolai written in 1597 and first published in 1599.

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Wie soll ich dich empfangen

"Wie soll ich dich empfangen" ("Ah! Lord, how shall I meet Thee", literally: How shall I receive you) is a Christian hymn for Advent by Paul Gerhardt.

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Wilhelm Friedemann Bach

Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (22 November 1710 – 1 July 1784), the second child and eldest son of Johann Sebastian Bach and Maria Barbara Bach, was a German composer and performer.

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Wilhelm Peterson-Berger

Olof Wilhelm Peterson-Berger (27 February 1867, Ullånger, Ångermanland – 3 December 1942, Östersund) was a Swedish composer and music critic.

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Wilhelm Stenhammar

Carl Wilhelm Eugen Stenhammar (February 7, 1871 – November 20, 1927) was a Swedish composer, conductor and pianist.

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Will Todd

William Todd (born 14 January 1970) is an English classical composer and pianist.

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William Edwin Haesche

William Edwin Haesche (April 11, 1867 – January 26, 1929 in Virginia, Death Records, 1912–2014 on Ancestry.com) was an American composer.

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William G. Whittaker

William Gillies Whittaker (Newcastle upon Tyne, July 23, 1876 – Orkney Islands, July 5, 1944) was an English composer, pedagogue, conductor, musicologist, Bach scholar, publisher and writer.

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William Henry Harris

Sir William Henry Harris KCVO (28 March 1883 - 6 September 1973) was an English organist and composer, affectionately nicknamed "Doc H" by his choristers.

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William Rhys-Herbert

William Rhys-Herbert (1868-1921) was a Welsh composer, conductor, organist and pianist.

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William Sterndale Bennett

Sir William Sterndale Bennett (13 April 18161 February 1875) was an English composer, pianist, conductor and music educator.

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William Walton

Sir William Turner Walton, OM (29 March 19028 March 1983) was an English composer.

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Willy Burkhard

Willy Burkhard (17 April 1900, Evilard, Canton of Bern – 18 June 1955) was a Swiss composer.

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Wolfgang Schäfer

Wolfgang Schäfer (born 7 April 1945) is a German choral conductor and academic.

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Women in music

Women in music describes the role of women as composers, songwriters, instrumental performers, singers, conductors, music scholars, music educators, music critics/music journalists and other musical professions.

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Xavier Boisselot

Dominique-François-Xavier Boisselot (Montpellier, 3 December 1811 — Paris, 8 April 1893) was a French composer and musical-instrument manufacturer.

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Yellow River Cantata

The Yellow River Cantata is a cantata by Chinese composer Sinn Sing Hoi (1905–1945).

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Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" is a phrase from an editorial called "Is There a Santa Claus?".

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Zdravitsa

Zdravitsa, Op.

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Zenón Rolón

Zenón Rolón (25 June 1856 – 13 May 1902) was an Afro Argentine musician and composer.

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1726 in music

The year 1726 in music involved some significant events.

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1727

No description.

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1857 in music

No description.

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1875 in music

This article is about music-related events in 1875.

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1913 in music

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1913.

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1939 in music

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1939.

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1943 in music

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1943.

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1968 in British music

This is a summary of 1968 in music in the United Kingdom.

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1968 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1968 in the United Kingdom.

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Redirects here:

Cantatas, Cantates, Kantate, Secular cantata.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantata

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