Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6551267> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6551267 subject Q7157246.
- Q6551267 subject Q8137323.
- Q6551267 subject Q8434104.
- Q6551267 subject Q9003332.
- Q6551267 subject Q9029741.
- Q6551267 abstract "Lincolnshire Posy is a piece by Percy Grainger for concert band composed in 1937 for the American Bandmasters Association. Considered Grainger's masterpiece, the 16-minute-long work is composed of six movements, each adapted from folk songs that Grainger had collected on a 1905–1906 trip to Lincolnshire, England. The work debuted with three of the movements on March 7, 1937 by the Milwaukee Symphonic Band, a group composed of members from several bands including the Blatz Brewery and Pabst Blue Ribbon beer factory worker bands in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Unlike other composers that attempted to alter and modernize folk music for band, such as Ralph Vaughan Williams, Grainger wished to maintain the exact sense of stylizing that he experienced from the singers. Grainger wrote: "Each number is intended to be a kind of musical portrait of the singer who sang its underlying melody... a musical portrait of the singer's personality no less than of his habits of song, his regular or irregular wonts of rhythm, his preference for gaunt or ornately arabesque delivery, his contrasts of legato and staccato, his tendency towards breadth or delicacy of tone."Grainger dedicated his "bunch of Wildflowers" to "the old folksingers who sang so sweetly to me."".
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink prognot6.htm.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=-MtKiVXFk8A&feature=related.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=8nxaNJCfGCo&feature=related.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=Qi5K8f5Fetc&feature=related.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=b2pKyRAP7tY&feature=related.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=piSieyTruog&feature=related.
- Q6551267 wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=tKhEzVJQdxM.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q113558.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q131168.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q1366388.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q1414932.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q1463985.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q155234.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q159998.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q163759.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q165666.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q1771297.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q178812.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q181014.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q185041.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q186393.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q189737.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q190172.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q202027.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q207947.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q208421.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q2092296.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q209554.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q211028.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q23090.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q318354.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q37836.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q382616.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q445275.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q4743124.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q495529.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q506986.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q5500333.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q626035.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q649116.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q656766.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q7157246.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q762048.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q7895974.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q790468.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q80019.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q808218.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q810551.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8137323.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8338.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8343.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8345.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8350.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q83509.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q83513.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8377.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q8434104.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q871633.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q9003332.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q9029741.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q908349.
- Q6551267 wikiPageWikiLink Q9798.
- Q6551267 comment "Lincolnshire Posy is a piece by Percy Grainger for concert band composed in 1937 for the American Bandmasters Association. Considered Grainger's masterpiece, the 16-minute-long work is composed of six movements, each adapted from folk songs that Grainger had collected on a 1905–1906 trip to Lincolnshire, England.".
- Q6551267 label "Lincolnshire Posy".