New England Music: The Public Sphere, 1600-1900, Volume 21Boston University, 1998 - 208 pagine |
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Pagina 52
... tunes as they were notated in their books . In Symmes's judgment , the solu- tion lay in educating youthful parishioners by setting up singing schools . He argued that they were of an age most apt to learn and that such instruc- tion ...
... tunes as they were notated in their books . In Symmes's judgment , the solu- tion lay in educating youthful parishioners by setting up singing schools . He argued that they were of an age most apt to learn and that such instruc- tion ...
Pagina 62
... tunes : Standish , Isle of Wight , Northampton , and Southwell . These well - estab- lished English tunes were , for the most part , widely published and dissem- inated in America as well as in Great Britain . Readers on both sides of ...
... tunes : Standish , Isle of Wight , Northampton , and Southwell . These well - estab- lished English tunes were , for the most part , widely published and dissem- inated in America as well as in Great Britain . Readers on both sides of ...
Pagina 146
... tunes formed another target of Mason's musical reforms . These were pieces which included a section where the separate singing parts ran counter to one another , with the same words entering in rapid succession , rather than in unison ...
... tunes formed another target of Mason's musical reforms . These were pieces which included a section where the separate singing parts ran counter to one another , with the same words entering in rapid succession , rather than in unison ...
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New England Music: The Public Sphere, 1600-1900 Peter Benes,Jane Montague Benes Anteprima non disponibile - 1998 |
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