Stephen Foster Song Book: Original Sheet Music of 40 Songs

前表紙
Dover Publications, 1974 - 181 ページ
Forty favorites: "Beautiful Dreamer," "Camptown Races (Gwine to Run All Night)," "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair," "Oh! Susanna," "Old Black Joe," "The Song of All Songs," "That's What's the Matter," more.

目次

1 Ah May the Red Rose Live Alway F D Benteen Baltimore 1850
4
5
32
10
49
5 Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming Wm A Pond Co
84
24 Old Folks at Home Firth Pond Co N Y 1851
100
6 Dont Bet Your Money on de Shanghai Firth Pond Co
101
25 Old Uncle Ned Millets Music Saloon N Y 1848
104
26 Open Thy Lattice Love George Willig Philadelphia 1844
108
31 There Are Plenty of Fish in the Sea Horace Waters N Y 1862
126
32 Theres a Good Time Coming Peters Field Cincinnati 1846
130
33 Thou Art the Queen of My Song Firth Pond Co N Y 1859
135
34 The Village Maiden Firth Pond Co N Y 1855
139
35 The Voices That Are Gone Wm A Pond Co N Y 1865
143
36 Way Down in Cairo Firth Pond Co N Y 1850
148
37 We Are Coming Father Abraam 300000 More S T Gordon N Y 1862
149
38 When This Dreadful War Is Ended Horace Waters N Y 1863
156

27 Ring de Banjo Firth Pond Co N Y 1851
110
28 Some Folks Firth Pond Co N Y 1855
114
7 Down Among the CaneBrakes Firth Pond Co N Y 1860
116
29 The Song of All Songs D S Holmes Brooklyn 1863 118
118
30 Thats Whats the Matter Firth Son Co N Y 1862
122
39 Willie Has Gone to the War Wm A Pond Co N Y 1863
161
40 Wilt Thou Be Gone Love? Firth Pond Co N Y 1851
166
NOTES ON THE MUSIC
173
著作権

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著者について (1974)

Born in Lawrenceville, Pennsylvania, Stephen Foster became a well-known American composer of many popular songs that are still sung and enjoyed today. As a child, Foster learned to play the flute. At the age of 18, he published his first song, "Open Thy Lattice, Love." In 1846 Foster moved to Cincinnati to work as an accountant for one of his brothers. During his career, Foster wrote 189 songs, to most of which he wrote both the words and the music. Among his most notable songs are "Old Folks at Home" (or "Swanee Ribber," as it was commonly called), "O Susanna," "My Old Kentucky Home," and "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair." "Beautiful Dreamer" was the last song he wrote. Foster finished the composition only a few days before his death. Foster's music was greatly influenced by black minstrel shows. The gentleness of many of Foster's songs was not characteristic of his life. He was constantly in need of money, his marriage was most unhappy, and he died penniless in New York's Bellevue Hospital. Foster's fame lives on today. Hundreds of reprints of Foster's songs are available, almost all of which have "improved" arrangements.

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