Partition complète (melody edition), 100 chansons, Music et Words, by Henry Russell
81 pages
English

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Partition complète (melody edition), 100 chansons, Music et Words, by Henry Russell

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
81 pages
English
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Découvrez les partitions de la musique 100 chansons, Music et Words, by Henry Russell partition complète (melody edition), chansons, par Russell, Henry. Cette partition romantique dédiée aux instruments suivants:
  • voix
  • piano

Cette partition compte plusieurs mouvements et l'on retrouve ce genre de musique classifiée dans les genres
  • chansons
  • pour 1 voix
  • pour voix non accompagnées
  • partitions pour voix
  • pour voix, piano
  • pour voix avec clavier
  • partitions pour piano
  • langue anglaise

Visionnez en même temps tout une collection de musique pour voix, piano sur YouScribe, dans la rubrique Partitions de musique romantique.
Edition: London: Davidson, n. d.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Nombre de lectures 15
Licence : Libre de droits
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 5 Mo

Extrait

Digitized Archiveby the Internet
in 2011 with funding from
National Library of Scotland
http://www.archive.org/details/acompositemusicv08rugg> i^Cj^(^^Im^
...... l^yC-
EN
N D R E DH I
SONGS,
AND WORDS,MUSIC
HENRY RlSSELL.
^SCOTLAND ,(^ OF
LONDON:
DOCTORS' COMMONS,DAVIDSON, PETER'S HILL,
ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF ST. PAUL'S.
uUll^uL'-fCONTENTS.
mavLet thera sing who 58A Happy Home is mine 58
Ones36 Little Fools and Great 48A Life in tlie West
the in-6 Gay Deceiver,A Life on the Ocean Wave..-.
76Almigtity Spirit
the or a Leap for Life 20Stormy Night 65 Main Truck,A Song for a
Life Boat 66Man the
Merrily, merrily, merrily, O ... 38Beautiful Streamlet, how precious to me 62
Merry Mariners, the 61Believe not the Tales they have toldThee ofme 32
the31 Minstrel of the Tyrol, 27Blow, blow, wild Winds
dead 66 My Mother's Bible 40Bright Hope is
PortraitCrimson Hue of the fair Sunset 64 My 9By the
My Old Wife 30
is failing fast 51Charter Oak 70 My Strength
,',8Chieftain's Daughter, the
62Choose ye who will Earth's dazzling Bnwers.. Dog, theNewfoundland 26
a.....Christmas Carol, 37 Grave that was newly madeNigh to a 54
43Come, Brothers, arouse sab'e Pall, no waving Plume 41No
Cup 48 fill the Not Married yet 34
fill my Glass again, old Friend 17Come, Now tell me, Mary, how it is 68
Dear Janet 47 Ivy Greena dainty Plant is the 42OI
Dove of Noah, the 77 Sound has the oldO 1 a mournful Church Bell 44
43Dying Legacy, the hither, and list
1 Brothers, come to ray Story 36
the Merry MarinersOcean, the, or 61
Eleven Years have pass'd away 74 Blessing sent by GodOh, Time is a 62
Exile, the 38 why shoidd we bewail the DeadOh, 76
Arm Chair, the 12Old
Fisher Boy, the 38 Old Church Bed, the 44
Mountain in HandFromhis Land,with hisHarp 27 Oid English Hospitality 59
TimeOlden Time and Present 64
Gin Fiend, the lO
theOld Fann Gate, 35
Greenwood Tree, the 73
Iionsides at Anchor layOld 20
King Time 54Od
^9Happy Change, the Old Mill-stream, the 32
28 Days of Childhood, the Old School-House, the 56
the Roar of an eager Crowd 24Hark, 'midst Old Sexton, the 54
Hark Clinking of Hammeis 13to the the Lustie of herOld Time has dimn'd Eyes... 30
Have e'er been in Love 49you was a Man of MightOld Tubal Cain 34
Heigho for a Husband 55 Rocky Cliif I stood 7On a 36
Hope on her Wings, and God her Guide 7
old Long Island's Seagirt ShoreOn 59
Hope's Sepulchre 56 On that lowly VillaL'^e Green 56
On the Brave who have fallen 39
for Spring 37I care not stoodOn the Village Green it 56
I dream d, dear Janet 47 daik rolling Waves of the Ocean..O, sadly, ye 38
If thou would'st win a lasting Fame 40 scorn me not as a fameless ThingO! 27
I love it, I love it .2 01 this Love 31
I love the N'ght when the Moon beams bright 29 OurWay across the Mountains ; 53
:0I'm Afloat
I'm Single yet—I'm Single yet 34
Patriot's Welcome, the 39In cold Misfortune's cheerless Day 75
Paupei's Drive, the 11
'Infinitude of Mercy, the 5
to the Deity, thePilgrim's Address .. 77
I've wander'd eft in Cl.ildhood 28
Frieiid, the 41Poor Man's42Ivy Green, the'
wear the Purple of Earth-born Kings.... 5l1 not
Resignation 75
Land, ho! 44 Rising Sun, the 36
awayLeap for Life, the 20 Rod' 5j
Song, the 31Le>s than a Man 16 Rover's
Let's Rushlight, the 27be Gay 72COA^TENTS.
Saw ye the Shadow o'er his Brow 45 The Soldier bold, when the Bugles sound 73
The StormSay not that any Critne of Man 75 o'er the Ocean flewfurious and fast 5
51 The Winds are FreeSea-King's Burial, the 60
Fight was over 57 The without, in their Midnight Rout...She heard the 65
on Fire, the.... 5 The World is on the MoveShip 25
ThisSlave Auction, the 24 Book is all that's left me now 40
14 Thou art, God, the Ship, the O Fount Divine 77
Bride, the 57 'Tis Eve on the OceanSoldier and his 60
Wife, the 57 Time is a BlessingSoldier's 62
Some love to roam o'er the dark Sea's Foam.. 46 Tubal Cain 34
31Song for the Yacht Clubs
Sempstress 22 Upon the barren Sand a single CaptiveSong of the Emigrant stood.. 28
Mariners 62 Up, up with a Signal of the 44
the Scaffold, the 13Song of
Soneofthe Shirt 22 Vision of the Reveller 17
So Young and so Lovelv 29
33 We have faith in old Proverbs, full surely 10Spider and the Fly, the'. *
the 50 We met in other YearsSpirit and Stream, 58
has Violets blue 53 Wery Pekooliar, or the Lisping Lover 49Spring
We togetherfor Fame - 40 were Boys 42Struggle
What need of all this Fuss and Strife 12
River were lovely and bright 50 When at the Social Board you sit 48The Banks of the
was over 57 is a Man less than a Man 16The Battle Strife
Dear Thing that ever 1 lov'd 52 When the Tempest flies 70The First
14 Wliere Will there's WayfirstgravDawnof theMorningwasbeaming there's a a ^ 10The
abroad 10 Where, where is the Gate that once serv'd toThe Gin Fiend cast his Eyes
Banquet Hall 63 divide 35The Lady leaves the
Main 50 Why, Dermot, you look Healthy now 68The Main, the
Mother who hath a Child at Sea 24 Wife's Dream, the 68The
64 Wife's theOlden Time Song, 74The
Coming 71 Will Nobody marryme ? 55There's a Good Time
with one Horsein ajoUy round Will you walk into my Parlour 33a Hearse
gay11 With Features happy and 22Trot
Cloud 24 Treean Eye that looks on the Swelling Woodman, spare that 41There's
12 Room enough for all
Portrait which fondly I Yet deeper and deeper and wilder the Night... 26There, there hangs the
9 You ask'd me, Sister, how it was 69prize
Maid 16There was a little— 1 —
SCENASANDTHE SONGS
OF
RUSSELL.HENRY
ON FIRE.THE SHIP
The Poetry by Di*. Mackiiy.
Accompaniments, in Davidson's Musical Treasury, Nos. 718-18, Price Sd.Published, with Pianoforte
Qiuxsi ad lib. ma Largamento. .
foam at theThe storm o'er the o-cean flew fu-rious and fast. And the wav^s rose in
Leqgiere apoco.Marcato.y.
ii
stout-heart-edvoice of the blast; And hea-vi-ly labour'dthe gale-beat-en ship, Like a
Lentando.
3 Jr F ^-^—j-g-c-e 3 3 j-j -A—^y.—tF=— —
swimmer, lip And was the o'er the ma-ri-ner'spath, Ex-ceptwhen thethe spray at her ; dark sky
'^ Lamentabile. i . .
light-ning il-lum'd it in wrath. A young mo-ther knelt in the ca-bin be-low, And press-ing her
Lentando.
:lz=:]N_-:j^D-t=Mr|
—'Oh!babe to herbo-som of snow, She pray'd to her God, 'mid the hur-ri-cane wild,
Lento.
:1=«=l'^
1'Fa-ther,have mer-cy, look down on my child It pass'd ;—the fierce whirlwind ca^
1 N \-T ^ ^ ^-:^- V-, r— ^;^-^^fc^
q:=ni:::-j—qr-_z^: ^b-i=:g-- —9-j-- e
on its way, And the ship like an ar - row di ded the
->--^rii!=:i]^r^:j5:q=d: :^2=^^-
ZiMz i—ti^3"-'
spray ; Her sails And theglim-mer'd white in the beams of the moon.
Leggieramente. ^,—
\
1-I 1 \-\ F- d^-^I-^- y-tzui— —•—-|
H--
winds up a - loft seem'd to whis-tle, And winds up a-to whis-tle a tune ; the
Poco Lento. - ^..^ ^
rJpg-.z3jrrrpc:ipzL_B_,..==j!^qsrL-cr-jz:T--iqV^
i'-h P— — P—^^-^ •—H^i—h— ®-^-=l-»-F-i— =^-i.¥---h-^——K-t— 5—
loft seem'd to whistle, to whistle a tune. There ship, furrow'd thawas joy in the as she—I 1 — u —
HENRY RUSSELL'S SONGS AND SCENAS.
J.i±anMancando.3 ». 3k /-w k. V k ^
1
1 -+— 1
tj
_
fond hearts with-iafoam, For her were dreaming of home : The young hermotherpress'd fnnd
A piacere.
r^ifedzd- d=Sr3^H
Ikz^ziht:
L rtri: 1 a— r-"^
1— c—^_ - "1
,
I —r—
babe to her breast, And sang a sweet song as she rock'd it to rest. And the hus-band sat
-U
:=:1=:z
M±±iiz=z^:z:Mz\M:zzS: :F=S: iigiF^
chee-ri-ly down her side, And look'd with de - light on the face :by of his bride 'Oh,
Fzorando e Spcritoso.
»:=^r:^;^=F=::l^^- ^-0-— ^-iz
t-ii I—I i— — i^E=El
-h-^T- F^>^—
'said he, when our roam-lug is o'er, We'll dwell in our cot-tage that stands thehap-py,' by
::^i^^;^—r^=i=- :idrr:i=r:jr:
z^zi.iz^izz=»zzzM-:igp^-h-r -t--
- -shore ; Al rea dy in fan-cy its roof I des-cry. And the smoke of its hearth curl-ing up to the
Soave ma con Spirito.
3S3K '-Q-E^]i=E^^|! ^^
— so green, and its vine-co-ver'd wall ; The kind friends a - wait-ingsky Its gar-den to
. Andantino.r> '^
the chil-dren that sport hv the old oak-en tree.' Ah gen - tly thewel-come us all ; And !
Recitativo.
'7^ 'TN-dI-1 —^/?-1^—'-=H N« ^^ r-^-i i^r- n ^^-^
'f^0^\f^^^^s^j^:3:^j^^^,^^^
gli-ded ver the sea. Hark ! what was that ? Hark, hark to the shout—Fire !ship
H#4fe|ii^igii ^^sfe:^J=^ff^^i^^
Then a tramp and a rout. And an up-roar of voi-ces a-ro?e in the air, And the
5?» —ff-F-— B-i or ^1^^.zw^zwz 1 :^ f^
^--t/— r=^
mo-ther knelt down—and the half-spo-ken pray'r That she of-fer'd to God, in her a - go-ny
—Lentando. =^-di;i:r=- Tempo.
bz^^;=rzzpzz,zz^z=zi=:^,z^^r^^^^j=^^^-^^^^^^TZZfiZ
1^
-Frzt3EEEH3
—Was, ' Fa-ther, have mer-cy ! look down, look down on my child I' She flew to herwild,
"
his side;— 1 th

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents