11/7/2022 0 Comments Get back up again sheet music(actually, I'm pleased- was surprised, now just pleased- to see that so much of the portion of the LoC collection consisting of music that seems to be for the domestic market, while a lot of it is what I admit I expected- silly trifles really- a lot of it too is fairly to rather good and they have some real gems there that make the LoC American Memory collection really worth searching in. but I think that I underestimated all of them and was wise not to write them up (even Sibley which I still regard most highly of them :)). sonata, some other piano and organ sonatas). the Sibley collection, the LoC collection (lots of brief piano music and songs, the occasional longer choral work and chamber work (e.g. At one point I was going to add to the IMSLP:Other music score websites page a brief description of what people could expect to find in e.g. The social status of music in much of the 19th century from what little I (think I) know (based on e.g. I recall reading part of a report (sadly not bookmarked by me) from an SI official complaining that it was costing them a small fortune to handle this due in part to publishers sending submissions to them postage due and that many publishers weren't submitting their expensive, quality material so that in his opinion the SI was amassing a collection of nearly worthless ephemera consisting of cheap popular novels, patent medicine labels, and sheet music! - Cypressdome 02:08, 20 August 2011 (UTC) Apparently, there was a brief period of time, perhaps only a few years, during which Congress had placed some type of responsibility for receiving copyright submissions with the Smithsonian Institute in the hopes that it would help the SI bulk up its library and the reports of the SI to Congress included lists of copyright submissions. I actually ran across this when compiling the Grobe worklist. 1850 Congressional edition with Wels' Grand Funeral March, copyright having been asked for it in October 1850. Off-topic, but I notice that Google has scanned in a number of 19th century Senate/Congressional documents that include inter alia copyright deposits - apparently that's the document where they were registered then, instead of the LoC document where they were printed in later decades. Thanks- reinserting and recompiling :)! Eric 01:03, 18 August 2011 (UTC) or do I have the wrong page? (that's page 194 written, not page 194 of the PDF.) Eric 00:28, 18 August 2011 (UTC) It looks like just a held C continuing into the next line and singing "ah"?. Please help, it is necessary for research work. I live in Ukraine, here they never get it, and the Internet can not be found. Very much needed musical notes: Ignaz Moscheles, opus 107 (processing scales).
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