Search Results

[An Abstract of Research Project on "Computer Studies in Indian Music']
An abstract detailing future research projects covering computer applications in Indian Music.
[Advertisement for "Celebrating the Centennial of Don Gillis" Concert]
Segment by Dennis Fisher, conductor of the UNT Symphonic Band, announcing a concert featuring works by composer Don Gillis to celebrate his 100th birthday.
[Album Artwork: Lab 87]
Album artwork for the Lab 87 album for One O'Clock Lab Band directed by Neil Slater.
American Bandmasters Association, Arlington, TX, 1972
Group photo of attendees of the 1972 American Bandmasters Association meeting in Arlington, Texas. The group, which may be entirely composed of men, appears to be standing on choir risers, with a smaller row of men seated at the front. This photo is from the Don and Barbara Gillis Collection.
[Background on "Celebrating the Centennial of Don Gillis" Concert]
Interview with Dennis Fisher, conductor of the UNT Symphonic Band, discussing the background of the concert to celebrate the centennial of Don Gillis' birthday. The segment originally aired during the concert's intermission.
[Binder's Collection: A. Worrell]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison, presumably compiled by Ann Worrell, whose name is inscribed on multiple works within the volume. The vast majority of titles in this collection were published in Philadelphia, and the remainder in Baltimore, between 1796 and 1830. A number of items have themes related to Scotland, along with several works about soldiers. Composers Michael Kelly, Joseph Mazinghi, John Stevenson, and Thomas H. Thompson are most prominent, with three works each, and Thomas Moore was the lyricist for four works. George Willig, G.E. Blake, and various iterations of the Carr publishing company are the most prominent publishers in this volume.
[Binder's Collection: Anna Pease]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by Anna M. Pease, from the collection of Thurman Morrison. All works were published in London, with multiple items published by Duff and Hodgson, Chappell, Robert Cocks & Co., and Joseph Williams. The volume features a variety of composers, including two works each by George Linley and Frank Mori. An additional set of three songs is attributed to the unnamed author of "Will you love me then as now," surmised to be Charles William Glover, though only "The rich man's bride" verifies as one of his works. For topics covered, two works are concerned with the month of May, and three others with Ireland (one of which, "The May Dew," overlaps in both areas).
[Binder's Collection: Civil War Pieces]
Bound compilation of sheet music from a variety of composers, prominently featuring songs about subjects related to the U.S. Civil War, from the Union perspective. Other works include dances for piano with a particular emphasis on galops and waltzes. A majority of titles in this volume were published in Boston, primarily by Oliver Ditson & Co. While the works range in date from 1846 through the 1870s, the most frequently appearing dates are between 1864 and 1866.
[Binder's Collection: Columbus Public Library, Parts]
Bound compilation of parts to accompany the volume M218.C67. This collection's contents do not overlap entirely with those of main volume. The library catalog record follows the handwritten numbering in the main volume, which generally assigns numbers to titles held in common between the two volumes. Therefore, some works are described by their position relative to numbered items. The set of parts also has several short manuscript pieces added at the end; some parts are for both violin or flute, or for flute but playable on violin. The volume itself heavily emphasizes "potpourris" and other arrangements of larger works, such as those by Gaetano Donizetti and Vincenzo Bellini. Charles Auguste de Bériot is prominent in this volume as both a composer and arranger. About half of the works were published in Mayence (present-day Mainz) or Offenbach (surmised from other evidence in some cases), with Fils de B. Schott as the most prominent publisher.
[Binder's Collection: Columbus Public Library, Scores]
Bound compilation of sheet music for violin and piano, assembled by the Columbus Public Library (now the Columbus Metropolitan Library). This volume consists of scores and piano parts, although its contents do not overlap entirely with those of the accompanying set of violin parts. The library catalog record follows the handwritten numbering in the volume, which generally assigns numbers to titles held in common between the two volumes. Therefore, some works are described by their position relative to numbered items, such as a set of three between numbered selections 23 and 24. The volume itself heavily emphasizes "potpourris" and other arrangements of larger works, such as those by Gaetano Donizetti and Vincenzo Bellini. Charles Auguste de Bériot is prominent in this volume as both a composer and arranger. About half of the works were published in Mayence (present-day Mainz) or Offenbach (surmised from other evidence in some cases), with Fils de B. Schott as the most prominent publisher.
[Binder's Collection: E. & F. Schetter]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by E. and F. Schetter. A blank page near the end is inscribed with "To be sent to Miss Ellen Schetter, care of Doct. Louis Schetter, Piqua, Ohio." The collection consists primarily of variations and other works based on those of other composers. The volume also contains Books 1 and 3 of Carl Czerny's L'ecole des expressions. Four works by Henri Herz are present, and source material for derivative works comes from Gaetano Donizetti, Vincenzo Bellini, and D.F.E. Auber, among others. Half of the works in this volume were published in Philadelphia, and five in New York, with the remainder in Baltimore and Boston. The publisher George Willig of Philadelphia is the most prominent in this collection, publishing five works out of twenty in the compilation.
[Binder's Collection: E. M. Peachey]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison. The contents were assembled by Edith Mills Peachey, and the 57 works in this volume include multiple ballads, quadrilles, polkas, and waltzes, with five different compositions by Henry Russell. Other composers with two works in the collection include Edwin Flood, Charles E. Horn, Louis Antoine Jullien, and Camille Schubert. About half of the works were published or co-published by the Musical Bouquet Office. All titles were published in London, but they cover a geographical scope including the British Isles and continental Europe, along with past and contemporaneous areas of British colonization in North America and India.
[Binder's Collection: E. M. Wagner]
Bound compilation of sheet music assembled by Ellen M. Wagner. About half of the titles in the volume were published in Boston, with others published in New York, Philadelphia, and Cincinnati. Many of the works in the volume are set as theme and variations.
[Binder's Collection: Fannie Schieffelin]
Bound compilation of sheet music collected by Fannie K. Schieffelin. The volume contains a variety of composers, though Diederich Krug is most prominent as a composer and arranger, along with three works each by Louis Moreau Gottschalk and Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. Many kinds of works are present, though two adjacent compositions are funeral marches. Numerous publishers are present, and are more or less evenly divided between the East Coast of the United States and Europe (particularly Leipzig and present-day Mainz).
[Binder's Collection: Florence Paulson, Book 1]
Bound compilation of sheet music, compiled by Florence B. Paulson. The collection was bound in 1870, and contains works published between 1830 and 1870. Many of the selections are patriotic, while others include dances, ballads, and selections from operas. A variety of composers are present, with S. Wesley Martin and Henry C. Work the most frequent, each with three compositions in the volume. Almost half of the selections were published in Chicago, with others from New York, Boston, Cincinnati, and Philadelphia. Lyrics in this volume include racial slurs and stereotyping.
[Binder's Collection: Florence Paulson, Book 2]
Bound compilation of sheet music, collected by Florence B. Paulson. This volume consists primarily of ballads and love songs, most of which were published in Philadelphia, New York, and Boston.
[Binder's Collection: Florence Paulson, Book 3]
Bound compilation of sheet music, collected by Florence B. Paulson. This volume consists primarily of sentimental songs ballads, lullabies, and cradle songs, and four titles involving birds. Composers Harrison Millard and Arthur Sullivan are most prominently represented. Most works were published in New York or Boston, with many published by Oliver Ditson & Co., Wm. A. Pond & Co., and G. Schirmer. The collection was compiled in 1881, but the works it contains were published between 1858 and 1881.
[Binder's Collection: G. K. Whitaker]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison, compiled by Gertrude K. Whitaker. The selections include multiple titles on military themes, including works dedicated to military figures of the time. Other works include ballads, waltzes, and the three-part cantata, The May Queen. Five works in this volume were composed by Charles Grobe. Almost half of the thirty-six items in the collection were published in Philadelphia, with others published in Baltimore, New York, and Boston.
[Binder's Collection: Ida Coit]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by Ida Burroughs Coit. The volume prominently features adaptations or arrangements of larger works (often operas), along with multiple waltzes and galops. Most works were published in Boston or St. Louis, with a smaller number published elsewhere. The St. Louis publisher Balmer & Weber and Boston publishers Oliver Ditson and W.A. Evans are most prominent in this collection. Most works were published in the 1870s, although items range in date from 1848 to 1884.
[Binder's Collection: Mary Waddington]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison, compiled by Mary Alsop King Waddington, an author who was born in New York, but lived in France beginning in 1871, and was married to French statesman William Henry Waddington. This volume consists largely of excerpts from operatic works, particularly by Gaetano Donizetti, Saverio Mercadante, Gioacchino Rossini, and Giuseppe Verdi. Most works were published in Paris, with a few published in Mayence (present-day Mainz), Vienna, and Boston.
[Binder's Collection: Minnie Greene, Book 1]
Bound compilation of sheet music. The dates of publication range between 1840 and 1880, and most of the publishers' imprints were located in New York or Philadelphia, along with several other locations. Discard stamps from the Columbus, Ohio public library, and a stamp for R.B. McAdow, Music Dealer in the same city suggest the compiler's residence was also there; the name Minnie S. Greene is written in pencil on the first page of music. Page 127 of the scan, or 114 of the music, is also inscribed "Presented to Minnie Greene."
[Binder's Collection: Minnie Greene, Book 2]
Bound compilation of sheet music. The dates of publication range between 1852 and 1879, and most of the publishers' imprints were located in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, with others from Cleveland and New Orleans. Several items have the name of Minnie S. Greene on the first page, and some have the location of the Southern Home School in Baltimore, or Patapsco [Ins. or Tns.]. A wide variety of composers and lyricists appear in the volume, with multiple entries from Virginia Gabriel, Luigi Arditi, Fabio Campana, Charles Gounod, John Hullah, and Harrison Millard.
[Binder's Collection: Mrs. Bright]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by Mrs. Bright. Almost all selections in the volume were published in London, with songs in English, German, and Italian. Six out of the forty-six titles in the volume are by Henry R. Bishop, with several works by J. Augustine Wade and Peter von Winter as well, among others.
[Binder's Collection: Mrs. Phillips]
Bound compilation of sheet music from the collection of Thurman Morrison. An inscription on the page facing the inside front cover reads "Mrs. J.M. Phillips, Priory St."
[Binder's Collection: Oliver Brett]
Bound compilation of sheet music collected by Oliver Sylvain Baliol Brett, 3rd Viscount Esher. The front cover is monogrammed O.S.B., with a bookplate reading "Ex libris Oliver Brett" on the front inside cover. Nearly all items contain a primary or secondary publishing location imprint in London. The collection is unusual for its inclusion of arrangements for banjo. The titles are generally in alphabetical order, beginning with the letter "K," which suggests the existence of a prior volume. Many titles are taken from larger works of musical theater. This item contains a substantial number of selections that include racial slurs and stereotyping.
[Binder's Collection: R. S. Harrington]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by R.S. Harrington. The collection consists of music for dances, ballads, and minstrel songs, notably juxtaposing songs with related titles, (Young Folks at Home and Old Folks at Home; Are We Almost There? and We Are Almost There). Most selections were published in Boston or New York. This item contains racial slurs and stereotyping.
[Binder's Collection: S. L. Schieffelin]
Bound compilation of sheet music compiled by S. L. Schieffelin. As is the case with the other Schieffelin binder's collections, this volume emphasizes variations and derivative works based on other compositions, and particularly operas. Works in this volume are entirely from the 1830s, with many by Henri Herz, Carl Czerny, and Franz Hünten, and include material frequently sourced from Giacomo Meyerbeer, Gioachino Rossini, and Gaetano Donizetti. Most works were published in Mayence (present-day Mainz) and Anvers (better known as Antwerp) or Leipzig, and publishers Fils de B. Schott and C.F. Peters are the most prominent in this volume.
[Binder's Collection: Sarah Carpenter]
Bound compilation of sheet music collected by Sarah Carpenter. The collection includes many works arranged for piano from larger works such as operas, as well as galops, marches, and fantasies. Eugène Ketterer, Brinley Richards, and William Vincent Wallace have multiple works in this volume. About half of the titles were published in New York City, with others in Philadelphia and Boston, as well as several European cities.
[Binder's Collection: Schieffelin, Book 1]
Bound compilation of sheet music with the surname Schieffelin attached. Nearly all works in this volume are derivative works by Henri Herz, with two by Jacques Herz. The titles are largely fantasies or variations on works by other composers (including four by Gaetano Donizetti), with a particular emphasis on operas. A majority of works were published in Mayence (present-day Mainz), and some in Anvers (better known as Antwerp), Paris, Bonn, and New York. B. Schott or Fils de B. Schott published or co-published most titles, and works in this volume range in date from 1825 through 1855. The stamp of music seller C. Breusing on works throughout the volume provides insights on how the works were acquired.
[Binder's Collection: Schieffelin, Book 2]
Bound compilation of sheet music with the surname Schieffelin attached. The collection was bound in Yonkers, New York, which strongly suggests a location for the owner, and digitized historical newspapers and genealogical records do show a prominent Schieffelin family in that city. Three quarters of the titles in the volume are variations, of which five were composed from various sources by Henri Herz. The collection includes a variety of publishers and locations in Europe and the United States. Where dates can be determined, they range from 1821 through the 1840s.
[Binder's Collection: Schumann u. Mendelssohn]
Bound compilation of sheet music with the title "Schumann u. Mendelssohn." In addition to Robert Schumann and Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, the volume also contains works by Franz Schubert, Franz Liszt, and Carl Maria von Weber. Titles in this collection were published in Leipzig, Berlin, Vienna, and possibly Braunschweig. Publishers Ed. Bote & G. Bock, Breitkopf und Härtel, and J. Schuberth account for just over half of the selections. Where a date can be determined or estimated, works in this volume were published between 1838 and 1889.
[Binder's Collection: Works by Brahms]
Bound compilation of sheet music consisting of six works by Johannes Brahms: Variationen über ein Thema von Paganini (1); Clavierstücke, op. 76: Heft 2 (2); Fantasien für Pianoforte (3); Drei Intermezzi, für Pianoforte, Op. 117 (4); Klavierstücke, op. 118 (5); and Klavierstücke, op. 119 (6).
[Brief Interview with Andy Narell]
Interview with Andy Narell about his experience playing, composing, and teaching steel band music at UNT. It originally aired during the intermission of the Global Rhythms concert.
[Brief resume of work done so far]
Resume detailing the research and lectures completed by Padma Rangachari including a list of publications.
[Clipping: Hoje é dia de música clássica ao meio-dia]
Newspaper clipping about a performance of classical music by Padma Rangachari.
[Clipping: Indiana vem divulgar sua música aqui]
Newspaper clipping about Padma Rangachari promoting her music at Instituto de Música na Unicamp.
[Clipping: Na Unicamp, uma música pouco conhecida aqui: dos indianos]
Newspaper clipping about a concert by Padma Rangachari.
[Clipping: Padma na cidade, falando da Índia]
Newspaper clipping about Padma Rangachari visit to Brazil.
[Clipping: Padma na cidade, falando da Índia; Indiana vem divulgar sua música aqui]
Two undated newspaper clippings describing Padma Rangachari's visit to the Departamento de Música do Instituto de Artes da Unicamp (Universidade Estadual de Campinas) in Brazil.
[Clipping: Recital de música hindu]
Newspaper clipping about a Padma Rangachari recital. Publisher and date information handwritten on the clipping.
[Clipping: The Grammy-Nominated College Jazz Band]
Clipping from The Epoch Times reviewing the Lab 2009 album by One O'Clock Lab Band. Shows album artwork.
["Coffee Break" Percussion Video]
Percussion ensemble in a coffee shop using coffee cups as instruments.
[Computers and Indian Music]
Typed text of a talk given by Padma Rangachari on computer applications in Indian music. Handwritten editing notes throughout.
[Computers and Indian Music]
Paper describing a talk given on Computer Music and experiments conducted.
[Concert Poster: 1st Annual Allen Jazz Invitational & Arts Festival]
Poster advertising a concert for the 1st Annual Allen Jazz Invitational and Arts Festival on March 22, 2014, at Allen Performing Arts Center.
[Concert Poster: Alex Fraile]
Poster advertising a concert by Alex Fraile with Scott Neary, Dustin Kisselbach, Marcos Merino, Rasmus Blixt and Stuart Mack on October 30, 2012, at Kenton Hall.
[Concert Poster: An evening with the One O'Clock Lab Band]
Poster advertising a concert by One O'Clock Lab Band with special guests Denis DiBlasio and Wayne Bergeron on April 21, 2012, at Allen ISD Performing Arts Center.
[Concert Poster: An Evening with the One O'Clock Lab Band]
Poster advertising a concert by One O'Clock Lab Band featuring Frank Greene, Denis Diblasio and Stockton Helbing on March 23, 2013, at Allen ISD Performing Arts Center.
[Concert Poster: Bob Moses]
Poster advertising a concert by drummer Bob Moses with Stefan Karlsson and Fred Hamilton on February 7, at The Syndicate. Bob Moses is shown playing the drums.
[Concert Poster: Dave Brubeck Quartet]
Poster advertising a concert by Dave Brubeck Quartet on February 26, 2009, at Murchison Performing Arts Center.
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