Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sir William Sterndale Bennett (13 April 1816 – 1 February 1875) was an English composer, pianist, conductor and music educator. At the age of ten Bennett was admitted to the London Royal Academy of Music (RAM), where he remained for ten years.
Pastoral: The May Queen, Op 39; Sacred Cantata: The Woman of Samaria, Op 44 (Birmingham Festival, 1867) Duet: Remember Now Thy Creator; Exhibition Ode (1862), Op 40; Cambridge Installation Ode, Op 41; Now, my God, Let, I beseech Thee; God is a Spirit; Several other anthems, Hymn and Psalm tunes
The Chorale Book for England: A Complete Hymn-book for Public and Private Worship, Catherine Winkworth, William Sterndale Bennett and Otto Goldschmidt (1863) Lyra Germanica: the Christian life, Catherine Winkworth (1868) Christian Singers of Germany, Catherine Winkworth (1869) Songs for the household: Sacred poetry, Catherine Winkworth (1882)
Sir William Sterndale Bennett in 1861. In the later 19th century there was an increasing appetite for large scale works that covered epic, biblical and mythical themes. This was reflected in the topics of operas, cantatas and oratorios, often utilising British poems and novels.
1 William Sterndale Bennett. Toggle William Sterndale Bennett subsection. 1.1 Conditional Support by Lingzhi. 1.2 User:Brianboulton. 1.3 Coord note. 1.4 Source review ...
Meg Bennett, a veteran soap opera writer and actress, has died. She was 75.Bennett -- who was best known for her writing on shows, including The Bold and the Beautiful and General Hospital, as ...
Sven receives a strange call from Paula. Then, the plane that Paula and Hadi are flying home on mysteriously disappears over the Atlantic Ocean, killing all 178 people on board and leaving Sven ...
Macfarren was born in London in 1826, youngest son of the dramatist George Macfarren, and brother of the musician Sir George Alexander Macfarren.In his fourth year he showed gifts for music; he was a choir-boy at Westminster Abbey under James Turle (1836–41), and sang at the coronation of Queen Victoria.