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Lullaby by François Nicholas Riss A lullaby (/ ˈ l ʌ l ə b aɪ /), or a cradle song, is a soothing song or piece of music that is usually played for (or sung to) children (for adults see music and sleep). The purposes of lullabies vary. In some societies, they are used to pass down cultural knowledge or tradition.
Baby Lullaby Calming music and images February 22, 2011 [36] Johann Sebastian Bach; Ludwig van Beethoven; Johannes Brahms; Claude Debussy; Charles Gounod; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Baby Baaach the Lamb Sierra Clark Based on Baby Bach and Lullaby Time 8 Neptune's Oceans Animals in the ocean George Frideric Handel; Georg Phillip Telemann ...
Lullaby Performs a song Artist Plot Chukchi: Ensemble " Vaeg girls" Elizabeth Skvortsova: The film is about what to do to calm the child. Russian: Arina Fridlyanskaya: Gleb Korzhov: Falling asleep, the girl watches who is doing what. Maybe she's already dreaming. Jewish: Efim Chorny: Elizabeth Skvortsova: A little boy dreams of becoming a bird ...
The refrain is an early example of an English lullaby; the term "lullaby" is thought to originate with the "lu lu" or "la la" sound made by mothers or nurses to calm children, and "by" or "bye bye", another lulling sound (for example in the similarly ancient Coventry Carol). [2]
"Schlaf, Kindlein, schlaf" ("Sleep, dear child, sleep") is a German lullaby. The oldest surviving version is a text and melody fragment of the first stanza, which appears in 1611 as part of a quodlibet in Melchior Franck's Fasciculus quodlibeticus.
"Seal Lullaby" (Rudyard Kipling, Alec Wilder) – 2:29 "Evening Is a Little Boy/The Night Will Never Stay" (Eleanor Farjeon, Frances Frost, Alec Wilder) – 3:09
"Still, still, still" is an Austrian Christmas carol and lullaby. The melody is a folk tune from the district of Salzburg. The tune appeared for the first time in 1865 in a folksong collection of Vinzenz Maria Süß (1802–1868), founder of the Salzburg Museum. The words describe the peace of the infant Jesus and his mother as the baby is sung ...
In the 1934 collection American Ballads and Folk Songs, ethnomusicologists John and Alan Lomax give a version titled "All the Pretty Little Horses" and ending: 'Way down yonder / In de medder / There's a po' lil lambie, / De bees an' de butterflies / Peckin' out its eyes, / De po' lil thing cried, "Mammy!"' [5] The Lomaxes quote Scarborough as ...