Top of page

Category: Sheet Music

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

Two Scoops from the Music Division

Posted by: Pat Padua

This comes over the transom from Today in History. Legend has it that on this day in 1904,   Charles E. Menches filled a pastry cone with two scoops of ice-cream and thus is responsible for the conical icon we celebrate today. The history of ideas, however sweet, is more complicated than that, as the cast of characters …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

One Small Dance Step For Man

Posted by: Pat Padua

Forty-one years ago today, astronaut Neil A. Armstrong became the first human being to set foot on the moon. The Apollo 11 broadcast from the moon on July 20, 1969, which transmitted Neil Armstrong’s immortal words,  “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind,” was named to the National Recording Registry in 2004. Remember one giant …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

Music to Drink Your Blood By

Posted by: Pat Padua

Are you a night person? Do garlic cloves make you break out, or worse?  Does Team Edward mean anything to you? If your answer to any or all of these questions is yes, you may enjoy “Vampire Polka,” by a composer known only as “Four-Eyes.”  Whatever societal anxieties may be behind the twenty-first century thirst …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

The Bicycle and the Bastille

Posted by: Pat Padua

Last week In the Muse brought you “The Battle of the Sewing Machines,” a 19th century piano piece that fondly mimics the chug of an old sewing machine. The piece features cover art that depicts sundry anthropomorphic sewing machines on the attack, revealing perhaps a bit of 19th century tension at the fate of man …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

The Battle of the Sewing Machines

Posted by: Pat Padua

Just over the transom via the American Folklife Center’s Facebook page, today is the birthday of Elias Howe, inventor of the sewing machine. Celebrate Howe’s gift, not only to the garment industry, but to mankind, with “The Battle of the Sewing Machines,” F. Hyde’s rhythmic impersonation of that old-fashioned sewing machine sound ca. 1874. The …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

There’s A Composer Born Every Minute

Posted by: Pat Padua

The phrase “there’s a sucker born every minute” is commonly attributed to famed showman Phineas Taylor Barnum. The quote’s provenance is disputed, its sentiment cynical, but as adaptable headline fodder it is unsurpassed. If the reader so desires, the remainer of this paragraph may be read out loud in the booming voice of a carnival …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

Sing Along with the Founding Fathers

Posted by: Pat Padua

It’s not exactly Schoolhouse Rock, but between the barbecue and the fireworks, celebrate the long Independence Day weekend with John E. Wilson’s vocal arrangement of the Declaration of Independence from the Civil War Sheet Music collection. You can also find sheet music and recordings of  “God Bless America,”  “America the Beautiful,” “The Star Spangled Banner,” and …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

The Heroine of Gettysburg

Posted by: Pat Padua

Two years ago I visited Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, during the anniversary weekend of the tragic battle. I have never been a Civil War aficionado, but to trod that consecrated ground among the Civil War reenactors and tour guides, to visit the house where Jennie Wade lived and died, was truly haunting. Remember the Battle of Gettysburg with …

Woman with dark hair, fancy dress and pearls with eyes closed and mouth slightly open, singing

Robert Cole

Posted by: Pat Padua

This post is abridged from a biography written by James Wolf, Digital Conversion Specialist, Music Division, for African-American Band Music & Recordings, 1883-1923 in the Performing Arts Encyclopedia. Read the entire article here. Robert Allen Cole was born on July 1, 1868, in Athens, Georgia, the son of former slaves. Like Will Marion Cook and James …