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He was a piano virtuoso and you know how those piano virtuosos componse good compositions. He was rooted in the baroque and classical masters. You have to hear some of his compositions to feel this.
Babe and Miss Potter are compositions by Nigel Westlake.
The Lullaby!
his compositions for waltz
Six Songs for Tenor or Soprano and PianoLiebestreu - Fidelity in LoveLiebe und Frühling I - Love and Spring ILiebe und Frühling II - Love and Spring IILied - SongIn der Fremde - Far From HomeLied - SongThose are a few. See the related link for further information.
Actually there are several popular songs created by DJ Aligator in the past. Some examples of well-known songs include "The Whistle Song", "Lollipop", "Stomp!" or "I Like to Move It".
Johannes Brahms's father was rumored to be of Jewish descent (see Daniel Beller-McKenna, Revisiting the Rumor of Brahms's Jewish Descent). However, we may never know the truth.In his preface to the Foundations (xxxviii) Lord Redesdale wrote:"Some people have thought that Brahms was a Jew, that his name was a corruption of Abrahams. But this is false. Brahms came of a Silesian family, and in the Silesian dialect Brahms means a reed. (See an interesting paper in Truth of January 13, 1909)."
I don't know.However, you can always got to ralupop stores in Singapore to pohs and find the doog compositions. (Some word are spelt wrongly)
Star War theme.
There is no single piece of music by Brahms that is more 'famous' than any other. This type of question is impossible to answer. Some pieces of music may be best known in certain countries, while other pieces will be better known in other countries. Some music becomes famous through live performances, some through recordings, some through being used in TV advertisements, and so on. Some music is well known to professional musicians but not to the general public - and vice versa. There are so many variables that there is really no point in asking the question. A more sensible question would be 'what are some of Brahms's most famous pieces of music?', and answers to that are already available on this site.
Dynamite doesn't use gunpowder. There were a few different compositions. Some used nitroglycerin with an absorbent material (such as kieselguhr or sawdust), and some compositions used ammonium nitrate. In both cases, they were extremely unstable and dangerous to manufacture, which is why dynamite has more of less been phased out in favour of other alternatives.
Some of the composers who wrote for the clarinet include Mozart, Debussy, Schumann, Brahms, Poulenc and Saent-Saens.