See the candy fairies, sugar-plums, jelly-beans, chocolate bars,
Dance the minuet,
With the candied cherries, lolly-pops, peppermints, candy-canes,
As they pirouette,
See the FAIRY PRINCESS curtsying, gracefully, beautifully,
Swaying to the tune...
Music in the air (so entrancing)
Flowers in her hair (as she's dancing)
Love is everywhere (Ah-h-h-h-h-h-h-h)
'Neath the yellow lemon-drop moon.
(SUGAR-PLUM FAIRY DANCES)
There she goes now, on her toes now,
To her yellow lemon-drop moon.
There's a kingdom just beyond a star
Not too far
You can go
If you only dare
It's a magic place
A lovely sight
Pure delight
You can go if you want to stay
If you dare now
We'll go there now
Through the air now
Today!
The trees are hung with candy canes
Bright red
And white
With chocolate streets
And licorice lanes
A lovely sight
Blueberry sky
Lemon sun
Fields of lime where we can run
Ooo-ooo-ooo-ooooooo!
There's a kingdom
Just beyond a star
Not too far
You can go if you only dare
It's a magic place
A lovely sight
Pure delight
You can go if you want to stay
If you dare now
We'll go there now
Through the air now
Today!
My Mother graduated from High School in 1938, and her class sang lyrics to Tchaikovsky's "Waltz of the Flowers" from the Nutcracker Suite. So yes, there ARE lyrics to this song. They are virtually impossible to find, I have been searching for a long time.
There aren't lyrics, just instruments.
Tchaikovsky
hyughhfdhhf
Miniature OvertureMarchScene and Waltz of the SnowflakesSpanish DanceArabian DanceChinese DanceRussian DanceDance of the Reed PipesWaltz of the FlowersIntradaDance of the Sugar-Plum FairyCodaWaltz Finale and ApotheosisIt should be noted that none of these are songs, but movements, or sections of instrumental (orchestral) music. One can call them "pieces of music"; a rather awkward term. A song requires words, although some forms of music are called "Songs without words" and the like - but they are not really songs.
I think it would be ballet because it comes from the Nutcracker Ballet.
The Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky. The Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy is from the third movement, act 2 of the 1892 ballet
THEY LOVE IT
I think its from France ( i dance my self and also speak a tiny bit of french ) such as pas du chat means step of the cat in french and is also a ballet step .
Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies.
Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy, from "The Nutcracker."
Miniature OvertureMarchScene and Waltz of the SnowflakesSpanish DanceArabian DanceChinese DanceRussian DanceDance of the Reed PipesWaltz of the FlowersIntradaDance of the Sugar-Plum FairyCodaWaltz Finale and ApotheosisIt should be noted that none of these are songs, but movements, or sections of instrumental (orchestral) music. One can call them "pieces of music"; a rather awkward term. A song requires words, although some forms of music are called "Songs without words" and the like - but they are not really songs.
The Sugar Plum fairy is a character in the ballet "The Nutcracker" by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky. In the ballet, the Sugar Plum fairy rules over the land of sweets while she waits for the return of the prince, who has been turned into a nutcracker.
The "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" is a famous piece of music from Tchaikovsky's ballet "The Nutcracker." Tchaikovsky composed the ballet in 1892.
The poem - 'Twas the Night Before Christmas
I think it would be ballet because it comes from the Nutcracker Ballet.
The Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky. The Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy is from the third movement, act 2 of the 1892 ballet
The name is The Nutcracker. There is a song called Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy in it.
Visions of Sugar Plums was created in 2003.
THEY LOVE IT
I think its from France ( i dance my self and also speak a tiny bit of french ) such as pas du chat means step of the cat in french and is also a ballet step .