Category:Nursery-rhymes
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A Nursery-rhyme is a type of partsong that uses a nursery rhyme as the lyric. The poem is usually anonymous or traditional, with many variations existing country to country, region to region, decade to decade. Some partsongs use a lyric based on a traditional rhyme, sometimes authored by the composer.
Pages in this category
The following 68 pages are in this category, out of 68 total.
A
G
H
J
L
- Little Bo-Peep (Charles King Hall)
- Little Bo-Peep (Henry Dancey)
- The Little Girl and her Dolly (Arthur F. M. Custance)
- Little Jack Horner (Albert Ham)
- Little Jack Horner (Alfred James Caldicott)
- Little Jack Horner (Charles King Hall)
- Little Miss Muffet (Arthur E. Fisher)
- Little Miss Muffet (John Winans Shryock)
- A little old man (Henry Walford Davies)
- Lullaby (Henry Walford Davies)
- Lullaby Up to Date (Adam Geibel)
O
- O my little sixpence (Henry Walford Davies)
- Oh! the noble Duke of York (Norman Frederic Byng Johnson)
- An Old Cradle Song (Henry Walford Davies)
- Old Daddy Longlegs (Clara Angela Macirone)
- Old King Cole (Avalon Collard)
- Old King Cole (Cecil Forsyth)
- Old King Cole (John B. Shirley)
- The Old Woman (Henry Walford Davies)
S
T
- There was a man of Edmonton (George Alexander Macfarren)
- Thomas and Annis (Henry Walford Davies)
- Three Children Sliding (Howard M. Dow)
- Three little kittens (George Rayleigh Vicars)
- Tom, Tom, the piper’s son (Alfred Ben Allen)
- Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son (Frederic Scholes)
- A Tragedy (Henry Walford Davies)
- T’other little tune (Henry Walford Davies)