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Composer: Elgar, Edward
Era
Place : Filtered
Era: Modern
Piece: Aria da capo
conc+g
Renaissance
Conc erto No.1
in F major, BMV
Composer: Sweelinck, Jan
Baroque
Era: Baroque
Conc erto No.1 in F major, BMV
Conc erto No.2 in F major, BMV
Conc erto No.3 in G major, BMV
Conc erto No.3 in G major, BMV
Conc erto No.4 in G major, BMV
Conc erto No.4 in G major, BMV
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Composer
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Biber, Heinrich Ignaz Franz von
de Araujo, Pedro (1662 - 1705)
Gibbons, Orlando (1583 - 1625)
Maler, Michael (1568 - 1622)
Pachelbel, Johann (1653 -1706)
Purcell, Henry (1659 - 1695)
Reusner, Esalas Jr. (1636 -1679)
Sweelinck, Jan Pieterszoon
Information
Preview
Credo, Chorus; Et Exspecto
Sonata No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1014,
Sonata No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1014,
Credo, Chorus: Confiteor (Attaca)
Bach, Johann Sebasti
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hann Sebastian (1685-1750)
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Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-17
Johann Sebastian Bach was music's most sublime creative genius. With the notable
exception of opera, he composed towering masterpieces in every major Baroque
genre: sonatas, concertos, suits and cantatas, as well as innumerable keyboard,
organ and choral works. Yet despite the sheer vastness of his output, Bach
sustained a rarefied level of musical inspiration that continues to amaze his most
gifted successors. Even those who find Bach's music somewhat overwrought - or
just plain dull - concede that at a purely technical level he is a league of his own.
Yet during his lifetime his awesome creative talent went barely unappreciated and by
Figure 4.16: mSpace - faceted browsing of a music dataset. http://mspace.fm/
to be linked. For example, older topics may not have an ISBN, and also the same book, for example,
'Tom Sawyer,' will have different ISBNs if printed by different publishers; while these are different
variants or editions, they are still in some senses 'the same,' at least for some purposes - if you want
to borrow 'Tom Sawyer' from the library, you normally don't care which publisher or print run.
User's Own Web of Data
Sometimes users are presented with data that are similar to web data and, indeed, may be presented
on the web, but are in on some way isolated. One example of this is in Facebook. There is a clear
web of relationships; people can be friends of other people, and they can be named in pictures, so it
is possible to navigate from a person to pictures naming that person, to the people who posted the
picture, to their friends.
Furthermore, Facebook offers developers an API that allows them to create their own classes
of data (tables) and relationships (see Figure 4.18 ). For example, a developer might create a task
management application with tasks and to-dos as tables with a 'sub-task' relationship between tasks
and a 'responsible for' relationship between to-dos and people.
For a variety of reasons, partly their users' privacy, partly commercial protection, Facebook only
allows linking into Facebook standard classes and does not allow rich links among application data
 
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