Christina Rossetti In Music

Christina Rossetti in Music Project

"Dancing on the hilltops" [Sidney Homer]

Title

"Dancing on the hilltops" [Sidney Homer]
First line of lyrics: Dancing on the hilltops?
Part of: "Seventeen Lyrics from 'Sing-Song'"

Creator

Homer, Sidney; music (American, 1864-1953)
Rossetti, Christina Georgina; text (English, 1830-1894)

Date

1908 [copyright]; 1910 [publication]; 1995? [republication]; 2000? [publication]

Publisher

New York: G. Schirmer; Boston: Boston Music Co.; New York: Classical Vocal Reprints [1995?]; Boca Raton, Fla.: Masters Music Publications [2000?]

Subject

genre: children's music|song|song cycle
solo: high voice
chorus: children's unison chorus
instrumentation: piano
initial sharps/flats: three sharps
initial time signature: 3/4
other version 1 - solo: low voice
other version 1 - chorus: children's unison chorus
other version 1 - instrumentation: piano
origin: United States
male composer

Language

English

Description

Rossetti poem(s): "'Dancing on the hill-tops'"
Place in the larger work: The twelfth song of seventeen in the song cycle called "Seventeen Lyrics from Sing-Song," settings of Christina Rossetti poems. The songs include in Part I, 1. "Eight o'clock; the postman's knock!"; 2. "Baby cry–Oh fie!"; 3. "Dead in the cold, a song-singing thrush"; 4. "Love me,–I love you"; 5. "Kookoorookoo! kookoorookoo!"; 6. "Boats sail on the rivers"; 7. "In the meadow–what in the meadow!"; 8. "The dog lies in his kennel"; 9. "Lie abed, sleepy head"; 10. "Mix a pancake, stir a pancake"; in Part II, 1. "Who has seen the wind?"; 2. "Dancing on the hilltops"; 3. "A pocket handkerchief to hem–"; 4. "A motherless soft lambkin"; 5. "Lullaby, oh lullaby!" ; 6. "Hurt no living thing"; 7. "Minnie and Mattie and fat little May".
Tempo markings: "Animato"; dotted half note = 56
Performance instructions: "mf with grace and affection"
Dedication: "To my Wife and Children"
Notes: "Key signature A" (Ives DM194)

Format

Format 1: musical score
2 pages (pp. 20-21, 20 misnumbered 18)

Source

In reference to the published works below: Ives DM194; Gooch and Thatcher 4339
Reference: Ives, Maura. Christina Rossetti: A Descriptive Bibliography. New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Press, 2011.
Reference: Gooch, Bryan N.S. and David S. Thatcher. Musical Settings of Early and Mid-Victorian Literature: A Catalogue. New York: Garland, 1979.
Reference: Ezust, Emily. The LiederNet Archive. http://www.lieder.net/lieder/index.html
Other data reference(s): Record for "Seventeen Lyrics from "Sing-Song" ... Op. 19, etc." British Library, http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01004419060. Accessed 9 Jul 2020.
Record for "Seventeen lyrics from Sing-song, op. 19." WorldCat, http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34052317. Accessed 9 Jul 2020.
Record for "Seventeen lyrics from Sing-song by Christina Rossetti : for high voice and piano, op. 19." WorldCat, http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/681509761. Accessed 9 Jul 2020.
Cataloguer: Roxanne Lafleur, University of Ottawa
Musical score for high voice [1908]: New York Public Library. Internet Archives, http://www.archive.org/details/seventeenlyricsf00home. Accessed 1 Aug 2019.

Identifier

Opus: 19
Record: CRM-dancingonthehilltops-homer
File(s): CRM-dancingonthehilltops-homer-high.pdf

Rights

"Copyright, 1908, by G. Schirmer, Inc."
The Christina Rossetti in Music project website is hosted in Canada at the University of Ottawa Library, and we aim to comply with Canadian copyright laws. If you believe we have violated Canadian copyright law, please contact us at christinarossettimusic@uottawa.ca. The Christina Rossetti in Music project is strictly not for profit and intended for research and educational purposes only.

Files

Collection

Citation

Homer, Sidney; music (American, 1864-1953) and Rossetti, Christina Georgina; text (English, 1830-1894), “"Dancing on the hilltops" [Sidney Homer],” Christina Rossetti In Music, accessed September 19, 2024, http://omeka.uottawa.ca/christinarossettiinmusic/items/show/2711.

Item Relations

This Item is part of a larger work that also includes Item: "A pocket handkerchief to hem–" [Sidney Homer]
This Item is part of a larger work that also includes Item: "A motherless soft lambkin" [Sidney Homer]
This Item is part of a larger work that also includes Item: "Lullaby, oh lullaby!" [Sidney Homer]
This Item is part of a larger work that also includes Item: "Hurt no living thing" [Sidney Homer]
This Item is part of a larger work that also includes Item: "Minnie and Mattie and fat little May" [Sidney Homer]
Item: "Eight o'clock; the postman's knock" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Baby cry–Oh fie!" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Dead in the cold, a song-singing thrush" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Love me,–I love you" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Kookoorookoo! Kookoorookoo!" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Boats sail on the river" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "In the meadow—what in the meadow?" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "The dog lies in his kennel" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Lie abed, sleepy head" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Mix a pancake, stir a pancake" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Who has seen the wind?" [Sidney Homer] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item