Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
---|---|---|
MUSICPOP 1851-SM | Take this lute / | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1852 |
Dear love to be about thee. I cannot sing to-night. Maggie by my side. And the king said to all the people. Song of peace. Massa's in de cold ground. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1852-D |
I dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls / Eliza's flight : a scene from Uncle Tom's cabin / The Green Mountain yankee : a temperance medley / Columbia, the land of the brave / |
4 |
MUSICPOP 1853 |
Slave girl's lave. The friends we've left behind. Something to love me. Little Katy : hot corn. Old dog tray. Friends we've left behind. Lulu is our darling pride. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1853-D |
Call me pet names / Hour of parting : duett / Ella Ree : a new Ethiopian melody as sung with immense success by Wood's Minstrels / Aileen aroon / Cheer boys cheer / Annie my own love : song / |
6 |
MUSICPOP 1853-SM |
Thou hast wounded the spirit that lov'd thee : an admired ballad / Softly ye night winds : ballad written and composed as a companion to Sleeping I dreamed love / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1853-SM Online |
Thou hast wounded the spirit that lov'd thee an admired ballad / Softly ye night winds ballad written and composed as a companion to Sleeping I dreamed love / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854 |
Sad news from home. Napoleon's farewell. Come with thy sweet voice again : song / Other side of Jordan. In the spring sweetly sing. Kitty Clyde. Good news from home. Arouse ye men of England! Tis hard to give the hand. Minnie. Charlie. Ellen Bayne. Close by the sparkling sea. |
13 |
MUSICPOP 1854-D |
Come with thy sweet voice again : song / Black eyed Susan : a favorite sea song as sung with rapturous applause by Mrs. Wood / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854-SM |
I cannot sing to night : ballad / Switzer's longing for home / |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1854-SM Online |
I cannot sing to night ballad / Switzer's longing for home |
2 |
MUSICPOP 1855 |
Absent but not forgotten. Sebastopol is taken. Thinking of old times. Our good old friends. Some folks. The departure for Syria = Partant pour la Syrie : romance / I've wandered by the hut side. Rosalie the prairie flower. My heart's on the Rhine. Consider the lillies. My old Kentucky home, goodnight! Arrow & the song. Massa's in de cold ground. King Witlaf's drinking horn. She watched for him. He's coming hame again. Lillie Dale. Partant pour la Syrie. Ivy Green. Pop goes the question! |
20 |
MUSICPOP 1855-D |
I cannot call her mother : ballad / Co-ca-che-lunk : an American student-song. Dearest spot of earth to me is home / To the west! / Come where my love lies dreaming : quartette / Britannia the pride of the ocean / |
6 |
MUSICPOP 1855-D Online | To the west! | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1856 |
Tis thus decreed. Home to our mountains. Darling Nellie Gray. Wake sweetest melody. When summer flowers are blowing. Then you'll remember me. Far from my native land. |
7 |
MUSICPOP 1856-D |
Home! sweet home! / Ever of thee : arranged as a song or duett / The beating of my own heart : song / The western trapper's camp song / The fisherman's daughter : ballad / |
5 |
MUSICPOP 1856-D Online | The western trapper's camp song | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1857 | Lords of creation. | 1 |
MUSICPOP 1857-D |
Flee as a bird : song / If your foot is pretty, show it! : sung with great applause by Matt Peel of the Campbells / Ah! che la morte ognora : from Il trovatore / Darling Nelly Gray : song & chorus / |
4 |
MUSICPOP 1857-K |
The one horse open sleigh : song and chorus / Minnie Clyde : Kitty Clyde's sister / |
2 |