Music
Found in 595 Collections and/or Records:
Florence Jepperson Madsen music compositions and arrangements, approximately 1900-1976
Contains photocopies of music composed and arranged by Florence J. Madsen.
Florence Jepperson Madsen music compositions and arrangements, approximately 1900-1976
Contains photocopies of music by Florence Madsen.
Florence Jepperson Madsen music manuscripts, approximately 1900-1976
Contains working copies of All Service Ranks the Same With God; Come Unto Me; Home Sweet Home; Still, Still With Thee; and an untitled manuscript. Materials date from between approximately 1880 and 1976.
Florence Jepperson Madsen oversized photographs, 1914-1967
Florence Jepperson Madsen papers, approximately 1900-1976
Contains personal correspondence, articles, programs, news clippings, yearbooks, scrapbooks, poetry, resumes, tributes, journals, photographs, patriarchal blessings, and biographical materials. Also includes published, unpublished, and workcopy music manuscripts by the Madsens. Materials date from 1870 to 1976.
Florence Jepperson Madsen personal correspondence, 1906-1976
Incoming, outgoing, and undated correspondence, poetic tributes and an autographed statement (by David O. McKay) about Florence Madson.
Florence Jepperson Madsen scrapbooks, 1912-1956
Scrapbooks of "Bouquet of Memories," landscape photos, clippings, cards and letters regarding presentation of a piano to the Alumni Association, and the Singing Mothers' Great Britain Tour.
Grace Follet papers
contain vocal scores for women's voices, vocal scores for mixed choirs, course booklets pertaining to harp instruction, research notes on the history and structure of harp, American Harp Society (AHS) conference booklets, programs and brochures of Follet and other prominent harpists, correspondence, two indexes and two appendixes to the AHS sound recording repository. Collection spans the dates 1927-1985, with publication dates ranging 1889-1959.
Nancy C. Follett papers
Foreword to a life story
Photocopy of a handwritten autobiography of John L. Seymour who taught at Sacramento Junior College for 24 years, produced and directed many plays, composed operas and chamber music. He later moved to Cedar City, Utah after the death of his mother and established a memorial library for her at Southern Utah State College. He discusses the operas he wrote and describes his philosophy of life.