Box 1
Contains 188 Results:
"Nobody's Sweetheart," Composition by Gus Kahn, 1924
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"S-H-I-N-E," Composition by Ford Dabney, 1924
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"Watchman's," Composition by Edvard Grieg, 1924
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"By Firelight," Composition by Homer Grunn, 1925
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"Dinah," Composition by Sam M. Lewis & Joe Young & Harry Akst, 1925
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"The Student Prince," Composition by Sigmund Romberg, 1925
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"Sweet Georgia Brown," Composition by Ben Bernie, 1925
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.
"Mandy Make Up Your Mind," Composition by Geo W. Myer, 1924
This collection includes over 400+ pieces of sheet music reflecting Hayden Reynolds’s tastes as both a consumer and producer of music. Encompassing a wide array of genres (classical, Tin Pan Alley, blues, jazz, and gospel), as well as Reynolds’s own original compositions, the collection extends chronologically from 1893 to 1963. It subsequently provides a cross-section of developments in the publishing of popular music and innovations in the production and commercialization of said music.