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Composer: Gordon Getty (1933-)
Alphabetic listing of musical settings [warning - not necessarily comprehensive]
[x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database
* indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
Song Cycles, Symphonies, etc.
All titles of vocal settings in our database, in alphabetic order
After a hundred years (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
Beauty crowds me (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I cannot live with you (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I cried at pity, not at pain (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I did not reach thee (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I had a guinea golden (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I like to see it lap the miles (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I shall not murmur if at last (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I should not dare to leave my friend (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I sing to use the waiting (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I sing to use the waiting (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
I taste a liquor never brewed (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
If she had been the mistletoe (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
It ceased to hurt me (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
It was not Death, for i stood up (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE
Loveliest of trees (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
My first well day, since many ill (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
My wars are laid away in books (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
New feet within my garden go (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
She bore it (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
Split the lark and you'll find the music (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The clouds their backs together laid (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The crickets sang (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 3 : Almost Peace) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The first day's night had come (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The going from a world we know (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The grave my little cottage is (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The night was wide (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The soul selects her own society (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
There came a day at summer's full (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
There came a wind like a bugle (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson) ITA FRE
There is a morn by men unseen (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 1 : The Pensive Spring) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
Upon his saddle sprung a bird (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 4 : My Feet Slip Nearer) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE
When I was small, a woman died (in The White Election - A Song Cycle for soprano and piano on 32 poems of Emily Dickinson, Part 2 : So We Must Meet Apart) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
[x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database
* indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
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