Talk:Luonnotar (Sibelius)

Infobox usage and editing on Sibelius tone poems
Hello, fellow Sibelian and welcome to the wonderful world of the Sibelius tone poems! I am sure we are of one mind: the 13 Sibelius examples in this form represent, along with his seven symphonies and the violin concerto, the height of his orchestral powers. As such, I have taken the liberty over the last year of giving some of these tone poems (namely, The Wood Nymph and The Oceanides) the expanded treatment I think they deserve.

As part of this expansion project, I have added infoboxes onto each of the tone poem pages (save for Finlandia and  Luonnotar and two that don't yet exist, The Dryad and Pan and Echo) to assist our readers in having the most important information about each piece at their fingertips. I feel that standardization of infobox information and form is something we should strive to maintain among these pieces, and as such, I suggest that any changes be agreed to by the community. If you're interested, I have the following opinions:


 * 1) Let's keep the picture of Sibelius the same for all his compositions, so as to create the feel of 'articles in a series'
 * 2) Let's have the opening title be the name in English (unless the native title is more famous, e.g., En saga)
 * 3) Let's include 'native name' or 'English name' below the picture if the piece goes by more than one name
 * 4) Let's have the form (e.g., tone poem) appear up-top next to the composer's name
 * 5) Let's include the average duration
 * 6) Let's have the caption under the image of Sibelius be "The composer in 1913"
 * 7) Let's keep the dates of composition/revision (important for some pieces, e.g., the Fifth Symphony, consistent with List of compositions by Jean Sibelius
 * 8) Let's have each infobox include information on 'movements', even if it is only one; this provides standardization among pieces.

Okay, thanks for reading! If you are so inclined to add the infobox to the seven symphonies (or the four tone poems mentioned above) or some of his incidental music, please be my guest. My focus, for now, is on the tone poems.

Sgvrfjs (talk) 18:24, 27 June 2015 (UTC)

Note: I have included this message on the talk pages of each of the existing tone poems that have infoboxes.

External links modified
Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just modified one external link on Luonnotar (Sibelius). Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
 * Added tag to http://www.gramophone.net/Issue/Page/January%201970/50/774721/SIBELIUS.+Luonnotar,+Op.+70.+En+Saga%E2%80%94+Tone+Poem,+Op.+9.+Night+Ride+and+Sunrise%E2%80%94Symphonic+Poem,+Op.+55.+Oceanides%E2%80%94Tone+Poem,+Op.+73.+Lon+don+Symphony+Orchestra+conducted+by+Antal+Dorati+with+Gwyneth+Jones+(soprano).+HMV+ASD2486+(43s.+9d.).
 * Added tag to http://blog.calebhugo.com/?page_id=643
 * Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20150301102605/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn9kit-_guk to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn9kit-_guk&feature=related

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Cheers.— InternetArchiveBot  (Report bug) 05:07, 9 January 2018 (UTC)