User:Durova/Recording score portrait

The new Wikipedia:WikiProject Media Restoration has several goals. One of them is to assemble media sets for composers and songwriters. This involves cross-project collaboration between Commons, Wikisource, and Wikipedia.

The idea grew out of something I noticed: in over 2 years since I raised Joan of Arc to featured article and the text has been translated into 3 languages. When I started doing image restorations the first one that got featured on Commons got its captions translated into 2 dozen languages within a couple of months. Media travels between languages more easily than articles, so it makes sense to build upon that synergy.

The drive is called a recording, a score, and a portrait: when people can hear the music and read the notes and see the composer's face, it introduces the artist even if an article is a stub. Many thanks to the regulars at Not the Wikipedia Weekly for their help.

A bust of Ludwig van Beethoven taken from his death mask.
Piano Sonata No. 28 in A Major, Op. 101: manuscript sketch for movement IV.

Irving Berlin in 1948.
Cover page for "I Want to Go Back to Michigan", a 1914 Irving Berlin song.

George M. Cohan, 1933.
Cover page for "Over There", a 1917 George M. Cohan song.

Antonín Dvořák (1841–1904).
Cover page to book 1 containing Biblical Songs 1-5.

First page of "Por una Cabeza", a 1935 tango by Carlos Gardel and Alfredo Le Pera.

Scott Joplin in 1907.
Cover page for "Maple Leaf Rag", 1899.

James Scott
Cover page for "Frog Legs Rag", first edition 1906.

Noble Sissle in 1951.
Cover page for "I'm Just Wild About Harry" from the musical Shuffle Along by Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake, 1921.

John Philip Sousa, 1900.
Cover page for "Stars and Stripes Forever".