Piano Sheets > Horace Silver Sheet Music > Silver's Serenade (ver. 2) Piano Sheet

Silver's Serenade (ver. 2) by Horace Silver - Piano Sheets and Free Sheet Music

  
About the Song
   Other avaliable versions of this music sheet: Version 1  Version 2  Version 3  
All you need to know about free sheet music The Internet has made it possible for piano enthusiasts to learn how to play piano by using free sheet music available online. There are plenty of websites online, which offer you music notes for playing the piano. Types of formats There are various formats available when it comes to online music sheets for the piano. These include GIF, Postscript, finale, graphics interchange, adobe acrobat etc. If you want quick and easy access to sheet music piano then these free websites are the best choice available. Most websites will also have listings based on the genre of music to help you easily select the appropriate category of piano notes.  (More...)    Download this sheet!
About the Artist
Horace Silver (born September 2, 1928), born Horace Ward Martin Tavares Silva[1] in Norwalk, Connecticut, is an American jazz pianist and composer. His father, who was known as John Tavares Silva, was from the island of Maio in Cape Verde. His mother was born in New Canaan, Connecticut and was of Irish-African descent. Silver is known for his distinctive humorous and funky playing style and for his pioneering compositional contributions to hard bop. Silver was influenced by a wide range of musical styles, notably gospel music, African music, and Latin American music and sometimes ventured into the soul jazz genre. Silver began his career as a tenor saxophonist but later switched to piano. His tenor saxophone playing was highly influenced by Lester Young, and his piano style by Bud Powell. Silver was discovered in the Sundown Club in Hartford, Connecticut in 1950 by saxophonist Stan Getz. Getz was playing at the club with Silver’s trio backing him up. Getz liked Silver’s band and brought them on the road, eventually recording three of Silver’s compositions. It was Getz with whom Silver made his recording debut. He moved to New York City in 1951, where he worked at the jazz club Birdland on Monday nights, when different musicians would come together and informally jam. During that year he met the executives of the label Blue Note while working as a sideman. He eventually signed with them where he remained until 1980. It was in New York that he formed The Jazz Messengers, a co-operatively run group with Art Blakey.
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All you need to know about free sheet music The Internet has made it possible for piano enthusiasts to learn how to play piano by using free sheet music available online. There are plenty of websites online, which offer you music notes for playing the piano. Types of formats There are various formats available when it comes to online music sheets for the piano. These include GIF, Postscript, finale, graphics interchange, adobe acrobat etc. If you want quick and easy access to sheet music piano then these free websites are the best choice available. Most websites will also have listings based on the genre of music to help you easily select the appropriate category of piano notes.  (More...)