NASA images of
the Transit of Venus, 2004
2004 The first transit
of Venus since 1882;
the next one occurred on June 6, 2012. See also June 6, 1760 and
June 3, 1769.
"John Philip Sousa (1854 - 1932) was very
interested in the 1882
transit of Venus. In 1882 - 3 he wrote his 'Venus Transit March'. He
didn't write it specifically to commemorate the transit itself, but wrote it
to honor the great American physicist Prof. Joseph Henry who had died on May
13, 1878.
"The
Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. asked Sousa to write this march for
the planned unveiling of the statue of Henry in front of the Smithsonian
Institution in 1883. The music was to be played while dignitaries solomly [sic]
walked from the museum to a special receiving stand in front of the
Smithsonian. Sousa's Transit of Venus March remains a delightful, and
rarely-played addition to Sousa's opus of compositions.
"Sousa's
Transit of Venus March remains a delightful, and rarely-played addition to
Sousa's very famous and much loved opus of compositions. If you would like to
view the cover page of the 1889 sheet music, play the march on your piano, or
listen to two versions of it, see below:
Transit of Venus cover page
Transit of Venus piano score Page 1
Transit of Venus piano score Page 2
Transit of Venus piano score Page 3"
Source
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