Finding free popular piano sheet music is not as hard as you may think. And if you are like me, you have already discovered the wonders of the Internet.
If you are in need to find the words to a song that has been bouncing around your brain, then there are many places on the Internet today where you can go to find them.
I recently got remarried, and if you are in any way a perfectionist like me, you probably wanted the most popular wedding songs out there to really express your joy of the occasion.
Finding the most popular wedding music is not so hard as I have stated before. Just go to any download site, type the song and you will even found the music sheet and boom you have found it! It's all very simple really.
A lot of sites in this day and age show in their main page a section of the most popular music downloads. This is where you strike gold people! So have a blast and find what you need because music always soothes the soul!
Osvaldo_Zoom posted a photo:
Avanti o popolo, alla riscossa
bandiera rossa s'innalzerà ;
bandiera rossa, bandiera rossa
bandiera rossa trionferà .
Poiché non vogliam sfruttati
né vogliamo sfruttatori,
ci hanno detto quei signori
che la loro è libertà :
libertà d'esser padroni,
di poterci derubare,
siamo in tanti a lavorare,
sono in pochi a guadagnar.
Avanti o popolo, alla riscossa
bandiera rossa s'innalzerà ;
bandiera rossa, bandiera rossa
bandiera rossa trionferà .
Poiché noi vogliam la terra
che ci avete derubato
e che per troppo vi abbiam lasciato,
ci gridate malfattori!
Ma le fabbriche potenti
che vi abbiamo costruito,
che ci hanno imprigionato,
ora noi vogliam guidar.
Vogliam le fabbriche, vogliam la terra
e non più guerra ma libertà ,
e non più guerra, e non più guerra,
e non più guerra ma libertà .
(Testo di Gualtiero Bertelli, 1976)
This is an anti-war version of a the famous popular song "Red Flag".
The original version of the Italian worker's song "Bandiera rossa" ("Red Flag"), which is also known as "Avanti Popolo" ("Forward People") has been written in 1908 by Carlo Tuzzi. The melody has been borrowed from two Lombardian folk songs (according to other sources, from a Venicean love song).