Dolly
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Dolly
Summary
Dolly is a musical work/composition[1]. Dolly ranks in the top 5% of musical_work_composition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (160 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Dolly's instance of is recorded as musical work/composition[3].
- Dolly's composer is recorded as Gabriel Fauré[4].
- Dolly's Commons category is recorded as Dolly Suite[5].
- Dolly was published on 1897[6].
- Dolly's dedicated to is recorded as Hélène Bardac[7].
- Dolly's instrumentation is recorded as piano[8].
- Dolly's instrumentation is recorded as piano four hands[9].
- Dolly's title is recorded as {'lang': 'fr', 'text': 'Suite Dolly'}[10].
- Dolly's number of parts of this work is recorded as {'unit': 'Q929848', 'amount': '+6'}[11].
- Dolly's form of creative work is recorded as piano duet[12].
- Dolly's form of creative work is recorded as suite[13].
- Dolly's opus number is recorded as 56[14].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
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Release type: Suite[15]
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Genre(s): classical[16]
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Community tags: classical, keyboard[17]
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MusicBrainz ID: 82123792-5376-4449-8ee2-3424954274f1[18]
Body
Publication
Dolly was published on 1897[6].
Why It Matters
Dolly ranks in the top 5% of musical_work_composition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (160 views/month).[2] Dolly has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] Dolly is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]