Is Flor Peeters' 60 Short Pieces book out of copyright, and if so, does anyone have a PDF? I've been teaching myself organ, and the organist used it tonight at Mass, and it sounded nice, but not too difficult. I'm always looking for short little things like that which are easy to play.
It's in print and not very expensive, so you can spend $8.50 printing out the PDF at a copy center (if one exists), or you can spend $15 and get a new copy shipped to you.
Who published Peeters' output? If it's a French edition, it could well be copyright for ages yet, although since Peeters didn't perish during either world war the French mort pour la patrie copyright extensions (Tournemire, Alain) might not kick in even for French-issued sheet music.
Anyone know anything about Belgian copyright, and how it might differ from French? I myself haven't a clue.
A pity, I guess, for impoverished musicians that Peeters wasn't an Italian or a Spaniard. Italian and Spanish musical administrators seem to regard copyright as a boring Teutonic imposition on their wild untamed creativity.
In this particular case, Peeters' "Sixty Short Pieces" are published by H.W. Gray. Most of his hymn tune settings (0p. 100) and his Gregorian Chant Themes (Op. 68, 69, 70) are published by Peters. Peeters "Elegie", "Suite Modale" and "Toccata, Fugue & Hymn on Ave Maris Stella" are published by LeMoine, Brussels. Regrettably his "Mass to Honor St. Joseph" (Kalmus) "Missa Festiva" (Schott) and "Jubilee Mass" (Peters) are the only remaining masses in publication. Regrettably, the "Missa Laudis in Honor of St. John the Baptist" (McLaughlin & Reilly) has been out of print for over 40 yrs. It is truly one of his greatest mass settings.
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