Sansoen Phra Narai

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sansoen_Phra_Narai

"Sansoen Phra Narai" (Thai: สรรเสริญพระนารายณ์) is a music composition based on a notated piece found in Simon de la Loubère's records of the French embassy to the Kingdom of Ayutthaya in 1687, originally titled in the English version as "A Siamese Song". King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) had a modern arrangement made by Michel Fusco in 1897, and used it as a royal anthem. The piece was arranged as the title song for the 1941 film King of the White Elephant, under the name "Si Ayutthaya". This arrangement was also used in the 2017 TV series , and the march composition was used in the royal funeral of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX) the same year. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sansoen Phra Narai
rdf:langString Sansoen Phra Narai
xsd:integer 63607565
xsd:integer 1104035259
rdf:langString Sheet music for "A Siamese Song", from la Loubère's 1693 book
rdf:langString Sheet music for A Siamese Song from Simon de la Loubère
rdf:langString สรรเสริญพระนารายณ์
rdf:langString th
rdf:langString Glorify to Narai
xsd:integer 1899
rdf:langString "Sansoen Phra Narai" (Thai: สรรเสริญพระนารายณ์) is a music composition based on a notated piece found in Simon de la Loubère's records of the French embassy to the Kingdom of Ayutthaya in 1687, originally titled in the English version as "A Siamese Song". King Chulalongkorn (Rama V) had a modern arrangement made by Michel Fusco in 1897, and used it as a royal anthem. The piece was arranged as the title song for the 1941 film King of the White Elephant, under the name "Si Ayutthaya". This arrangement was also used in the 2017 TV series , and the march composition was used in the royal funeral of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX) the same year.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2631

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