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LEADER 00000cz  a2200397n  4500 
001    n  82039934  
003    DLC 
005    20200229073839.0 
008    820427n| azannaabn          |a ana       
010    n  82039934 
024 8  |1http://dbpedia.org/resource/God_Save_the_Queen 
024 7  Q40807|2wikidata|1http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q40807 
024 7  186706449|2viaf|1http://www.viaf.org/viaf/186706449 
024 7  3a7900a1-f4a9-3bf6-9f37-9ec2df823246|2musicb|1http://
       musicbrainz.org/work/3a7900a1-f4a9-3bf6-9f37-
       9ec2df823246#_ 
024 7  mc0002359604|2allmusic 
035    (OCoLC)oca00736966 
040    DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dDLC|dPPi-MA|dDLC|dMBCM|dDLC|dWaU 
046    |k1744|2edtf 
130  0 God save the King 
370    |cGreat Britain|2naf|0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/
       n79023147|1http://id.loc.gov/rwo/agents/n79023147 
380    National anthems|2lcgft|0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/
       genreForms/gf2017026028 
430  0 America (Song) 
430  0 Celebration of American independence 
430  0 God save our Lord the King 
430  0 God save the Queen 
430  0 Heil dir im Siegerkranz 
430  0 My country, 'tis of thee 
430  0 National anthem (Great Britain) 
500 1  |wr|iModified by variation as (work):|aBeethoven, Ludwig 
       van,|d1770-1827.|tVariations sur le thême God save the 
       King|0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no96066492 
667    URIs added to this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. 
       Please do not remove or edit the URIs. 
670    Music for the Kings and Queens of England [SR] c1974:
       |blabel (National anthem) 
670    New Grove dict. of Amer. mus.:|bv. 3, p. 485 (America or 
       My country, 'tis of thee; words written by Samuel Francis 
       Smith in 1831 to a German hymn, not recognizing that its 
       melody was that of the British God save the King; sung on 
       July 4, 1831, in Boston, under the title Celebration of 
       American independence) 
670    New Grove|b(under National anthems: Great Britain: God 
       save the King/Queen) 
670    Wikipedia, July 27, 2017|b(The first published version of 
       what is almost the present tune appeared in 1744 in 
       Thesaurus Musicus. The 1744 version of the song was 
       popularised in Scotland and England the following year, 
       with the landing of Charles Edward Stuart and was 
       published in The Gentleman's Magazine. This manuscript has
       the tune depart from that which is used today at several 
       points, one as early as the first bar, but is otherwise 
       clearly a strong relative of the contemporary anthem) 
670    Fuld|b(God save the King) 
670    Harmonia Anglicana, 1744?:|bpage 1 (God save our Lord the 
       King)