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MusicSpoke

Artist Owned Sheet Music™

Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?

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Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day? | Matt Hill | MusicSpoke - $2.00 x

About the Score

William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18—commonly known as “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”—stands as one of the most celebrated expressions of admiration in the English language. The speaker opens with a familiar comparison but soon acknowledges the shortcomings of nature’s beauty: summer is transient, winds turn rough, and the sun’s radiance inevitably dims. In contrast, the beloved’s beauty emerges as more constant and enduring—not through the whims of seasons, but through the immortalizing power of poetry itself. The sonnet’s famous closing lines affirm that as long as people breathe and read these words, the poem’s subject will live on eternally.

This musical setting aims to reflect the sonnet’s elegant equilibrium of tenderness and inevitability. The vocal lines unfold with lyrical warmth, allowing the natural rhythm and cadence of Shakespeare’s language to shape the phrasing. Harmonic touches of color highlight the poem’s vivid imagery—the blustery summer winds, the fading eye of heaven, and the promise of something everlasting—while the piano provides a gently flowing accompaniment that evokes both intimacy and quiet reflection. The music broadens gradually in scope and intensity as the text builds toward its transcendent conclusion, where the timeless power of art becomes the sonnet’s ultimate revelation.

The piece was supported by a grant from the Nebraska Arts Council and premiered by the Sing Omaha Master Chorale on a concert entitled "Choral Canvases" which featured music inspired by or otherwise connected to visual art. A painter was commissioned to create new artwork based on the text, and both the painting and this piece debuted at the same performance.

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Product Details

Matt Hill

Score Details

Score Categories: Mixed, Choral
Score Tags: mixed, secular, Shakespeare, concert, collegiate, university, community, high school, piano, accompanied

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