Template:Did you know nominations/Sechs Lieder, Op. 35

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by Montanabw(talk) 02:26, 30 July 2016 (UTC)

Sechs Lieder, Op. 35[edit]

Reger c. 1900
Reger c. 1900
  • ... that Sechs Lieder, Op. 35, are six songs by Max Reger (pictured) on love poems by five authors which inspired "some of Reger's most magical sonorities"?

Created by Gerda Arendt (talk). Self-nominated at 21:25, 19 July 2016 (UTC).

  • No issues found with article, ready for human review.
    • This article is new and was created on 11:12, 19 July 2016 (UTC)
    • This article meets the DYK criteria at 2039 characters
    • All paragraphs in this article have at least one citation
    • This article has no outstanding maintenance tags
    • A copyright violation is unlikely (5.7% confidence; confirm)
      • Note to reviewers: There is low confidence in this automated metric, please manually verify that there is no copyright infringement or close paraphrasing. Note that this number may be inflated due to cited quotes and titles which do not constitute a copyright violation.
  • No overall issues detected

Automatically reviewed by DYKReviewBot. This bot is experimental; please report any issues. This is not a substitute for a human review. --DYKReviewBot (report bugs) 20:42, 21 July 2016 (UTC)

  • New, long enough, neutral, good citations, no apparent unacceptable paraphrasing. Sources are online.
  • hook accurate, sourced and of acceptable length. Interesting as it highlights an unfamiliar work of this composer.
  • QPQ undertaken. Image meets all DYK requirements.
  • Good to go! - Smerus (talk) 16:26, 23 July 2016 (UTC)