Flora Zygman | |
---|---|
Nationality | Polish, American |
Other names | Flora Guenzburg Zygman, Flora G. Zygmanowa |
Occupation | Pianist |
Flora Guenzburg Zygman (died after May 1940) was a Polish-born American pianist based in Chicago.
Flora Guenzburg Zygman was from Warsaw. [1] She studied with Sergei Bortkiewicz and with Alexander Glazunov in Saint Petersburg. [2]
Zygman taught [3] and played piano in Chicago [4] [5] from 1917, [6] and was a soloist with the Temple Judea Symphony Orchestra in Chicago in 1918. [7] In 1919 she was a soloist with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. [8] She made her New York debut in 1919, in an afternoon at the Aeolian Hall. [9] "The young pianist played with daylight cheerfulness and feminist sensitiveness," reported one reviewer, "and with no little technical skill." [10]
She made piano roll recordings for Ampico in 1920. [11] She also played in trios with violinist Edmund Zygman and cellist Adolf Hoffman, [12] and gave a concert with German contralto Rosa Olitzka on Mackinac Island in 1920. [13] [14]
In 1922, 1928, 1932, 1936 and 1940, she was briefly noted for being the very last alphabetical listing in each year's new edition of Who's Who in America . [15] [16]
Henriëtte Hilda Bosmans was a Dutch composer and pianist.
Winifred MacBride, later Winifred MacBride Thomas, was a Scottish-born concert pianist who achieved international acclaim in the first half of the twentieth century, particularly for her interpretations of the works of Beethoven and Tchaikovsky. She also taught piano at Catawba College in North Carolina.
William Baines was an English pianist and composer who wrote more than 150 works for solo piano and a number of larger orchestral works before his death from tuberculosis at the age of 23.
Flora Woodman was a Scottish soprano singer popular for her London concert performances in the first decades of the twentieth century. She extensively performed in oratorios such as The Messiah and Elijah.
Wynne Pyle(néeWynne Belle Pyle 24 October 1881 Ladonia, Texas — 24 April 1971 Miami, Florida) was an American concert pianist.
Gitta Gradova, also known as Gitta Cottle and Gertrude Weinstock, was an American pianist.
Dai Buell was an American pianist and teacher. In 1921 she gave the first piano concerts heard by radio audiences and in 1931, gave the first concert on TV.
Theodora Sturkow-Ryder was an American concert pianist, composer, music critic and piano teacher, based in Chicago.
Josephine Kryl was an American violinist.
Myrtle Elvyn, later Myrtle Elvyn-Bloch, was an American pianist and composer.
The Woman's Symphony Orchestra of Chicago was an American orchestra based in Chicago. In addition to its regular radio broadcasts which spanned 1925–1948, the Woman's Symphony Orchestra of Chicago also toured.
Mae Doelling Schmidt was an American virtuoso pianist, composer, clubwoman, and music educator from Chicago. She was on the faculty of the American Conservatory of Music.
Gladys Louise Welge was an American violinist and conductor. She was the conductor of the Woman's Symphony Orchestra of Chicago from 1938 to 1940. She was also founder of the Symphony of Oak Park and River Forest, one of the longest-surviving community orchestras in the United States.
Viola Cole-Audet was an American pianist, composer, and music educator, based in Chicago.
Eugenia Argiewicz, later Eugenia Argiewicz Bem, was a Polish violinist based in San Francisco, California for much of her career.
Katherine Neal Simmons Love was an American soprano singer of Choctaw ancestry. She often performed songs of Native American themes, wearing an evocative costume of beads and fringe.
Maude J. Roberts George was an American singer, arts administrator, and music critic. She was president of the National Association of Negro Musicians (NANM) from 1933 to 1935. She was also president of the Chicago Music Association, and a music critic for The Chicago Defender newspaper.
Prudence Maria Neff was an American pianist and music teacher, based in Alabama as a young woman, and in Chicago for the rest of her career.
Adelaide L. FischerFederlein was an American soprano singer, based in New York.
Frances Nash Watson was an American concert pianist and composer. In the 1920s, she was part of a musical trio with Elisabeth of Bavaria, Queen of the Belgians, and Albert Einstein. Later in life she was prominent in social and musical circles in Washington, D.C.