List of music students by teacher: K to M

Last updated

Jean-Marc Nattier, The Music Lesson (1710) Jean-Marc Nattier, La Lecon de musique (1710).jpg
Jean-Marc Nattier, The Music Lesson (1710)

This is part of a list of students of music, organized by teacher.

Contents

K

Dmitry Kabalevsky

this teacher's teachers
Kabalevsky (1904–1987) studied with teachers including Gregory Catoire, Nikolai Myaskovsky, and Alexander Goldenweiser.

Mauricio Kagel

Robert Kahn

this teacher's teachers
Kahn (1865–1951) studied with teachers including Vinzenz Lachner  and Josef Rheinberger.

Jouni Kaipainen

Friedrich Kalkbrenner

this teacher's teachers
Kalkbrenner studied with teachers including Louis Adam  and Charles-Simon Catel.

Hedwig Kanner-Rosenthal

this teacher's teachers
Kanner-Rosenthal (1882–1959) studied with teachers including Theodor Leschetizky  and Moriz Rosenthal.

M. William Karlins

this teacher's teachers
Karlins studied with teachers including Philip Bezanson, Vittorio Giannini, and Stefan Wolpe.

Richard Karpen

Peter Katin

this teacher's teachers
Katin (1930–2015) studied with teachers including Harold Craxton.

Leokadiya Kashperova

Eli Kassner

Apolinary Kątski

Nikolai Kazanli

this teacher's teachers
Kazanli studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

Donald Keats

this teacher's teachers
Keats studied with teachers including Paul Hindemith, Dominick Argento, Henry Cowell, Paul Fetler, Otto Luening, and Quincy Porter.

Milko Kelemen

this teacher's teachers
Kelemen studied with teachers including Wolfgang Fortner  and Karlheinz Stockhausen.

Reginald Kell

Ian Kellam

this teacher's teachers
Kellam (1933–2014) studied with teachers including Reginald Tustin Baker, Howard Ferguson, and Herbert Sumsion.

Homer Keller

this teacher's teachers
Keller studied with teachers including Howard Hanson.

Edgar Stillman Kelley

Johann Peter Kellner

this teacher's teachers
Kellner studied with teachers including Johann Sebastian Bach.

Wilhelm Kempff

this teacher's teachers
Karl Heinrich studied with teachers including Barth Robert  and Kahn (composer) .

Anne Gamble Kennedy

Matthew Kennedy

Johann Caspar Kerll

this teacher's teachers
Kellner (1627–1693) studied with teachers including Girolamo Frescobaldi  and Giovanni Valentini.

Patricia Kern

this teacher's teachers
Kern (1927–2015) studied with teachers including Gwynn Parry Jones.

Aaron Jay Kernis

this teacher's teachers
Kernis studied with teachers including Jacob Druckman.

Aram Khachaturian

this teacher's teachers
Khachaturian studied with teachers including Reinhold Glière  and Nikolai Myaskovsky.

Abdul Wahid Khan

Allauddin Khan

Ali Akbar Khan

this teacher's teachers
Khan (1922–2009) studied with teachers including Allauddin Khan.

Imdad Khan

Yuri Kholopov

this teacher's teachers
Kholopov studied with teachers including Semyon Bogatyrev  and Philip Herschkowitz.

Tikhon Khrennikov

this teacher's teachers
Khrennikov studied with teachers including Vissarion Shebalin  and Nikolai Myaskovsky.

Friedrich Kiel

Earl Kim

this teacher's teachers
Kim (1920–1998) studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg  and Roger Sessions.

Florence Kimball

this teacher's teachers
Kimball (1888–1977) studied with teachers including Sarah Robinson‐Duff, Marcella Sembrich, and Arthur Shepherd.

Yasuji Kiyose

William Kincaid

this teacher's teachers
Kincaid (1895–1967) studied with teachers including Georges Barrère.

Johann Erasmus Kindermann

Leon Kirchner

this teacher's teachers
Kirchner studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg  and Roger Sessions.

Dumitru Georgescu Kiriac

this teacher's teachers
Kiriac (1866–1928) studied with teachers including Vincent d'Indy, Gabriel Fauré, and Charles-Marie Widor.

Johann Kirnberger

this teacher's teachers
Kirnberger (1721–1783) studied with teachers including Johann Sebastian Bach.

Charles Herbert Kitson

this teacher's teachers
Kitson (1874–1944) studied with teachers including .

Johann Christian Kittel

this teacher's teachers
Kittel (1732–1809) studied with teachers including Jakob Adlung  and J. S. Bach.

Johann Friedrich Kittl

this teacher's teachers
Kittl (1806–1868) studied with teachers including Václav Tomášek.

Halfdan Kjerulf

Bernhard Klein

Klein (1793–1832), mostly self-taught

Bruno Klein

this teacher's teachers
Klein (1858–1911) studied with teachers including Carl Baermann, Josef Rheinberger, and Franz Wüllner.

Jakob Friedrich Kleinknecht

Julius Klengel

Jose Kliass

this teacher's teachers
Jose Kliass studied with teachers including Martin Krause.

Karl Klindworth

this teacher's teachers
Klindworth (1830–1916) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.

Friedrich Klose

this teacher's teachers
Klose (1862–1942) studied with teachers including Anton Bruckner.

Hyacinthe Klosé

Franz Kneisel

Editha Knocker

this teacher's teachers
Knocker (1869–1950) studied with teachers including Joseph Joachim.

Iwan Knorr

this teacher's teachers
Knorr (1853–1916) studied with teachers including Ignaz Moscheles, Ernst Richter, and Carl Reinecke.

Oliver Knussen

this teacher's teachers
Knussen (1952–2018) studied with teachers including John Lambert  and Gunther Schuller.

Friedrich Koch

this teacher's teachers
Koch (1862–1927) studied with teachers including Woldemar Bargiel  and Robert Hausmann.

Zoltán Kodály

this teacher's teachers
Kodály studied with teachers including Hans von Koessler.

Charles Koechlin

this teacher's teachers
Koechlin (1867–1950) studied with teachers including Louis-Albert Bourgault-Ducoudray, Gabriel Fauré, André Gedalge, Charles Lefebvre, Jules Massenet, and Antoine Taudou.

Hans-Joachim Koellreutter

Gottfried Michael Koenig

Hans von Koessler

Masayuki Koga

Louis Köhler

this teacher's teachers
Köhler (1820–1886) studied with teachers including Carl Maria von Bocklet, Simon Sechter, and Ignaz von Seyfried.

Ridley Kohné

Lee Konitz

this teacher's teachers
Konitz (1927–...) studied with teachers including Lennie Tristano.

Aloys and Alfons Kontarsky

Steven en Stijn Kolacny

Mark Kopytman

this teacher's teachers
Kopytman (1929–2011) studied with teachers including Roman Simovych.

Nikolai Korndorf

this teacher's teachers
Korndorf (1947–2001) studied with teachers including Sergey Balasanian  and Leo Ginzburg.

Włodzimierz Kotoński

Serge Koussevitzky

Simon Kovar

Leopold Koželuch

this teacher's teachers
Kozeluch studied with teachers including František Xaver Dušek.

Antonín Kraft

Leo Kraft

this teacher's teachers
Kraft studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger  and Randall Thompson.

William Kraft

Jonathan Kramer

this teacher's teachers

Clemens Krauss

this teacher's teachers
Krauss (1893–1954) studied with teachers including Hermann Graedener  and Richard Heuberger.

Martin Krause

this teacher's teachers
Krause studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.

Herman Krebbers

this teacher's teachers
Krebbers (1923–2018) studied with teachers including Oskar Back.

Josef Krejčí

Ernst Krenek

this teacher's teachers
Krenek studied with teachers including Franz Schreker.

Franz Krenn

this teacher's teachers
Krenn (1816–1897) studied with teachers including Ignaz von Seyfried.

Hermann Kretzschmar

Leonid Kreutzer

this teacher's teachers
L. Kreutzer (1884–1953) studied with teachers including Alexander Glazunov, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and Anna Yesipova.

Rodolphe Kreutzer

this teacher's teachers
R. Kreutzer (1766–1831) studied with teachers including Anton Stamitz.

Jaroslav Křička

Jean-Baptiste Krumpholz

Ivan Kryzhanovsky

this teacher's teachers
Kryzhanovsky studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

Johann Kuhnau

this teacher's teachers
Kuhnau (1660–1722) studied with teachers including Vincenzo Albrici.

Georg Kulenkampff

this teacher's teachers
Kulenkampff (1898–1948) studied with teachers including Leopold Auer  and Willy Hess.

Gary Kulesha

this teacher's teachers
Kulesha studied with teachers including John Corigliano, Samuel Dolin, and John McCabe.

Theodor Kullak

this teacher's teachers
Kullak (1818–1882) studied with teachers including Albrecht Agthe, Carl Czerny, and Wilhelm Taubert.

Jaap Kunst

Michael Kurek

Karol Kurpiński

Eugene Kurtz

this teacher's teachers
Kurtz studied with teachers including Max Deutsch, Arthur Honegger, and Darius Milhaud.

Vilém Kurz

Johannes Vermeer - A Lady at the Virginals with a Gentleman (detail) - WGA24652.jpg

L

Josef Labor

Helmut Lachenmann

this teacher's teachers
Lachenmann (born 1935) studied with teachers including Johann Nepomuk David, Luigi Nono, and Karlheinz Stockhausen.

Franz Lachner

this teacher's teachers
Lachner studied with teachers including Simon Sechter  and Maximilian Stadler.

Vinzenz Lachner

this teacher's teachers
Lachner (1811–1893) studied with teachers including Simon Sechter  and Maximilian Stadler.

C. K. Ladzekpo

Kobla Ladzekpo

Charles Philippe Lafont

this teacher's teachers
Lafont (1781–1839) studied with teachers including Rodolphe Kreutzer  and Pierre Rode.

Théophile Laforge

this teacher's teachers
Laforge (1863–1918) studied with teachers including Eugène Sauzay.

Pierre Lalo

Jacques-Michel Hurel de Lamare

this teacher's teachers
Lamare (1772–1823) studied with teachers including Jean-Louis Duport.

Alexander Lambert

Constant Lambert

this teacher's teachers
Lambert (1905–1951) studied with teachers including George Dyson, Herbert Fryer, Ralph Vaughan Williams, R. O. Morris, and Malcolm Sargent.

John Lambert

this teacher's teachers
Lambert (1926–1995) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger.

Frederic Lamond

this teacher's teachers
Lamond studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.

Francesco Lamperti

Giovanni Battista Lamperti

Wanda Landowska

this teacher's teachers
Lang studied with teachers including Moritz Moszkowski.

Benjamin Johnson Lang

this teacher's teachers
Lang studied with teachers including Adriana Hölszky  and Alfred Jaëll.

Jean Langlais

this teacher's teachers
Langlais studied with teachers including Paul Dukas, Marcel Dupré, Noël Gallon, and André Marchal.

Paul Lansky

this teacher's teachers
Lansky studied with teachers including Milton Babbitt, Edward T. Cone, Earl Kim, George Perle, James Tenney, and Hugo Weisgall.

Alcides Lanza

this teacher's teachers

John Francis Larchet

this teacher's teachers
Larchet studied with teachers including Michele Esposito  and Charles Herbert Kitson.

Alicia de Larrocha

this teacher's teachers
Larrocha (1932-2009) studied with teachers including Frank Marshall.

Eduard Lassen

Orlande de Lassus

Jacob Lateiner

Gaetano Latilla

Ferdinand Laub

this teacher's teachers
Laud (1832–1875) studied with teachers including Simon Sechter.

Thomas Laub

Calixa Lavallée

Berthe Laventurier

this teacher's teachers
Laventurier (1901–1978) studied with teachers including Arthur De Greef.

Albert Lavignac

this teacher's teachers
Lavignac (1846–1916) studied with teachers including François Benoist, Antoine François Marmontel, and Ambroise Thomas.

Mario Lavista

this teacher's teachers
Lavista (1943–2021) studied with teachers including Rodolfo Halffter, Jean-Étienne Marie, and Héctor Quintanar.

Djane Lavoie-Herz

this teacher's teachers
Lavoie-Herz studied with teachers including Alexander Scriabin.

Henry Lawes

Henri Lazarof

this teacher's teachers
Lazarof (1932–2013) studied with teachers including Paul Ben-Haim.

Madé Lebah

Jean-Marie Leclair

this teacher's teachers
Leclair [the older] (1697–1764) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Somis.

Jean-Marie Leclair the younger

Jean-Pantaléon Leclerc

Ton de Leeuw

this teacher's teachers
Leeuw studied with teachers including Jaap Kunst  and Olivier Messiaen.

Nicola LeFanu

this teacher's teachers
LeFanu (1947–) studied with teachers including Earl Kim, Jeremy Dale Roberts, Peter Maxwell Davies, Thea Musgrave, Goffredo Petrassi, and Egon Wellesz.

Yvonne Lefébure

Gustave Lefèvre

Paul Le Flem

this teacher's teachers
Le Flem (1881–1984) studied with teachers including Vincent d'Indy  and Albert Roussel.

Ethel Leginska

this teacher's teachers
Leginska studied with teachers including Theodor Leschetizky.

Giovanni Legrenzi

Jacques Leguerney

this teacher's teachers
Leguerney (1906–1997) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger  and Francis Poulenc.

René Leibowitz

this teacher's teachers
Leibowitz (1913–1972) studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg  and Anton Webern.

Hugo Leichtentritt

this teacher's teachers
Leichtentritt studied with teachers including John Knowles Paine.

Karl Leimer

Nestor Lejeune

Peter Mandrup Lem

Edwin Lemare

Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens

this teacher's teachers
Lemmens (1823–1881) studied with teachers including François-Joseph Fétis  and Adolf Friedrich Hesse.

Henry Lemoine

this teacher's teachers
Lemoine (1786–1854) studied with teachers including Anton Reicha.

Charles Lenepveu

Carl Petter Lenning

Leonardo Leo

this teacher's teachers
Leo (1694–1744) studied with teachers including Nicola Fago  and Francesco Provenzale.

Hubert Léonard

this teacher's teachers
Léonard studied with teachers including Charles Auguste de Bériot  and François Habeneck.

Gustav Leonhardt

Fred Lerdahl

this teacher's teachers
Lerdahl studied with teachers including Wolfgang Fortner  and Roger Sessions.

Xavier Leroux

this teacher's teachers
Leroux studied with teachers including Théodore Dubois.

Theodor Leschetizky

this teacher's teachers
Leschetizky studied with teachers including Carl Czerny  and Simon Sechter.

Annette LeSiege

this teacher's teachers
LeSiege studied with teachers including Samuel Adler  and Warren Benson.

Franciszek Lessel

this teacher's teachers
Lessel studied with teachers including Joseph Haydn.

Jean-François Le Sueur

this teacher's teachers
Le Sueur (1760–1837) studied with teachers including Nicolas Roze.

Hermann Levi

Ray Lev

Heniot Levy

Lazare Lévy

this teacher's teachers
Lévy (1882–1964) studied with teachers including Louis Diémer, André Gedalge, and Albert Lavignac.

David Lewin

this teacher's teachers
Lewin studied with teachers including Milton Babbitt, Edward T. Cone, and Earl Kim.

Henry Ley

this teacher's teachers
Ley (1887–1962) studied with teachers including Marmaduke Barton, Charles Villiers Stanford, Walter Parratt, and Charles Wood.

Ingvar Lidholm

this teacher's teachers
Lidholm (born 1921) studied with teachers including Hilding Rosenberg.

Estelle Liebling

this teacher's teachers
Liebling studied with teachers including Mathilde Marchesi  and Selma Nicklass-Kempner.

Theodor Lierhammer

György Ligeti

Liza Lim

Jenny Lind

this teacher's teachers
Lind studied with teachers including Manuel García  and Adolf Fredrik Lindblad.

Magnus Lindberg

Adolf Fredrik Lindblad

this teacher's teachers
Lindblad studied with teachers including Carl Friedrich Zelter.

Ludvig Mathias Lindeman

Robert Lindley

this teacher's teachers
Lindley (1776–1855) studied with teachers including James Cervetto.

Thomas Linley the elder

David Liptak

Bernhard Listemann

this teacher's teachers
Listemann studied with teachers including Joseph Joachim  and Henri Vieuxtemps.

Franz Liszt

this teacher's teachers
Liszt studied with teachers including Carl Czerny, Anton Reicha, and Antonio Salieri.

Henry Litolff

this teacher's teachers
Litolff (1818–1891) studied with teachers including Ignaz Moscheles.

Edward Llewellyn

Miguel Llobet

this teacher's teachers
Llobet studied with teachers including Francisco Tárrega.

Charles Harford Lloyd

this teacher's teachers
Lloyd (1849–1919 studied with teachers including John Stainer.

William Lloyd Webber

this teacher's teachers
Lloyd Webber (1914–1982) studied with teachers including Ralph Vaughan Williams.

Normand Lockwood

this teacher's teachers
Lockwood studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger  and Ottorino Respighi.

Johann Bernhard Logier

Antonio Lolli

Vincenzo Lombardi

Marguerite Long

this teacher's teachers
Long studied with teachers including Antoine François Marmontel.

Nikolai Lopatnikoff

Richard Loqueville

Yvonne Loriod

this teacher's teachers
Loriod (1924–2010) studied with teachers including César-Abel Estyle, Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud, and Isidor Philipp.

Antonio Lotti

this teacher's teachers
Lotti (1667-1740) studied with teachers including Giovanni Legrenzi.

Charles Lucas

this teacher's teachers
Lucas (1808–1869) studied with teachers including William Crotch  and Robert Lindley.

Andrea Luchesi

this teacher's teachers
Luchesi (1741–1801) studied with teachers including Ferdinando Bertoni  and Baldassare Galuppi.

Alvin Lucier

this teacher's teachers
Lucier (born 1931) studied with teachers including Arthur Berger, Aaron Copland, Lukas Foss, Quincy Porter, and Harold Shapero.

Otto Luening

Lennart Lundberg

Giovanni Lorenzo Lulier

Jean-Baptiste Lully

Radu Lupu

Witold Lutosławski

Elisabeth Lutyens

Luzzasco Luzzaschi

this teacher's teachers
Luzzaschi (c. 1545 – 1607) studied with teachers including Cipriano de Rore  and Francesco dalla Viola.

Anatoly Lyadov

Boris Lyatoshinsky

George Goodwin Kilburne The Piano Lesson 1871.jpg

M

Terence MacDonagh

this teacher's teachers
MacDonagh (1908–1986) studied with teachers including Myrtile Morel  and Léon Goossens.

Mieczysław Michailowicz

Edward MacDowell

this teacher's teachers
MacDowell (1860–1908) studied with teachers including Teresa Carreño, Antoine François Marmontel, and Marie Gabriel Augustin Savard.

José Maceda

George Alexander Macfarren

this teacher's teachers
Macfarren (1813–1887) studied with teachers including William Henry Holmes, Charles Lucas, Cipriani Potter, and John Smithies.

Walter Cecil Macfarren

Alexander Mackenzie

this teacher's teachers
Mackenzie (1847–1935) studied with teachers including Charles Lucas  and Eduard Stein.

Giovanni de Macque

Bruno Maderna

this teacher's teachers
Maderna (1920–1973) studied with teachers including Antonio Guarnieri, Gian Francesco Malipiero, and Hermann Scherchen.

Nikita Magaloff

this teacher's teachers
Nikita Magaloff (21 February [O.S. 8 February] 1912 – 26 December 1992) studied with teachers including Alexander Siloti  and Isidor Philipp.

Rudolf Magnus

Gustav Mahler

this teacher's teachers
Mahler (1860–1911) studied with teachers including Julius Epstein, Heinrich Fischer, Robert Fuchs, and Franz Krenn.

Alphonse Mailly  [ nl ]

Artur Malawski

this teacher's teachers
Malawski (1904–1957) studied with teachers including Jan Chmielewski  and Kazimierz Sikorski.

Ivo Malec

Gian Francesco Malipiero

this teacher's teachers
Malipiero (1882–1973) studied with teachers including Marco Enrico Bossi.

Otto Malling

Mathilde Mallinger

Francesco Mancini

Eusebius Mandyczewski

this teacher's teachers
Mandyczewski (1857–1929) studied with teachers including Robert Fuchs  and Gustav Nottebohm.

Leopold Mannes

Eduard Mantius

André Marchal

this teacher's teachers
Marchal studied with teachers including Eugène Gigout.

Louis Marchand

Mathilde Marchesi

this teacher's teachers
Marchesi (1821–1913) studied with teachers including Manuel García.

Jean-Étienne Marie

this teacher's teachers
Marie (1917–1989) studied with teachers including Olivier Messiaen  and Darius Milhaud.

Gaetano Marinelli

Władysława Markiewiczówna

Antoine François Marmontel

this teacher's teachers
Marmontel (1816–1898) studied with teachers including Victor Dourlen, Fromental Halévy, Jean-François Le Sueur, and Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmerman.

Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg

Roger Marsh

this teacher's teachers
Marsh (b. 1949) studied with teachers including Ian Kellam  and Bernard Rands.

Frank Marshall

this teacher's teachers
Marhshall (1883-1959) studied with teachers including Enrique Granados.

Martin Pierre Marsick

this teacher's teachers
Marsick (1847–1924) studied with teachers including Désiré Heynberg, Hubert Léonard, and Lambert Massart.

Maurice Martenot

Frank Martin

Giovanni Battista Martini

this teacher's teachers
"Padre Martini" studied with teachers including Giacomo Antonio Perti.

Vicente Martín y Soler

Salvatore Martirano

Bohuslav Martinů

Adolf Bernhard Marx

this teacher's teachers
Marx (1795-1866) studied with teachers including Daniel Gottlob Türk  and Carl Friedrich Zelter.

Joseph Marx

Eduard Marxsen

this teacher's teachers
Marxsen (1806–1887) studied with teachers including Carl Maria von Bocklet, Johann Heinrich Clasing, and Ignaz von Seyfried.

William Mason

this teacher's teachers
Mason (1829–1908) studied with teachers including Moritz Hauptmann, Franz Liszt, Ignaz Moscheles, and Henry Schmidt.

Angelo Mascheroni

Lambert Massart

this teacher's teachers
Massart (1811–1892) studied with teachers including Rodolphe Kreutzer.

Rodolphe Massart

this teacher's teachers
Massart (1840–1910) studied with teachers including .

William Masselos

this teacher's teachers
Masselos (1920-1992) studied with teachers including Carl Friedberg.

Jules Massenet

this teacher's teachers
Massenet (1842–1912) studied with teachers including Ernest Guiraud, Napoléon Henri Reber, and Marie Gabriel Augustin Savard.

Georges Mathias

this teacher's teachers
Mathias studied with teachers including François Bazin, Frédéric Chopin, Fromental Halévy, and Friedrich Kalkbrenner.

Émile Mathieu

this teacher's teachers
Mathieu (1844–1932) studied with teachers including Auguste Dupont.

Stanislao Mattei

this teacher's teachers
Mattei (1750–1825) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Martini.

Tobias Matthay

this teacher's teachers
Matthay (1858– 1945) studied with teachers including William Sterndale Bennett, George Alexander Macfarren, Ebenezer Prout, and Arthur Sullivan.

Antoinette Mauté de Fleurville

Nicholas Maw

this teacher's teachers
Maw studied with teachers including Lennox Berkeley  and Nadia Boulanger.

Richard Maxfield

this teacher's teachers
Maxfield studied with teachers including John Cage, Aaron Copland, Luigi Dallapiccola, Ernst Krenek, Bruno Maderna, and Roger Sessions.

František Maxián

this teacher's teachers
Maxián (1907–1971) studied with teachers including Vilém Kurz.

Charles Mayer

this teacher's teachers
Mayer studied with teachers including John Field.

Wilhelm Mayer

Thomas Mayne

this teacher's teachers
Mayne (–) studied with teachers including .

Simon Mayr

this teacher's teachers
Mayr (1763–1845) studied with teachers including Ferdinando Bertoni.

Carl Mayrberger

Joseph Mayseder

this teacher's teachers
Mayseder (1789–1863) studied with teachers including Emanuel Aloys Förster, Ignaz Schuppanzigh, and Paul Wranitzky.

Virgilio Mazzocchi

this teacher's teachers
Mazzocchi (1597–1646) studied with teachers including Domenico Mazzocchi.

Alberto Mazzucato

this teacher's teachers
Mazzucato (1813–1877) studied with teachers including Bresciano .

John Blackwood McEwen

this teacher's teachers
McEwen (1868–1948) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder, Tobias Matthay, and Ebenezer Prout.

Colin McPhee

this teacher's teachers
McPhee (1900–1964) studied with teachers including Arthur Friedheim, Gustav Strube, and Edgard Varèse.

Paul Méfano

this teacher's teachers
Méfano (1937–2020) studied with teachers including Messiaen  and Milhaud .

Lambert Joseph Meerts

this teacher's teachers
Meerts (1800–1863) studied with teachers including Pierre Baillot  and Jean-Henri Simon.

Étienne Méhul

this teacher's teachers
Méhul (1763–1817) studied with teachers including Jean-Frédéric Edelmann  and Wilhelm Hanser.

Gustav Meier

this teacher's teachers
Meier (1929–2016) studied with teachers including Hans Swarowsky.

Salvatore Meluzzi

this teacher's teachers
Meluzzi (1813–1897) studied with teachers including Giuseppe Baini, Otto Nicolai, and Henrik Rung.

Felix Mendelssohn

this teacher's teachers
Mendelssohn (1809–1847) studied with teachers including Ludwig Berger, Ignaz Moscheles, and Carl Friedrich Zelter.

Manuel Mendes

Martin-Joseph Mengal

Isolde Menges

this teacher's teachers
Menges (1893–1976) studied with teachers including Leopold Auer, Carl Flesch, and Leon Sametini.

Peter Mennin

this teacher's teachers
Mennin studied with teachers including Howard Hanson, Normand Lockwood, and Bernard Rogers.

Tugdual Menon

Gian Carlo Menotti

this teacher's teachers
Menotti studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger  and Rosario Scalero.

Yehudi Menuhin

this teacher's teachers
Menuhin studied with teachers including George Enescu  and Louis Persinger.

Saverio Mercadante

this teacher's teachers
Mercadante studied with teachers including Fedele Fenaroli.

Aarre Merikanto

Frank Merrick

A. Tillman Merritt

Claudio Merulo

this teacher's teachers
Merulo (1533–1604) studied with teachers including Tugdual Menon.

Carlos de Mesquita

Olivier Messiaen

this teacher's teachers
Messiaen (1908–1992) studied with teachers including Paul Dukas, Marcel Dupré, Maurice Emmanuel, César-Abel Estyle, Jean Gallon, Noël Gallon, and Charles-Marie Widor.

As well as being a prominent composer, the Frenchman Olivier Messiaen was a noted teacher of musical analysis, harmony and composition at the Paris Conservatoire from the 1940s until he retired in 1978. He also taught classes at the Darmstadt new music summer school in 1949 and 1950. This list of students of Olivier Messiaen contains some of the musicians who (like Pierre Boulez, Yvonne Loriod and George Benjamin) attended his classes, or who (like Peter Hill and Jennifer Bate) studied privately with the composer or collaborated with him in preparation for their performances of his music.

[ Barraine ]

Metastasio

Leonard B. Meyer

this teacher's teachers
Meyer studied with teachers including Stefan Wolpe, Otto Luening, and Aaron Copland.

Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer

this teacher's teachers
Meyer (1818–1893) studied with teachers including .

Aleksander Michałowski

this teacher's teachers
Michałowski (1851–1938) studied with teachers including Theodor Coccius, Karol Mikuli, Ignaz Moscheles, and Carl Reinecke.

Wilhelm Middelschulte

this teacher's teachers
Middelschulte (1863–1943) studied with teachers including Carl August Haupt.

Hubert Stanley Middleton

Karol Mikuli

Moritz Mildner

Darius Milhaud

this teacher's teachers
Milhaud studied with teachers including Vincent d'Indy  and André Gedalge.

Rosalie Miller

Anthony Milner

this teacher's teachers
Milner studied with teachers including R. O. Morris  and Mátyás Seiber.

Miloje Milojević

Lluís Millet

this teacher's teachers
Millet (1867–1941) studied with teachers including Felip Pedrell  and Carles Vidiella.

Nathan Milstein

this teacher's teachers
Milstein (1904–1992) studied with teachers including Leopold Auer, Pyotr Stolyarsky, and Eugène Ysaÿe.

Akira Miyoshi

this teacher's teachers
Miyoshi studied with teachers including Henri Challan, Raymond Gallois-Montbrun, Kozaburo Hirai, and Tomojirō Ikenouchi.

Emil Młynarski

Wiktor Łabuński  [ pupils ]

this teacher's teachers
Młynarski (1870–1935) studied with teachers including Leopold Auer, Anatoly Lyadov, and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

Robert Moevs

Benno Moiseiwitsch

this teacher's teachers
Moiseiwitsch (1890–1963) studied with teachers including Dmitry Klimov  and Theodor Leschetizky.

Jérôme-Joseph de Momigny

Stanisław Moniuszko

this teacher's teachers
Moniuszko studied with teachers including Carl Friedrich Rungenhagen.

Georg Matthias Monn

this teacher's teachers
Monn (1717–1750) studied with teachers including unknown .

John La Montaine

this teacher's teachers
La Montaine studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Howard Hanson, and Bernard Rogers.

Antonio Montanari

Philippe de Monte

Pierre Monteux

this teacher's teachers
Monteux (1875–1964) studied with teachers including Théophile Laforge.

Claudio Monteverdi

this teacher's teachers
Monteverdi studied with teachers including Marc'Antonio Ingegneri.

Xavier Montsalvatge

this teacher's teachers
Montsalvatge (1912 – 2002) studied with teachers including Eduard Toldrà.

Undine Smith Moore

Cristóbal de Morales

Giovanni Morandi

Henri Moreau

this teacher's teachers
Moreau (1728 – 1803) studied with teachers including Bartolomeo Lustrini  and Antonio Aurisicchio.

Orlando Morgan

Francesco Morlacchi

this teacher's teachers
Morlacchi studied with teachers including Stanislao Mattei.

R. O. Morris

this teacher's teachers
(1886–1948) studied with teachers including Charles Wood.

Robert Morris

this teacher's teachers
Morris studied with teachers including Leslie Bassett, Ross Lee Finney, Eugene Kurtz, and John La Montaine.

Ignaz Moscheles

this teacher's teachers
Moscheles studied with teachers including Johann Georg Albrechtsberger, Muzio Clementi, and Bedřich Diviš Weber.

Angus Morrison

this teacher's teachers
Morrison (1902–1989) studied with teachers including Thomas Dunhill  and Ralph Vaughan Williams.

Konstantin Mostras

this teacher's teachers
Mostras (1886–1965) studied with teachers including Boris Sibor.

Moritz Moszkowski

this teacher's teachers
Moszkowski (1854–1925) studied with teachers including Theodor Kullak.

Felix Mottl

this teacher's teachers
Mottl (1856–1911) studied with teachers including Felix Otto Dessoff.

Henry Moule

Luiz António de Moura

Alexander Moyzes

this teacher's teachers
Moyzes (1906–1984) studied with teachers including Vítězslav Novák.

Franz Xaver Wolfgang Mozart

Leopold Mozart

this teacher's teachers
L. Mozart (1719–1787) studied with teachers including Balthasar Siberer.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

this teacher's teachers
Mozart studied with teachers including Leopold Mozart, Giovanni Battista Martini, and Giusto Fernando Tenducci.

Gottlieb Friedrich Müller

this teacher's teachers
Müller studied with teachers including Johann Gottlieb Goldberg.

Gordon Mumma

this teacher's teachers
Mumma (born 1935) studied with teachers including Ross Lee Finney.

Tristan Murail

this teacher's teachers
Murail (b. 1947) studied with teachers including Olivier Messiaen.

Raffaele Muti-Papazzurri

this teacher's teachers
Muti-Papazzurri (1801–1858) studied with teachers including Unknown .

Thea Musgrave

this teacher's teachers
Musgrave studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger  and Aaron Copland.

Nikolai Myaskovsky

this teacher's teachers

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Georg Albrechtsberger</span> Austrian composer (1736–1809)

Johann Georg Albrechtsberger was an Austrian composer, organist, and music theorist, and one of the teachers of Ludwig van Beethoven. He was also a friend of Haydn and Mozart.

This is a list of music-related events in 1810.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ambroise Thomas</span> French composer and music educator

Charles Louis Ambroise Thomas was a French composer and teacher, best known for his operas Mignon (1866) and Hamlet (1868).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henri Herz</span> 19th-century Austrian musician

Henri Herz was a virtuoso pianist, composer and piano manufacturer, Austrian by birth and French by nationality and domicile. He was a professor in the Paris Conservatoire for more than thirty years. Among his major works are eight piano concertos, a piano sonata, rondos, nocturnes, waltzes, marches, fantasias, and numerous sets of variations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ignaz Moscheles</span> Bohemian pianist and composer (1794–1870)

Isaac Ignaz Moscheles was a Bohemian piano virtuoso and composer. He was based initially in London and later at Leipzig, where he joined his friend and sometime pupil Felix Mendelssohn as professor of piano in the Conservatory.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carl Friedrich Zelter</span> German composer

Carl Friedrich Zelter was a German composer, conductor and teacher of music. Working in his father's bricklaying business, Zelter attained mastership in that profession, and was a musical autodidact.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Friedrich Kalkbrenner</span> German pianist

Friedrich Wilhelm Michael Kalkbrenner, also known as Frédéric Kalkbrenner, was a pianist, composer, piano teacher and piano manufacturer. German by birth, Kalkbrenner studied at the Conservatoire de Paris, starting at a young age and eventually settled in Paris, where he lived until his death in 1849. Kalkbrenner composed more than 200 piano works, as well as many piano concertos and operas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">René Leibowitz</span> Polish and French musician (1913–1972)

René Leibowitz was a Polish and French composer, conductor, music theorist and teacher. He was historically significant in promoting the music of the Second Viennese School in Paris after the Second World War, and teaching a new generation of serialist composers.

The year 1682 in music involved some significant events.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johann Nepomuk Fuchs (composer)</span> Austrian composer, opera conductor, teacher and editor

Johann Nepomuk Fuchs was an Austrian composer, opera conductor, teacher and editor. His editorial work included an important role in the preparation of the first complete edition of Franz Schubert's works. He was an older brother of the composer Robert Fuchs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Louis Plaidy</span> German piano teacher and compiler of books of technical music studies (1810–1874)

Louis Plaidy was a celebrated German piano pedagogue and compiler of books of technical music studies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alexander von Zemlinsky</span> Austrian composer, conductor, and teacher (1871-1942)

Alexander Zemlinsky or Alexander von Zemlinsky was an Austrian composer, conductor, and teacher.

References

Citations

  1. Hakobian, Levon (2016). Music of the Soviet Era: 1917-1991. Taylor & Francis. ISBN   9781317091868. The first Tajik opera Vose's Uprising (1939) was written by Kabalevsky's pupil Sergey Balasanian (1902–1982)...
  2. Biographical Encyclopedia of the World. Institute for Research in Biography. 1948. p. 2289. Holland, Theodore, British Composer; born Apr. 25, 1878;... ...educated at Royal Academy of Music, 1896-1902; Hochschule für Musik, Berlin, 1902-03; studied composition under Frederick Corder, Robert Kahn...
  3. Berichte und Forschungen Jahrbuch des Bundesinstituts für Ostdeutsche Kultur und Geschichte [Reports and research Yearbook of the Federal Institute for East German Culture and History] (in German). Vol. 18. Walter de Gruyter GmbH. 1993. p. 129. ISBN   978-3-486-70292-7. Adam Sołtys wies eine etwas andere Herkunft auf, er hatte das Konservatorium in Berlin besucht und bei Robert Kahn Komposition sowie unter anderem bei Johannes Wolf Musikwissenschaft studiert. [Adam Sołtys had a slightly different background; he had attended the conservatory in Berlin and studied composition with Robert Kahn and musicology with Johannes Wolf, among others.]
  4. 1 2 Jaffé, Daniel (15 February 2022). Historical Dictionary of Russian Music. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 189. ISBN   978-1-5381-3008-7. (Gerke), Anton Avgustovich (1812–1870). Pianist, teacher, and composer. Born in Pulin (now Chervono-Armeysk), Zhitomir district, on 28 July 1812, son of the Polish violinist Avgust Herke, he studied under John Field, Friedrich Kalkbrenner, Ignaz Moscheles, and Ferdinand Ries and was acquainted with Franz Liszt, Sigismond Thalberg, and Clara Schumann.
  5. Mason (1917), p.174.
  6. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.200.
  7. Jones (2014), p.362.
  8. Hinkle-Turner (2006), p.201.
  9. "All the right notes". Town and County. 9 February 2020. p. 25. Retrieved 19 December 2023 via Issuu. They met at the Royal College of Music where Kevin was studying piano/composition with Peter Wallfisch and Joseph Horowitz and Steven studied piano performance with Phyllis Sellick and Peter Katin.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Greene (1985), p.1094.
  11. MacBlane, Amanda (19 May 2003). "New York Youth Symphony Celebrates 20 Years of First Music". newmusicusa.org. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  12. Cummings, David M. (2003). International Who's Who in Classical Music 2003. Europa Publications, Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN   978-1-85743-174-2.
  13. "Faculty: Conrad Kehn". University of Denver Lamont School of Music. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  14. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.160.
  15. Greene (1985), p.1538.
  16. Hall, Michael (2015). Music Theatre in Britain: 1960-1975. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 255. ISBN   978-1-78327-012-5. LCCN   2015563662. Roger Marsh (b. 1949) studied composition in London with Ian Kellam, and later at the University of York with Bernard Rands.
  17. Mason (1917), p.16.
  18. van Boer (2012), p. 465.
  19. 1 2 "Famous Composers I (Almost) Studied With", RobertPaterson.com.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Koskoff, ed. (2013), p.966.
  21. "Music and memories". The Hindu. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  22. "Pt. Jotin Bhattacharya". Facebook. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  23. 1 2 3 Koskoff, Ellen (2013). The Concise Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Volume 2, p.965. Routledge. ISBN   978-1-136-09602-0.
  24. "Aashish Khan Archived 29 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine ", SimlaHouse.com.
  25. "Biography and interview", Raga.com.
  26. Bush, John. "Tommy Graham". allmusic. Macrovision Corporation. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  27. 1 2 "Bio: Richard Marriott Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine ", RichardMarriott.com.
  28. Leggett, Steve. "Peter Walker – Biography". Allmusic.
  29. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.169.
  30. "Alexander Tchaikovsky - Composer, pianist". mariinsky.ru. The Mariinsky Theatre. Retrieved 18 August 2022. ...he graduated from the Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory (composition class of Tikhon Khrennikov and piano classes of Heinrich Neuhaus and Lev Naumov...)
  31. 1 2 3 Randel (1996), p.641.
  32. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.51.
  33. Mason (1917), p.124.
  34. Hopkins, Charles (2001). "Stavenhagen, Bernhard". Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.41246. ISBN   9781561592630. ...he took lessons at the Hochschule für Musik with Ernst Rudorff and studied theory and composition with Friedrich Kiel.
  35. Mason (1917), p.268.
  36. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Griffiths, Paul (2004). The Penguin Companion to Classical Music, [unpaginated]. Penguin UK. ISBN   978-0-14-190976-9.
  37. "Untitled". Society of Composers. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  38. Randel (1996), p.229.
  39. "George Edwards". Columbia University . 22 April 2016. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  40. 1 2 3 Randel (1996), p.373.
  41. 1 2 3 4 5 Randel (1996), p.484.
  42. Pendle, Karin (2001). Women & Music: A History. Indiana University Press. p. 237. ISBN   978-0-253-33819-8. Her other teachers included Goffredo Petrassi, Peter Maxwell Davies, and Earl Kim.
  43. ""Tony Caruso's Final Broadcast", liner notes" (PDF). NaxosMusicLibrary.com.
  44. "Jan Swafford & Glenn Gass: Chamber Works". DRAMOnline.org. The Scott Chamber Players playing works by Jan Swafford and Glen Gass
  45. Don, Randel (1996). Richard Aaker Trythall, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. ISBN   9780674372993.
  46. 1 2 3 4 5 Allen Hughes (26 November 1977). "Florence Kimball Teacher, Dies At 87". The New York Times .
  47. Fair, Demetra Baferos (2003). Flutists' Family Tree: In Search of the American Flute School (DMA thesis). Ohio State University.
  48. 1 2 Gagné (2012) , p. 150
  49. Riggs, Robert (2010). Leon Kirchner: Composer, Performer, and Teacher. University Rochester Press. p. 4. ISBN   978-1-58046-343-0.
  50. Greene (1985), p.1533.
  51. Randel (1996), p.657.
  52. van Boer (2012) , p. 299
  53. Hoffmann, Carl Julius Adolf (1830). Die Tonkünstler Schlesiens: ein Beitrag zur Kunstgeschichte Schlesiens vom Jahre 960 bis 1830 (in German). In Kommission bei G. P. Aderholz. p. 327.
  54. Mason (1917), p.172.
  55. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.280.
  56. Greene (1985), p.486.
  57. 1 2 3 Mason (1917), p.278.
  58. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.302.
  59. Humphreys, Maggie; Evans, Robert (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. p. 64. ISBN   978-0-7201-2330-2. LCCN   96041998. Christopher, Dr. Cyril Stanley (1897-1979) Born in Oldbury, Worcestershire on 23 June 1897; died on 31 March 1979. Studied with C.H. Kitson, Edward Bairstow, Alfred Hollins, G.D. Cunningham and Ambrose Coviello.
  60. Randel (1996), p.749.
  61. Randel (1996), p.86.
  62. Mason (1917), p.178.
  63. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.189.
  64. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.48.
  65. Mason (1917), p.164.
  66. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.219.
  67. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.235.
  68. Mason (1917), p.248.
  69. Mason (1917), p.277.
  70. Mason (1917), p.117.
  71. van Boer (2012), p. 309.
  72. Falbel, Anat; Falbel, Nachman (1 March 2009). "Yara Bernette, 1920–1922". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 24 December 2016.
  73. Martin & Hilton 1948, p. 268.
  74. "Yara Bernette". Enciclopedia Itau Cultural (in Portuguese). 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  75. "", JoseEduardoMartins.com.
  76. "", editora.unb.br.
  77. 1 2 3 4 Mason (1917), p.241.
  78. Straeten, Edmund S. J. van der (1968). The History of the Violin: Its Ancestors and Collateral Instruments from Earliest Times. Da Capo Press. p. 316. ISBN   978-0-306-71112-1. Sybil Eaton, b. Ketton, Rutland, 1897... In May, 1914, she attended von Auer's summer school at Loschwitz. The War prevented her from continuing her studies ... but on her return to England she continued for six years to study under his assistant, Miss Editha Knocker.
  79. Mason (1917), p.104.
  80. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.281.
  81. Mason (1917), p.292.
  82. Harwood, Earl Of (30 November 2011). The New Pocket Kobbé's Opera Book. Random House. p. 418. ISBN   978-1-4464-9075-4. Mark-Anthony Turnage studied with Oliver Knussen and John Lambert and then worked at Tanglewood with Hans Werner Henze...
  83. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.287.
  84. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The Julius Block Cylinders Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine ", MarstonRecords.com.
  85. Greene (1985), p.1123.
  86. Still, William Grant; Still, Judith Anne; Headlee-Huffman, Lisa M. (2006). Just Tell the Story: Troubled Island : a Collection of Documents Previously Published and Unpublished, Pertaining to the First Significant Afro-American Grand Opera, Troubled Island, by William Grant Still, with Librettists Langston Hughes and Verna Arvey. Master-Player Library. p. 389. ISBN   978-1-877873-06-5. László Halász studied to be a concert pianist at the Budapest Music Academy where his teachers included Béla Bartók, Zoltan Kodály, Ernö Dohnányi and Leo Weiner.
  87. Greene (1985), p.1331.
  88. Greene (1985), p.1368.
  89. "Gyorgy Sandor, Pianist Who Trained Under Bartok, Is Dead at 93 ", NYTimes.com.
  90. Music and Exile: From 1933 to the Present Day. Brill. 6 March 2023. p. 231. ISBN   978-90-04-54410-9. Mátyás Seiber (1905–1960), who had developed an interest in Hungarian folk music during his studies with Zoltán Kodály in the 1920s and became an influential teacher of composition in Britain...
  91. Randel (1996), p.947.
  92. 1 2 Pfitzinger, Scott (2017). Composer Genealogies: A Compendium of Composers, Their Teachers, and Their Students. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 289. ISBN   9781442272248. LCCN   2016049733.
  93. Randel (1996), p.242.
  94. "Bartok", Classical.net.
  95. Elliott, Robin; Smith, Gordon Ernest (2001). Istvan Anhalt: Pathways and Memory. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 10. ISBN   978-0-7735-2102-5. Albert Siklós, who until his death in 1942 shared the composition teaching duties with Kodály at the academy, was another Koessler pupil.
  96. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.197.
  97. Randel (1996), p.31.
  98. Kelsey, Chris. Richard Tabnik at AllMusic
  99. "Faculty: Crumb Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine ", UOregon.edu.
  100. "Victoria Borisova-Ollas". universaledition.com. Universal Edition. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  101. 1 2 Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.418.
  102. 1 2 3 Greene (1985), p.1458.
  103. Greene (1985), p.1433.
  104. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.268.
  105. Gagné (2012) , p. 103
  106. Lowe, Carol Loraine Cope (2008). "II" (PDF). Norman Herzberg: An Icon of Bassoon Pedagogy (DMA). The University of North Carolina Greensboro. Retrieved 9 May 2022.
  107. 1 2 3 Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.26.
  108. Johnson, Graham (2006). "Simon Sechter". hyperion-records.co.uk. Hyperion Records . Retrieved 9 July 2022. He studied in Vienna with his countryman Kozeluh (Kozeluch)...
  109. Randel (1996), p.465.
  110. Jones (2014), p.50.
  111. "Gino Robair", BayImproviser.com.
  112. Cowan, Rob. "Conductor Otmar Suitner has died, aged 87". Gramophone. Retrieved 28 February 2024. He also studied under Clemens Krauss, whose feeling for precisely the "right" phrase or tempo was an obvious influence.
  113. 1 2 Randles, Roma (2013). A Life in Music: Ruth Nye and the Arrau Heritage. Grosvenor House. p. unpaginated. ISBN   978-1-78148-200-1.
  114. Randel (1996), p.27.
  115. "Arthur Frazer, Oregon Pianist, to Appear in Villard" (PDF). Oregon Emerald. Vol. 21. 4 May 1920. LCCN   2004260238 . Retrieved 14 November 2024. Since leaving the University Mr. Frazer has studied under European masters. He regards Martin Krause, pupil of Liszt, as the greatest of his teachers.
  116. 1 2 3 Masin, Gwendolyn Carolina Helena (2012). 'Violin Teaching in the New Millennium: In Search of the Lost Instructions of Great Masters - an Examination of Similarities and Differences Between Schools of Playing and How These Have Evolved, or Remembering the Future of Violin Performance' (doctoral thesis). Trinity College Dublin.
  117. Rickards, Guy (August 2019). "Cervetti Parallel Realms". Gramophone. Retrieved 23 September 2024. He was a pupil of Krenek, among others, at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, graduating in 1967.
  118. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.1532.
  119. 1 2 3 Randel (1996), p.580.
  120. Gagné (2012) , p. 205
  121. Gann (1997), p.105.
  122. "On the Origin of the Symphony No. 1 in E major". Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2006.
  123. 1 2 Thomas Christensen, ed. (2002). The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory, unpaginated. Cambridge. ISBN   978-1-316-02548-2.
  124. Gillespie, John; Gillespie, Anna (1995). Notable Twentieth-century Pianists: A Bio-critical Sourcebook. Greenwood Press. p. 673. ISBN   978-0-313-29696-3. Petri studied composition with Hermann Kretzschmar and Felix Draeseke.
  125. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Greene (1985), p.707.
  126. Green & Thrall (1908), p.401.
  127. Greene (1985), p.1247.
  128. Jones (2014), p.722.
  129. van Boer (2012) , p. 538
  130. Mason (1917), p.41.
  131. Roy Pinney (29 October 1945). LEONARD LIEBLING, LIBRETTIST, CRITIC; Editor in Chief of The Musical Courier for 34 Years Dies-- Worked on 4 Comic Operas.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  132. 1 2 3 Mason (1917), p.185.
  133. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.190.
  134. 1 2 3 Mason (1917), p.206.
  135. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.274.
  136. "Sydney Conservatorium". The Sydney Morning Herald . New South Wales, Australia. 12 February 1910. p. 11. Retrieved 18 May 2020 via Trove.
  137. 1 2 Griffiths (2011), p.421.
  138. 1 2 "Season 47, Concert 20 | Center for New Music - The University of Iowa". cnm.uiowa.edu. 23 June 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2024 via The University of Iowa. Bert Van Herck is Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Iowa. He holds a PhD from Harvard University where he studied with Magnus Lindberg, Julian Anderson, Chaya Czernowin, Brian Ferneyhough, and Helmut Lachenmann.
  139. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.70.
  140. Emery, Frederic Barclay (1928). The Violin Concerto Through a Period of Nearly 300 Years: Covering about 3300 Concertos, with Brief Biographies of 1000 Composers ... Violin Literature Publishing Company. p. xvii. Kahn, Robert (kän). Born at Mannheim, July 21, 1865. Studied with V. Lachner, Kiel, Rheinberger...
  141. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.452.
  142. Mason (1917), p.204.
  143. Green & Thrall (1908), p.467.
  144. 1 2 "Paul Dresher Bio", DresherEnsemble.org . "Paul Dresher Biography", AllMusic.com. "Dresher Bio", Lovely.com.
  145. Mason (1917), p.19.
  146. Mason (1917), p.170.
  147. Jones (2014), p.65.
  148. Mason (1917), p.86.
  149. Jones (2014), p.335.
  150. Lloyd, Stephen (2014). Constant Lambert: Beyond the Rio Grande. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 270. ISBN   978-1-84383-898-2. On 7 July 1939 Constant took his last Conductors' Class of the term at the Royal College, Bernard Stevens being one of his students on that day.
  151. 1 2 3 4 Pettitt, Stephen. "Lambert, John". Grove Music Online. Oxford. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  152. Pettitt, Stephen (1988). "The Music of John Lambert". Tempo (164): 12–19. doi:10.1017/S0040298200023792. ISSN   0040-2982. JSTOR   946180. John Lambert... ...is known better as a teacher than as a composer, and despite a formidable list of past pupils, which includes the likes of Javier Alvarez, Simon Bainbridge, Gary Carpenter, Oliver Knussen, Jonathan Lloyd, Ian McQueen, and Mark-Anthony Tumage,...
  153. SPENCER de GRAHAM, Lizzie. (Isabel.). Fernando Callejo Ferrer. "Música y Músicos Portorriqueños." Project Gutenberg. 4 August 2013. Page 188. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  154. Mason (1917), p.217.
  155. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.190.
  156. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.694.
  157. Greene (1985), p.1486.
  158. 1 2 3 4 "Margaret Ruthven Lang & Family Archived 4 February 2005 at the Wayback Machine ", DogBoyProductions.com.
  159. "Arthur Foote", UUdb.org.
  160. Greene (1985), p.1366.
  161. 1 2 Who's who in Spain. Intercontinental Book and Publishing Company. 1988. p. 446. ISBN   9788440421067. LCCN   64000841. ...educ.: studies in piano and composition under Frank Marshall, Alicia de Larrocha, Xavier Montsalvatge and Igor Markevitch.
  162. AKIKO NOMOTO
  163. Alba Ventura
  164. "Biography". martazabaletapiano.com. 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2022. She then went on to continue her studies at some of the most prestigious European academies: the National Superior Conservatory of Music in Paris under Dominique Merlet, the Reina Sofía College of Music in Madrid with Dmitri Bashkirov, and the Marshall Academy in Barcelona with Alicia de Larrocha.
  165. "Marta Zabaleta". naxos.com. Naxos Music Group. Retrieved 18 March 2022. The Spanish pianist Marta Zabaleta studied with Dominique Merlet, Dimitri Bashkirov and Alicia de Larrocha.
  166. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.258.
  167. Randel (1996), p.238.
  168. Wright, Craig; Simms, Bryan R. (2005). Music In Western Civilization: The Baroque And Classical Eras. Thomson Schirmer. p. 254. ISBN   978-0-495-00868-2.
  169. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.176.
  170. Randel (1996), p.110.
  171. Randel (1996), p.385.
  172. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.172.
  173. Reding-Piette, J.; Dulac, Sébastien (1992). 2 pianos, une vocation [2 pianos, one vocation] (in French). Brussels: La Longue Vue. p. 16. ISBN   287121042X. Je travaillais le piano trois fois par semaine avec Berthe Laventurier, élève d'Arthur de Greef...
  174. 1 2 3 Greene (1985), p.904.
  175. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.163.
  176. 1 2 "Jean Gallon", Organ-Biography.info.
  177. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.581.
  178. Estrada, Alán Saúl Saucedo (15 April 2014). The Influence of Carlos Prieto on Contemporary Cello Music. University Press of America. p. 62. ISBN   978-0-7618-6327-4. Javier Alvarez studied clarinet and composition in Mexico with Mario Lavista.
  179. Tick (1997), p.44.
  180. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.140.
  181. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.23.
  182. 1 2 Gann (1997), p.378.
  183. 1 2 "Bio". MichaelTenzer.com. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  184. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.475.
  185. van Boer (2012) , p. 483
  186. Randel (1996), p.754.
  187. 1 2 van Boer (2012) , p. 245
  188. Notosudirdjo, R. Franki S. (2014). "Musical Modernism in the Twentieth Century". In Barendregt, Bart; Bogaerts, Els (eds.). Recollecting Resonances: Indonesian-Dutch Musical Encounters. Brill. p. 147. doi: 10.1163/9789004258594_007 . ISBN   9789004258594.
  189. LinkedIn profile
  190. Sounz.org.nz
  191. Ceidiog
  192. British Music Collection
  193. British Music Collection
  194. Greene (1985), p.915.
  195. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.325.
  196. Greene (1985), p.1306.
  197. Greene (1985), p.166.
  198. Jones, Barrie (3 June 2014). The Hutchinson Concise Dictionary of Music. Routledge. p. 105. ISBN   978-1-135-95018-7. Caldara, Antonio (1670-1736) Italian composer. He was a pupil of Giovanni Legrenzi at Venice...
  199. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.83.
  200. 1 2 3 Randel (1996), p.494.
  201. Gagné (2012) , p. 128
  202. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Randel (1996), p.499.
  203. Laila Barkefors. Allan Petterssons studier i tolvtonsteknik för René Leibowitz, Paris 1952[Pettersson’s (twelve-tone) Studies with Rene Leibowitz in Paris 1952] (CDROM) (in Swedish). Göteborg: Institutionen för musikvetenskap.
  204. Greene (1985), p.1277.
  205. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.151.
  206. Jones (2014), p.271.
  207. Mason (1917), p.252.
  208. 1 2 Studwell, W.E.; Schueneman, B.R. (1997). Minor Ballet Composers: Biographical Sketches of Sixty-Six Underappreciated Yet Significant Contributors to the Body of West. Taylor & Francis. p. 42. ISBN   9781136770289. Gaubert studied with Paul Taffanel, Xavier Leroux, and Charles Lenepveu at the Paris Conservatory.
  209. 1 2 3 4 Randel (1996), p.738.
  210. van Boer (2012), p. 564.
  211. "Composers", NeapolitanMusicSociety.org.
  212. Giovanni Tribuzio (2019). "D'Alessandro (Alexandre, Allexandro, D'Alessandri, D'Allessandria), Gennaro". www.oxfordmusiconline.com. doi:10.1093/omo/9781561592630.013.90000369478. ISBN   9781561592630 . Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  213. Boer, Bertil H. Van (2012). Historical Dictionary of Music of the Classical Period. Scarecrow Press. p. 196. ISBN   978-0-8108-7183-0. Fioroni, Giovanni [Gian] Andrea, (1716, Pavia, to 19 December 1778, Milan). Italian composer and organist. Fioroni studied under Leonardo Leo … His pupils included Alessandro Rolla and Vincenzo Manfredini.
  214. Jones (2014), p.568.
  215. Mason (1917), p.147.
  216. Mason (1917), p.167.
  217. Campbell, Margaret (21 April 2011). The Great Violinists. Faber & Faber. ISBN   978-0-571-27745-2. César Thomson (1857-1931) was also born in Liège, and studied with Léonard at the Conservatoire.
  218. Greene (1985), p. 1163.
  219. Randel (1996), p.105.
  220. 1 2 3 Griliches, Diane Asséo (2008). Teaching Musicians: A Photographer's View. Bunker Hill. p. 20. ISBN   978-1-59373-060-4.
  221. Randel (1996), p.20.
  222. R. Allen Lott (20 January 2001). "Hughes, Edwin". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.42139. ISBN   978-1-56159-263-0.
  223. Haag, John. "Kanner-Rosenthal, Hedwig (1882–1959)". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  224. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.1161.
  225. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.225.
  226. Levin, Neil W. "Weinberg, Jacob". Milken Archive of Jewish Music. Retrieved 8 August 2024. In 1910 Weinberg studied for a year in Vienna with the legendary piano pedagogue and author of piano methodology Theodor Leschetizky…
  227. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.98.
  228. Mason (1917), p.298.
  229. Mason (1917), p.299.
  230. Cohen, Aaron I. (1987a) [1981]. International Encyclopedia of Women Composers . Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Chatham: R. R. Bowker. p.  7. ISBN   978-0-9617485-2-4. OCLC   16714846.
  231. Cohen, Aaron I. (1987) [1981]. International Encyclopedia of Women Composers . Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). Chatham: R. R. Bowker. p.  640. ISBN   978-0-9617485-2-4. OCLC   16714846.
  232. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Wikisource-logo.svg This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Jean-François Lesueur". Catholic Encyclopedia . New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  233. Jones (2014), p.365.
  234. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Mason (1917), p.11.
  235. Mason (1917), p.111.
  236. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.130.
  237. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.184.
  238. Mackenzie, C.; Stone, C. (1969). The Gramophone. Vol. 47. United Kingdom: C. Mackenzie. p. 412. LCCN   36014955. Varda Nishry... ...she went on to Tel Aviv to study with Emma Gorochov, then to the Paris Conservatoire and Professor Lazare Levy...
  239. Corbet, August (1957). Algemene muziekencyclopedie [General music encyclopedia] (in Dutch). Vol. 6. Zuid-Nederlandse Uitg. LCCN   59028745. RAMETTE, Yves, Fr. componist en organist. Hij ontving onderricht in piano van Lazare - Lévy, voor orgel van G. Jacob en in compositie van Arthur Honegger.
  240. "Lee Hyla", LeeHyla.com.
  241. "Armstrong, Sir Thomas Henry Wait (1898–1994)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/54713. Influential music teachers included Hugh Allen (New College), Dr Henry Ley (Christ Church), and Ernest Walker (Balliol).(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  242. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Charlotte Greenspan (2009). ESTELLE LIEBLING: 1880 – 1970.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  243. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Dean Fowler, Alandra (1994). Estelle Liebling: An exploration of her pedagogical principles as an extension and elaboration of the Marchesi method, including a survey of her music and editing for coloratura soprano and other voices (PhD). University of Arizona.
  244. 1 2 3 4 Estelle Liebling Dies Here at 90; Was a Leading Operatic Coach. 26 September 1970.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  245. Margalit Fox (16 August 2012). Joan Roberts Dies at 95; Original 'Oklahoma!' Star. p. A15.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  246. Meryl Streep explains how her opera training helps vocal control. 7 February 2012.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  247. "James Horner". Naxos. Archived from the original on 11 July 2018.
  248. Cole, Hugo (March 1988). "Jonathan Lloyd's Music". Tempo. 164 (164): 2–11. doi:10.1017/S0040298200023780. JSTOR   946179. S2CID   145721966. ...thereafter attending classes given by Pousseur at Durham and by Ligeti at Tanglewood.
  249. "Wolfgang Plagge". 24 January 2023.
  250. Louise Duchesneau, Wolfgang Marx, ed. (2011). György Ligeti: Of Foreign Lands and Strange Sounds. United Kingdom: Boydell Press. p. 226. ISBN   9781843835509 . Retrieved 12 February 2022. ...when a tightly knit group had built around Ligeti. Some of the 'regulars' were the young Hubertus Dreyer, Hans Peter Reutter, Mike Rutledge and Sidney Corbett who came later.
  251. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.7.
  252. "Darmstädter Musikpreis 2006" [Darmstadt Music Prize 2006](PDF). kultur-foerderkreis.de (in German). 17 November 2006. Karola Obermüller wurde 1977 in Darmstadtr geboren ... Seit September 2003 studiert sie dort bei Komponisten wie Bernard Rands, Harrison Birtwistle, Julian Anderson, Chaya Czernowin und Magnus Lindberg.[Karola Obermüller was born in Darmstadt in 1977 ... Since September 2003, she has been studying with composers such as Bernard Rands, Harrison Birtwistle, Julian Anderson, Chaya Czernowin and Magnus Lindberg.]
  253. 1 2 3 Jones (2014), p.370.
  254. Mason (1917), p.183.
  255. Greene (1985), p.893.
  256. Gänzl, Kurt (1994). "BERÉNY , Henrik [ aka BERÉNY , Henri ]". The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Volume 1. Schirmer Books.
  257. McGraw (2001), p.31.
  258. Liszt, Franz; Street-Klindworth, Agnes (2000). Franz Liszt and Agnes Street-Klindworth: A Correspondence, 1854-1886. Pendragon Press. p. 421. ISBN   978-1-57647-006-0. Valérie Boissier (1813-1894). Swiss pupil of Liszt.
  259. Greene (1985), p.689.
  260. McGraw (2001), p.54.
  261. Ratner, Sabina Teller (2002). Camille Saint-Saëns, 1835-1921: A Thematic Catalogue of His Complete Works. Vol. 2. Germany: Oxford University Press. p. 52. ISBN   9780198163206. Arthur De Greef (b. Louvain, 1862; d. Brussels, 1940) studied with Liszt at Weimar and in 1885 was appointed professor of piano at the Brussels Conservatoire.
  262. Wier, Albert Ernest (1940). The Piano: Its History, Makers, Players and Music. United Kingdom: Longmans, Green and Company. p. 195. LCCN   40010143. Jean Paul Ertel (1865-1933)... ...He was a pupil of Liszt...
  263. Greene (1985), p.1046.
  264. see Alan Walker
  265. Mason (1917), p.23.
  266. 1 2 3 4 Mason (1917), p.28.
  267. Mason (1917), p.99.
  268. Mason (1917), p.108.
  269. Mason (1917), p.109.
  270. Ehrlich, A. Celebrated Pianists of the Past and Present. p. 276.
  271. Mason (1917), p.118.
  272. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.134.
  273. Mason (1917), p.136.
  274. Mason (1917), p.150.
  275. Gillespie (2013), p.354.
  276. Greene (1985), p.764.
  277. "István Thomán". Notable Alumni. Liszt Academy (Budapest). Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  278. Mason (1917), p.35.
  279. Jeal, Erica (24 February 2006). "Pauline who?". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 4 January 2024. As a young teenager she studied piano with Liszt, 10 years her senior,...
  280. 1 2 3 Mason (1917), p.283.
  281. Schindler, Agata (25 November 2020). "Košickí bratia Weiss a Berény v Berlíne, New Yorku, Paríži a Budapešti". Opera Slovokia Magazine.
  282. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.303.
  283. Henderson, John (1996). A Directory of Composers for Organ. John Henderson. ISBN   978-0-9528050-0-7. LCCN   gb97012447. (Joseph) Gordon Saunders, pupil of Elizabeth Stirling, W. Rea, E.J. Hopkins and H. Litolff, was a co-founder of Trinity College London and a teacher of Granville Bantock. He published many piano teaching pieces and a number of organ pieces.
  284. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.1043.
  285. Brock, M. G.; Curthoys, M. C. (16 November 2000). Volume VII: Nineteenth-Century Oxford, Part 2. Clarendon Press. p. 440. ISBN   978-0-19-155966-2. Sir Percy Carter Buck (1871-1947, B.Mus. 1891, D.Mus. 1893), Worcester: studied at the Royal College of Music with Parratt, C. H. Lloyd, and Parry...
  286. Morris, R. Winston; Jr, Lloyd E. Bone; Paull, Eric (1 March 2007). Guide to the Euphonium Repertoire: The Euphonium Source Book. Indiana University Press. p. 457. ISBN   978-0-253-11224-8. He studied composition with Joseph Horovitz and W. S. Lloyd Webber at the Royal College of Music in London and later privately with Wilfred Josephs.
  287. 1 2 Goehr, Alexander (2003). Sing, Ariel: Essays and Thoughts for Alexander Goehr's Seventieth Birthday. Ashgate. pp. xiv. ISBN   978-0-7546-3497-3. He was born in Lancashire in 1932 and read history at Oxford. He then studied with William Lloyd Webber, Anthony Milner, Iain Hamilton and Mátyás Seiber.
  288. Greene (1985), p.1484.
  289. James Henry Benson and Gail E. Lowther (2021). Louis Mennini Collection (PDF). University of Rochester Press.{{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  290. Randel (1996), p.963.
  291. Sadi & Sameul (1994), p.337.
  292. van Boer (2012), p. 110.
  293. van Boer (2012), p. 182.
  294. Johnson, Nathaniel Thomas (2004). "Ondine" on Record. University of California, Davis. p. 66. Descaves studied with Marguerite Long, and with Yves Nat at the Paris Conservatory.
  295. "Hans Peter Wallfisch". www.rcm.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 December 2023. From 1946 until 1949 Wallfisch studied in Paris with Marguerite Long.
  296. Randel (1996), p.889.
  297. Planchart, Alejandro Enrique (2001). Du Fay [Dufay; Du Fayt], Guillaume. New Grove.
  298. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.63.
  299. 1 2 Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.134.
  300. Gagné (2012) , p. 56
  301. 1 2 3 Jones (2014), p.144.
  302. Gagné (2012) , p. 66
  303. Gagné (2012) , p. 72
  304. Jones (2014), p.174.
  305. 1 2 Gagné (2012) , p. 80.
  306. Randel (1996), p.318.
  307. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.1505.
  308. Randel (1996), p.781.
  309. Jones (2014), p.603.
  310. Greene (1985), p.1371.
  311. van Boer (2012), p. 142.
  312. "Alba Ventura". Fundació Conservatori Liceu (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 October 2024.
  313. Jones (2014), p.626.
  314. Jones (2020), p.575.
  315. Jones (2014), p.575.
  316. Jones (2014), p.383.
  317. McGraw (2001), p.104.
  318. Wier (1938), p.924.
  319. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.366.
  320. Jones (2014), p.416.
  321. Greene (1985), p.1186.
  322. "Obituary: Frederick Corder". The Musical Times. 73 (1076): 943. 1932. JSTOR   919531 . Retrieved 26 June 2022. After two years at the Royal Academy of Music under Sterndale Bennett as principal and George MacFarren as teacher...
  323. Nigel Burton. 'Marshall, Florence Ashton' in Grove Music Online (2001)
  324. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.307.
  325. Matthay, Tobias (17 September 2020). The Pianist's First Music Making - For use in Conjunction with Tobias Matthay's "The Child's First Steps" in Piano Forte Playing - Book II. Read Books Ltd. p. 13. ISBN   978-1-5287-6691-3. Tobias Augustus Matthay was born on 19th February 1858, in Clapham, Surry, England... ...He studied composition at the 'Royal Academy of Music' (London) under Sir William Sterndale Bennett and Arthur Sullivan, and piano with William Dorrell and Walter Macfarren.
  326. Spanswick, Melanie (2022). Women Composers: A Graded Anthology for Piano, Book 2. Schott Music. p. 38. ISBN   9783795727451. Helen Hopekirk (1856–1945)... ...she studied with George Lichtenstein and with Scottish composer Alexander Mackenzie...
  327. Purser, John (4 November 2016). "The tragic silence of composer William Wallace". The National. Retrieved 18 June 2022. His father discontinued payment for William's composition lessons with Mackenzie and Corder in London.
  328. Jones (2014), p.406.
  329. Randel (1996), p.568.
  330. Brown, Liz (18 May 2021). Twilight Man: Love and Ruin in the Shadows of Hollywood and the Clark Empire. United States: Penguin Publishing Group. p. 110. ISBN   9780698184732. LCCN   2020055015. A month after his announcement, he hired Englishman Walter Henry Rothwell, a former apprentice of Gustav Mahler, to be the conductor...
  331. LaFave, Kenneth (April 2017). Experiencing Film Music: A Listener's Companion. Germany: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 13. ISBN   9781442258426. LCCN   2016044142. Not only did little Max study piano with Brahms, he studied conducting with Gustav Mahler...
  332. Teufner, Gabriele (14 October 2021). "Winterberg, Robert Anton". Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon .
  333. "Andrzej Dobrowolski". culture.pl. Polish Music Centre - University of Southern California. April 2002. Retrieved 23 March 2022. In 1945-1951, he continued his studies at the State Higher School of Music in Kraków, under Stefania Łobaczewska – who taught him theory, and Artur Malawski – who taught composition.
  334. Randel, Don Michael (1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. p. 364. ISBN   978-0-674-37299-3. Haubenstock-Ramati, Roman (b. Kraków, 27 Feb. 1919; d. Vienna, 3 Mar. 1994). Composer. From 1934 to 1938, while still in secondary school, he studied theory and counterpoint with Artur Malawski at the Kraków Conservatory ...
  335. "Artur Malawski - Biography". polishmusic.usc.edu. Polish Music Centre - University of Southern California. 9 April 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2022. Malawski lectured on composition, conducting and theory at the State Higher School of Music in Kraków from 1945 until his death, where his pupils included Penderecki and Schaeffer.
  336. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.101.
  337. 1 2 Ficher, Miguel; Schleifer, Martha Furman; Furman, John M. (16 October 2002). Latin American Classical Composers: A Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. pp. 165, 523. ISBN   978-1-4616-6911-1. Dianda, Hilda, Argentine composer; b.13 Apr 1925, Córdoba, Prov. of Córdoba, Argentina. She studied in Buenos Aires with Honorio Siccardi and, in Europe, with Cian Francesco Malipiero and Hermann Scherchen. ...Siccardi, Honorio, Argentine composer and teacher; b.13 Sep 1897, Buenos Aires, Argentina; d.10 Sep 1963, Dolores, ...studied at the Cons. of Parma with Gian Francesco Malipiero.
  338. 1 2 McHard, James L. (2006). The Future of Modern Music: A Vibrant New Modernism in Music for the Future. The Future of Modern Music. p. 74. ISBN   978-0-9778195-0-8. As a teacher, he was of great influence on the future of the Italian avant-garde, numbering among his students, Bruno Maderna and Luigi Nono.
  339. Mason (1917), p.73.
  340. Randel (1996), p.291.
  341. Jones (2014), p.237.
  342. Randel (1996), p.699.
  343. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.220.
  344. 1 2 Gagné (2012) , p. 227
  345. 1 2 Mason (1917), p.208.
  346. Randel (1996), p.273.
  347. Greene (1985), p.1365.
  348. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.196.
  349. "Section 2". The Monthly Musical Record. Vol. 19. London: Augener. 1889. p. 44.
  350. Mason (1917), p.234.
  351. Ficher, Miguel; Schleifer, Martha Furman; Furman, John M. (16 October 2002). Latin American Classical Composers: A Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 311. ISBN   978-1-4616-6911-1. Lavista, Mario, Mexican composer; b.3 Apr 1943... ...studied piano with Francisco Gyves, and harmony, counterpoint, and composition with Rodolfo Halffter and Héctor Quintanar. With a scholarship from the French government, he also studied with Jean-Etienne Marie in the Schola Cantorum of Paris, France.
  352. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.125.
  353. Wier (1938), p.940.
  354. "Mr. Theodore John Tourrier". Table Talk . No. 246. Victoria, Australia. 7 March 1890. p. 5. Retrieved 6 May 2022 via National Library of Australia.
  355. Mason (1917), p.294.
  356. "Back Matter". Tempo. 63 (248): 87. 2009. ISSN   0040-2982. JSTOR   40496091. Richard Causton studied with Param Vir, Roger Marsh, Jeremy Dale Roberts and Edwin Roxburgh,...
  357. Collins, Nicholas; Rincón, Julio d' Escrivan (9 November 2017). The Cambridge Companion to Electronic Music. Cambridge University Press. p. X. ISBN   978-1-107-13355-6. Andrew Hugill (1957) Between 1976 and 1980, he studied composition with Roger Marsh at the University of Keele.
  358. GARRIGA, Carlota
  359. Greene (1985), p.1428.
  360. Torrens, Albert (2020). Montserrat Torrent – La dama de l'orgue [Montserrat Torrent - The lady of the organ]. FL0003 (in Spanish). Ficta Edicions. ISBN   9788494610431. ...em va portar a l'Acadèmia Marshall, on em va donar classes directament Frank Marshall...
  361. Escande, Alfredo (2012). Don Andrés and Paquita : the life of Segovia in Montevideo. Amadeus Press. ISBN   978-1-57467-205-3. OCLC   754713474.
  362. Greene (1985), p.1095.
  363. Gagné (2012) , p. 160
  364. 1 2 Gagné (2012) , p. 257
  365. van Boer (2012), p. 94.
  366. Greene (1985), p.459.
  367. van Boer (2012) , p. 202
  368. 1 2 van Boer (2012) , p. 211
  369. van Boer (2012), p. 217.
  370. van Boer (2012), p. 227.
  371. van Boer (2012), p. 356.
  372. Randel (1996), p.565.
  373. Greene (1985), p.372.
  374. van Boer (2012), p. 426.
  375. Mason (1917), p.144.
  376. Greene (1985), p.393.
  377. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.984.
  378. Gagné (2012) , p. 132
  379. Pfitzinger, Scott (2017). Composer Genealogies: A Compendium of Composers, Their Teachers, and Their Students. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 463. ISBN   9781442272248. LCCN   2016049733.
  380. Mason (1917), p.251.
  381. Mason (1917), p.301.
  382. Thompson, Oscar; Bohle, Bruce (1985). The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians. Dodd, Mead. p. 1026. ISBN   978-0-396-08412-9. Høffding, Finn (b. Copenhagen, March 10, 1899), Danish composer, studied with Knud Jeppesen and Joseph Marx.
  383. Randel (1996), p.560.
  384. Mason (1917), p.224.
  385. Greene (1985), p.919.
  386. 1 2 3 Stowell, Robin (10 December 1992). The Cambridge Companion to the Violin. Cambridge University Press. p. 65. ISBN   978-0-521-39923-4. ...and the renowned pedagogue Lambert Massart (1811-92), whose numerous pupils included Wieniawski, César Thomson, Fritz Kreisler and four other distinguished teachers who succeeded him at the Paris Conservatoire — the two Frenchmen Lefort and Berthelier, and the two Belgians Martin Marsick and Guillaume Rémy.
  387. Thompson, Oscar (1975). The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians. Dodd, Mead. p. 2270. ISBN   978-0-460-04235-2. Thomson, César (b. Liège), March 17, 1857–d. Lugano, Switzerland, Aug. 21, 1931), Belgian violinist; studied with his father and at Liège Conservatory in the class of J. Dupuis, winning a gold medal at eleven. He was also pupil also of Léonard, Vieuxtemps, Wieniawski and Massart.
  388. "Great Violinists: Eugène Ysaÿe". The Strad. 20 September 2021. Retrieved 31 December 2023. A couple of years later he returned to study there with Rodolphe Massart.
  389. Rockwell, John (12 April 1987). "Music: Debuts in Review; A Violinist and 2 Pianists in Recitals". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 31 December 2023. Born in Nashville in 1960, Miss Kennedy was first taught by her parents, who were on the piano faculty of Fisk University for nearly 30 years. Eventually she wound up at the Juilliard School, where she studied with William Masselos.
  390. Greene (1985), p.959.
  391. Jones (2014), p.122.
  392. Greene (1985), p.1050.
  393. Mason (1917), p.187.
  394. Randel (1996), p.690.
  395. "De Greef, Arthur". svm.be. Studiecentrum Vlassmse Muziek. Retrieved 30 March 2022. The pianist-composer Arthur De Greef studied at the municipal music school of his native city with Emile Mathieu, who himself was a student of Auguste Dupont at the Brussels Conservatory.
  396. Mason (1917), p.74-5.
  397. Green & Thrall (1908), p.470.
  398. Wier, Albert Ernest (1938). The Macmillan Encyclopedia of Music and Musicians: In One Volume. Macmillan. p. 30. Alexander, Arthur, Australian pianist, born Dunedin, New Zealand, Mar. 25, 1891. He studied under Tobias Matthay and Frederick Corder...
  399. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Tobias Matthay", Naxos.com.
  400. Mike, Celia, "Howell, Dorothy", in The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers (Julie Anne Sadie and Rhian Samuel, eds.). The MacMillan Press (London & Basingstoke), p. 231 (1994, ISBN   0-333-51598-6).
  401. Canon: Australian Journal of Music. Vol. 9. 1959. p. 318. Frank Hutchens was born near Christchurch, New Zealand in 1892, and at the age of thirteen, on the advice of Paderewski went to England to study. His teachers there were Tobias Matthay for piano, and Frederick Corder for composition.
  402. Denise Lassimonne: English pianist, 1903-1994
  403. 'Short Sketches of Well-Known Teachers, III: Lilias Mackinson', in The Musical Mirror, May 1929, p 126
  404. Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p.216.
  405. Radio Times Issue 627, 6 October 1935, p 56
  406. Anderson, W. R. (1946). "Tobias Matthay (1858-1945)". The Musical Times. 87 (1235): 9–13. ISSN   0027-4666. JSTOR   933410. ...Cuthbert Whitemore, one of the vast number of teachers whom he taught, inspired and sent out all over the world.
  407. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.91.
  408. 1 2 3 4 5 Greene (1985), p.952.
  409. 1 2 3 4 Mason (1917), p.17.
  410. Schiavone, Michael (17 August 2023). "Biography: Carmelo Pace". Times of Malta. Retrieved 22 October 2024. He studied for a further nine years under Carlo Fiamingo and Thomas Mayne, grounding himself thoroughly in harmony, counterpoint, composition, and orchestration.
  411. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.433.
  412. Greene (1985), p.626.
  413. Ponchielli, Amilcare. La Gioconda: Vocal (Opera) Score (in Italian). Alfred Music. ISBN   978-1-4574-8250-2. Amilcare Ponchielli was born, August 31st, 1834, … His first teachers were Signori Angelini, Rossi and Frisi, and he subsequently studied under the celebrated teacher of harmony, Mazzucato.
  414. Mason (1917), p.112.
  415. Jones (2014), p.17.
  416. "Influential beginnings". www.birmingham.gov.uk. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 19 November 2020. In 1913 at the age of just 15, Dorothy entered the Royal Academy of Music. She studied composition with Sir J.B. McEwen...
  417. Amis, John (1955). "Priaulx Rainier". The Musical Times. 96 (1349): 354–357. doi:10.2307/937279. JSTOR   937279.
  418. (2006). Asian Music: Journal of the Society for Asian Music, Volume 37, p.179. Society for Asian Music.
  419. Conway, David (15 December 2011). Jewry in Music: Entry to the Profession from the Enlightenment to Richard Wagner. Cambridge University Press. p. 212. ISBN   978-1-139-50535-2. Two years later, Fromental was already studying composition with Étienne Méhul and then with Cherubini, which in the opinion of Léon, inspired in him the love of the grand style.
  420. "Biography Archived 31 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine ", RogerBriggs.com.
  421. Paparelli, Silvia (2001). Stanislao Falchi: musica a Roma tra due secoli [Stanislao Falchi: music in Rome over two centuries] (in Italian). Akademos. p. 5. ISBN   978-88-7096-269-7. A Terni Falchi compie gli studi classici e i primi studi musicali presso le scuole comunali con Celestino Magi. In seguito, lascia la provincia per rag- giungere la vicina capitale, dove approfondirà i suoi studi con Salvatore Meluzzi ed Ettore Pinelli. [In Terni Falchi completed his classical studies and his first musical studies at the municipal schools with Celestino Magi. Subsequently, he leaves the province to reach the nearby capital, where he will deepen his studies with Salvatore Meluzzi and Ettore Pinelli.]
  422. Larry Todd, R. (16 January 2012). Mendelssohn and His World. The Bard Music Festival. New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 237. ISBN   9781400831623. After a period of study in Kassel, Horsley moved to Leipzig in 1841; there he undertook composition lessons with Mendelssohn until 1843.
  423. "Carl Reinecke (1824- 1910)". oxfordlieder.co.uk. Oxford Lieder. Retrieved 3 April 2022. Carl Heinrich Carsten Reinecke was a German composer, conductor, and pianist in the Middle Romantic Era. He studied under Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann and Franz Liszt.
  424. "William Rockstro", Bach-Cantatas.com.
  425. Sallis, E. (2022). Stargardt-Wolff, Edith: Pathfinder of Great Musicians. Page Publishing, Incorporated. ISBN   9781635689365. He studied harmony with Richard Wüerst, who later became known for studying composition with Felix Mendelssohn.
  426. Randel (1996), p.135.
  427. Jones (2014), p.388.
  428. Campbell, Margaret (2 December 2005). "Suzanne Rozsa". The Independent . London. Retrieved 1 February 2023. At 18, Suzanne Rozsa was awarded a scholarship to the Royal College of Music, where she became a pupil of Isolde Menges, a pupil of the legendary Leopold Auer.
  429. Hinson (1993), p.325.
  430. Randel (1996), p.581.
  431. Jones (2014), p.268.
  432. Mason (1917), p.24.
  433. Mason (1917), p.207.
  434. 1 2 Randel (1996), p.101.
  435. Griffiths, Paul (23 September 1998). "William Albright, 53, Composer Of Ragtime Music for the Organ". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 18 February 2024. He spent the 1968-69 academic year in Paris, attending Olivier Messiaen's classes at the Conservatory...
  436. Greene (1985), p.1512.
  437. 1 2 Jones (2014), p.20.
  438. Griffiths (2011), p.54.
  439. 1 2 3 4 Benitez, Vincent P. (2008). Olivier Messiaen: A Research and Information Guide. New York and London: Routledge. p. xiii. ISBN   978-0-415-97372-4.
  440. "Easley Blackwood, composer". CedilleRecords.org.
  441. "William Bolcom Biography". WilliamBolcom.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014.
  442. 1 2 Gagné (2012) , p. 39
  443. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Gagné (2012) , p. 172
  444. Jones (2014), p.93.
  445. Hinson (1993), p.69.
  446. Dingle, Christopher Philip; Simeone, Nigel, eds. (2007). Olivier Messiaen: Music, Art and Literature. Ashgate Publishing. p. 137 n.3. ISBN   978-0-7546-5297-7. i.e. "visitor".
  447. Griffiths (2011), p.44.
  448. Randel (1996), p.265.
  449. Gagné (2012) , p. 116
  450. 1 2 Delaere, Mark (1996). "Karel Goeyvaerts: A Belgian Pioneer of Serial, Electronic and Minimal Music". Tempo (195): 2–5. doi:10.1017/S0040298200004708. JSTOR   946454. S2CID   144081301.
  451. Jones (2014), p.291.
  452. Griffiths (2011), p.19.
  453. "BMOP: Betsy Jolas". Archived from the original on 5 March 2008. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  454. 1 2 Greene (1985), p.1509.
  455. Fallon, Robert (22 April 2016). Messiaen Perspectives 1: Sources and Influences. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN   978-1-317-09718-1. As early as 1952, Messiaen's former student Jean-Étienne Marie noted a similarity between these linked parameters and John Cage's prepared piano, where the pitch and the timbre of a given preparation are always associated.
  456. Kozinn, Allan (1985). "Guardian of the Schoenberg Flame". The New York Times .
  457. Jones (2014), p.436.
  458. "Robert Sherlaw Johnson". OUP.com. "Obituary: Robert Sherlaw Johnson", TheGuardian.com.
  459. Holst, Gail (1999). "Mikis Theodorakis: A Man of Peace". Mikis-Theodorakis.net.
  460. Matossian, Nouritza (1986). Xenakis. London: Kahn and Averill. p. 48. ISBN   978-1-871082-17-3.
  461. Slonimsky, Nicolas (1978). "Yashiro, Akio". Baker's Biographical dictionary of musicians (6th ed.). New York: Schirmer Books. p. 1926. ISBN   978-0-02-870240-7.
  462. Randel (1996), p.289.
  463. Bishop, Maria Catherine (1893). The Prison Life of Marie Antoinette , p.20. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. [ISBN unspecified].
  464. Mason (1917), p.12.
  465. Kennedy, Joyce; Michael, Kennedy; Rutherford-Johnson, Tim (2012). "Strauss, Richard Georg". The Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.40117. ISBN   9780191744518 . Retrieved 31 March 2022. Studied theory with F. Meyer 1875...
  466. Jasińska, Danuta; Jabłoński, Maciej, eds. (2006). Henryk Wieniawski and the 19th Century Violin Schools: Techniques of Playing, Performance, Questions of Sources and Editorial Issues. Poland: Henryk Wieniawski Musical Society. p. 155. ISBN   9788392334415. LCCN   2007484137. He studied piano in Kraków (Kazimierz Hofman), Vienna and Warsaw (Aleksander Michałowski).
  467. Randel (1996), p.278.
  468. David Barlow by Dr David C F Wright
  469. Aide, William; Lazarevich, Gordana (2001). "Adaskin, Murray". New Grove.
  470. Morgan, John; Sperber, Roswitha (15 November 2005). Root, Deane (ed.). "Ahrens, Sieglinde". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.2019874.
  471. Humphrey, Mary Lou (2001). "Albert, Stephen (Joel)". New Grove.
  472. Spieth-Weissenbacher, Christiane; Bowen, José A. (2001). "Albin, Roger". New Grove.
  473. Jeremy Thurlow, "Amy, Gilbert", New Grove.
  474. Barbara A. Petersen and Judith Rosen, "Anderson, Ruth", New Grove.
  475. Guthrie P. Ramsey Jr., "Anderson, T(homas) J(efferson)", New Grove.
  476. William Glackin, "Camellia Orchestra Delves into a World of Whimsy, Fantasy", The Sacramento Bee, metro final edition (Sunday, 14 May 1995): EN4; J. Michele Edwards, "Armer, Elinor", New Grove.
  477. Clark, Thomas Enrique (2001). "Austin, Larry (Don)". New Grove.
  478. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Gagné (2012) , p. 175
  479. Gagné (2012) , p. 22
  480. Budds, Michael J. (2001). "Bacharach, Burt (F.)". New Grove.
  481. Frisbie, Charlotte J. (2001). "Ballard, Louis W(ayne) [Honganózhe]". New Grove.
  482. Rigoni, Michel (2001). "Bancquart, Alain". New Grove.
  483. Wheeler, Scott (2001). "Bazelon, Irwin (Allen)". New Grove.
  484. Smith, Charles M. (2006). 'Eric Hermannson's Soul': Comparing and Contrasting Two Musical Adaptations of the Willa Cather Short Story (Robert Beadell, Libby Larsen) (Ph.D.). Lincoln: University of Nebraska. p. 10.
  485. Gaynor G. Jones, "Behrens, Jack", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers, 1992).
  486. Kanazawa, Masakata (2001). "Bekku, Sadao". New Grove.
  487. Gagné (2012) , p. 33
  488. Johnson, Steven (2001). "Bolcom, William (Elden)". New Grove.
  489. Brennan, Elizabeth A. and Clarage, Elizabeth C. (1999). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners, p.445. Greenwood. ISBN   9781573561112.
  490. Fischer, Heinz Dietrich (2010). The Pulitzer Prize Winners for Music, p.192. Peter Lang. ISBN   978-3-631-59608-1.
  491. Griffiths, Paul; Musk, Andrea (2001). "Bondon, Jacques (Laurent Jules Désiré)". New Grove.
  492. Metzelaar, Helen (2001). "Bonhomme, Andrée (Marie Clémence)". New Grove.
  493. Brody, Martin (2001). "Boretz, Benjamin". New Grove.
  494. Daniel Kawka, "Brenet, Thérèse", New Grove.
  495. Gary W. Kennedy, "Brubeck, (David) Darius", The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, second edition, 3 vols., edited by Barry Dean Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2002).
  496. Richard Wang, "Brubeck, Dave [David Warren]", The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, second edition, 3 vols., edited by Barry Dean Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2002).
  497. Petersen, Barbara A.; Stanford, Joe R. (2001). "Brubeck, Howard R(engstorsff)". New Grove.
  498. Ruth Pincoe, "Buczynski, Walter", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan, 1992).
  499. Vollsnes, Arvid O. (2001). "Bull, Edvard Hagerup". New Grove.
  500. Michel, Philippe (2001). "Chaynes, Charles". New Grove.
  501. Hinson (1993), p.64.
  502. Cynthia Green Libby, "Clayton, Laura", Grove Music Online, edited by Deane Root (15 November 2005).
  503. Andrieux, Françoise (2001). "Clostre, Adrienne". New Grove.
  504. Cassaro, James P. (2001). "Colgrass, Michael (Charles)". New Grove.
  505. Barry Kernfeld, "Collins, Dick [Richard Harrison]", The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, second edition, 3 vols., edited by Barry Dean Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2002).
  506. Keillor, Elaine (2001). "Coulthard, Jean". New Grove.
  507. Michel, Philippe (2001). "Decoust, Michel (André)". New Grove.
  508. Brill, Mark (2001). "Delerue, Georges". New Grove.
  509. Musk, Andrea (2001). "Dubois, Pierre Max". New Grove.
  510. Swift, Richard (2001). "Elkus, Jonathan (Britton)". New Grove.
  511. Stoïanova, Ivanka (2001). "Eloy, Jean-Claude". New Grove.
  512. Jones (2014), p.195.
  513. Randel (1996), p.246.
  514. Randel (1996), p.249.
  515. Katherine K. Preston and Lincoln Ballard, "Epstein, David M(ayer)", Grove Music Online, edited by Deane Root (6 February 2012).
  516. Libbey, Theodore (2006). The NPR Listener's Encyclopedia of Classical Music . New York: Workman Publishing. p.  507. ISBN   9780761120728. ISBN   978-0-7611-3642-2 (cloth). ISBN   978-0-7611-2072-8 (pbk).
  517. Whitney Smith, "Bravo! Don Freund: Memphis Loses a Big Talent with Musician's Departure", The Commercial Appeal [Memphis, TN] (Sunday, 31 May 1992): G1.
  518. Cardy, Patrick, "Steven Gellman", revised by Evan Ware, The Canadian Encyclopedia/The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada (Historica-Dominion, 2012).
  519. Marshall, Ingram D.; Smith, Catherine Parsons (2001). "Giteck, Janice". New Grove.
  520. Ev Grimes, "Interview: Education (1989)", in Writings on Glass: Essays, Interviews, Criticism, edited by Richard Kostelanetz and Robert Flemming, 12–36 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1999): 24. ISBN   978-0-520-21491-0.
  521. Delaere, Mark (2001). "Goeyvaerts, Karel (August)". New Grove.
  522. Diana von Volborth-Danys, "Goeyvaerts, Karel (August)", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan, 1992).
  523. Terri Lowen Finn, "New Works to be Heard at Free Concert", New York Times (21 October 1984): NJ10; Rena Fruchter, "Day for Composers to Be in Spotlight", New York Times (8 January 1995): NJ14.
  524. Preston, Katherine K.; Vise, Sidney R. (2001). "Green, Ray (Burns)". New Grove.
  525. "May O'Donnell and Ray Green papers". New York Public Library . Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  526. Jolas, Betsy (2001). "Guézec, Jean-Pierre". New Grove.
  527. Delaere, Mark (2001). "Goeyvaerts, Karel (August)". New Grove.
    Vargas, Jorge Luis Acevedo (2001). "Gutiérrez Sáenz, Benjamín". New Grove.
  528. 1 2 Schleifer, Eliyahu (2001). "Hajdu, André". New Grove.
  529. Kirk, Elise (2001). "Hollingsworth, Stanley [Hollier]". New Grove.
  530. Ramaer, Huib (2001). "Holt, Simeon ten". New Grove.
  531. Ben Johnston, Maximum Clarity and Other Writings on Music, edited by Bob Gilmore. (University of Illinois Press, 2006): xxviii.
  532. Gagné (2012) , p. 145
  533. Krones, Hartmut (2001). "Kont, Paul". New Grove.
  534. Wierzbicki, James (2001). "Kurka, Robert (Frank)". New Grove.
  535. William E. Powell, "Eugene Kurtz Archived 28 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine " (William E. Powell website, 2006, accessed 3 October 2013).
  536. Andrieux, Françoise; Briscoe, James R. (2001). "Lachartre, Nicole". New Grove.
  537. Galaise, Sophie (2001). "Lauber, Anne". New Grove.
  538. von der Weid, Jean-Noël (2001). "Lefebvre, Claude". New Grove.
  539. Myrna Oliver, "Robert Linn; Composer, USC Music School Teacher", Los Angeles Times (2 November 1999).
  540. Cope, David (2001). "London, Edwin". New Grove.
  541. Griffiths, Paul (2001). "Loriod, Yvonne". New Grove.
  542. Criton, Pascale (2001). "Marie, Jean-Etienne". New Grove.
  543. David Stabler, "'The King of Bali' A Crowning Achievement", The Oregonian, fourth edition (Friday, 20 April 1990): R32.
  544. Tamara Bernstein and Emily-Jane Orford, "Boyd McDonald", The Canadian Encyclopedia/The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada (Historica-Dominion, 2012).
  545. Jeremy Drake. "Méfano, Paul", New Grove.
  546. Paul Griffiths and Richard Langham Smith. "Miroglio, Francis", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers, 1992).
  547. Jensen, Niels Martin; Grimley, Daniel M. (2001). "Mortensen, Otto (Jacob Hübertz)". New Grove.
  548. Daniel, Oliver (2001). "Overton, Hall". New Grove.
  549. Yanow, Scott. Hall Overton at AllMusic . Retrieved January 2016.
  550. Kirk, Elise (2001). "Pasatieri, Thomas". New Grove.
  551. Amann, Jean-Pierre (2001). "Perrin, Jean". New Grove.
  552. Pool, Jeannie Gayle (2008). American Composer Zenobia Powell Perry: Race and Gender in the 20th Century . Scarecrow Press. p.  50. ISBN   978-0-8108-6377-4.
  553. Musk, Andrea (2001). "Prey, Claude". New Grove.
  554. Temes, José Luis. "Prieto, María Teresa" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 21 July 2011.
  555. Duric-Klajn, Stana; Pejović, Roksanda (2001). "Radić, Dušan". New Grove.
  556. Paul Griffiths and Alison Latham, "Reich, Steve [Stephen] (Michael)", The Oxford Companion to Music, revised online edition, edited by Alison Latham. Oxford Music Online, 2011 (accessed 2 October 2013).
  557. Craig Smith, "In Other Words", The Santa Fe New Mexican (Friday, 9 January 2009): PA-8; Emily Van Cleve, "Music Leader's Requiem in Concert: Former UNM Dept. Head Recorded 3,000 Hispanic Folk Songs", Albuquerque Journal (Sunday, 19 May 2013): F3.
  558. Frank J. Oteri and Neil Rolnick, "Neil Rolnick: Seamless Transitions", transcribed by Julia Lu, NewMusicBox: The Web Magazine (1 April 2013, accessed 3 October 2013).
  559. Swift, Richard (2001). "Rosen, Jerome (William)". New Grove.
  560. Krones, Hartmut (2001). "Rubin, Marcel". New Grove.
  561. Solare, Juan María (2001). "Sáenz (Amadeo), Pedro (Alejo)". New Grove.
  562. Musk, Andrea (2001). "Saguer, Louis". New Grove.
  563. Diane Wright, "Brass Quintet to Help Chorale Ring in Holidays". Seattle Times, fourth edition (Wednesday, 29 November 2006): H21.
  564. "Peter Schickele Bio", Schickele.com.
  565. Root, Deane L. (2001). "Schickele, (Johann) Peter". New Grove.
  566. Key, Stevan (2001). "Sender, Ramón". New Grove.
  567. Cockrell, Dale (2001). "Shapiro, Gerald (Mark)". New Grove.
  568. Kaufman, Charles H.; Boykan, Martin (2001). "Shifrin, Seymour". New Grove.
  569. Leotsakos, George (2001). "Sicilianos, Yorgos". New Grove.
  570. James G. Roy Jr., "Silverman, Stanley J(oel)", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie (London: Macmillan Publishers, 1992).
  571. Ledbetter, Steven (2001). "Sims, Ezra". New Grove.
  572. Barry Kernfeld, "Smith, Bill [William O(verton)] (i)", The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, second edition, 3 vols., edited by Barry Dean Kernfeld (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2002); Ian Mitchell, "Smith, William O(verton) [Bill] ", New Grove.
  573. Swift, Richard (2001). "Smith, Leland C(layton)". New Grove.
  574. Cherney, Brian (2001). "Somers, Harry (Stuart)". New Grove.
  575. Kurtz, Michael (1992). Stockhausen: A Biography. Translated by Richard Toop. London and Boston: Faber and Faber. pp. 45–48. ISBN   978-0-571-14323-8 (cloth) ISBN   978-0-571-17146-0 (pbk).
  576. Robert Franklin Bigley, Jr., "The Choral Music of Gloria Wilson Swisher" DMA diss. (Seattle: The University of Washington, 2009): 11–14.
  577. Smith, Catherine Parsons (2001). "Thome, Diane". New Grove.
  578. Kelly, Barbara L. (2001). "Tisné, Antoine". New Grove.
  579. Salgado, Susana (2001). "Tosar (Errecart), Héctor". New Grove.
  580. Hughes, Allen (2001). "Trimble, Lester (Albert)". New Grove.
  581. Anne Dhu Shapiro, ed., Music and Context: Essays for John M. Ward (1985), ix.
  582. Bialosky, Marshall (2001). "Ward-Steinman, David". New Grove.
  583. Anon., "Challenge to Music in Education", The Sydney Morning Herald (20 May 1964): 23.
  584. Pratt, Michael J. (2001). "Westergaard, Peter (Talbot)". New Grove.
  585. Hoffmann, Peter (2001). "Xenakis, Iannis". New Grove.
  586. Anon., "James Yannatos: Biography ", Harvard: Faculty of Arts and Sciences (archive, accessed 4 October 2013).
  587. Morgan, Paula (2001). "Yellin, Victor (Fell)". New Grove.
  588. Jones (2014), p.95.
  589. "William Mival - Head of Composition". rcm.ac.uk. Royal College of Music. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  590. Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.174.
  591. Butterworth, Neil (2 October 2013). Dictionary of American Classical Composers (Second ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 499. ISBN   9781136790249. ...Wilson entered Harvard University (B.A., 1963), where he was a pupil of Randall Thompson and Robert Moevs.
  592. Pine, Richard (2005). Music and Broadcasting in Ireland. Four Courts. p. 92. ISBN   978-1-85182-843-2. Of these, Charles Lynch (1906–84) had enjoyed a considerable career in Britain, where he had studied with York Bowen, Egon Petri and, for short but significant periods, with Benno Moiseiwitsch and Rachmaninov.
  593. Crimp, Bryan (1990). Benno Moiseiwitsch: An HMV Discography. APR. p. ix. ISBN   978-1-870295-02-4. Malcolm Sargent was the only musician who could lay claim to some systematic study with Moiseiwitsch.
  594. Kennedy, Michael (27 June 1985). The Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 625. ISBN   978-0-19-311333-6. Pf. pupil of Moiseiwitsch 1919-21.
  595. Mason (1917), p.72.
  596. Greene (1985), p.1115.
  597. Freeman, Robert N. (2001). "Albrechtsberger, Johann Georg". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.00478 . Retrieved 15 October 2024. His studies in composition under G.M. Monn (if accurately reported by Albrechtsberger's pupil Johann Fuss) must have taken place during this period.
  598. Randel (1996), p.695.
  599. Mason (1917), p.84.
  600. Jones (2014), p.387.
  601. Gagné (2012) , p. 158
  602. Greene (1985), p.126.
  603. Mason (1917), p.138.
  604. Randel (1996), p.339.
  605. Mason (1917), p.33.
  606. Kennaway, Dimitri. "A Biography: The Watchmaker's Apprentice" . Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  607. "Lan Adomian": Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians. Schirmer. 2001. ISBN   9780028660912 . Retrieved 5 August 2022 via Gale. ...where his teachers were Bailly (viola) and R. O. Morris (composition).
  608. Jones (2014), p.218.
  609. "Hyde, Miriam Beatrice (1913—)". Encyclopedia.com. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. 29 April 2022. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  610. "Mark Isaacs : Represented Artist Profile : Australian Music Centre". www.australianmusiccentre.com.au. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  611. Humphreys, Maggie; Evans, Robert (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. p. 76. ISBN   978-0-7201-2330-2. Cowen, Frederic Hymen (1852-1935) ... In 1865 he studied at the Leipzig Conservatory, under Louis Plaidy, Ignaz Moscheles, Carl Reinecke, Ernst Richter and Moritz Hauptmann.
  612. Pfitzinger, Scott (2017). Composer Genealogies: A Compendium of Composers, Their Teachers, and Their Students. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 120. ISBN   9781442272248. LCCN   2016049733.
  613. Clive, Peter (2 October 2006). Brahms and His World: A Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 135. ISBN   978-1-4617-2280-9. Farmer, John, (b. Nottingham, 16 August 1835; d. Oxford, 17 July 1901). Composer and teacher....he studied for three years at the Leipzig conservatory with Ignaz Moscheles, Louis Plaidy, Moritz Hauptmann, and Ernst Friedrich Richter,...
  614. "Edvard and Nina Grieg", UUdb.org.
  615. Clive, Peter (2 October 2006). Brahms and His World: A Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 268. ISBN   978-1-4617-2280-9. After the family settled in Leipzig in 1868, he enrolled at the conservatory, where he studied piano with Ignaz Moscheles, theory with Ernst Friedrich Richter, and composition with Carl Reinecke.
  616. Kroll, Mark (2014). Ignaz Moscheles and the Changing World of Musical Europe. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 168. ISBN   978-1-84383-935-4. Henry Litolff (1818–1891) was one of Moscheles' favorites...Moscheles therefore gave Litolff free lessons from 1830–1835...
  617. Humphreys, Maggie; Evans, Robert (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. p. 250. ISBN   978-0-7201-2330-2. O'Leary, Arthur (1834-1919) … Able to study due to the patronage of Wyndham Gould, firstly in Dublin (1844-1846) and at Leipzig Conservatory (from 1847) under Louis Plaidy, Ernst Richter, Ignaz Moscheles, Moritz Hauptmann and Julius Rietz.
  618. Padel, Ruth (5 January 2012). The Mara Crossing. United Kingdom: Random House. ISBN   978-1-4090-2742-3. At sixteen he went to Germany to study piano at the Leipzig Conservatorie with the Bohemian virtuoso Ignaz Moscheles, a pupil of Beethoven.
  619. Mason (1917), p.158.
  620. Green & Thrall (1908), p.322.
  621. Green & Thrall (1908), p.330.
  622. Greene (1985), p.1297.
  623. Grove, G.; Allan, J. M. (2001). "Taylor, Franklin". Oxford Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.27588 . Retrieved 5 May 2022. ...he studied at the Leipzig Conservatory with Plaidy and Moscheles as well as Hauptmann, E.F.E. Richter and Papperitz (harmony and composition).
  624. Mason (1917), p.223.
  625. Mason (1917), p.257.
  626. Mason (1917), p.289.
  627. Mason (1917), p.296.
  628. Green & Thrall (1908), p.509.
  629. Wyndham, Geoffrey L'Epine (1915), p.135.
  630. van Boer (2012) , p. 82
  631. Greene (1985), p.434.
  632. Eisen, Cliff; Keefe, Simon P., eds. (2006). The Cambridge Mozart Encyclopedia. Cambridge. p. 58. ISBN   978-1-139-44878-9.
  633. Greene (1985), p.464.
  634. Jones (2014), p.305.
  635. Greene (1985), p.444.
  636. Eisen & Keefe, eds. (2006), p.496.
  637. Mentioned by Paul Wranitzky in a letter to Johann Anton André.
  638. Greene (1985), p.362.
  639. Gagné (2012) , p. 30
  640. Grimley, Daniel M. (26 February 2004). The Cambridge Companion to Sibelius. Cambridge University Press. ISBN   978-1-107-49463-3. Julian Anderson studied composition with John Lambert, Tristan Murail and Alexander Goehr.
  641. "Olga Neuwirth, Artistas, El Compositor Habla, Música contemporánea, compositores. Ruth Prieto". www.elcompositorhabla.com. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
  642. Hinson (1993), p.152.

Sources