This is part of a list of students of music, organized by teacher.
Also known to his students as "Pak Cokro".
This is a list of music-related events in 1810.
Notker the Stammerer, Notker Balbulus, or simply Notker, was a Benedictine monk at the Abbey of Saint Gall active as a composer, poet and scholar. Described as "a significant figure in the Western Church", Notker made substantial contributions to both the music and literature of his time. He is usually credited with two major works of the Carolingian period: the Liber Hymnorum, which includes an important collection of early musical sequences, and an early biography of Charlemagne, the Gesta Karoli Magni. His other works include a biography of Saint Gall known as the Vita Sancti Galli and a martyrology, among others.
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.
Johann Christian Innocenz Bonaventura Cannabich, was a German violinist, composer, and Kapellmeister of the Classical era. A composer of some 200 works, he continued the legacy of Johann Stamitz and helped turn the Mannheim orchestra into what Charles Burney described as "the most complete and best disciplined in Europe.". The orchestra was particularly noted for the carefully graduated crescendos and diminuendos characteristic of the Mannheim school. Together with Stamitz and the other composers of the Mannheim court, he helped develop the orchestral texture that paved the way for the orchestral treatment of the First Viennese School.
The year 1703 in music involved some significant events.
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.
The Belgian Prix de Rome is an award for young artists, created in 1832, following the example of the original French Prix de Rome. The Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp organised the prize until 1920, when the national government took over. The first prize is also sometimes called the Grand Prix de Rome. There were distinct categories for painting, sculpture, architecture and music.
Marguerite-Louise Couperin was a French soprano singer and harpsichordist, who came from the musically talented Couperin family dynasty. The Frenchman Évrard Titon du Tillet, in his 1732 book Le Parnasse françois, describes her as "one of the most celebrated musicians of our time, who sang with admirable taste and who played the harpsichord perfectly."
Louis Plaidy was a celebrated German piano pedagogue and compiler of books of technical music studies.
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the 1410s.
Citations
класс фортепиано Е. П. Ховен, Т. Д. Мануильская, И. А. Дашкова, композиции Л. Н. Наумов, теории и гармонии Л. М. Калужский... (...piano class E. P. Hoven, T. D. Manuilskaya, I. A. Dashkova, composition L. N. Naumov, theory and harmony L. M. Kaluzhsky...)
...he graduated from the Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory (composition class of Tikhon Khrennikov and piano classes of Heinrich Neuhaus and Lev Naumov...)
...but decided to study the piano independently, first with Stephen Francis Rimbault and then, from 1826 to 1831, with Charles Neate, a friend of Beethoven.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
...he graduated from the Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory (composition class of Tikhon Khrennikov and piano classes of Heinrich Neuhaus and Lev Naumov...)
Two aspects of Abrahamsen's works might be discussed in the context of the compositional ideas of Nørgård and Gudmundsen-Holmgreen for he studied with both of them.
...in addition to teaching numerous private pupils, one of whom was Edward Holmes [q. v.]. In
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Born in the U.K., he studied with Simon Bainbridge at the Royal College of Music (London), with Louis Andriessen and Martijn Padding at the Royal Conservatorium of The Hague (The Netherlands)...
Butterworth, George Sainton Kaye (1885-1916), composer... ...studied with T. F. Dunhill, as well as with Christian G. Padel in York.. Dictionary of National Biography, 1927 supplement
Greg Simon, composer and jazz trumpeter... currently studies composition with Richard Toensing; he has also studied with Daniel Kellogg, Carter Pann and Robert Hutchinson...
Composer and organist. From 1899 he studied with Walter Parratt (organ) and with Walford Davies (composition) at the Royal College of Music.
...the climax to the slow movement takes a long time coming and, when it does, sounds rather too much like that from I was glad by Dyson's teacher, Parry.
Forsyth had studied under Parry and Stanford at the RCM and played viola with the QHO before emigrating to New York in 1914.
On completing his studies at Cambridge in 1898, Rootham went to the Royal College of Music where he studied with Parry, Parratt and Stanford.
Biscardi studied electronic music with Bert Levy and composition with Les Thimmig while in Madison, and composition with Robert Morris, Krzysztof Penderecki and Toru Takemitsu at Yale.
...he received a scholarship from the Brazilian Mozarteum to study composition under the supervision of Krzysztof Penderecki at Music Academy of Krakow.
Shortly after Cooke's eighth birthday his father died, and it was to Pepusch that young Benjamin's musical education was entrusted.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Finalmente pasó al Conservatorio Nacional de París, en donde adelantó estudios bajo la dirección de la eminente musicóloga Nadia Boulanger y del famoso intérprete raveliano VIada Perlemuter.
Here both Biret and Dalberto give us a view of Ravel only one generation removed. Their teachers at the Paris Conservatory, Fevrier and Perlemuter, both studied with Ravel.
From the age of 12 he studied at the Menuhin School in England, where his piano teachers included Perlemuter and Nadia Boulanger.
In 1961, on a scholarship from the Juilliard School, Pasatieri began formal studies under Vincent Persichetti and Vittorio Giannini.
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.
Studied in Stuttgart, Germany with H.H. Pierson.
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)...he studied at the Leipzig Conservatory with Plaidy and Moscheles as well as Hauptmann, E.F.E. Richter and Papperitz (harmony and composition).
Rolande Falcinelli studierte ab 1932 am traditionsreichen Pariser Conservatoire bei Abel Estyle (Klavierbegleitung), Marcel Samuel-Rousseau (Harmonielehre), Simone Plé-Caussade (Kontrapunkt und Fuge) und Henri Busser...
He studied at the conservatories of Antwerp and Brussels (composition with Poot).
...he became a student at the RAM in 1823. There he studied with Cipriani Potter...
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(help)...thereafter attending classes given by Pousseur at Durham and by Ligeti at Tanglewood.
Among his pupils at Kensington were Eugene d'Albert, Frederic Cliffe, and Frank L. Moir, the song writer.
Jacques Dupuis was born at Liège, October 21, 1830, and died there June 20, 1870. He studied with Prume,...
Hubert Léonard (1819-90), one of the numerous disciples of François Prume at the Brussels Conservatoire and of Habeneck in Paris, became one of Vieuxtemps's closest friends.
Sources