List of music students by teacher: T to Z
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
This is the end of a list of students of music, organized by teacher.
T[edit]
Tarapada Chakraborty[edit]
- Manas Chakraborty
- Amaresh Roy Chowdhury
- Pratima Bandopadhyay
- Akhilbandhu Ghosh
- Azad Rahman
- Usha Ranjan Mukherjee
- Srila Bandopadhyay
- Suprabha Sarkar
- Purabi Mukhopadhyay
- Anup Ghoshal
Marcel Tabuteau[edit]
Nicola Tacchinardi[edit]
Paul Taffanel[edit]
Steven Takasugi[edit]
Toru Takemitsu[edit]
Tan Xiaolin[edit]
Sergei Taneyev[edit]
- Georgi Conus [pupils][7]
- Julius Conus[8]
- Lev Conus[8]
- Reinhold Glière [pupils][8][9]
- Alexander Goldenweiser [pupils]
- Paul Juon [pupils][8][10]
- Nikolai Medtner[8]
- Yuri Pomerantsiev [pupils][9]
- Sergei Rachmaninoff [pupils][8]
- Leonid Sabaneyev [pupils][11]
- Alexander Scriabin [pupils][8]
- Sergei Vasilenko [pupils][12]
- Jacob Weinberg [pupils][13]
Daniel Tarquínio[edit]
Francisco Tárrega[edit]
Giuseppe Tartini[edit]
Wilhelm Taubert[edit]
Dorothy Taubman[edit]
Antoine Taudou[edit]
Carl Tausig[edit]
John Tavener[edit]
Franklin Taylor[edit]
Kendall Taylor[edit]
Alexander Tchaikovsky[edit]
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky[edit]
Ivan Tcherepnin[edit]
Nikolai Tcherepnin[edit]
Serge Tcherepnin[edit]
Ignaz Amadeus Tedesco[edit]
Robert Teichmüller[edit]
Georg Philipp Telemann[edit]
Rafael Tello[edit]
Emil Telmányi[edit]
Wayan Tembres[edit]
Giusto Fernando Tenducci[edit]
James Tenney[edit]
Michael Tenzer[edit]
Lionel Tertis[edit]
Sigismond Thalberg[edit]
Hilda Thegerström[edit]
Johann Theile[edit]
Willi Thern[edit]
Jacques Thibaud[edit]
Ambroise Thomas[edit]
István Thomán[edit]
Diane Thome[edit]
Randall Thompson[edit]
César Thomson[edit]
Virgil Thomson[edit]
Ludwig Thuille[edit]
Jukka Tiensuu[edit]
Heinz Tiessen[edit]
Edgar Tinel[edit]
Maria Tipo[edit]
Michael Tippett[edit]
Yakov Tkatch[edit]
Ernst Toch[edit]
Eduard Toldrà[edit]
Václav Tomášek[edit]
Tomášek (1774–1850, also 'Tomaschek'), autodidact
István Tomka[edit]
Giuseppe Torelli[edit]
Montserrat Torrent[edit]
Laurits Christian Tørsleff[edit]
Arturo Toscanini[edit]
Firmin Touche[edit]
Charles Tournemire[edit]
Donald Tovey[edit]
Tommaso Traetta[edit]
Gilles Tremblay[edit]
Lennie Tristano[edit]
Giacomo Tritto[edit]
František Tůma[edit]
Józef Turczyński[edit]
Joaquín Turina[edit]
Daniel Gottlob Türk[edit]
Mark-Anthony Turnage[edit]
Robert Turner[edit]
Burnet Tuthill[edit]
Hans Tutschku[edit]
"Blue" Gene Tyranny[edit]
U[edit]
Marco Uccellini[edit]
Delphine Ugalde[edit]
Vincenzo Ugolini[edit]
Chinary Ung[edit]
Heinrich Urban[edit]
Erich Urbanner[edit]
Gennaro Ursino[edit]
Anton Urspruch[edit]
Vladimir Ussachevsky[edit]
Galina Ustvolskaya[edit]
V[edit]
Fartein Valen[edit]
Giovanni Valentini[edit]
Giovanni Valesi[edit]
Francesco Antonio Vallotti[edit]
Gilius van Bergeijk[edit]
David Van Vactor[edit]
Edgard Varèse[edit]
Sergei Vasilenko[edit]
Ralph Vaughan Williams[edit]
- Stanley Bate
- Arthur Bliss
- Ina Boyle[143]
- Amice Calverley[144][145]
- Hubert Clifford
- Jean Coulthard
- David Cox
- Cedric Thorpe Davie
- Howard Ferguson [pupils]
- Armstrong Gibbs[146]
- Ruth Gipps
- Peggy Glanville-Hicks
- Helen Glatz [pupils]
- Dorothy Gow
- Ivor Gurney
- Patrick Hadley [pupils]
- Imogen Holst [pupils]
- Gordon Jacob [pupils]
- Constant Lambert [pupils][5]
- William Lloyd Webber [pupils][147]
Aurelio de la Vega[edit]
Isabelle Vengerova[edit]
John Verrall[edit]
Pauline Viardot[edit]
Paul Vidal[edit]
Carles Vidiella[edit]
Carlo Vidusso[edit]
Louis Vierne[edit]
Henri Vieuxtemps[edit]
Heitor Villa-Lobos[edit]
Alexander Villoing[edit]
Ricardo Viñes[edit]
Francesco dalla Viola[edit]
Giovanni Battista Viotti[edit]
János Viski[edit]
Tomaso Antonio Vitali[edit]
Jāzeps Vītols[edit]
Loreto Vittori[edit]
Antonio Vivaldi[edit]
Pancho Vladigerov[edit]
Allin Vlasenko[edit]
Wladimir Vogel[edit]
Georg Joseph Vogler[edit]
Robert Volkmann[edit]
Georg Jacob Vollweiler[edit]
Han de Vries[edit]
W[edit]
Bernard Wagenaar[edit]
Diderik Wagenaar[edit]
Johan Wagenaar[edit]
Georg Christoph Wagenseil[edit]
Peter Wallfisch[edit]
Thomas Attwood Walmisley[edit]
William Wallace[edit]
Bruno Walter[edit]
Johann Gottfried Walther[edit]
Raymond Warren[edit]
Samuel Webbe[edit]
Bedřich Diviš Weber[edit]
Carl Maria von Weber[edit]
Anton Webern[edit]
Georg Caspar Wecker[edit]
Adolf Weidig[edit]
Jacob Weinberg[edit]
Leó Weiner[edit]
Christian Ehregott Weinlig[edit]
- Christian Theodor Weinlig [pupils] (his nephew)
Christian Theodor Weinlig[edit]
John Weinzweig[edit]
- Murray Adaskin [pupils]
- Robert Aitken
- Kristi Allik
- Milton Barnes
- John Beckwith
- Norma Beecroft
- Lorne Betts
- Howard Cable
- Brian Cherney
- Gustav Ciamaga
- Samuel Dolin
- John Fodi
- Clifford Ford
- Harry Freedman
- Srul Irving Glick
- Jack Kane
- Peter Paul Koprowski
- Alfred Kunz
- Bruce Mather
- Ben McPeek
- Mavor Moore
- Marjan Mozetich
- Phil Nimmons
- Kenneth Peacock
- Paul Pedersen
- Doug Riley
- John Rimmer
- R. Murray Schafer
- Harry Somers
- Ben Steinberg
- Fred Stone
- Rudy Toth
- Kenny Wheeler
Hugo Weisgall[edit]
Hans Weisse[edit]
Carl Friedrich Weitzmann[edit]
Dan Welcher[edit]
Egon Wellesz[edit]
Richard Wernick[edit]
Hans Wesley[edit]
Peter Westergaard[edit]
Frederik Thorkildsen Wexschall[edit]
José White Lafitte[edit]
Cuthbert Whitemore[edit]
Arthur Batelle Whiting[edit]
Charles-Marie Widor[edit]
- Seth Bingham[222]
- Nadia Boulanger [pupils]
- Virginia Carrington-Thomas[223]
- Georges Dandelot[224]
- Marcel Dupré [pupils]
- Henri Gagnon
- Arthur Honegger [pupils][225]
- Dumitru Georgescu Kiriac [pupils]
- Olivier Messiaen [pupils]
- Georges Migot[226]
- Darius Milhaud [pupils]
- André Pirro [pupils][172]
- Alexander Schreiner
- Albert Schweitzer
- Charles Tournemire [pupils]
- Edgard Varèse [pupils][227]
- Louis Vierne [pupils][228][229]
- Horace Whitehouse
- Christopher Wilson
Friedrich Wieck[edit]
Henryk Wieniawski[edit]
Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht[edit]
August Wilhelmj[edit]
Adrian Willaert[edit]
Healey Willan[edit]
Alberto Williams[edit]
Ernest Williams[edit]
Richard Edward Wilson[edit]
Godfrey Winham[edit]
Alexander Winkler[edit]
I Nyoman Windha[edit]
Emanuel Wirth[edit]
Peter Wishart[edit]
Leopold Carl Wolff[edit]
Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari[edit]
Leonard Wolfson[edit]
Stefan Wolpe[edit]
Charles Wood[edit]
- Arthur Bliss
- William Denis Browne
- Douglas Clarke [pupils][246]
- Nicholas Gatty
- Armstrong Gibbs[146]
- Eugene Aynsley Goossens [pupils][247]
- Patrick Hadley [pupils][246]
- William Henry Harris [pupils][248]
- Herbert Howells [pupils]
- Henry Ley [pupils][249]
- Elizabeth Maconchy
- R. O. Morris [pupils][246]
- Humphrey Procter-Gregg
- Michael Tippett [pupils][246]
- Ralph Vaughan Williams [pupils]
Daniel Wood[edit]
Henry Wood[edit]
James Wood[edit]
Joseph Wölfl[edit]
Rowsby Woof[edit]
Paul Wranitzky[edit]
Richard Wüerst[edit]
Franz Wüllner[edit]
Johann Georg Wunderlich[edit]
Charles Wuorinen[edit]
Robert Wykes[edit]
Yehudi Wyner[edit]
X[edit]
Iannis Xenakis[edit]
Y[edit]
Kosaku Yamada[edit]
Abram Yampolsky[edit]
Akio Yashiro[edit]
Anna Yesipova[edit]
Michèl Yost[edit]
La Monte Young[edit]
Eugène Ysaÿe[edit]
Maria Yudina[edit]
Isang Yun[edit]
Z[edit]
Jan Zach[edit]
Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow[edit]
Alfred Zamara[edit]
Antonio Zamara[edit]
Nikolai Zaremba[edit]
Gioseffo Zarlino[edit]
- Giovanni Artusi
- Giovanni Croce[283]
- Girolamo Diruta
- Vincenzo Galilei, the father of the astronomer
- Claudio Merulo
- Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck
Ruth Zechlin[edit]
Jan Dismas Zelenka[edit]
Władysław Żeleński[edit]
Ferdinand Zellbell[edit]
Carl Friedrich Zelter[edit]
Alexander Zemlinsky[edit]
Bernhard Ziehn[edit]
Efrem Zimbalist[edit]
Bernd Alois Zimmermann[edit]
Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmerman[edit]
Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli[edit]
Nikolai Zverev[edit]
Bernard Zweers[edit]
References[edit]
Citations
- ^ Storch, Laila (2008). Marcel Tabuteau: How Do You Expect to Play the Oboe If You Can't Peel a Mushroom?. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34949-1.
- ^ a b c Mason (1917), p.75.
- ^ "Robert Beaser Profile", Schott-Music.com. [1]
- ^ "archives.nypl.org -- Chester Biscardi papers". archives.nypl.org. New York Public Library. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
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.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Griffiths, Paul (2004). The Penguin Companion to Classical Music, [unpaginated]. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-0-14-190976-9
- ^ Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.380.
- ^ McGraw (2001), p.55.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "The Julius Block Cylinders Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine", MarstonRecords.com.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.1186.
- ^ "Paul Juon The Russian Brahms", WRTI.org.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.1182.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.245.
- ^ Levin, Neil M. Biography: Jacob Weinberg 1879–1956. Milken Archive. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.1043.
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.111.
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.151.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.284.
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.241.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.330.
- ^ Boer, Bertil H. Van (2012). Historical Dictionary of Music of the Classical Period. Scarecrow Press. p. 269. ISBN 978-0-8108-7183-0.
After four years, he embarked upon a six-year study tour of Italy, where his teachers included Giuseppe Tartini.
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.402.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.372.
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.404.
- ^ Highfill (1991), p.102.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.215.
- ^ Orledge, R. (1989). Charles Koechlin (1867-1950): His Life and Works. Harwood Academic Publishers. p. 5. ISBN 9783718606092.
Koechlin was already too old to enter Théodore Dubois' harmony class at the Paris Conservatoire, for which Lefebvre wrote him a letter of introduction, so he was admitted instead as an auditeur to the harmony class of Antoine Taudou that autumn.
- ^ Lockspeiser, E. (1979). Debussy: Volume 1, 1862-1902: His Life and Mind. Cambridge University Press. p. 145. ISBN 9780521220538.
Satie is stated to have entered the Paris Conservatoire in 1879 and to have been enrolled there for eight years, in the elementary piano class of Émile Descombes, the solfège class of Albert Lavignac, the piano class of Georges Mathias and the harmony class of Antoine Tardou.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.23.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.172.
- ^ Green & Thrall (1908), p.467.
- ^ Jones (2014), p.723.
- ^ Evans, Robert; Humphreys, Maggie (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. London: Mensell. p. 67. ISBN 0720123305.
Studied from 1876 at the National Training School of Music where his teachers were Franklin Taylor, Ebenezer Prout, Arthur Sullivan and John Stainer.
- ^ "In memory". www.rcm.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
He went on to study at the RCM from 1968 to 1973, with Kendall Taylor, Maurice Cole and David Wilde.
- ^ Musgrave, Michael (13 April 1995). The Musical Life of the Crystal Palace. Cambridge University Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-521-37562-7.
Of others, Kendall Taylor's RCM pupil Ethel Sharpe played the d'Albert Concerto in 1895, ...
- ^ "Yonty Solomon". The Telegraph. 14 October 2008. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
Fortunately the English pianist Kendall Taylor was in the country at the time and took Solomon under his wing.
- ^ Richards & Tanosaki (2008), p.29.
- ^ "Bio: Richard Marriott Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine", RichardMarriott.com.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.1187.
- ^ a b c Mason (1917), p.171.
- ^ "Felix Wolfes compositions and papers". harvard.edu. MS Thr 820. Retrieved 3 April 2022 – via Houghton Library.
Born to Jewish parents in Hannover, his career in Germany included studies under Max Reger, Robert Teichmüller, Richard Strauss, and Hans Pfitzner.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.1291.
- ^ a b c "Bio". MichaelTenzer.com. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.15.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.112.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.167.
- ^ Kennedy, M.; Kennedy, J.B. (1994). The Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780198691624. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.940.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.89.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.117.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.764.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.219.
- ^ a b c Mason (1917), p.223.
- ^ a b Randel (1996), p.279.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n 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.
- ^ Silvertrust, R.H.R. (2015). "A Guide to the Standard Piano Trio, Part I" (PDF). The Chamber Music Journal. XXVI (1): 2–37.
Théodore Dubois (1837-1924) was born in the French town of Rosnay. After an impressive career at the Paris Conservatory, where he studied with Ambroise Thomas, he won the coveted Prix de Rome.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.310.
- ^ Green & Thrall (1908), p.315.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.182.
- ^ a b c d Hinson (1993), p.79.
- ^ "Bartok", Classical.net.
- ^ Hinkle-Turner (2006), p.201.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.1458.
- ^ a b Gagné (2012), p.35.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.103.
- ^ Gerald R. Benjamin (2001). "Orrego-Salas, Juan (Antonio)". Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.20499.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.126.
- ^ Lightner, Helen (1991). Class Voice and the American Art Song: A Source Book and Anthology, p.172. Scarecrow. ISBN 978-0-8108-2381-5
- ^ Greene (1985), p.893.
- ^ Szweykowski, Zygmunt M. (2001). "Chybiński, Adolf". Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.05743. ISBN 9781561592630. Retrieved 26 August 2022 – via Oxford Music Online.
... while at the same time taking private composition lessons with Ludwig Thuille.
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(help) - ^ Randel (1996), p.452.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.109.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.159.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.275.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.955.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.143.
- ^ "The rich life of the musical crofter". The Herald. Scotland. 8 July 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
He trained with Frank Spedding, Hans Gal and Michael Tippett...
- ^ March, Ivan (November 2003). "Ridout Cello Concertos". gramophone.co.uk. Gramophone. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
...studied at the Royal College of Music under Gordon Jacob and Herbert Howells, and later privately with Michael Tippett.
- ^ Pfitzinger, Scott (2017). Composer Genealogies: A Compendium of Composers, Their Teachers, and Their Students. Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 541. ISBN 9781442272248. LCCN 2016049733.
- ^ Longley, Michael (1971). Causeway; the Arts in Ulster. Ireland: Arts Council of Northern Ireland. p. 146. ISBN 9780903203012. LCCN 72193632.
Raymond Warren has a special interest in opera presumably inspired by Michael Tippett with whom he studied.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.309.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.389.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.1483.
- ^ International Who's who in Classical Music. Vol. 25. Europa Publications Limited. 2009. p. 701. ISBN 9781857435139. ISSN 1740-0155. LCCN 2002200068.
Ros Marba, Antoni: Spanish conductor. b. 2 April 1937, Barcelona. Education: Barcelona Conservatory, studied with Eduard Toldra.
- ^ Rickards, Guy (31 July 2002). "Xavier Montsalvatge". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
Montsalvatge was born in Girona, in the north of Catalonia, and educated at Barcelona's municipal conservatory, where his teachers included Enrique Morera, Jaime Pahissa and Eduard Toldrà.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.230.
- ^ Temperley, Nicholas (2001). Pierson [Pearson], Henry Hugo [Hugh]. Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.21728. ISBN 9781561592630.
...also under Tomášek at Prague.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.220.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.277.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.699.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.192.
- ^ Arnold, Corliss Richard (1995). Organ Literature: Biographical Catalog. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9781461670254. LCCN 2021675298.
Alcaraz, Jordi... ...Org student of Montserrat Torrent, Helmut Rilling, Fernando Germani, J. Reinberger, Flor Peeters;
- ^ Mason (1917), p.262.
- ^ "Obiturary - Alfredo Antonini, 82". The New York Times. 5 November 1983. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
Mr. Antonini began his musical career as a teen-ager when he won a scholarship to the Royal Conservatory of Music in Milan. During his last year, he was an organist-pianist with La Scala Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.1318.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.977.
- ^ James (2014), p.735.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.754.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.140.
- ^ a b c d e f Kelsey, Chris. Lennie Tristano at AllMusic
- ^ "New Artists Records Biographies". New Artists Records. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ Kelsey, Chris. Connie Crothers at AllMusic
- ^ Hamad, Michael (17 December 2010). "Scola Tristano Duo At Bridge Street Live On Dec. 19". Hartford Advocate. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
- ^ "About Dave and the School of Jazz".
- ^ "Steve Vai: "Joe Satriani Shut Me Down—And It Was One of the Best Experiences"".
- ^ a b c d Giorgio Sanguinetti: The Art of Partimento. Oxford University Press, New York 2012, ISBN 978-0-19-539420-7, p.81
- ^ van Boer (2012), p.187.
- ^ a b van Boer (2012), p.515.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.783.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.237.
- ^ Little, W.A. (2010). Mendelssohn and the Organ. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 121. ISBN 9780199741830.
He had studied briefly with Daniel Gottlob Türk in Halle but was essentially self-taught.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.303.
- ^ "Birmingham Contemporary Music Group Appoints Charlotte Bray As BCMG/Sound And Music Apprentice Composer-In-Residence For 2009/10". Classical Source. 14 December 2009. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
At the Royal College of Music she gained distinction for her Master's degree as a scholar under Mark-Anthony Turnage.
- ^ "William Dougherty" (PDF). mariomerzprize.org. June 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
Principle Teachers: Kenneth Hesketh, 2010–2011; Mark-Anthony Turnage, 2011–2012.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.181.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.239.
- ^ Edwin Michael Richards, Kazuko Tanosaki; eds. (2008). Music of Japan Today, p.112. Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1-84718-562-4
- ^ Wyndham, Geoffrey L'Epine (1915), p.135.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.56.
- ^ Dinko Fabris Music in seventeenth-century Naples: Francesco Provenzale (1624–1704) p230 2007
- ^ Randel (1996), p.194.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.56.
- ^ a b Gagné (2012), p.80.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.1505.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.781.
- ^ Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.418.
- ^ Anderson, Martin (27 December 2006). "Galina Ustvolskaya (Obituary)". The Independent. London. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
She remained on the staff until 1975, the best-known of her own students being Boris Tishchenko.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.240.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.243.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.214.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.144.
- ^ "Vogler, Georg Joseph" in Grove Music Online.
- ^ "Bio", JasnaVeličković.com.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.927.
- ^ Don, Randel (1996). Richard Aaker Trythall, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674372993.
- ^ Greene (1985), p.1136.
- ^ Griffiths (2011), p.141.
- ^ a b c d e Gagné (2012), p.285.
- ^ Jones (2014), p.325.
- ^ Gagné (2012), p.171.
- ^ Jones (2014), p.631.
- ^ "An Interview with Composer Marc Wilkinson". Movie Music Italiano [sic]. 2007. Archived from the original on 30 November 2012.
- ^ Lewis, Uncle Dave. Nikolai Roslavets at AllMusic. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
- ^ a b c Hill, J. R., ed. (2010). A New History of Ireland Volume VII: Ireland, 1921 –84. Oxford University. p. unpaginated. ISBN 978-0-19-161559-7.
- ^ Fahn, Eric D.; Munarriz, Alberto J. (May 2017). "Program Notes" (PDF). oakvillechamber.org.
In 1922, she received a scholarship from the Royal College of Music in England where she had the opportunity to study with Ralph Vaughan Williams.
- ^ "Notations Fall 2015 by CMC Ontario Regional Director - Issuu". issuu.com. Canadian Music Centre. 22 November 2015. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
Calverley would go on to receive a scholarship and study composition with George Dyson and Ralph Vaughan Williams.
- ^ a b Randel (1996), p.306.
- ^ Humphreys, Maggie; Evans, Robert (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-7201-2330-2.
Won an organ scholarship to Mercers' School, and, at the age of 14, a Sir John Goss scholarship to the Royal College of Music, where he studied composition with Ralph Vaughan Williams.
- ^ Hinson (1993), p.244.
- ^ a b Randel (1996), p.738.
- ^ a b Jones (2014), p.730.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.116.
- ^ a b Griliches, Diane Asséo (2008). Teaching Musicians: A Photographer's View. Bunker Hill. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-59373-060-4.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.487.
- ^ "Elvina Pearce". Clavier Companion. The Frances Clark Center for Keyboard Pedagogy. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
- ^ Randel (1996), p.874.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.206.
- ^ a b c Randel (1996), p.273.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.28.
- ^ a b Greene (1985), p.846.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.94.
- ^ a b 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.
- ^ Mason (1917), p.291.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.298.
- ^ a b Mason (1917), p.252.
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They met at the Royal College of Music where Kevin was studying piano/composition with Peter Wallfisch and Joseph Horowitz...
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He later studied at the Vienna Music Academy, and at the RCM from 1987 to 1989 with Peter Wallfisch.
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...He entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in October 1836; ...and took lessons in counterpoint from T.A. Walmisley.
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Novello was trained and worked within the Catholic embassy chapels, studying organ with Samuel Webbe at the Portuguese Chapel...
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Hans Swarowsky is Viennese, although he was born in Budapest. He studied musical theory with Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern and conducting with Richard Strauss...
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Her father decided to take her to a young teacher named Rowsby Woof, who had been a pupil of Hans Wesley at the Royal Academy of Music.
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Five years later she won an open scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, studying with Cuthbert Whitemore;
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...and studied under Parratt; his composition teachers were Charles Wood and Walford Davies...
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...in January, 1905, went to the Royal College of Music, studying under Parratt, Bridge, Stanford, Charles Wood, and Marmaduke Barton,...
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ALWYN, William (1905-1985). Composer, flautist, painter and writer. Entered the RAM at the age of fifteen, studied flute with Daniel Wood and composition with John B. McEwen.
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His principal study would be Flute under Daniel S. Wood (brother of the composer Haydn Wood), with Piano as his second subject under Edward Morton and subsequently, Leo Livins.
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At RAM, she studied violin with Hans Wesseley and Rowsby Woof, and counterpoint with J B McEwen.
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William H. Sherwood 1854-1911...Among his many teachers were Kullak, Weitzmann, Wüerst, Deppe, Richter, Karl Doppler, Scotson Clark...
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Anna Yesipova, concert pianist and professor of St Petersburg Conservatoire, where Yudina was her pupil for just over a year.
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