Lifetime Honors: National Medal Of Arts Antoine Fats Domino rock n roll pianist, singer Ramblin Jack Elliott -folk singer, songwriter Leopold adler - preservationist, civic leader http://www.nea.gov/honors/medals/medalists_year.html
Lifetime Honors: National Medal Of Arts adler, Leopold preservationist, civic leader (1989) Albanese, Licia - operasinger (1995) Horowitz, Vladimir - pianist (1989 - posthumous award) http://www.nea.gov/honors/medals/medalists_alpha.html
CNN.com - Entertainment - Showbuzz - February 18, 2000 For the occasion, ma offered tunes from a cello concerto that composer LeonKirchner wrote cellist Sharon Robinson, and pianist Joseph Kalichstein. http://archives.cnn.com/2000/SHOWBIZ/News/02/18/showbuzz/
Musical Calendar For May 15 Another pianist, Dick Katz, put his finger on the style He has a vast repertoireof the 1951 Jonathan Richman, vocals/guitar, b. Boston, ma, USA. http://nfo.net/calendar/may15.htm
Musical Calendar For February 10 February 10. BIRTHDAYS 1914 Larry adler, Harmonica, b. Baltimore, MD, USA. d.Aug. 6, 2001. 1924 Joseph Servello, Trombone, b Roxbury, ma, USA. d. http://nfo.net/calendar/feb10.htm
National Council On The Humanities: Council Members A composer and pianist, Hertz is the cofounder of the Center for ComparativeArts at He has BA, ma and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Virginia. http://www.neh.gov/whoweare/council.html
Release Date July 31, 2001 Contact Deb Hammacher, Assistant Philip Thomson, Canadian pianist and faculty member at the University of Akron . He has collaborated with YoYo ma, Steven Isserlis and members of the http://www.emory.edu/WELCOME/journcontents/releases/beetsonata.html
Extractions: Contact: Deb Hammacher, Assistant Director, 404-727-0644, or dhammac@emory.edu Emory Presents Beethoven's Complete Sonatas For Piano This Season Music at Emory and the Emory Chamber Music Society of Atlanta will present the entire cycle of Beethoven's 32 piano sonatas in eight recitals by noted pianists from around the world. Eight pianists will divide the set, each performing four sonatas, between Oct. 5, 2001 and April 19, 2002 in Emory's Performing Arts Studio. General admission tickets are $15 each or $90 for the series of eight concerts. For information or to order tickets, call the Arts at Emory box office at 404-727-5050 or send e-mail to boxoffice@emory.edu. Created over the span of his lifetime (1770-1827), Beethoven's sonatas for piano include some of his earliest and some of his last works. "The 32 pieces express the joy and suffering, sensuality and spirituality that make Beethoven one of the most enduring and popular composers of all time," says series organizer William Ransom, the Mary Emerson Professor of Music and artistic director of the Emory Chamber Music Society. Having eight different artists perform the cycle will provide different perspectives on the body of music, says Ransom. "This is one of the most exciting projects I have been involved in, and I am thrilled to be able to put it together for Atlanta."
Past Events - 2004-2005 Season pianist and scholar Robert Levin brings the great composer to life in these concerts Ten Strings will perform a program of adler, Schubert, and Purcell. http://www.nyvs.org/otherevents/other200405.html
Sony Classical - News YoYo ma Philip Glass have collaborated for the first time in creating the musical The pianist Original Motion Picture Soundtrack November 26 http://www.sonyclassical.com/newsletter/volume5/clnotes020539.html
Forums > It Was The Day Of My Grade 1 Exam but then the pianist realised something was stuck in the piano so he decided I ma Soprano. And with that she wandered off into newspaper recycling http://forums.abrsm.org/lofiversion/index.php/t7622.html
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra > About The BSO > BSO History concertos of George Gershwin and Maurice Ravel, featuring pianist Hélène Grimaud; PETER HERMAN adler, 1959, 1968. SERGIU COMISSIONA, 1969, 1984 http://www.baltimoresymphony.org/about/bsohistory.asp
Extractions: The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra is internationally recognized as having achieved a preeminent place among the world's most important orchestras. Acclaimed for its uncompromising pursuit of artistic excellence, the Baltimore Symphony has attracted a devoted national and international following while maintaining deep bonds throughout the Maryland community through innovative education and community outreach initiatives. In October 1997, Yuri Temirkanov accepted the position as the Orchestra's eleventh Music Director. Regarded on every continent as among the most talented conductors of his generation, Maestro Temirkanov is also the Music Director and Chief Conductor of Russia's legendary St. Petersburg Philharmonic, Principal Guest Conductor of the Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and Conductor Laureate of London's Royal Philharmonic. Beginning with the Inaugural season in 2000, the Temirkanov-BSO partnership has captured the imaginations of both audiences and critics alike. Major newspapers such as the
Cabrillo Festival Of Contemporary Music - Offline Aspen Music Festival to be performed by YoYo ma, in honor of David Zinman s70th birthday; In 1998, Puts appeared as pianist at Weill Recital Hall, http://www.cabrillomusic.org/festival/kevin-puts-2005.html
Matthew Van Brink - Tritone Press & Tenuto Publications MATTHEW VAN BRINK is an American composer and pianist born in 1978 and currently with David Dzubay, Samuel adler, and Don Freund at Indiana University, http://www.tritone-tenuto.com/vanbrink.htm
Extractions: ordering information MATTHEW VAN BRINK is an American composer and pianist born in 1978 and currently living in Boston, completing a DMA in composition at Boston University. He has studied composition with Bruce Adolphe at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, with David Dzubay, Samuel Adler, and Don Freund at Indiana University, and with John Harbison and Lukas Foss at Boston University. Piano studies were with Jeremy Denk and Evelyn Brancart at Indiana University. As a performer, Van Brink is foremost a pianist, and he has also played accordion in opera and chamber music and has conducted performances of his own and his colleagues' compositions. Van Brink instructs undergraduate ear training courses at Boston University, teaches keyboard harmony at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and serves this year as Composer-in-Residence for Collage New Music Ensemble. Van Brink's recent compositions include music for dance and film as well as chamber music for the concert setting. Van Brink composed music for "Running at the Sunshine," a unique work for dance and spoken word, in collaboration with choreographer Judith Chaffee and writer Jesse Jarnow. In his jazz score to Patrick Ford's short film "Francine St Claire's Mail," influences from Van Brink's jazz compositions and jazz piano playing, usually embedded or just hinted-at in his concert music, are manifest in full force. Other recent pieces include the trio
Prof. Friedman Laurie Friedmanadler is Assistant Professor of Clarinet studies at Hofstra She received her ma degree from Brooklyn College, during which she was http://www.hofstra.edu/Academics/HCLAS/Music/Music_friedman.cfm
Extractions: About Hofstra Academic Calendars Apply Online Ask Us Campus Map Commencement Computing Courses Directions E-mail Events Faculty Grades Hofstra Headlines Hofstra Online January Session Libraries Registration See Hofstra Summer Tuition-Fees Viewbook Faculty Large Ensembles Resident Professional Ensembles Current Students Department Calendar ... Music
Strad Magazine Profile Of Aaron Rosand, Virtuoso Violinist At twelve, with the support of the Chicago philanthropist, Max adler, Rosand s first wife, the late pianist Eileen Flissler, set in motion perhaps his http://aaronrosand.com/articlestrad1997.htm
Extractions: dqmcodebase = "script/" //script folder location At 70, Aaron Rosand is busier than ever. But if his reluctance to conform has affected his career, he doesn't care, he tells Dennis Rooney. (Reprinted with Permission from Strad Magazine, November 1997 'I've always been something of a rebel,' Aaron Rosand says to me as he recalls the near half-century since his debut in New York's Town Hall. 'I never thought of music as a business, living in a fantasy world where music is concerned. I was always very proud and if I couldn't do it on my own I didn't want to do it. I do have a certain intolerance for incompetence, preferring to live in my own ivory tower rather than be nice to people who are not worth the effort,' he continues, 'I haven't played the social game or attempted to ingratiate myself with people in power. Some might say this has cost me, but I don't think so. I live very well, and those who appreciate what I have to say and do make my career gratifying.' Cicadas provide a shrill counterpoint to our conversation on a mild August afternoon as we sit on a shady patio at the rear of Rosand's Connecticut home, where he lives with his wife, Monica Woo, in a rambling yet cosy house that is filled with mementos, each one possessing a unique resonance of the people, places and events that fill a lifetime.
History Resources For Eastman School Of Music Samuel adler was professor of composition at the Eastman School of Music from1966 to Ingelow was a silent movie pianist in Livonia and worked as church http://www.rochester.edu/Eastman/sibley/specialc/esmhistory.php
Extractions: Last updated July 1998 by S.M. Honea Materials relating to the history of the Eastman School of Music reside in a variety of resources in Watanabe Special Collections and the general collections of Sibley Music Library. These include individual collections, organizational collections, sub-collections, files, and cataloged materials. The Eastman School of Music Archives, a part of Watanabe Special Collections, also possesses many departmental and administrative papers relating to the operations of the School, but these are restricted files and have not been included here. Individual and organization Sub-collections and files are somewhat loose designations and refer to materials accumulated within and by the Sibley Music Library and according to some organizing principle. These are often of a historical or documentary nature, but may also be relatively large sub-divisions of the cataloged collections. Files in particular are usually loose cumulations of individual miscellaneous items sharing some common characteristic or purpose. A bibliography of cataloged works relating to the history of the School has been appended. The items may be found in the collections of Sibley Library.
Rochester Review University Of Rochester pianist Curtis Stotlar presented an allFrench benefit recital for the AllianceFrancaise The CD contains all commissions, including one from Sam adler. http://www.rochester.edu/pr/Review/V64N2/cn-east.html
Extractions: - Select a Section - The College Admission to the College Athletics Eastman School of Music School of Medicine and Dentistry School of Nursing Simon School Warner School About Us Graduate Studies Information Technology Services Libraries Medical Center Memorial Art Gallery Research Strong Health System Working at the University Directory Index Contact University Events Calendar News Giving Graduate Eastman Medicine Nursing In Memoriam Class Acts Donald Stauffer '42 (MM) was the commander of the U.S. Navy Band and has received more academic credentials than any other U.S. military band conductor. He was instrumental in recruiting the band's first female players and formed several Navy Band Specialty Units. Donald Stauffer (MM) (see '41). The first Raymond Shiner Jazz Award, in honor of woodwind studio musician Shiner, who died in 1999, was presented to Brian Wilkins, a senior at Nazareth College. The prize of $400 is intended to help facilitate private study in jazz. Mary Jeanne van Appledorn '50 (MM), '66 (PhD) sends an update. She received her 22nd consecutive American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) Award on June 10, 2001. Her Rhapsody for violin and orchestra had its world premiere under the direction of Charles Rex, associate concertmaster for the New York Philharmonic, November 18 and 19, 2000, in Reading, Pa. She also completed her
Encyclopedia Of Chicago Philanthropist; founded adler Planetarium; vice president of Sears, Jazz musician; singer; pianist; composer; played in King Oliver s Band. http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/browse/bioA.html
Extractions: Abbott, Edith b Sept. 26, 1876, Grand Island, NE; d July 28, 1957, Grand Island, NE. Social reformer; dean of School of Social Service Administration, Univ. of Chicago. Abbott, Grace b Nov. 17, 1878, Grand Island, NE; d June 19, 1939, Chicago. Social worker; worked at Hull House; director of U.S. Children's Bureau. Abbott, Merriel b Apr. 27, 1893, Chicago; d Nov. 6, 1977, Chicago. Dance teacher; troupe performed at Palmer House for 24 years. Abbott, Robert Sengstacke b Nov. 28, 1868, St. Simons Island, GA; d Feb. 29, 1940, Chicago. Newspaper publisher; founded Chicago Defender. Abbott, Wallace Calvin b Oct. 12, 1857, Bridgewater, VT; d July 4, 1921, Chicago, IL. Physician; drug manufacturer; founded Abbott Laboratories. Abercrombie, Gertrude b Feb. 17, 1909, Austin, TX; d July 1977, Chicago. Painter; associated with Chicago's surrealist school. Abner, Ewart, b May 11, 1923, Chicago; d Dec. 27, 1997, Los Angeles, CA. Record executive; president of Vee-Jay Records and Motown Records. b Apr. 28, 1906, Chicago; d May 27, 1992, Chicago.
Extractions: Family Composer, performer, sound architect, writer, lecturer, broadcaster and interactive designer, was born in Ayrshire, 1943. He co-wrote Pink Floyd's Atom Heart Mother [EMI CD] and made Music From The Body [EMI CD] with Roger Waters . After his first solo album A Raise Of Eyebrows [Transatlantic 1967], he became one of the first one-man record companies with As He Stands Patruns and Right Through . His first book of poems and stories Fallables appeared in 1974. At Abbey Road with his Atom Heart Mother score CDs include HEADSCOPE's Funny Frown (1991) and Bluefuse CHERRY RED's Hystery (1994) and CLEOPATRA's (LA) Land Of Mist June 1995. SEE FOR MILES reissued his first 2 albums on CD in 1995. His Tune Tube ,a giant interactive walk-through tube in sound and light 'played' from the inside by individuals' body-movements, was a huge success at The Art Machine exhibition for 'Glasgow 1990' ("it takes the prize": The Times). In the Tune Tube For Expo 70 (Osaka Japan), he made a large multi-source sound-work in the British Pavilion. He and his wife Frances designed and installed
HACU Faculty Bios - Hampshire College - Amherst, MA She studied Authentic Movement with Janet adler and Edith Sullwold in the maryStarks Biography Rebecca (Becky) Miller, received an ma from Wesleyan http://www.hampshire.edu/cms/index.php?id=892