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... Viennese society for the promotion of new music through performance, active 1904‒05. The Vereinigung The Society was launched in Vienna by Arnold Schoenberg and Alexander von Zemlinsky in 1904, with Gustav Mahler as its honorary president and Alban ...
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... successful until 1945, including radio performances (Wiener Abende). In his diary, Schenker recorded hearing the Tautenhayn Quartet on the Vienna Radio, after he and Jeanette acquired a radio set in October 1924 following the setting up of RAVAG (Radio ...
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... Independent professional orchestra in Vienna 1907‒32, revived after World War Two. The Tonkünstler Orchestra was established with 83 musicians in 1907 by Oskar Nedbal as a free-standing professional orchestra dedicated to concert performance (as ...
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... and Schenker Schenker attended numerous VPO concerts during his days as a concert reviewer in the 1890s and throughout the remainder of his career, and from 1924 onward by listening to its concerts via Radio Wien, commenting on its performances in his ...
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... last saw each other, we were entrusted by Mr Hertzka of UE with drafting some paragraphs for the statutes of an organization of creative and performing artists.” Some indication of the purpose of the organization can be gained from his remark: "Such an ...
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... Union concerts, and reported them in his diary, beginning the entry with the standard abbreviation "K.-V." and providing a brief critique of the performance and works. Schenker also belonged to a circle of friends many of whom were active in the Concert ...
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... 13th Street. Its name became Mannes School of Music, forming part of the College of Performing Arts within The New School. Its library became the Performing Arts Library (the name Scherman Library then being dropped), and its archives became part of ...
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... ; according to Moskovitz "he was recruited to serve as the organization's pianist." Songs by both Zemlinsky and Schoenberg were performed at early concerts sponsored by the Society, and a review of the Society's inaugural event on November 29, 1903 praised ...
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... performance in Berlin in November of that year. Nine items of correspondence from Weinberger to Schenker survive: three undated calling cards as OJ 15/12, [1]‒[3] probably from the late 1890s; five letters with the Weinberger letterhead as OJ 15/12, [5] from ...
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... ’s response (OJ 10/3, [174], July 21, 1932) lists the topics Schenker had in mind, “Urlinie, thoroughbass, manuscript study, and performance”– questioned by Deutsch as perhaps too wide-ranging – and suggests newspapers and journals in which advertisements for ...