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... acquired the small hotel Rössle in Galtür, which they managed successfully thereafter. The couple had four children: Adolf, Franz, Angela, and Ida. In the early 1920s, the family acquired another small hotel, the Alpenhaus Fluchthorn, the management of ...
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... 1905 Emerenzia acquired and managed the Gasthaus Rössle in Galtür. In the early 1920s, the family acquired the Alpenhaus Fluchthorn, the management of which Adolf Türtscher took on, while the Gasthaus Rössle was transferred to Franz Anton. Emerenzia ...
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... Wealthy Jewish Viennese family, financial supporters of Schenker between the 1890s and 1909. The Eißler family was involved in the timber business. Josias Eißler & Söhne dealt in wood preservation, and was based at Vienna I, Elisabethstraße 22 ...
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... in Strauss's Ariadne auf Naxos. She also sang Tosca and Sieglinde. She produced many gramophone recordings. Kurz and Schenker Schenker did not review her work during the 1890s, and commented on her in his diary sourly on January 27, 1907: "coloratura ...
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... Pupil of Schenker’s from October 1918 to Summer 1922. Miss Schaab approached Schenker first on September 3, 1918, starting lessons at the beginning of the teaching year 1918/19 with three lessons a month, reducing in later years to two lessons a ...
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... ) between 1926 and 1939. The quartet toured the USA, Canada and Mexico in 1928 at the invitation of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, and moved to the USA in the 1930s. Molnar became the principal violist of the San Francisco Symphony under Pierre Monteux in 1944 ...
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... Austrian industrialist, and a major Schenker benefactor in the early 1930s. Paul Khuner was the son of Gottfried Friedrich Khuner (1854–1912) who, together with his father Emanuel Mendel Khuner (1829–85) founded a company that manufactured cooking ...
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... -tone method, include works for the stage, orchestra, chamber music and solo works. Berger audited Hans Weisse's "Seminar in the Structure of Music" in the early 1930s at Columbia University. ...
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... the couple, three of whom died at an early age. Nothing is known of Nina’s life. It is possible that she lived latterly with her brother Eduard at Wallgasse 26 in the sixth district (Mariahilf). She died unmarried at the age of 33 after a long illness ...
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... Coffee house at Universitätsstraße 3, Vienna I, close to Vienna University and the Votivkirche, frequented mostly by Jews, and associated in the 1930s with performances of music by Schoenberg, Webern, Krenek, and others. Schenker visited it with ...