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... Association of musical amateurs, of central importance to the musical life of Vienna since the early 19th century. The Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde was founded in 1812 as an association of noble and middle-class music amateurs in Vienna. It devoted ...
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... Viennese music retailer and publishing house, founded by Leopold Buchholz in 1870 as Buchholz und Diebel, its address from 1873 being Vienna I, Bräunerstraße 2, and from 1893 Graben 21 and 14 (corner of Bräunerstraße); in 1873 the retailing and hire ...
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... Association founded in Germany in 1909 as a type of trade union for authors. The parent organization, the Schutzverband deutscher Schriftsteller (SDS), first tried to establish a Vienna branch in 1916 with Engelbert Pernerstorfer as chairman. Among ...
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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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... Public radio company established in February 1924. It was a joint venture of the Austrian federal government, the City of Vienna, and several banks. Its radio transmissions began on October 1, 1924, and featured classical music, literature, and ...
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... studied with Weisse in Vienna in 1930‒32 and taught at Columbia until 1968 (when he joined the music theory faculty at SUNY Binghamton). Patricia Carpenter, a student of Arnold Schoenberg, received her PhD in music theory from Columbia in 1972, and as a ...
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... Dutch composer and editor. Brandts-Buys studied at the Raff Conservatory in Frankfurt, and in 1893 settled in Vienna, where after 1901 he worked for Universal Edition preparing piano arrangements. As a composer, he was influenced by Brahms and Grieg ...
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... German pianist and teacher active in Berlin. Career Summary Breithaupt studied at the Leipzig Conservatory (Paul, Jadassohn, Teichmüller), and musicology at Leipzig University (Riemann, Kretzschmar). He worked in Dresden and Vienna as a writer on ...
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... Russian concert pianist and piano teacher, pupil of Anton Rubinstein. From 1901 to 1915 De Conne taught in the piano Ausbildungsklasse at the Akademie für Musik und darstellende Kunst (=Vienna Conservatory--but according to Schenker (OJ 8/3, [67 ...
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... Schenker had worked in 1903–04 and had himself performed in Vienna in 1904. Again in 1910 Schenker ordered a complimentary copy of his edition of J. S. Bach’s Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue to be sent to her (WSLB 66/67, October 19, 1910). Nothing more is ...