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... Anbruch was intended as a musical corollary to a journal entitled Der Anbruch. Flugblätter aus der Zeit (A New Day: Dispatches from the Age), ed. Otto Schneider and Ludwig Ullmann (Vienna, 4 vols, 1917-22). The latter promoted expressionist art, with ...
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... Vienna's leading liberal daily newspaper, founded by Max Friedländer in 1864. The paper appeared from September 1, 1864 until January 31, 1939. It had a distinguished array of contributors, was modern in its style of journalism and technology, and ...
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... Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, also Das Reich and Signal. After the war the Ullstein family re-established the company in Vienna, Berlin, and Frankfurt; it was purchased by Axel Springer in the 1960s, and is now (2011) part of the Bonnier group. Ullstein and ...
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... collaboration with Otto Erich Deutsch, began work on a revised edition of the score of Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony (the autograph manuscript of which was in the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna). In his diary, Schenker recalls one session with ...
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... to Śliwiński or Śliwiński-Effenberger. He studied in Berlin and Prague, worked as a journalist, then gained his doctorate with a dissertation on Nikolaus Lenau and music (1908). Between 1908 and 1913, he worked in libraries in Prague and Vienna. He ...
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... 1887--and made a number of commercial recordings. He wrote two books on piano playing and left many compositions, under the pseudonym Michael Dvorsky. He is not to be confused with the Josef Hofmann[link] (1865–1927) who taught at the Vienna Akademie ...
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... Crude Oil Association (Iriag) in the 1920s. On May 22, 1930 he is recorded as a patient at the Oskar Mautner Waldsanatorium in Perchtoldsdorf, southwest of Vienna, where he is described as “Vice-Minister, Honorary Attaché of the Polish legation.” Where ...
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... Swiss musicologist and music theorist of Austrian birth. Career and Output Kurth studied music history at Vienna University under Guido Adler, completing his doctorate in 1908 with a dissertation on Gluck's operatic style. After a period as a ...
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... having resumed lessons in the October. A Marianne Leibl (1871–1942) was transported from Vienna to Theresienstadt (Terezín) (transport IV/4, no. 502) and from there to Treblinka on September 21, 1942 (Bp, no. 1551), where she perished. No identity between ...
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... of Vienna; by 1914 this company had 1,300 employees, by 1920 2,000 employees and 100 branches, was aryanized in 1938 but continues into the 21st century. Fritz Mendl and Schenker Schenker knew Fritz Mendl through his sister Mrs. Sofie Deutsch, who was ...