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61. Joys And Sorrows, Chapter Seven
It was short after my debut with Lamoureux that I came to know harold bauer.He was then twentysix and already widely known as a pianist.
http://www.celloheaven.com/joys/chap7.htm
Chapter Seven...Family of Man
Within a few years after I moved to Paris, I was to become familiar with a score of foreign lands. In my heart Catalonia remained my home, but I came to feel at home in St. Petersburg and Sao Paulo, Philadelphia and Budapest, London, Venice, Stockholm, Buenos Aires. Traveling then was not of course what it is today. To fly over the Atlantic now takes a few hours; my crossing with Emma Nevada and Leon Moreau took eighteen days. I traveled tens of thousands of miles. The years became a kaleidoscope of new places, new acquaintances, new impressions. I lost track of the number of concerts I gave. I do know it was often around two hundred and fifty a year. Sometimes when I was traveling in countries where cities were close together, I'd give over thirty concerts a month-on Sundays I would often have one concert in the afternoon and another in the evening. It was a demanding schedule. I never missed an engagement. I had a strong constitution, but even so I sometimes felt exhausted. Once, in Berlin, I fainted in the middle of a performance, but after a short rest I finished the concert. I must say it was not an ideal form of existence. I have never liked packing and unpacking. Even for a young man, full of energy and curiosity, the excitement of travel wears off; and to spend a night here, a weekend there, and to hurry on-to have to rush to catch trains after concerts when your clothing is still drenched with perspiration, and to travel all night and have a rehearsal the following morning-becomes fatiguing and frustrating. Then too there was the sadness of leaving newfound friends. Regardless of how successful my concert tours were, I was always glad when they were over and I returned to Paris. I was happiest of all when summer came-then I could visit Catalonia and see my mother and father.

62. Ampcast.com: Sergio Fiorentino, Pianist (1927 - 1998)
Franck s beautiful organpiece in harold bauer s transcription for piano, recorded by Fiorentino in...... Sergio Fiorentino, pianist (1927 1998). Song
http://www.ampcast.com/music/25146/music.php

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63. 1085-1086 (Nordisk Familjebok / Uggleupplagan. 2. Armatoler - Bergsund)
bauer baVe, harold, engelsk pianist, f. 1873 i London, debuterade vid tioårs ålder som violinist och började först sent att spela piano.
http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/nfbb/0579.html
Nordisk familjebok Uggleupplagan. 2. Armatoler - Bergsund
(1904) Tema: Reference
Table of Contents / Innehåll
Project Runeberg Catalog ... Print (PDF) On this page / på denna sida - Bauditz ...
Below is the raw OCR text from the above scanned image. Do you see an error? Proofread the page now!
Här nedan syns maskintolkade texten från faksimilbilden ovan. Ser du något fel? Korrekturläs sidan nu!
This page has never been proofread. / Denna sida har aldrig korrekturlästs.
Project Runeberg, Tue May 25 17:17:19 2004 (aronsson)
http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/nfbb/0579.html

64. PROF'S:The Late Greats I
And, in his own case, the musician and the pianist were completely fused thoughthe pianist remained always the servant of the musician harold bauer (1873-1951
http://w3.gwis.com/~fschoett/great.htm
SOLO PIANISTS
"Artur, you will never be a pianist. You are a musician." These prophetic words were uttered by the legendary early 20th century teacher, Theodor Leschetizky, to his young student, Artur Schnabel. "In later years, Schnabel took special delight in repeating Leschetizky's prophecy as a paradox, because he himself could never make any distinction between pianist and musician, even for his pupils. And, in his own case, the musician and the pianist were completely fused - though the pianist remained always the servant of the musician."*
Artur Schnabel: a biography.
Wilhelm Backhaus (1884-1969)
SIMON BARERE (1896-1951)
Harold Bauer (1873-1951)
ALEXANDER BRAILOWSKY (1896-1976)
ROBERT CASADESUS (1899-1972)
Alfred Cortot (1877-1962)
Samuel Feinberg (1890-1962)
Edwin Fischer (1886-1960)
Karl Friedberg (1872-1955) Ignaz Friedman (1882-1948) Ossip Gabrilowitsch (1878-1936) The Hands of RUDOLPH GANZ (1877-1972) WALTER GIESEKING (1895-1956) LEOPOLD GODOWSKY (1870-1938) Percy Grainger (1882-1961) DAME MYRA HESS (1895-1965) Josef Hofmann (1876-1957) Wilhelm Kempff (1895-1991) Guiomar Novaes (1896-1979) Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1860-1941) Egon Petri (1881-1962) Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943) ARTHUR RUBINSTEIN ARTUR SCHNABEL (1882-1951) CLAUDIO ARRAU Gina Bachauer (1913-1976) FELICJA BLUMENTAL (1911-1991) Jorge Bolet (1914-1990) SHURA CHERKASSKY (1911-1995) Clifford Curzon (1907-1982) Youri Egorov RUDOLPH FIRKUSNY (1912-1994) Annie Fischer (1914-1995) Malcolm Frager (1935-1991) Emil Gilels Glen Gould VLADIMIR HOROWITZ William Kapell Julius Katchen (1926-1969)

65. Casals Festival - Pablo Casals Biography
Tours throughout his native Spain with pianist harold bauer. 1901,Tours the United States of America. 1903, Tours South America.
http://www.festcasalspr.gobierno.pr/casals.html
Chronology
Offers his first violin recital in El Vendrell. This recital caused great discomforts on the promising musician. Due to his habit of performing with his eyes closed. his friends jokingly called him "the blind musician". This infuriated him to the extent that he swore to abandon playing the violin and take up another instrument. Discovers the cello. Moves to Barcelona to continue his music studies. His first cello recital is held in Barcelona. Travels to Paris. Begins performing as second cellist with the orchestra of the Follies Marigny Theatre. Travels to Portugal invited by King Carlos and Queen Amelia to perform a recital at the Royal Palace in Lisbon. Returns to Paris and appears as soloist with the Maestro Lamoureux Orchestra. Receives an invitation from Queen Victoria to offer a concert at the Crystal Palace in London. Tours throughout his native Spain with pianist Harold Bauer. Tours the United States of America. Tours South America. Is invited by President Theodore Roosevelt to give a recital at the White House in Washington, D.C. Travels to Russia.

66. Free Music Download, MP3 Music, Music Chat, Music Video, Music CD, ARTISTdirect
group (consisting of the pianist/leader, altoist Lee Konitz, Marsh on tenor, guitaristBilly bauer, bassist Arnold Fishkin, and either harold Granowsky or
http://www.artistdirect.com/store/artist/album/0,,235945,00.html
Subscribe Help Artist Album Song Tour Dates Movie Title Movie Cast/Crew Record Label Radio Musician Resource Retail Outlet Magazine Meta Site Venue Festival Promoter/Agent Ticket Seller Featured Artist Merch *NSYNC ...Trail of Dead A New Found Glory A.F.I. Abandoned Pools AC/DC Adema ADIO Clothing Aerosmith Alanis Morissette Alice Cooper Alien Ant Farm Alkaline Trio Allman Brothers Band Andrew W.K. Anthrax At the Drive-In Ataris Atticus Clothing Audioslave Avril Lavigne Backstreet Boys Bad Religion Barry Manilow Beach Boys Beastie Boys Beatles Ben Sherman Biohazard Black Sabbath blink-182 Blood Brothers Blues Traveler Blur Bob Dylan Bob Marley Britney Spears Bush Calling Chemical Brothers Cher Chevelle CKY Coal Chamber Cold Cradle of Filth Custom Cypress Hill Danzig Dave Matthews Dead Kennedys Def Leppard Default Deftones Descendents Dickies Disturbed Don McLean Donnas Doors Dropkick Murphys Drowning Pool EchoBrain Elvis Presley Eminem Eric Clapton Everclear Fear Factory Fender Filter Finch Foo Fighters Frank Sinatra Garbage Gene Gibson Godsmack Goldfinger Good Charlotte Grateful Dead Gravity Kills Green Day Green Lantern Guttermouth Hives Hole Hoobastank Hot Water Music Hurley Clothing Incubus Insane Clown Posse Iron Maiden Janet Jackson Janis Joplin Jawbreaker Jimi Hendrix Jimmy Eat World Jon Brion Judas Priest Jurassic 5 Kid Rock Kiss Kittie Korn Led Zeppelin Less Than Jake Limp Bizkit Linkin Park Lisa Germano Live Lostprophets Lou Reed LunaticWorks Lynyrd Skynyrd Macbeth Shoe Company Marc Anthony Marilyn Manson MC Lyte Megadeth Melissa Etheridge mellowdrone Mest Metallica Midtown Mighty Mighty Bosstones Miles Davis

67. Introduction
of the growing personality cult of the solo pianist as a Ossip Gabrilowitsch, JosefLhevinne, Leopold Godowsky, Mischa Levitsky, harold bauer, Egon Petri
http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/intro.htm
Introduction: On the Usefulness of Archival Sound Recordings in Performance Practice Study
That the study of performance practice per se is important to the study of music and its creators and performers cannot be doubted. Further, an organized investigation into the historical aspects of performance practicei.e., performance standards and options within a particular milieu during a set time periodcan offer understanding to the nature of the music and its aesthetics in a manner ranging from merely noteworthy through useful to indispensable. Certainly many factors have influenced changes in performance practice from the middle of the nineteenth century to the present date. In terms of orchestral performance, the most influential factors must include the following: the existence of fully-professional orchestras, standing bodies with set personnel and planned schedules of rehearsal, performance, broadcast and recording, thus affording the development of technique and ensemble; the advent of virtuoso perfectionist conductors, beginning (for the purposes of this study) with the much-beleaguered Berlioz and stretching through such This last circumstancethat of the technical advancement as heavy influence upon performance practicecannot be sufficiently stressed. It is tritely remarked that the advent of broadcast and of recordings has brought music closer to a larger audience than has ever existed previously in human history; the depth of this influence becomes almost unfathomable whenever it is casually remarked, for example, that a single televised performance of a particular opera has been seen (and may continue to be seen, by recording and repeated playing or broadcast) by more people than had ever seen that opera in live performance up to that time.

68. CMR MIDI Spotlight
She also had the annoying habit of making a big deal of the fact that she was a pupilof harold bauer. bauer was a fine pianist and a very fine musician, but
http://www.classicalmidiresource.com/site/spotlite/lloyd.html
The CMR Spotlight
Gary Lloyd
Picture of Gary, along with a shot of his large reach Gary D. Lloyd was born October 3rd, 1948 in a small town outside of Poughkeepsie, New York. As a child, he lived within easy walking distance of his grandparents home. As fate would have it, his grandmother was an accomplished piano instructor, and as a result, became his first and best teacher. According to his family, Gary's musical talents began showing themselves early on. Not only could he sing almost as soon as he could talk, but he also sang perfectly on key. He was blessed with what is commonly called ‘perfect pitch’, or the ability to discern and identify notes precisely as they are heard, without assistance from any other source. This talent ran so deeply that he was able to pass the final exam for "sight-singing" before even starting the first class. In doing so, he was exempted from the entire course. For those of you unfamiliar with the term "sight-singing", it describes how well and accurately an individual performs a piece of music, having never see the manuscript or score for it beforehand. "We had a recording of the Tchaikovsky Bb Minor Piano Concerto, but when a family friend gave me the famous recording by Horowitz and Toscannini, I threw the other recording in the garbage. When Van Cliburn became a national hero, and most people went nuts over his Tchaikovsky Concerto recording, people gave me strange looks when I said it was boring in comparison to Horowitz’s recording."

69. WCLV - 12/07 - Sunday
composer 1944 (59) Daniel Chorzempa American organist, harpsichordist, pianist,composer 12 419169 CD) 1922 Cesar Franck (arr harold bauer) Prelude, Fugue
http://www.wclv.com/skin/blurb.php?sectionId=176&contentId=33401

70. Mlist_log0307: The New York Times: "Harold C. Schonberg, 8
Hofmann, somehow, made every other pianist sound thick harold Charles Schonberg wasborn in Washington Heights studied with the composer Marion bauer and wrote
http://listproc.ucdavis.edu/archives/mlist/log0307/0009.html
The New York Times: "Harold C. Schonberg, 87, Dies; Won Pulitzer Prize as Music Critic for The Times"
From: Paul Moor ( Texas-Paule@t-online.de
Date: Sun Jul 27 2003 - 03:40:34 PDT
  • Next message: Howard Weiner: "musical hermeneutics?" [This article from NYTimes.com has been sent to you by
    texas-paule@t-online.de

    Harold C. Schonberg, 87, Dies; Won Pulitzer Prize as Music Critic for The
    Times
    July 27, 2003
    By ALLAN KOZINN
    Harold C. Schonberg, the ubiquitous and authoritative chief music
    critic of The New York Times from 1960 to 1980, whose reviews and essays
    influenced and chronicled vast changes in the world of opera and classical
    music, died yesterday at St. Luke's Hospital in Manhattan. He was 87 and lived in Manhattan. Writing daily reviews and more contemplative Sunday pieces, Mr. Schonberg set the standard for critical evaluation and journalistic thoroughness. He wrote his reviews in a crisp, often staccato style that
  • 71. International Piano Archives At Maryland, UM Libraries
    BÉLA BARTÓK (18811945). The Hungarian composer-pianist s complete recordingshave been harold bauer (1873-1951). Three CDs on BIDDULPH (LHW 7, 9 and 11
    http://www.lib.umd.edu/PAL/IPAM/bgad.html
    Performing Arts Library International Piano Archives at Maryland Buyer's Guide
    ISAAC ALBÉNIZ (1860-1909)
    Some improvisations by this well-known Spanish composer were privately recorded on cylinders around 1903 and have been issued on VAI 1001 (“The Catalan Piano Tradition”). EUGEN d’ALBERT (1864-1932)
    Only a sampling of this Liszt pupil's recorded output is available on CD. SYMPOSIUM 1146 is entirely devoted to d'Albert, with transfers that are noisier than they need to be, whereas a few selected recordings can be found on PEARL 9972 (Pupils of Liszt) and on IPAM 1206 ("A Multitude of Pianists"). A much-needed complete edition of d'Albert's recordings is projected for 2004. CONRAD ANSORGE (1862-1930)
    This Liszt pupil was especially known for his Beethoven interpretations, but very little by him is available on CD. Two recordings can be found in Pearl's "Pupils of Liszt" set (PEARL 9972). CLAUDIO ARRAU (1903-1991)
    FRIDTJOF BACKER-GRØNDAHL (1885-1959)
    A Norwegian pianist who was coached by both Grieg and Dohnanyi, Backer-Grøndahl is represented on CD by several Grieg solo pieces on SIMAX 1809 ("Historic Interpretations of Grieg"; three CDs) WILHELM BACKHAUS (1884-1969)
    Backhaus' pre-WW2 recordings have been widely reissued on a variety of labels. BIDDULPH released three CDs of Brahms (LHW 17, 18 and 19), plus Beethoven Concertos 4 and 5 (LHW 37), and his complete 1916 Polydor recordings (LHW 38). PEARL has issued several Backhaus CDs: a collection of Schumann (Fantasy in C), Bach, and Schubert (PEARL 0046), his complete British acoustic recordings (PEARL 0102, two discs), a single CD of Brahms solos (PEARL 9835), and a disc of Chopin (24 Etudes) and Liszt (PEARL 9902). The Japanese label SHINSEIDO issued a 12-CD series of selected recordings made between 1908 and 1948 (SHINSEIDO 1501-1512), but these are difficult to obtain. The now-defunct DANTE label also issued a series of Backhaus CDs, and ANDANTE 2999 (four CDs) contains a good selection.

    72. Musicians Collection, Folder List A-E
    fc 1 Bartee Sisters. Photo, 1929 ofc Bartholdi fc 1 Bartol, accordionist(2) fc 1 Baskette, Billy, composer fc 1; ofc bauer, harold, pianist.
    http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/musicians.folder.a-e.html
    Musicians Collection
    Folder List, A-E
    Musicians Collection Finding Aid Title Page Provenance Scope and Contents Folder List
    A-E
    F-K L-R S-Z ...
    Correspondents
    (Last modified: 8 June 2000) Reference queries to: reference@hrc.utexas.edu Performing Arts Collection Finding Aids All HRC Finding Aids
    About the Center
    ...
    Guide to the Collections

    73. Bach: Arrangements
    harold bauer) Die Seele ruht in Jesu Händen, from Cantata No 127, BWV127 5 29 BachBook for Harriet Cohen (a collection compiled for the pianist Harriet Cohen
    http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/details/67309.asp
    Compact Disc CDA67309 Audio
    Bach (arr. Wilhelm Kempff): Sinfonia in D major from Cantata No 29, BWV29
    Bach (arr. Harold Bauer): Die Seele ruht in Jesu Händen, from Cantata No 127, BWV127

    This delightful disc offers a selection from the wealth of piano transcriptions of Bach's music. The Bach revival that gathered momentum during the nineteenth century created a climate for many composer-pianists to interpret his works through their own piano transcriptions, whether of chorale preludes, organ works or other instrumental music. Much of Bach's music was made domestically available via such arrangements (and the tradition continued well into the twentieth century, even after Bach originals were well known). Indeed, the practice of such transcriptions was widely used by Bach himself, who freely adapted his own and others' music for different instrumental settings. One of today's finest Bach pianists, Angela Hewitt concentrates primarily on those arrangements of Bach that keep pianistic elaboration and virtuosity in proportion: whatever instrument his music is played on, Bach should still sound like Bach. Eugen d'Albert's magnificent transcription of the C minor Passacaglia and Fugue for organ, BWV582, is included, as are five beautiful transcriptions by Wilhelm Kempff, and a number of arrangements by English composers that were included in A Bach Book for Harriet Cohen (a collection compiled for the pianist Harriet Cohen, who knew many English composers of the early twentieth century). Angela Hewitt also includes three transcriptions of her own. A fascinating companion to Angela Hewitt's acclaimed Bach recordings for Hyperion, this ravishing disc will appeal to lovers of Bach as much as connoisseurs of the piano.

    74. BluesTone Ampico Rolls
    4 (Schubert) played by harold bauer $15 (originally issued on Ampico 51517, ca. MauriceHinton s Guide to the pianist s Repertoire describes the piece very
    http://www.bluesrolls.com/Ampico.html
    BluesTone AMPICO Roll Catalog Classical artists on BluesTone Ampico rolls include Clarence Adler, Harold Bauer, Ferrucio Busoni, Teresa Carreno, Leopold Godowsky, Phillip Gordon, Arthur Loesser, Arthur Mirovitch, Elly Ney, Marguerite Volavy, and Eleanor Winogradoff. Popular artists on BluesTone Ampico rolls include John Arpin, Eubie Blake, Adam Carroll, Edgar Fairchild, and J. Rosamond Johnson. Playing Ampico rolls on regular 88-note player pianos: Ampico rolls are layed out so that they will play fine on any standard 88-note player. If you wish, you can use a piece of Scotch tape to cover channels 3-6 on the bass end and channels 91-97 on the treble end so that no extraneous notes are played on your piano. For details please take a look at a brief BluesTone Tracker Bar Comparison . Note that the automatic sustain channel will still operate normally in this case. BluesTone Ampico roll reissues
    (sorted by my catalog number)
    BT-115 Negro Spirituals
    (traditional) arranged and played by J. Rosamond Johnson

    75. Ruhleben - Sir Ernest MacMillan (1893-1973)
    He intended to study piano with harold bauer, as well as piano privately with ThérèseChaigneau, bauer s assistant At the first, pianist Harry Field, a fellow
    http://www.collectionscanada.ca/4/6/m7-212-e.html
    Ruhleben
    Sir Ernest MacMillan:
    Maureen Nevins Group of prisoners (MacMillan - back row, far left), n.d.
    Photographer unknown.
    Download the above picture Here beginneth a new chapter in the history of a captive Colonial… I fully expect to be a truly interesting personage… You may imagine how the ingenuity of several thousand men succeeds when they have practically all their time to themselves! One soon falls into one's place, and I feel quite at home(!) I In July, MacMillan was invited to accompany the Burgesses to the Wagner Festival in Bayreuth. Then came the outbreak of World War I. MacMillan's American friends advised him to go to Nuremberg to seek advice from the American Consul. On August 4, England declared war on Germany. MacMillan, as a British subject, was considered an enemy alien and required to register with the Nuremberg police. After doing so, he returned to Bayreuth for the Festival. Shortly after his twenty-first birthday, arrangements were made for the Burgesses to leave Europe. MacMillan accompanied them to Nuremberg for their departure. He was instructed to remain in the city until the international situation had been clarified and to report daily to the police. The American Consul took MacMillan under his wing and recommended that he take a room at the Pension Trefzer. This became his home for the next four months. In January 1915 he was arrested, tried and imprisoned for having violated Article 4, No. 2 of the

    76. The Johns Hopkins News-Letter
    worldfamous reputation and a prestigious list of faculty members, present and past— violinist William Kroll and pianist harold bauer, for example — many
    http://www.jhu.edu/~newslett/03-15-01/Features/5.html
    Features March 15, 2001
    Incredible musicians and stress at Peabody Institute
    BY JANE PARK
    The Johns Hopkins News-Letter Peabody is home to many talented musicians who will someday grace concert halls with their musical talents. Located in the heart of Mt. Vernon, the Peabody Institute makes its home in the middle of Baltimore's historical and cultural center. Homewood students visit the area all the time, whether to watch a play at Center Stage, eat out at Scotto's Cafe (once known as Louie's) or Minato or to browse the Manet exhibit at Walters Art Gallery. But though they've passed by Peabody numerous times, only a few know what it's really like on the inside. The institute, a division of the Johns Hopkins University, has two constituent parts: the Conservatory and the Preparatory. The Conservatory trains those musicians who are aspiring to a professional career while the Preparatory provides performing arts instruction to all who are seeking a solid performing arts education. Most Homewood people, when talking about Peabody, are referring to the Conservatory. While the Conservatory possesses a very distinguished, world-famous reputation and a prestigious list of faculty members, present and past — violinist William Kroll and pianist Harold Bauer, for example — many of its students harbor bitter complaints, and sometimes even hatred, for the school. Even with the various historical and cultural sites previously outlined, Conservatory students are weary about the location. With some classes ending as late as 11 p.m., students who live off-campus are forced to walk home in an area that becomes somewhat dangerous and frightening at night. And the many cafes and restaurants that Homewood students are so fond of do not offer any consolation. After living in the area for only a couple months, going out to these places apparently gets old real fast.

    77. Yamahamusicsoft : Product Detail
    Award winning pianist, Thomas Hrynkiw, has been making professional concert includethe Gold Medal, Geneva Competition, the harold bauer Award, Manhattan
    http://www.yamahamusicsoft.com/index.php?action=ProductDetail&product_id=1016941

    78. Artist Name
    and Russia as an orchestral and recital soloist, chamber musician, and jazz pianist. andwas awarded the schools highest graduate honor, the harold bauer Award
    http://www.concertartists.com/InmanPianoTrio.html
    Inman Piano Trio
    "The Inman Trio played
    with exuberance,
    graceful lyricism and
    jaunty high spirits." (The Orlando Sentinel, Florida) "A wonderfully engaging and stylish performance...Everything was gloriously played, and rapturously received by the overflow crowd." Des Moines Register
    "One of the most melody-filled programs ever presented by this fine series...immediately accessible and enjoyable. The Inman is an ensemble on the rise." The Virginia Gazette, Williamsburg) "A most convincing performance...hauntingly beautiful." Mansfield News Journal, OH)
    The Inman Piano Trio takes its name from the gracious Inman Park neighborhood in Atlanta. Like the neighborhood, the trio creates a unique presence by looking both to the past and to the present by featuring mainstays of the piano trio repertoire on its programs as well as newer, rarely performed works. The strong individual qualities of the Inman Piano Trio blend to form an exciting whole. Violinist Beth Newdome was appointed to the faculty of Florida State University as Assistant Professor of Violin in Fall 2002. Previously she served as Associate Concertmaster of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, where she had been a member since 1991. Her association with major orchestras in the US began with the position of Assistant Concertmaster of the Jacksonville Symphony and then followed with positions in the Columbus and Dallas Symphony Orchestras. Hailed by the Atlanta Journal Constitution as a "musician's musician", Ms Newdome enjoys an active solo and chamber music life. As a core member of the Georgian Chamber Players, she has performed with such artists as Ruth Laredo, Awadagin Pratt, Maria Bachman, Robert McDuffie and Jonathan Bass. She and Mr. Pratt have given concerts throughout the US as well as in Japan. In the summer she teaches at the Aspen Music Festival. Beth Newdome trained at the Eastman School of Music, where her teacher was Charles Castleman.

    79. Wauu.DE: Arts: Music: Instruments: Keyboard: Piano: Pianists: B
    Leon International concert pianist. Site includes biography, reviews, repertoryand programs. http//www.rilearts.com/leonbates.htm. bauer, harold (18731951
    http://www.wauu.de/Arts/Music/Instruments/Keyboard/Piano/Pianists/B/
    Home Arts Music Instruments ... Pianists : B Search DMOZ-Verzeichnis:
    All Categories Categories Onlye
    Kategorien:
    Biret, Idil Brendel, Alfred
    Links:
    • Bakker, Johan
      Dutch pianist brings more than 35 original compositions for solo piano. With audio clips.
      http://members.lycos.nl/JohBakker/index.html
    • Bates, Leon
      International concert pianist. Site includes biography, reviews, repertory and programs.
      http://www.rilearts.com/leonbates.htm
    • Bauer, Harold (1873-1951)
      Bauer Collection in the Music Division of the Library of Congress.
      http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/perform/special/bauer.html
    • Berman, Boris Pianist of international stature and teacher at Yale University School of Music. http://pantheon.yale.edu/~bb25/
    • Brautigam, Ronald Information on the Dutch pianist (piano and fortepiano); biography, concert schedule, discography, reviws, sounds. http://www.ronaldbrautigam.com/
    • Brelsford, Eric (b.1984) Includes a resume, program offerings, repertoire, recordings and contact information. http://members.tripod.com/ericbrelsford/index.htm
    © 1998- 2002 Ein Service von Wauu.de

    80. Welcome To Rho Tau!
    William Count Basie. Jazz pianist and Band Leader. harold E. bauer.pianist. Robert Russell Bennet. Composer. E. Power Biggs. Organist.
    http://www.acs.appstate.edu/~pma/famsin.html
    Home Projects Brotherhood Lyrecrest
    Julian "Cannonball" Adderly Jazz Saxophonist and Band Leader Samuel Adler Composer and Conductor Pasquale Amato Baritone Leroy Anderson Composer Maurice Andre Trumpet Samuel Barber Composer William "Count" Basie Jazz Pianist and Band Leader Harold E. Bauer Pianist Robert Russell Bennet Composer E. Power Biggs Organist David Bispham Bass-Baritone Les Brown Band Leader Charles Wakefield Cadman Composer John Cage Composer Cleofonte Campanini Conductor Andrew Carnegie Philanthropist John Alden Carpenter Industrialist and Composer Enrico Caruso Tenor Eugene Conley Tenor Fredrick S. Converse

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