「Mendelssohn」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 194件
Moses | Mendelssohn: A Biographical Study, University of Alabam |
R. Larry Todd, | Mendelssohn, A Life in Music, Oxford, 2003. |
Todd, R. Larry | Mendelssohn: A Life in Music, Oxford 2003 ISBN 97801951 |
He was a tutor in the house of Moses | Mendelssohn; afterwards a teacher at Lemberg. |
The 12-year old Felix | Mendelssohn almost certainly attended the premiere and |
e Romantic movement, represented by Brahms, | Mendelssohn and others, and the progressive "Music of t |
ttina Walker, W. S. Rockstro (biographer of | Mendelssohn), and Tobias Matthay (the last-named eventu |
, brother of Luise Hensel, husband to Fanny | Mendelssohn, and brother-in-law to Felix Mendelssohn. |
They also recorded the complete | Mendelssohn and Schubert String Quartets on the Deutsch |
became friends with Albert Lortzing, Felix | Mendelssohn, and Robert Schumann. |
Nottebohm studied in Leipzig, where he met | Mendelssohn and Schumann, and settled in Vienna in 1846 |
chestral performances of works by Spontini, | Mendelssohn and Beethoven. |
rtholdy's sister Lea was married to Abraham | Mendelssohn, and Bartholdy persuaded him to adopt his ' |
of her cousin, Lea Salomon, wife of Abraham | Mendelssohn and mother of Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn ( |
ian, she cultivated friendly relations with | Mendelssohn and other composers and performers, includi |
Brahms, Chopin, Demus, Gubaidulina, Kodaly, | Mendelssohn and Schubert. |
ieder by Carl Loewe, Robert Schumann, Felix | Mendelssohn, and Richard Strauss. |
His wife, Fanny | Mendelssohn, and his brother-in-law, Felix Mendelssohn, |
l, John Field, Moscheles, Reinecke, Chopin, | Mendelssohn and Schumann. |
corded in 2002 the complete choral works of | Mendelssohn, and in 2006, Mahler's Das Lied von der Erd |
uding the Jewish-by-birth composers Mahler, | Mendelssohn, and Schoenberg, and also Debussy, who had |
ugal scherzo with a fleetness comparable to | Mendelssohn and a dense chromaticism that recalls Schoe |
rather showing the fine craftsmanship of a | Mendelssohn and an undoubtedly professional technical c |
oadly conservative, very much influenced by | Mendelssohn, and with similarities to the output of his |
works by Beethoven (7th Symphony), Mozart, | Mendelssohn and Meyerbeer. |
Sullivan's early music, is in the style of | Mendelssohn and suggests that The Sapphire Necklace wou |
es the Prophet, Moses Maimonides, and Moses | Mendelssohn, and in 1838 Notes on Basnage and Milman's |
ty has pioneered music by such composers as | Mendelssohn and Haydn, whose oratorio 'The Seasons' is |
His father, who had studied with Felix | Mendelssohn and knew the value of good instruction, sen |
He befriended Franz Schubert and Felix | Mendelssohn, and beginning in 1828, he published a numb |
isplays the influence of Beethoven, Mozart, | Mendelssohn and, especially, Louis Spohr. |
ic, in which the influences of Schumann and | Mendelssohn are paramount, although critically well-rec |
ber of 1823 with Felix and his sister Fanny | Mendelssohn as the two soloists. |
In response to the commission, | Mendelssohn at first drafted seven individual voluntari |
nd his family played host to composer Felix | Mendelssohn at their country home in Wales. |
idsummer Night's Dream, with songs by Felix | Mendelssohn, at the Bath Theatre in 1863, starring Elle |
Humperdinck becomes the first winner of the | Mendelssohn Award awarded by the Mendelssohn Stiftung ( |
Elisabeth | Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1845-1910) married Adolf Wach |
Rebecka | Mendelssohn Bartholdy - drawing by Wilhelm Hensel, 1823 |
In 1804 his younger brother Abraham | Mendelssohn Bartholdy joined the company. |
Felix | Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809-1847) : Symphony no 4 in A |
middle-class Jewish family, and part of the | Mendelssohn Bartholdy clan. |
and the Academy of Music and Theatre “Felix | Mendelssohn Bartholdy" in Leipzig (Music Performance). |
In 1804, his younger brother Abraham | Mendelssohn Bartholdy, the father of the composer Felix |
ge Frideric Handel, Joseph Haydn, and Felix | Mendelssohn Bartholdy. |
such as the Messiah by Handel or Elijah by | Mendelssohn Bartholdy. |
of Georg Rosen and a close friend of Felix | Mendelssohn Bartholdy. |
In 1804, Abraham | Mendelssohn became a partner in his brother Joseph's ba |
When | Mendelssohn became conductor of the orchestra in 1835 h |
Felix | Mendelssohn begins studying composition with Carl Fried |
s of the concerti by Tchaikovsky, Paganini, | Mendelssohn, Bruch, Wieniawski, Bach, Mozart and Vivald |
that Queisser was responsible for annoying | Mendelssohn by putting a 'turn' in the opening trombone |
Mercer-Taylor, Peter The Life of | Mendelssohn, Cambridge 2000 ISBN 9780521639729 |
s including works by Robert Schumann, Felix | Mendelssohn, Carl Loewe, Ludwig van Beethoven, seven vo |
etween May 1822 and 1823, during which time | Mendelssohn celebrated his fourteenth birthday. |
The Herald Angels Sing" (Felix | Mendelssohn, Charles Wesley) - 2:29 |
rald Angels Sing/Carol of the Bells" (Felix | Mendelssohn, Charles Wesley, ft. |
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing" (Felix | Mendelssohn, Charles Wesley, Farian) - 3:03 |
Orchestra from 1931 to 1956 and the Toronto | Mendelssohn Choir from 1942 to 1957. |
the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Toronto | Mendelssohn Choir. |
Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Toronto | Mendelssohn Choir. |
He founded the | Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia (1874). |
From 1926-1934 he was conductor of the | Mendelssohn Club in Philadelphia, notably collaborating |
The | Mendelssohn Club is a music institution in Philadelphia |
Fischer was rector of the Felix | Mendelssohn College of Music and Theatre from 1948 to 1 |
as born in Stendal and studied at the Felix | Mendelssohn College of Music and Theatre before moving |
pianist, pedagogue and rector at the Felix | Mendelssohn College of Music and Theatre in Leipzig. |
2000 Davidoff Competition in Riga, the 2001 | Mendelssohn competition in Berlin and was the top prize |
He won Berlin's 1980 | Mendelssohn competition and was awarded 2nd prizes at L |
Mendelssohn composed chorale cantatas, three operas, an | |
Mendelssohn composed two other violin sonatas, both in | |
While there, | Mendelssohn composed several works, including his opere |
44 set of 3 string quartets that | Mendelssohn dedicated to the Crown Prince of Sweden. |
Mendelssohn dedicated the work to the violinist Louis S | |
He gave the premiere of Felix | Mendelssohn's violin concerto, and had worked closely w |
orks by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, | Mendelssohn, Dvorak, Lalo and Shostakovich. |
ded, with other young scholars, like Joseph | Mendelssohn, E. Wolfssohn, and N. Oppenheimer, the "Ges |
the keyboard, in The Cambridge Companion to | Mendelssohn, ed. |
ew style is found in his biography of Moses | Mendelssohn, entitled "Toledot Rambeman: Lebensgeschich |
In 1795 the eldest son Joseph | Mendelssohn established the bank Mendelssohn & Co. in B |
The Times wrote, "Mr Sullivan should abjure | Mendelssohn, even Beethoven and above all Schumann, for |
See | Mendelssohn family |
Fanny | Mendelssohn's son Sebastian Hensel edited the family co |
The | Mendelssohn family are the descendants of the German Je |
The | Mendelssohn family through the descendants of the found |
It was owned by the | Mendelssohn family before coming into Paganini's posses |
Gustav Dirichlet, who was introduced to the | Mendelssohn family by Alexander von Humboldt. |
en was performed in the garden house of the | Mendelssohn family on or around Felix's 15th birthday ( |
er's pupils (at different times) were Felix | Mendelssohn, Fanny Mendelssohn Giacomo Meyerbeer, and H |
nd Austrian music, such as Beethoven, Felix | Mendelssohn, Franz Schubert, Anton Bruckner and Richard |
art and Haydn, and the string symphonies of | Mendelssohn from the 1820s. |
Michael Rabin recorded concertos by | Mendelssohn, Glazunov, Paganini (No. 1 in D major; 2 re |
Shortly after | Mendelssohn's death in 1847, a group of his friends and |
rn in the same house in Hamburg where Felix | Mendelssohn had been born the previous year, David was |
Mendelssohn had hoped to succeed Zelter on the latter's | |
that a painting on a Scotland trip made by | Mendelssohn had inspired the 33-year-old composer, espe |
or) incorporates a processional piece which | Mendelssohn had written for the wedding of his sister F |
tion-only affairs at the group's home base, | Mendelssohn Hall. |
Induced by Moses | Mendelssohn, he began the translation into German of so |
ion of fellow German Jewish composer, Felix | Mendelssohn, he entered the Brussels Conservatoire at t |
eastern seaboard of the United States, the | Mendelssohn helped to popularize classical music before |
Mendelssohn himself received £60 from the publisher. | |
trated with pages of Robert Schumann, Felix | Mendelssohn, his sister Fanny Mendelssohn, and finally |
After Hiller gave | Mendelssohn his advice, the finale was the most revised |
the Stock Exchange built on the site of the | Mendelssohn house. |
Visitors to the | Mendelssohn household in the early 1820s, including Ign |
The | Mendelssohn household in Berlin was often the setting f |
E flat major, Op. 12, was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1829, completed in London on September 1 |
It was established in 1795 by Joseph | Mendelssohn in Berlin. |
43 (performed, possibly premiered, 1846 by | Mendelssohn in Leipzig) |
Sidney | Mendelssohn in his book The Jews of Asia: especially in |
e scholar, the popularity of composer Felix | Mendelssohn in America "gained momentum sharply after 1 |
B flat major, Op. 87, was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1845. |
major, Op. 44, No. 1, was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1838. |
1 in A major, Op. 18, was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1826 and revised in 1832. |
for violin and piano was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1825 and is the only one to carry an opu |
6 in F minor, Op. 80, was composed by Felix | Mendelssohn in 1847 and is essentially his last major c |
on conducted by Enoch zu Guttenberg; and by | Mendelssohn, including Elijah with the Collegium Vocale |
Julius Schoeps, director of the Moses | Mendelssohn institute for European Jewish studies on th |
pon threw his extensive correspondence with | Mendelssohn into the river, and it has therefore been l |
Mendelssohn is known to have written three sets of pian | |
The organ has illustrious associations: | Mendelssohn is believed to have given lessons to Caroli |
1999 Juilliard | Mendelssohn IVC - 1st prize |
Mendelssohn knew George's father, Thomas Attwood, compo | |
counted among his friends Eschenburg, Moses | Mendelssohn, Lessing, Nicolai, Herder, and Goethe. |
emy houses original manuscripts by Purcell, | Mendelssohn, Liszt, Brahms, Sullivan and Vaughan Willia |
As | Mendelssohn matured however the two drifted apart. |
n, Debussy, d'Indy, Gershwin, Grieg, Liszt, | Mendelssohn, Messiaen, Rachmaninoff, Ravel, Satie, Schu |
may have been inspired by the occasion when | Mendelssohn met Ignaz Moscheles in Berlin in 1824, when |
aidulina, Haydn, Hindemith, Kefadis, Liszt, | Mendelssohn, Mussorgsky, Mozart, Ovchinnikov, Prokofiev |
Mendelssohn: Octet | |
was offered the position, vacated by Felix | Mendelssohn, of Kapellmeister at the Berlin Cathedral; |
l Heilprin, and published a sketch of Moses | Mendelssohn on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of |
s strong love of the music of J. S. Bach to | Mendelssohn, one consequence of which was Mendelssohn's |
fused with Violin Sonata in F major (1820) ( | Mendelssohn) or Violin Sonata in F major (1838) (Mendel |
t to be confused with Violin Sonata, Op. 4 ( | Mendelssohn) or Violin Sonata in F major (1838) (Mendel |
t to be confused with Violin Sonata, Op. 4 ( | Mendelssohn) or Violin Sonata in F major (1820) (Mendel |
For this performance | Mendelssohn orchestrated the scherzo from his Octet Op. |
Mendelssohn: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 2 (CD 1987, but | |
His string trio, op. 9, won the | Mendelssohn Prize and his Wald-Idyll (Forest Idyll), Th |
Ivan Nagel received the 2000 Moses | Mendelssohn Prize and the 2002 Verdienstorden des Lande |
ragments of an unfinished oratorio by Felix | Mendelssohn, published posthumously as Op. |
In 1986 Renate Eggebrecht founded the Fanny | Mendelssohn Quartet with which she gave the premiere in |
Mendelssohn quickly rose to prominence among European b | |
The | Mendelssohn Quintette Club, 1849 |
... Influential ... was the | Mendelssohn Quintette Club, which presented early Ameri |
The | Mendelssohn Quintette Club (1849-1895) based in Boston, |
However, | Mendelssohn remained unsatisfied with the composition, |
f the Leipzig Conservatory in 1843 by Felix | Mendelssohn, remaining there through 1865. |
by Robert and Clara Schumann, Chopin and F. | Mendelssohn, Rubinstein's 24 Kamennoy-ostrow, and both |
In 1988 he was awarded the | Mendelssohn Scholarship which enabled him to spend seve |
After winning the | Mendelssohn Scholarship in 1962, he studied under Nadia |
In 1951 he also won the | Mendelssohn Scholarship for his Symphony for Strings, O |
Frances-Hoad holds the | Mendelssohn Scholarship 2002, the Bliss Prize 2002, joi |
and Leipzig fell through, resulting in two | Mendelssohn Scholarships. |
A disc of ‘Romantic' sonatas by | Mendelssohn, Schumann and Grieg is planned for 2010. |
ncluding concertos of Brahms, Grieg, Liszt, | Mendelssohn, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Rachmani |
g' and 'Kreutzer' Sonatas, Schubert, Rolla, | Mendelssohn, Schumann, Spohr, Brahms, Reger, Bela Barto |
works of Beethoven, Berlioz, Brahms, Gluck, | Mendelssohn, Schumann, Verdi, and Weber. |
n Gould Edition: Chopin Piano Sonata No. 3, | Mendelssohn Songs without Words etc. (S2K 52622) (also |
Mendelssohn studied from 1927 to 1931 at the Music Acad | |
Felix | Mendelssohn: Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4, Virgin Veritas 34 |
built a reputation as a teacher, numbering | Mendelssohn, Taubert, Henselt, Dorn, and August Wilhelm |
ir daughter Lea (1777-1842) married Abraham | Mendelssohn; they were the parents of Felix Mendelssohn |
Moscheles, Felix, Letters of Felix | Mendelssohn to Ignaz and Charlotte Moscheles, London, 1 |
Boston), is a three act Singspiel by Felix | Mendelssohn to a libretto by Johann Ludwig Casper. |
intellectuals, and artists, from Buber and | Mendelssohn to Spinoza and Freud, grappled with the cha |
The publisher Pietro Mecchetti asked | Mendelssohn to contribute to a 'Beethoven Album' , publ |
The Herald Angels Sing" ( | Mendelssohn, Traditional) - 2:12 |
al William H. Cummings harmonisation of the | Mendelssohn tune for the first two verses but adds a so |
he made his debut in Copenhagen playing the | Mendelssohn Violin Concerto. |
In 1947 he recorded the | Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with the CSO and Mischa Elm |
from April 9, 1944, of Heifetz playing the | Mendelssohn Violin Concerto, again with Toscanini and t |
ade her professional debut in 2009, playing | Mendelssohn Violin Concerto at the National Symphony Or |
When Felix | Mendelssohn visited Munich in 1831, he considered marri |
Mendelssohn was born in the then Ratibor, Province of S | |
Mendelssohn was by now the music director of the King's | |
Felix | Mendelssohn was perhaps Zelter's favorite pupil and Zel |
Loewe and | Mendelssohn were the two piano soloists on that occasio |
Among his goals in undertaking his work on | Mendelssohn were the restoration to this important Jewi |
d 12 November 1824 and was written by Felix | Mendelssohn when he was 15 years old, probably for hims |
r and early fall of 1823 by the young Felix | Mendelssohn when he was 14 years old. |
nt-day scholars, was his biography of Moses | Mendelssohn, which appeared first in installements in 1 |
o. 1 in C minor, Op. 11, is a work by Felix | Mendelssohn, which was completed on March 31, 1824, whe |
In 1831, he married Rebecka | Mendelssohn, who came from a distinguished Jewish famil |
umann, with whom he corresponded, and Felix | Mendelssohn, who dedicated a song to him. |
x became an intimate of the family of Felix | Mendelssohn, who was greatly influenced by Marx's ideas |
In 1836, Felix | Mendelssohn, who was on holiday in Scheveningen, was sh |
Her repertoire also included Felix | Mendelssohn, whose music she effectively championed, an |
ed Lysander in A Midsummer Night's Dream by | Mendelssohn with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra under Vl |
y Ludwig van Beethoven, Joseph Haydn, Felix | Mendelssohn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Franz Schuber |
Mendelssohn wrote a text on the subject of Moses, while | |
Mendelssohn wrote the incidental music, Op. 61, for A M | |
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