Noteable Composers and Musicians/K
Composer Birthdays |
Of Interest To Children |
Books, CD's and Tapes |
Quotes and Fun Facts |
Read More! |
MIDI Files |
Listening |
Other Links
|
Other Sites
|
News Items |
Oscar Winners |
Grammy Winners |
Kabalevsky
Dmitri Kabalevsky (1904) was a Russian composer, pianist and conductor.
Kabalevsky's birthday
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kay, Hershy
Hershy Kay lived from 1919 until 1981. He was a
composer and arranger who was born in Philadelphia. A Broadway and screen arranger who often worked for
Leonard Bernstein, he composed and arranged ballets including Balanchine's Western Symphony.
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kay, Ulysses
Ulysses (Simpson) Kay lived from 1917 until 1995. He was a composer who was born in Tuscon, Ariz. One of the first prominent African-American composers, he
studied with Hindemith and Hanson and wrote mildly modernist works that won numerous prizes.
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kissin
Evgeny Kissin was born in Moscow in 1972 and began picking out melodies on the piano at age two. He attended a school for musically gifted chaldren and made his debut at age ten.
Books and CD's by Kissin
Kissin was the performer in an Grammy Winning performance, Forty-Second Annual Awards
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Ketelbey
Albert W. Ketelbey was a British composer. His best known works are "In a Monastery Garden" and "In a Persian Market". Both are beautifully written and imaginatively scored musical fantasies.
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Key
Key's birthday
Star Spangled Banner became the National Anthem
Interesting facts about the Star Spangled Banner
Listen to Key's music
Read about Francis Scott Key's Star Spangled Banner
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Khachaturian
Aram Khachaturian lived from 1903 until 1968. He an Armenian compose, born in Tiflis, Georgia and was a student of folksong, and an authority on oriental
music. He is renowned for the exotic beauty of his themes and the rich texture of his orchestration. He used the principles of Armenian folk music in his compositions which include two symphonies, a piano concerto, a cello concerto, choral works, and several
ballets, among them the "Gayane" ballet suite with the famous
"Sabre Dance". An
excerpt from his ballet music Spartacus topped the popular music charts when used as the theme
music for the TV series The Onedin Line in the 1970s.
Khachaturian's birthday
anniversary of Khachaturian's death
Top of "K" section || Top of page
von Köchel
von Köchel's birthday
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kodály
Zoltán Kodály
Kodály's birthday
Influence on Phillip Glass' Dracula score
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Korngold
Erich Wolfgang Korngold lived from 1897 until 1957. He was born in Brno and made his early reputation in Vienna as a
composer, even in childhood. In 1934 he moved with Max Reinhardt
to Hollywood turning his attention then to film scores of remarkable
accomplishment. Most of his music in more traditional forms belongs
to the European period of his work, including much of his piano and
chamber music, some written for the pianist Paul Wittgenstein, who had lost his right arm in World War I.
Korngold's birthday
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Koussevitsky
Serge Koussevitsky lived from 1874 until 1951. He was a conductor and virtuoso on the double bass who was born in Vishny-Volochok, Russia. He took up
conducting and in 1909 founded his own orchestra and publishing company in Moscow. After the
Revolution he emigrated to Paris, where his Concerts Koussevitzky presented important new
works by Stravinsky, Prokofiev, Ravel, and others. In 1924 he was named conductor of the Boston Symphony - he would conduct it for 25 years, a legendary era for the orchestra. He
continued his historic advocacy of contemporary composers (though tending to conservative
ones), commissioning major works from Stravinsky, Hindemith, and Prokofiev, as well as
championing American composers including Copland, Piston, and Barber. In the 1930s he
developed the orchestra's Tanglewood summer concerts and the associated school called the
Berkshire Music Center (1940). After his retirement from the orchestra in 1949, he
guest-conducted in Europe and the Americas.
anniversary of Koussevitsky's death
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kuhlau
Friedrich Daniel Kuhlau lived from 1786 until 1832. He was a Danish composer of German extraction, and is
principally known for his piano music. Much of it well known to students
of the instrument. He wrote extensively for the flute, although he did not
play the instrument. His chamber music without flute includes three piano
quartets, in the musical idiom of the period.
Kuhlau's birthday
Top of "K" section || Top of page
Kyser
Kay (James King Kern) Kyser lived from 1906 until 1985 and was a bandleader; born in Rocky Mount, N.C. He formed his first band in college in the late-1920s; it
toured widely and later expanded. In the early-1930s he performed at the Blackhawk Restaurant in
Chicago and in 1937 he began broadcasting his popular radio show, Kay Kyser's Kollege of Musical
Knowledge; it appeared on television from 1949 to 1951, the year he retired. He appeared in several
films and released many hit records.
Kyser's birthday
anniversary of Kyser's death
Top of "K" section || Top of page
The Thomas Music Studio
is located
in Beaverton, Oregon
~~