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Tartini
Giuseppe Tartini was born in Pirano, Italy and lived from 1692 until 1770. He was a violinist and composer, who also had studied law and divinity at Padua, and was an
accomplished fencer. He secretly married a protegée of the Archbishop of Padua, for which he was
arrested. He fled to Assisi but, after attracting the archbishop's attention by his violin playing, he was
invited back to his wife. Perhaps one of the greatest violinists of all time, he was also an eminent
composer. His best-known work is the Trillo del Diavolo (c.1735, Devil's Trill). .
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Tavener
John Kenneth Tavener, born in 1944 in London, England is a composer. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music, London
and has been professor of music at Trinity College of Music since 1969. He was still at college when he won the
prestigious Prince Rainier of Monaco Prize in 1965 with his cantata, Cain and Abel. His music is
predominantly religious, and includes the cantata The Whale (1966), Ultimos ritos (1972, Last Rites)
for soloists, chorus, and orchestra, and a sacred opera Therese (1979). He was converted to the
Russian Orthodox faith in 1976.
His work, Eternity's Sunrise, won a Grammy Award. His sacred work, Song for
Athene, was sung at the funeral ceremony of Princes Diana.
Tavener's birthday
Grammy Winner, Forty-Second Annual Awards
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Taverner
John Taverner lived from about 1490 until 1545. He was employed as master of the choristers at Cardinal College
(Christ Church), Oxford, in its early heyday, retiring, on Cardinal
Wolsey's fall from power, to Boston, where he was held in
considerable regard until his death in 1545. The popular, if
mistaken, account of his life is the subject of the opera by Peter
Maxwell Davies, Taverner.
Taverner wrote Latin Mass settings, Magnificat settings and motets. Of the first of these the
Western Wynde Mass, using the melody of a popular song of that name, is among the better
known. From his Mass Gloria tibi Trinitas came the fragment of a theme that served later
generations as the basis of an English genre of consort music, the In nomine.
Taverner himself began the tradition of the In nomine, an instrumental arrangement of part of
the Benedictus of his Mass Gloria tibi Trinitas.
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Tchaikovsky
Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky lived between 1840 and 1893. He is considered to be a romantic composer. He was a Russian composer who
was a master of melancholy moods, emotional outbursts and dramatic climaxes in his music.
"Worthless, vulgar, derivative, unplayable" were a few of the adjectives that pianist and conductor Nicholas Rubinstein used to describe Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto in b-flat minor, when he first heard it on Christmas Eve, 1874. Ironically, Tchaikovsky had arranged the piece as a gift for Rubinstein, to whom he intended to dedicate it. Furious, Tchaikovsky re-dedicated the piece to pianist Hans von Bülow, who was the first to perform it.
Within a few yers, Rubinstein's distaste for the concerto mellowed and he became one of its principal intrepreters.
Tchaikovsky read Goethe's novel Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre in the 1860's and set its melancholy poem "None but the Lonely Heart" to music.
Tchaikovsky found one of his greatest successes with his lovely waltz from the "Serenade for Strings" which he composed in 1880. He was also composing the 1812 Overture at the same time. He conducted several early performances of the Serenade himself, but he had no formal conducting training and became so nervous that he sometimes lost the place in his own music.
Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet inspired the melancholy Tchaikovsky to write his own version, using musical themes to suggest various themes from the play.
On his way to New York in 1891 to participate in the opening of Carnegie Hall, Tchaikovsky stopped in Paris and discovered the celesta, The celesta is a small keyboard with tiny silver bars which sound like bells when struck. He ordered one to be sent to Moscow in strict secrecy so that he could be the first to use it. His ballet The Nutcracker included the "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" which has several wonderfully shimmering phrases for the celesta.
Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker was featured in the Walt Disney movie Fantasia.
The first performance of the Sixth Symphony was only a mild success. By the time of the next performance a few weeks later - which was a tremendous success - Tchaikovsky was dead of cholera. It's title Pathétique - is characteristic of the composer, who always was afraid that his creativity would suddenly stop.
Kremlin's Early Christmas Gift: Nutcracker on Net
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin offered an early Christmas present Wednesday, saying it
would broadcast Pyotr Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker ballet live on the Internet this month.
The Kremlin is an ancient fortress that contains many buildings including churches, President
Boris Yeltsin's offices and a vast Soviet-era concert hall once used for Communist Party
gatherings and now known as the State Kremlin Palace.
"It is a Christmas gift to the entire world," the State Kremlin Palace said in its announcement.
"The best New Year extravaganza of the 20th century!"
The live performance of the traditional ballet about a magical guest at a Christmas gathering
will be broadcast on the Internet at www.kremlin-gkd.ru on Dec. 13 at 11 a.m. EST.
The Kremlin said it would be the first live ballet broadcast from Russia on the Internet. But
many Russians who have Internet access may find it difficult to view the show because of
poor-quality telephone lines.
Highlights will be available free for a month, covering Western and Orthodox Christmas --
Dec. 25 and Jan. 7 -- and New Year's, a particularly important holiday for Russians.
The State Kremlin Palace is owned by the presidential administration and has its own
established ballet company.
Tchaikovsky's birthday
anniversary of Tchaikovsky's death
Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake Premiér
Read quotes by and about Tchaikovsky
Books and CD's by Tchaikovsky
Tchaikovsky for Children
Listen to Tchaikovsky's music
Read about Tchaikovsky
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Tebaldi
Renata Tebaldi is an Operatic soprano, born in Pesaro, Italy in 1922. She studied at Parma Conservatory, made her debut at
Rovigo in 1944, and was invited by Toscanini to appear at the re~opening of La Scala, Milan, in
1946, where she sang until 1954. She then sang in many opera houses, including several seasons
at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, and made many recordings.
Tebaldi's birthday
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Te Kanawa
Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, born in 1944 in Gisborne, New Zealandin, is an
Operatic soprano. After winning many awards in New Zealand
and Australia she came to London, where she made her debut with the Royal Opera Company in
1970. She has since taken a wide range of leading roles, and in 1981 sang at the wedding of the
Prince and Princess of Wales. She was made a dame in 1982 and has produced many
non-classical recordings. In 1989 she published Land of the Long White Cloud: Maori Myths and
Legends.
Te Kanawa's birthday
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Telemann
Georg Philipp Telemann, born in 1681 in Magdeburg, Germany, was a very prolific late Baroque era composer, composing 600 overtures in the Italian style, 44 Passions, 40 operas, innumerable trio sonatas, suites and flute quartets. He was a self-taught composer and organist. When he died in 1767, his organist post in Leipzig went to Johann Sebastian Bach.
Telemann's birthday
anniversary of Telemann's death
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Thomson
Thomson's birthday
Read quotes by and about Thomson
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Tilson Thomas
Michael Tilson Thomas is the Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony, the
Founder and Artistic Director of the New World Symphony, and the Principal Guest
Conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra. He is currently Artistic Director of the
Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan, which he and Leonard Bernstein inaugurated in
1990. Born in Los Angeles, he is the third generation of his family to follow an artistic
career. At age nineteen he was named Music Director of the Young Musicians Foundation
Debut Orchestra where he worked with Stravinsky, Boulez, Stockhausen and Copland on
premieres of their compositions. He was also Assistant Conductor at the Bayreuth
Festival. Noted for his commitment to music education, Michael Tilson Thomas founded
the New World Symphony in 1988, to be a national orchestra for the most gifted graduates
of America's music conservatories. In addition to their regular season in Miami, they have
toured France, Great Britain, South America, Japan, Israel and the United States, and in
1998 celebrated their 10th anniversary with concerts in New York, London, Paris,
Amsterdam and Vienna.
Tilson Thomas has recently completed a very successful tour of Europe with the San
Francisco Symphony and back at home in June 1999, they present a festival of
Stravinsky's music, some of which they have recently recorded together.
With the London Symphony Orchestra, Tilson Thomas has toured in Israel, Japan, the
USA, as well as in Europe including an appearance at the Salzburg Festival. In London, he
and the orchestra have mounted major festivals focusing on the music of Brahms, Mahler,
Rimsky-Korsakov, Gershwin, Reich and Takemitsu.
Tilson Thomas' recordings have received many awards and cover a wide range of
repertoire including Bach, Beethoven, Mahler and Prokofiev as well as his pioneering work
with the music of Ives, Ruggles, Reich, Cage and Gershwin. In 1994 Michael Tilson
Thomas received the Ditson Award for contributions to American Music, was named
Musical America's Conductor of the Year and received five Grammy nominations and two
Gramophone awards for his recordings. He has been an exclusive BMG Classics/RCA
Victor Red Seal recording artist since 1995 and his most recent releases include the disc
"New World Jazz" with the New World Symphony Orchestra.
Tilson Thomas has also worked extensively for television including educational
broadcasts with the New York Philharmonic, a BBC series with the London Symphony
Orchestra including programmes on Strauss, Sibelius and Beethoven, and other television
productions celebrating works by Gershwin and Bernstein.
Tilson Thomas' birthday
Grammy Winner, Forty-Second Annual Awards
Read Amazon.com's Get Started in Classical feature
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Tippett
Sir Michael (Kemp) Tippett is a Composer, born in London, England, UK in 1905. He studied at the Royal College of Music, London,
and became director of music at Morley College from 1940 until 1951. His oratorio, A Child of Our Time
(1941), reflecting the problems of the 1930s and 1940s, won him wide recognition. A convinced
pacifist, he was imprisoned for three months as a conscientious objector during World War 2. He
scored a considerable success with his operas The Midsummer Marriage (1952) and King Priam
(1961), and among his other works are four symphonies, a piano concerto, and string quartets.
He was knighted in 1966, and received the Order of Merit in 1983.
Tippet's birthday
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Toscanini
Arturo Toscanini, 1867 to 1957, was a conductor who born in Parma, Italy. He was a cellist before the night in 1886 when he took over the
baton from an indisposed conductor in Rio de Janeiro and stayed on the podium for the rest of his
career. After years of journeyman work in Italian opera houses, he became conductor of Milan's
La Scala in 1898. In 1909 he came to the USA to lead the Metropolitan Opera orchestra; his
subsequent career took him to positions in Europe, England, and the USA, including the podium
of the New York Philharmonic from 1928 to 1936. In 1937 the NBC Symphony, primarily a
broadcasting and recording orchestra, was created for Toscanini; he led it until 1954, cementing
his reputation as one of the most revered conductors in the world. He helped pioneer a new
performance tradition that proclaimed an end to Romantic interpretive excesses and substituted
absolute fidelity to the score; in practice, that made for clean, sinewy performances, achieved
partly by his legendary tantrums in rehearsals. He was equally admired for his performances of
Beethoven and other 19th-century classics and of modern composers including Stravinsky,
Debussy, and Richard Strauss.
Toscanini's birthday
Read quotes by and about Toscanini
More information about Toscanini
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Townshend
Born Peter Dennis Blandford Townshend on May 19, 1945, as a member of The Who, he wrote nearly all of
the songs and sang "The Acid Queen" and "Sensation". for the double album Tommy. Tommy is a deaf, dumb, and blind
kid who becomes a Messiah and later is forsaken by his followers. Tommy is based, in
part, on the spiritual teachings of Indian mystic Meher Baba, of whom Townshend had
become a devotee.
Read the rest of this biography at www.petetownshend.net
Townshend's birthday
News Item about Townshend
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Tucker
There is a statue of Richard Tucker, an opera singer, in New York.
Tucker's birthday
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The Thomas Music Studio
is located
in Beaverton, Oregon
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© 2000