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Wagner
Richard Wagner lived between 1813 and 1883. He is considered to be a romantic composer.
Wagner was born in Leipzig, Germany. For three years he lived in Paris and in 1842 he moved to Dresden where he was appointed Kapellmeister. After the revolution in 1848 he had to flee from Germany, moving to Paris and Zurich. After his return he won the backing of the eccentric King of Bavaria, Ludwig II, who became a fanatical admirer of his work.
Richard Wagner became the creator of the German music drama, that could bind all life reality and illusion into one symbiotic union. He achieved this result with a new musical technique whereby the leading motives recur, often modified by the needs of the drama, and provide a kind of unity to the entire work. His best known work 'Ring of the Nibelungen' is a four- evening cycle of music dramas. To fulfil his ambition to give a complete performance of the 'Ring' (Walkure, Siegfried, Gotterdammerung, with Rheingold as introduction), he started the now famous theatre at Bayreuth, which opened in 1876. 'Parsifal', his last opera, was staged in 1882, a year before his sudden death from a heart attack, in Venice.
Wagner's birthday
anniversary of Wagner's death
Read quotes by and about Wagner
Listen to Wagner's music
Read Amazon.com's Get Started in Classical feature
University offers opera instead of traditional discipline
Read Fun Facts About Wagner
About Wagner's opera The Ring.
Wagner MIDI Section
Richard Wagner
Wagner on the Web
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Walton
Sir William Walton
Walton's birthday
Walton's works were played in an Grammy Winning performance, Forty-Second Annual Awards
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Waller
The pianist Thomas Wright (Fats) Waller was a brilliant
pupil of James Price Johnson, one of
the inventor of stride music. At his
time, he was rather regarded a comic
singer from the show-business, but he
surely was the best 'strider' ever.
Fats Waller was known as a blues musician, pianist, organist and song writer SOme of his most famous works are Ain’t Misbehavin’ and Honeysuckle Rose. He led a led sextet which performed It’s a Sin to Tell
a Lie, Smarty, All My Life and Two Sleepy People. He was also an actor in King of Burlesque, Hooray for Love, Ain’t
Misbehavin’ and Stormy Weather.
Waller's birthday
anniversary of Waller's death
Listen to Waller's music
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von Weber
Carl Maria von Weber was born in Eutin, Oldenburg on November 18, 1786 and died in London on June 5, 1826. lived from 1786 until 1826. He was a German composer credited as the founder of the German romantic
opera (the most popular Der Freischutz).
Weber figures prominently in history as the composer who established a German opera in his native land
and successfully broke the chains of Italian traditions. He accomplished this in a variety of ways: the use
of spoken dialogue in place of the Italian recitative; the use of German myths and folklore, with an
emphasis on nature, for the subjects of his operas; and his remarkable use of the instruments of the
orchestra, rather than just the voices, to tell the story. The overtures to Weber's operas are dramatic
renderings through music of the stories that are about to unfold, as in the overture to his most famous opera, Der Freischütz. The
opera is about a hunter who, in order to marry the girl he loves, becomes a pawn in a bargain with the devil so that he may win a
marksman's shooting contest.
Taking Weber's ideas and musical idioms, composer Richard Wagner later evolved his ideas of a German Music Drama into the
art from that would forever change the course of music.
von Weber's birthday
Anniversary of von Weber's death
von Weber MIDI Section
von Weber's works were played in an Grammy Winning performance, Forty-Second Annual Awards
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Webern
Anton (Friedrich Ernst von) Webern was a composer who was born in Vienna in 1883. He died in 1945. He studied under Schoenberg, and became one of his first musical
disciples, making wide use of 12-tone techniques, which led to several hostile demonstrations when
his works were first performed. For a while he worked as a conductor and tutor in various cities,
before settling in Mödling in 1918. His works, which include a symphony, cantatas, several short
orchestral pieces, chamber music, a concerto for nine instruments, and songs, have profoundly
influenced many later composers. The Nazis banned his music, and he worked as a proofreader
during World War 2. He was accidentally shot dead by a US soldier near Salzburg in 1945.
Webern's birthday
Read quotes by and about Webern
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Weill
Kurt Weill (1900 - 1950) was an important figure in German musical life
during the period of the Weimar Republic. He left Germany in
1933 and later became a citizen of the United States of
America, turning his musical attention to compositions for
Broadway.
Weill collaborated with Bertold Brecht in Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera), a
topical derivative of The Beggar's Opera set in contemporary Germany, with music strongly
influenced by the jazz of the period. Other collaborations with Brecht included Aufstieg und
Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny). His work for
Broadway is now attracting revived attention. Mack the Knife, from The Threepenny Opera, is a well-known work.
Weill arranged an instrumental suite from Die Dreigroschenopfer, the Kleine
Dreigroschenmusik.
Weill's birthday
Los Angeles Philharmonic's 2000-01 seasonal repertory
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Welk
Lawrence Welk lived from 1903 until 1992. He was a bndleader, born in Strasburg, North Dakota. In the 1920s he developed what he called a
sweet-sounding "champagne music' with his orchestra. He toured and appeared on radio in the
1930s and 1940s and in 1951 began hosting his own television show. Carried on network television
until 1971, the show featured such traditional forms as tap and ballroom dancing, ragtime piano, and
a variety of singing. He was a major publisher of music and the author of several books.
Welk's birthday
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Wieck, Clara
Clara Wieck was married to married Robert Schumann and was a fine pianist and composer in her own right
Clara Wieck's birthday
History of the Piano
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Wieniawski
Henryk Wieniawski lived from 1835 until 1880. He was a pupil of Massart at the Paris Conservatoire, the Polish violinist.
Henryk Wieniawski began his career as a virtuoso in earnest in
1851, spending some three years in Russia giving concerts and
writing music for his own use. After further concert tours he
accepted an invitation from Anton Rubinstein to join the staff of the
St Petersburg Conservatory, where he served from 1860 until
1872. Exhausting concert tours of the United States of America were followed by appointment
as successor to Vieuxtemps at Brussels Conservatory, where he taught until 1877. At the same
time he continued his concert tours, brought to an end only by ill-health and his death in Moscow
in 1880.
Violin Music
Wieniawski's compositions were principally for his
own use. They include two important violin concertos
as well as a number of pieces designed to display his
technical and romantic musical accomplishments. His
Souvenir de Moscou, Souvenir de Posen and Le
carnaval russe may be considered a concession to
Russian audiences, while the Reminiscences of San
Francisco were no doubt designed as a compliment to
the audiences of that city.
Wieniawski's birthday
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Wigglesworth
Mark Wigglesworth has been Music Director of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales
since January 1996. He is also Music Director of The Premiere Ensemble and Principal
Guest Conductor of the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra. Since winning the
Kondrashin Competition in 1989, Mark Wigglesworth has worked with many of the world's
leading orchestras, including the Berlin Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw,
Philadelphia, Chicago Symphony, Minnesota, Los Angeles Philharmonic, San Francisco
Symphony, Oslo Philharmonic, Santa Cecilia of Rome, Israel Philharmonic, London
Symphony and the London Philharmonic.
His future plans feature debuts with the Toronto and Sydney Symphony orchestras, as
well as the Cleveland Orchestra and New York Philharmonic. Mark Wigglesworth's
festival appearances include the BBC Proms, Salzburg, the 1995 Concertgebouw
Mahlerfest and the Hollywood Bowl. For the Welsh National Opera he has performed
Elektra and The Rake's Progress and for Opera Factory the three Mozart/da Ponte operas
and Birtwistle's Yan Tan Tethera. He will make his debut at Glyndebourne Festival Opera
with a production of Peter Grimes in 2000 and at English National Opera conducting Lady
Macbeth in 2001. He has recorded Schoenberg's arrangement of Mahler's Das Lied von
der Erde for BMG Records with The Premiere Ensemble and is currently recording all the
Shostakovich Symphonies with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales.
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Williams
John Williams is an American Academy Award-winning composer and conductor of the Boston Pops who was born in
1932. His film scores include Schindler’s List (1993), E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
(1982), Star Wars (1977), Fiddler on the Roof (1971), Jurassic Park, Home Alone series, JFK, Indiana Jones series, Born on
the Fourth of July, The Accidental Tourist, Superman series, Jaws series, The Deer Hunter, Close Encounters of the Third
Kind, Black Sunday, Midway, The Towering Inferno, Earthquake, The Paper Chase and The Poseidon Adventure. His score to Angela's Ashes earned an Oscar in 2000.
John Williams' birthday
John Williams in the news
Williams' work won a Grammy Award, Forty-Second Annual Awards
Williams' score won an Oscar, Seventy-Second Annual Awards
Listen to Williams' music
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Willson
Meredith Willson (Reiniger) was a composer and lyricist who was born in Mason City, Iowa in 1902.
He studied in New York City for a career in serious
music and after touring with the John Philip Sousa band (1921 until 1923), he became the principal flutist of
the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra (1924 until 1929). In the 1930s and 1940s he was music
director of several radio programs including The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show. He also
composed film scores (including Chaplin's The Great Dictator, 1940) and both words and music for
popular songs; his biggest hit would be "May the Good Lord Bless and Keep You" (1950). Even this
was eclipsed by the success of his musical, The Music Man (1957), for which he wrote the book as
well as lyrics and music. His other successful musical was The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1960), for
which he wrote lyrics and music. He also composed some concert music.
He died in 1984.
Willson's birthday
anniversary of Willson's death
Nominated for a Broadway Tony Award
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Wolf
Hugo Philipp Jakob Wolf was born in 1860 and died in 1903. He was a composer who was born in Windischgraz, Austria. He studied at the Vienna Conservatory, then earned a
living by teaching, conducting, and music criticism. From 1888 he composed about 300 songs, settings of
poems by Goethe and others, the opera Der Corregidor (1895), and other works. Having lived most
of his life in poverty, he became insane in 1897, and died in the asylum at Steinhof, near Vienna. He is best known for his books of
songs, notably Spanish Song Book and Goethe Song Book.
Wolf's birthday
Read quotes by and about Wolf
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Wonder
Stevie Wonder (Stevland Morris) was born prematurely on May 13, 1950. Too
much oxygen in the incubator caused the baby to become
permanently blind. However, this did not prove to be any kind of
handicap to Stevland’s musical talents as a singer, songwriter and
multiinstrumentalist.
At the tender age of ten, Little Stevie Wonder, as he was called
by Berry Gordy at Motown, was discovered singing and playing
the harmonica. The child prodigy got a little bigger and in his teen
years recorded Fingertips (his first hit) and My Cherie Amour;
co-wrote I was Made to Love Her, For Once in My Life and
Tears of a Clown. If You Really Love Me was a #1 hit and
Stevie was just 20 years old.
Stevie Wonder won an Oscar in 1984 (I Just Called to Say I Love You); induction into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame in 1989; and sixteen Grammy Awards. He has stood up for civil rights, campaigns against cancer,
AIDS, drunk driving and the plight of Ethiopians.
Wonder's birthday
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