German musicologists

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 45. Chapters: Theodor W. Adorno, Curt Sachs, Siglind Bruhn, Herbert Eimert, Dieter Lehnhoff, Lorenz Christoph Mizler, Valeri Brainin, Thomas Hengelbrock, Georg August Griesinger, Alfred Einstein, Karl Straube, Roland Pröll, Alfred... Viac o knihe

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Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 45. Chapters: Theodor W. Adorno, Curt Sachs, Siglind Bruhn, Herbert Eimert, Dieter Lehnhoff, Lorenz Christoph Mizler, Valeri Brainin, Thomas Hengelbrock, Georg August Griesinger, Alfred Einstein, Karl Straube, Roland Pröll, Alfred Dürr, Hermann Abert, Adolf Bernhard Marx, Leo Schrade, Philipp Spitta, Manfred Stahnke, Friedrich Chrysander, Erhard Karkoschka, Martin Gerbert, Willi Apel, Werner Neumann, Hermann Kretzschmar, Gustav Jenner, Max Friedlaender, Hans Joachim Moser, Johann Nikolaus Forkel, Fritz Dietrich, Linda Maria Koldau, Siegfried Dehn, Albrecht Dümling, Franz Xaver Haberl, Johannes Zahn, Alfred Lorenz, Hugo Riemann, Alphons Silbermann, Carl Dahlhaus, Christoph Wolff, Raphael Thoene, Gustav Nottebohm, Karl Proske, Gerd Sannemüller, James Simon, Johann Anton André, Walter Kaufmann, Heinrich Reimann, Carl Ferdinand Becker, Heinrich Besseler, Reinhold Brinkmann, Friedrich Blume, Franz Beyer, Wilhelm Rust, Kevin Clarke, Edward Dannreuther, Hans Hickmann, Franz Brendel, Reinhard Strohm, Gerhard Röthler, Hugo Leichtentritt, Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt, Wilhelm Brambach, Wilibald Gurlitt, Robert Lachmann, Walter Niemann, Gustav Becking, Hellmuth Christian Wolff, Kurt Reinhard, Wolfgang Schmieder, Christoph Albrecht, Max Seiffert, Konrad Ruhland, Enjott Schneider, Eric Baumann, Albert Richard Mohr, Friedrich Wilhelm Jähns, Max Unger, Arnold Schering, Wilhelm Altmann, Fritz Oeser, Theophil Stengel, Albert Schatz, Herbert Gerigk, Werner Körte. Excerpt: Theodor W. Adorno (September 11, 1903 - August 6, 1969) was a German-born international sociologist, philosopher, and musicologist. He was a member of the Frankfurt School of social theory along with Max Horkheimer, Walter Benjamin, Herbert Marcuse, Jürgen Habermas, and others. He was also the Music Director of the Radio Project from 1937 to 1941, in the U.S. Theodor Ludwig Adorno Wiesengrund was born in Frankfurt as the only child to the wealthy wine merchant Oscar Alexander Wiesengrund (1870-1941, of Jewish descent, converted to Protestantism) and the Catholic singer Maria Barbara, born Calvelli-Adorno. It was the second half of this name that he adopted as his surname upon becoming a naturalised American citizen in the 1930s ("Wiesengrund" was abbreviated to "W"). His musically talented aunt Agathe also lived with the family. The young Adorno passionately engaged the piano. He attended the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gymnasium where he did well, graduating at the age of 17 at the top of his class. In his free time he took private lessons in composition with Bernhard Sekles and read Kant's Critique of Pure Reason together with his friend Siegfried Kracauer - 14 years his elder - on Saturday afternoons. Later he would proclaim that he owed more to these readings than to any of his academic teachers. At the University of Frankfurt (today's Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität) he studied philosophy, musicology, psychology and sociology, graduating in 1924 with a dissertation on Edmund Husserl. Before his graduation, Adorno had already met with his most important intellectual collaborators, Max Horkheimer and Walter Benjamin. During his student years in Frankfurt, Adorno had written a number of music critiques, but primarily wanted to be a composer. With this goal envisioned, he used his relationship to Alban Berg to pursue studies in Vienna beginning in January, 1925, making contacts with members of the Viennese School, Anton Webern and Arnold Schoenberg. Schoenberg's revolution...

  • Vydavateľstvo: Books LLC, Reference Series
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  • ISBN: 9781157426394

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