Www.patrickfriesen.com a segment from A Broken Bowl), created, performed with jazz pianist Marilyn Lerner songs,Blue Flame, with music by robert wright Frankie's Blues, with music by http://www.patrickfriesen.com/bio.htm
Links From Backroads Music Robin Spielberg A pianist with an engaging style and a full catalog to AD Music Homeof David wright, robert Fox, robert DeFresnes, Witchcraft Code Indigo http://www.backroadsmusic.com/links/links.htm
Research: AIDS & American Music Peterson, pianist William Pflugradt, conductor robert Phillips, pianist cellist,conductor Joseph Villa, pianist Paul G The B52s) Bill wright, cabaret singer http://hometown.aol.com/estatemusic/myhomepage/business.html
Extractions: htmlAdWH('7002962', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7002058', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help About My Research: I am a music consultant working as the Director of the Music Archive program of The Estate Project for Artists with AIDS. This project is dedicated to preserving and promoting the music of composers who have died from AIDS and who are living with HIV/AIDS. Currently we are gathering information on the effects of AIDS on American Music. Consult the list of composers that we have identified to date (below) and let me know of other composers that should be added. We are interested in all composers who have died without regard to the type of music they wrote or their level of prominence. For convenience, we have divided the names into two general fields Composers and Singer Songwriters.
William Bolcom of the birth of the wright Brothers, by the an opera, A Wedding, based on robert Altman'smovie as pianist (Advance, Jazzology, Musical Heritage, Nonesuch, Vox http://www.bolcomandmorris.com/bolcom.html
Extractions: William Bolcom Composer/pianist WILLIAM BOLCOM was born in Seattle, Washington, in 1938. Exhibiting early musical talent, he entered the University of Washington at age 11, studied composition with John Verrall and piano with Berthe Poncy Jacobson, and earned his B.A. there in 1958. During this time, he performed solo piano and chamber music concerts in the Seattle area as well as throughout the Northwest. Further studies followed with Darius Milhaud at Mills College in California and in Paris at the Conservatoire de Musique. He completed his doctorate in composition at Stanford University in 1964, where he studied with Leland Smith. Returning to the Paris Conservatoire in 1964, he won the 2e Prix in composition in 1965. While in Europe he began writing stage scores for theaters in West Germany, and continued to do so at Stanford University, in Memphis,Tenn., at Lincoln Center/New York, the Yale Repertory Theater, and others. Compositions from every period of his life have earned him many honors including: a BMI award (1953) two Guggenheim fellowships (1965 and 1968) several Rockefeller Foundation awards several NEA grants the Marc Blitzstein Award (1966) from the Academy of Arts and Letters (for Dynamite Tonite , an opera for actors written with his long-time collaborator, Arnold Weinstein) the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1988 for 12 New Etudes for Piano two Koussevitzky Foundation Awards (1976 and 1993) for the First Piano Quartet
July 30 1921, Grant Johannesen, Salt Lake City Ut, pianist (Ost?nd injuries at 29 In 1865,George wright, US Union talmudic scholar, dies In 1927, robert Marquies de http://www.dailyalmanacs.com/almanac2/july/0730.html
Louisiana Music Artist Directory: Phillip Walker To Albert Wynn Clarence Williams noted pianist, bandleader, composer, publisher (1898 bio, and audioclips (CDNow); robert Pete Williams Marvelous Marva wright legendary New http://www.satchmo.com/nolavl/noladirw.html
Extractions: Chances are, we have them listed elsewhere on the satchmo.com web site. A B C D ... Z Phillip Walker Michael Ward New Orleans-born percussionist recorded with Maceo Parker, Harry Connick Jr., Wild Magnolias, ReBirth Brass Band, and many others; Ward also fronted his own band, The Reward; he passed away in 1998 at age 44 Michael Ward noted jazz violinist Washboard Chaz singer, songwriter, and washboard player; recent transplant to New Orleans has been working with John Fohl, Johnny Sansone, Coco Robicheaux, and others Washboard Chaz Leary offical web site, with photos, reviews, music, and more.
Promemade Concert Reviews by robert wright. PROM 1. It's Friday 14 July 2000. The weather is season.Evgeny Kissin is the Prommer's favourite pianist. He always http://www.robertwright.dsl.pipex.com/proms00.htm
Extractions: Promenade Concert Reviews Some personal reflections on the 2000 Season from the Arena of the Albert Hall [1999 Season] [Proms 11 - 20] [Proms 21 - 30] [Proms 31 - 40] ... [Proms 61 - 72] by Robert Wright It's Friday 14 July 2000. The weather is still cool and overcast, but promises to become hot and dry by Sunday, in time for our planned group mountain bike tour of the Forest of Dean. For the moment, though all eyes are concentrated on the improvements to the Royal Albert Hall. The lower passageways have a sound deadening carpet, and all the doors are new. No more creaking and bangs, audible during the concert. The toilets are unchanged. They smell as bad as ever, and the powder blue 1960's basins contrasts with the stained Victorian stand-up sanitary ware. Some of the entry steps into the Arena have disappeared. You can now stand and sit around the walls at the edge of the Arena after the ban imposed many years ago and enforced by a white line and constant arguments with the stewards. Tonight's audience was a good one. Quiet and appreciative. The first mobile phone trilled only 5 seconds into the concert, closely followed by another, but these noises now seem inevitable, and the RAH no longer even bothers to make an announcement asking patrons to switch them off. I was at a small theatre recently when one woman even answered a call during the play, and then had a short conversation. Copeland's Fanfare for the Common Man sounds well in the Albert Hall, and the placement of brass in the Gallery worked well. Stokowski's orchestration of the Toccata and Fugue in D minor (did Bach actually write it?) was if anything an improvement on the now hackneyed organ original, and well played by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Sir Andrew Davis in his last Prom season.
BEAZER District were Gane Olsen, Elva Beazer, Leon wright and others robert McNishfromNew Brunswick-good skater Mr. AE Langley Mr. Calvin Chadsey-very good pianist. http://www.olsenfamily.us/olsenfami/beazer.html
Extractions: by Elva Beazer "Chief Mountain Country" pages 56-59 The first known white man to live here was William Lee, a fur trapper who came here about 1867 from Fort Benton, Montana. He built trapper's cabins on land owned today by Charles W. Ivins. It was for him that Lee Creek was named. Next came W. S. Shirley from Oregon where he was known as the "Cattle King of Oregon". He started a cattle ranch on section 11, and branded his cattle with a big "44". For years the ranch was called the "44 Ranch" by the early pioneers. When he left he sold out to the Cochrane Ranch Co. who operated the ranch for several years. When they left, the house was sold to George E. Peterson who moved it to his homestead where it is still standing (1977), and has the distinction of being the first house built in Beazer. Mark E. Beazer from Kaysville, Utah, was the first permanent homesteader, arriving in Cardston with his wife and four children by "prairie schooner", June 7, 1890 after seven weeks of travel. The next two settlers were Jasper Head and Samuel Buck. These three families had the country to themselves until 1899 and 1900 when over sixty land-hungry homesteaders swarmed in and took up all the remaining homesteads.
Bargain Basement 8 N.Jane the well prepared pianist, vol. intermediate ..$2.95/1.95 Vandall, robert- Sonatina for Keyboard Scales ..$11.00/5.00 wright/Lowenstein - The http://www.piano-pal.com/bb8.htm
CNIDR Search [act6697] Author Schumann, robert, 18101856. Notes Harold wright, clarinet; Nobuko Imai,viola; Harris Goldsmith Program notes by the pianist and biographical notes on http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/cgi-bin/var/bib?act6697
RTOS Performers List Langford, Bill, 9/20/79, wright, George, 10/20/79, Died 10 May 1998. Wolfe, robert,11/16/97, Eisenhart Aud. 200 pm 700 pm. 200 pm With Dick Kroeckel pianist. http://www.netacc.net/~organman/rtos/Rtosart2.html
Extractions: Artist's Name Date Notes: 1964/1965 Season at the RKO Palace Theatre before Removing the Organ. Scott, Don At the RKO Palace Theatre. Robinson, Dean At the RKO Palace Theatre. Died 7 January 1988. Ross, Alan At the RKO Palace Theatre. Died 30 July 1970. Elsaesser, Harvey At the RKO Palace Theatre. Mills, Allen At the RKO Palace Theatre. Kinnier, Don At the RKO Palace Theatre. Miller, Ashley At the RKO Palace. Jolles, Harold At the RKO Palace Theatre. Died 23 February 1978. Decker, Bruce At the RKO Palace with Richard Lane. Lane, Richard At the RKO Palace with Bruce Decker. Bebko, Doc At the RKO Palace Theatre. Scott, Don Final Gala 4/21 Concert at the RKO Palace Theatre before removal. 1965/1966 Season of Fundraising during the Moving and Installation phase. Ross, Alan RTOS organ installation fundraiser. Died 30 July 1970. Scott, Don RTOS organ installation fundraiser using Universalist Hope-Jones. Kinnier, Don
Rec.Music.Newage FAQ - Record Label Homepages arists Code Indigo Witchcraft David wright robert Fox DISCIPLINE GLOBAL MOBILE Homefor robert Fripp, King currently featuring the work of pianist PatrickLee http://www.cix.co.uk/~nleacy/rmn_faq/faq-6d.htm
Extractions: Founded in 1991 by musician David Wright, AD Music now has Robert Fox and Peter Maydrew on their books as well as new signings Jan Hanford, Bekki Williams and Chris Harvey. A well designed site which can be found at: http://www.admusic.ltd.uk/index.html Email them at ad@shelby.com or more information. AD Music now has an official fan club, and June 1999 sees the first issue of Fanz-AD-FM, a colour magazine which is being circulated free of charge to the fans who have subscribed to it. It is hoped to present 2 or 3 issues per year focusing on many AD Music arists Code Indigo AD Music itself is not the originator of the magazine, it has been compiled by a collection of fans in West Sussex, England. However, AD Music has agreed to assist them in the presentation of a professional fan magazine. The contact details are: Artist Fan Club, 42 Horsham Road, Littlehampton, West Sussex, BN17 6DA, England.
Home Page For Harrison, Robert Email robert.Harrison@Colorado.Edu. Society Meeting House (Frank Lloyd wright designedbuilding Chamber Music series; ellsworth snyder, pianist; Madison, WI. http://spot.colorado.edu/~harrisor/vitae.html
Extractions: CURRICULUM VITAE Name: ROBERT J. HARRISON - Lyric-tenor/Counter-tenor Date/Place of Birth: September 29, 1949 - Dodgeville, Wisconsin Address: Campus Box 301, College of Music, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309 Telephone: 303-492-6341 Email: Robert.Harrison@Colorado.Edu Marital Status: Married ; Two Children DEGREES EARNED 1986 Doctor of Musical Arts (Major Area of Study: Voice Performance; Minor Areas of Study: Vocal Pedagogy and Musicology), University of Arizona 1978 Master of Music (Voice Performance), University of Wisconsin-Madison 1971 Bachelor of Arts (Voice Performance), Milton College, WI 1967 Diploma, Dodgeville Public High School, Dodgeville, Wisconsin TEACHING COMPETENCIES Studio Voice, Language Diction, History of Vocal Literature, History of Oratorio and Cantata, Vocal Pedagogy, and Voice Class EMPLOYMENT HISTORY 1990-Present Associate Professor of Music, University of Colorado at Boulder Graduate-Level Voice
Fall 1997 Concerts L' Histoire du Soldat by Stravinsky, robert Hause, conductor, 8 Arts Series Carmen,800 pm, wright Auditorium 16 of Music; Jean Barr, guest pianist; John B. O http://www.music.ecu.edu/calendar/F_97_Cal.html
Extractions: Music HomePage East Carolina University Concert Calendar for 1997-1998 August 24 SUNDAY Faculty Recital: An afternoon of Baroque music for bassoon and harpsichord, Christopher Ulffers, bassoon; John B. O'Brien, harpsichord, 3:00 p.m., The Music House, 408 West Fifth Street 26 TUESDAY ECU Voice Faculty, Opera excerpts and more, Louise Toppin, soprano; Sharon Munden, mezzo-soprano; Perry Smith, tenor; John B. O'Brien, piano, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall September 5 FRIDAY Faculty Recital: Duo Recital of Works by Beethoven, Schumann and Shostakovich, Kelley Mikkelsen, cello; Paul Tardif, piano, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 11 THURSDAY Guest Recital: Gail Williams, horn, from the Chicago Symphony, Mary Ann Covert, piano, from Ithaca College, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 12 FRIDAY Guest Recital: Kick-off concert of "Viva Viola" workshop, September 12-13. Jonathan Bagg, violin, and Jane Hawkins, piano, from Duke University School of Music, assisted by Fritz Gearhart, violin, 4:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall (For additional information, call Fritz Gearhart 919-328-4873.) S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts Series: Count Basie Orchestra, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 13 SATURDAY ECU String Orchestra with "Viva Viola" workshop guest violists, Fritz Gearhart, director. A viola extravaganza featuring Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 6., 3:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall, (For additional information call Fritz Gearhart, 919-328-4873.) 15 MONDAY Faculty Recital: Twentieth century American music for clarinet and piano. Nathan Williams, clarinet; Audrey Andrist, piano, 8:00 p.m., Hendrix Theatre 21 SUNDAY Voice students of Louise Toppin; John B. O'Brien, harpsichord, 3:00 p.m., The Music House, 408 West Fifth Street 25 THURSDAY Symphonic Wind Ensemble and Concert Band, Scott Carter and Christopher Knighten, conductors, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 26 FRIDAY Jazz at Night, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr., director, 8:00 p.m., Great Room, Mendenhall Student Center 28 SUNDAY Fall Event of the Friends of the School of Music. Sponsored by the Friends for members and their guests. (For membership information, call 919-328-6851.) 29 MONDAY Faculty Recital: Song cycles of life and love, Sharon Munden, mezzo-soprano; John B. O'Brien, piano, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall October 1 WEDNESDAY Faculty Ensemble: Faculty chamber concert featuring "L' Histoire du Soldat" by Stravinsky, Robert Hause, conductor, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 9 THURSDAY Faculty Recital: Three centuries of music for trumpet, voice and keyboard, Thomas Huener, trumpet; Sharon Munden, mezzo-soprano; John B. O'Brien, keyboards, 8:00 p.m. A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 12 SUNDAY Guest Recital: Glenn Caluda, guitar; Elizabeth Caluda, piano, from Shenandoah University, Winchester, Virginia, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 13 MONDAY Faculty Recital: Charles Bath, piano, 8:00 p. m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 15 WEDNESDAY S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts Series: Quartetto Gelato, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 16-21 THURSDAY - TUESDAY East Carolina Playhouse: Name (TBA) 8:00 p.m., McGinnis Theatre 18 SATURDAY Clarinet Quartet, Nathan Williams, director, 7:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 19 SUNDAY East Carolina Symphony Orchestra, Douglas Morrison, conductor, 3:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium Faculty Recital: The Chamber Music of T. J. Anderson, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 20 MONDAY Faculty Recital: Mark Ford, percussion, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 22 WEDNESDAY S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts Series and the School of Music: Herbert Eckhoff, bass Distinguished Professor of Music John B. O'Brien, piano, 8:00 p.m., Hendrix Theatre For ticket information, call 919-328-4788 or 1-800-ECU-ARTS (328-2787). 23 THURSDAY Guest Recital: Cassatt String Quartet in Residence 1997-98 at ECU School of Music, Muneko Otani, Jennifer Leshnower, violins; Michiko Oshima, viola; Kelley Mikkelsen, cello; and Paul Tardif, piano 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall For ticket information, call 919-328-4788 or 1-800-ECU-ARTS (328-2787). 24 FRIDAY Jazz at Night, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr., director, 8:00 p.m., Great Room, Mendenhall Student Center 27 MONDAY Premiere Performances of Works by ECU Composers, Mark Taggart, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 31 FRIDAY Opera Scenes, John B. O'Brien, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall November 1 SATURDAY Family Fare: Michael Cooper, 2:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium Opera Scenes, John B. O'Brien, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 3 MONDAY Faculty Recital: Mary Burroughs, horn; with Alisa Gilliam, piano, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 5 WEDNESDAY Symphonic Wind Ensemble and Concert Band, Scott Carter and Christopher Knighten, conductors, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 6 THURSDAY Percussion Ensemble, Mark Ford, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 7 FRIDAY Jazz Ensemble A, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr., director, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 12 WEDNESDAY ECU Steel Orchestra, Mark Ford, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 14 FRIDAY S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts Series: Carmen, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 16 SUNDAY Brass Quintet Chamber Music, Britt Theurer, director, 3:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 17 MONDAY Tuesday/Thursday Jazz Ensemble, , director, Contemporary Jazz Ensemble, Paul Tardif, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 18 TUESDAY ECU Vocal Quartet with Herbert Eckhoff, bass, Distinguished Professor of Music; Jean Barr, guest pianist; John B. O'Brien, pianist, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 19 WEDNESDAY S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts Series: Ballet Hispanico, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 20 THURSDAY Guitar Ensemble, Elliot Frank, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 21 FRIDAY Jazz at Night, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr., director, 8:00 p.m., Social Room, Mendenhall Student Center 22 SATURDAY Family Fare: Hans Brinker and The Silver Skates, 2:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 23 SUNDAY ECU String Orchestra, Fritz Gearhart, director; with soloists Andrew McAfee, principal hornist and Brian Reagin, Concertmaster of The North Carolina Symphony; Karen Moratz, principal flautist of the Indianapolis Symphony; 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 24 MONDAY Trombone Ensemble, George Broussard, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall December 3 WEDNESDAY East Carolina Symphony Orchestra, Douglas Morrison, conductor, 8:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium 4 THURSDAY Percussion Players, Mark Ford, director, 8:00 p.m., A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall 4-7 THURSDAY-SUNDAY Madrigal Dinners, Brett Watson, director, 7:00 p.m., Great Room, Mendenhall Student Center 7 SUNDAY Holiday Concert featuring the Symphonic Wind Ensemble, Scott Carter, conductor, Sponsored for the community by the Friends of the School of Music, 2:00 p.m., Wright Auditorium University Chorale, Janna Brendell, conductor, 4:00 p.m., Immanuel Baptist Church, 1101 South Elm Street 8 MONDAY Strata Trio: Nathan Williams, clarinet; James Stern, violin/viola; Audrey Andrist, piano, 8:00 p.m., Hendrix Theatre Music HomePage
Arts Calendar robert E. Parilla Performing Arts Center, Montgomery College, 51 wright's Meditation and Crossing Unction Junction feature live Haskell Small, pianist. http://www.wgms.com/index.php?nid=120
Richard Wright's Life wright moved her, her son, her mother, and her pianist to Mexico for a few monthsand Booklength studies of wright's work include robert Bone, Richard http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/s_z/r_wright/wright_life.htm
Extractions: Richard Wright's Life Ann Rayson W right, Richard (4 Sept. 1908-28 Nov. 1960), author, was born Richard Nathaniel Wright on Rucker's Plantation, between Roxie and Natchez, Mississippi, the son of Nathaniel Wright, an illiterate sharecropper, and Ella Wilson, a schoolteacher. When Wright was five, his father left the family and his mother was forced to take domestic jobs away from the house. Wright and his brother spent a period at an orphanage. Around 1920 Ella Wright became a paralytic, and the family moved from Natchez to Jackson, then to Elaine, Arkansas, and back to Jackson to live with Wright's maternal grandparents, who were restrictive Seventh-day Adventists. Wright moved from school to school, graduating from the ninth grade at the Smith Robertson Junior High School in Jackson as the class valedictorian in June 1925. Wright had published his first short story, "The Voodoo of Hell's Half-Acre," in three parts in the Southern Register in 1924, but no copies survive. His staunchly religious and illiterate grandmother, Margaret Bolden Wilson, kept books out of the house and thought fiction was the work of the devil. Wright kept any aspirations he had to be a writer to himself after his first experience with publication. After grade school Wright attended Lanier High School but dropped out after a few weeks to work; he took a series of odd jobs to save enough money to leave for Memphis, which he did at age seventeen. While in Memphis he worked as a dishwasher and delivery boy and for an optical company. He began to read contemporary American literature as well as commentary by H. L. Mencken, which struck him with particular force. As Wright reveals in his autobiography
Ann170 John Martin. Reply on behalf of New Members. robert Wayman. Piper's Selection. 1989.R wright. 1991. J Glachan. 1991. 1994. 72 Members. pianist W Sim. Piper I Mathieson. http://home.clara.net/douglaswmartin/ann170.htm
Extractions: Robert Denver List of Toasts Proposed Introduction of Chairman William Bain Robert Denver Address to the Haggis Charles Cook Grace C Oswald Supper I. The Queen Duke of Edinburgh and Members of the Royal Family Robert Denver Report and Intimations James Clark II. Deceased Members James Clark Company: "Land O' The Leal" Selection: Fiddles/Piano/Accordion J Mathieson III. Town and Community of Dalry Andrew Boyd Song: "A Man's A Man" Robert Wright IV. Song Writers Norman McKinnon Song: "Ye Banks and Braes" William Wallace V. Guests and New Members John Martin Reply on behalf of New Members Robert Wayman Piper's Selection I Mathieson VI. Memory of Burns The Chairman Company: "There Was A Lad" Reply on behalf of Guests Andrew Fergus Recitation: "Tam O'Shanter" William Wallace VII. Memory of Jean Armour The Croupier Company: "O' A' The Airts" Snippets: "Burns Verse" Song: "Mary Morrison" Hugh Hodge Selection: Burns Airs - Fiddle etc J Mathieson VIII. Land o' Cakes Hugh McTaggart Company: "Scots wha hae" Recitation: "Holy Willie's Prayer" T Wilson "Willie Brewed a Peck O' Maut" IX. The Chairman
Extractions: Young Abbé Coulmier (Joaquin Phoenix) runs the hospital gently and thoughtfully, hoping perhaps that de Sade will somehow give up his pornography and return to God; but the Abbé's nemesis, Dr. Royer-Collard (Michael Caine), a friend of the emperor, has other ideas and wangles an oversight position in order to impose his own barbaric ideas of treatment, specifically upon the Marquis.