piano

  1. Obscure Music Monday: Beach's By the Still Waters

    Amy Marcy Cheney Beach (Sept. 5, 1867 - December 27, 1944) was an American composer and pianist.  Extremely gifted from a young age, Beach's talents seemed to run in the family, with various members playing instruments or singing, and showing great aptitude for music. Beach was exceptionally talented, having learned 40 songs around the age of one, and at two...
  2. Obscure Music Monday: Coleridge-Taylor's Forest Scenes

    Samuel Colderidge-Taylor (Aug. 15, 1875 - Sept. 1, 1912) was born in London, England, to Alice Hare Martin, an English woman, and Dr. Daniel Peter Hughes Taylor, from Sierre Leone. They weren't married, and Daniel Taylor returned to Africa before 1875, unaware he had a son. Martin named her child after the poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and was raised in Croydon...
  3. Obscure Music Monday: Menter's Petite Valse

    Sophie Menter (July 29, 1846 - Feb. 23, 1918) was a German pianist and composer, born to musical parents. At the age of fifteen she soloed with an orchestra, and her concertizing after that took her all around Germany and Switzerland. Menter would go on to be known for her interpretations of Franz Liszt's compositions, and she actually studied with...
  4. Obscure Music Monday: Holmès' Violon d'amour

    Augusta Holmès (Dec. 18, 1847 - Jan. 28 1903) was a pianist and composer, born in Paris, and of Irish descent. Despite showing great talent as a child, she wasn't allowed to take piano at the Paris Conservatory. Instead she took private piano lessons with Mademoiselle Peyrnnet, and later on, harmony and counterpoint with Henri Lambert, and composition lessons with Hyacinthe Klosé. Holmès became...
  5. Obscure Music Monday: Suk's Spring

    Josef Suk (Jan. 4, 1874 - May 29, 1935) was a Czech composer and violinist. He began his musical training at an early age, learning the violin, organ, and piano from his father. Suk went on to study composition at the Prague Conservatory, with his most famous teacher being Antonin Dvořák, and the two became close, trusted friends. Suk ended up marrying Dvořák's  daughter, Otilie...
  6. Obscure Music Monday: Bonis' Suite en Trio

    Mélanie Hélène Bonis, known as Mel Bonis, (Jan. 21, 1858 - March 18, 1937) was a French late Romantic composer. Bonis wrote an incredible amount of music for many genres. Bonis grew up in a strict Catholic household, and her parents did not encourage her musical interests, though she did teach herself the piano. When she was twelve, a professor...
  7. Obscure Music Monday: Bauer's Six Preludes

    Marion Bauer (Aug. 15, 1882 - Aug. 9, 1955) was an American composer, music critic, teacher, and writer. Born in Walla Walla, Washington, she was the youngest of seven children. Her father noticed her musical inclinations and she began studying piano  with her elder sister Emilie, who was 17 years older than her.  After finishing high school, Bauer traveled to...
  8. Obscure Music Monday: Chaminade's Tristesse

    Cécile Louise Stéphanie Chaminade (Aug. 8, 1857 - April 13, 1944) was a French pianist and composer. Her first teacher was her mother, and she also took violin and composition lessons; sadly her father disapproved. Despite her father's disapproval, Chaminade was composing at a young age, and at eight years old she played some of her music for George Bizet...
  9. Obscure Music Monday: Johnson's A Collection of New Cotillions

    Francis "Frank" Johnson (June 16, 1792 – April 6, 1844) was an American violinist, Kent bulge player, and composer, born in Philadeliphia, PA. The first Black musician to have his music published as sheet music, Johnson wrote a wide variety of music, military bands and dance orchestras, gave music lessons, and performed on the bugle and violin. Sadly, only manuscripts...
  10. Obscure Music Monday: Turina's Danzas fantásticas

    Joaquín Turina (Dec. 9, 1882 - Jan. 14, 1949) was a Spanish composer born in Seville, where music was a significant part of his upbringing. He tried his hand at studying medicine, but music was his ultimate calling. He studied in both Seville and Madrid, and from 1905 - 1914 he studied composition with Vincent d'Indy at the Schola Cantorum...

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