Maurice Ravel was a French composer, pianist, and conductor in the late 1800s. Maurice Ravel was born in Ciboure, France on March 7, 1875. His parents were passionate in music. He had a Basque mother named Marie Delouart and a Swiss father named Pierre-Joseph Ravel who was an engineer, inventor, and manufacturer. He had a brother named Édouard Ravel. He was unmarried. Ravel moved to Paris as an infant. He began learning music at age 7 and never had a formal education. He then studied piano with Henry Ghys and attended the Paris Conservatoire, a dance and musical school located at the capital of France, at age 14. His first performance was when he was fourteen with Émile Decombes. He studied at Paris Conservatoire for 6 years and expelled
On January 27th, 1756, at 9 Getreidegasse in Salzburg, Austria, a Jupiter among mere men and composers was born. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born the son of Anna Maria (1720-1778) and Leopold Mozart (1719-1787), a composer, teacher, and the fourth violinist for Count Leopold Anton von Firmian. Already learning to play the keyboard at a mere age of three years old, Mozart would learn by sight as he watched his seven year old sister took lessons from her music teacher. As Mozart got older and started to develop as a player and composer, his traveled with his father around Europe performing as a child ...
Philippe Petit changed numerous peoples’ thoughts about the Twin Towers when he performed his high wire walk between them in 1974. Before Philippe Petit walked the high wire between the Twin Towers in 1974, people weren’t certain how they felt about the construction of the World Trade Center. After Philippe performed, people began to warm up to the idea of the towers. Philippe Petit walked the high wire between the Twin Towers on August 7, 1974. This event prompted Andrew McMahon to write the song “Platform Fire” about this event for his band, Jack’s Mannequin. This song was not a hit for the band; however, fans of Jack’s Mannequin seem to have a special place in their heart for it.
Ever wonder who broke way for women in the graphic design industry in the 1930s-50s? The answer is Cipe Pineles , in this era women was thought to only obtain a certain job in a males eyes. Her style and way of work soon grabbed the attention of Vogue, Seventeen magazine, Glamour , and Charm just to name a few. Its amazing how quick her life flipped around from selling her work on the streets of New York to working with big time directors. Living out your dreams.
rebellion the government sent 3,000 troops on the new railroad. Louis Riel leading different groups of First Nations fought the government and lost. Louis Riel was found guilty and hanged for his actions. It took 10 years of surveying to determine the best route across Canada. Many Chinese and surveyors lives were lost during the building of the railroad due to the dangerous work, bad weather and the lack of food. The Canadian Pacific Railroad is considered to be one of Canada's greatest feats of engineering. The railroad was finally built in 1885. When the last stake was hammered in the rail line in Vancouver, BC. The Canadian Pacific Railroad is a significant aspect of Canadian history.
Frederic Chopin was a composer, teacher, and pianist born on March 1, 1810 in Zelazowa Wola, Poland. He was raised in a musical family as his mother and his sister played piano. At a very young age, he would listen to them play the piano, and not long after he was trying to play their repertoire while trying to make up his tunes. He officially started getting piano lessons at the age of seven, lasting six years, but would soon surpass and leave the teacher to teach himself (Clark). He also wrote two different polonaises at the age of seven; one in B flat major and the other in G minor. He played his first concert at the age of eight, and at age eleven played
Born in Saint Petersburg, Russia on September 25, 1906, Shostakovich was the second of three children born to Dmitri Boleslavovich Shostakovich and Sofiya Vasilievna Kokoulina. His father was of Polish descent but both his parents were Siberian natives. Dmitri was a child prodigy as a pianist and composer. He began taking piano lessons from his mother at the age of nine. He displayed an incredible talent to remember what his mother had played at the previous lesson and would get caught pretending to read the music, playing the music from his last lesson instead of what was placed in front of him.
Jean Baptiste Lully was a prolific composer who is best known for establishing French Opera. (Boynick) Born in Florence on the 28th of November 1632, (Boynick) Giovanni Battista Lulli was a miller’s son. (Sadie 2000 pg 166) Lully first arrived in France in March of 1646 (Jean Baptiste Lully) to work as an attendant for a female courtier. (Sadie 2000 pg. 166) “During his six years in her household, Lully, already an expert at the guitar and violin, polished his skills as a performer and composer.” (Straughan (a)) He made a name for himself as a dancer in the court ballets. (Straughan (a))
Achille-Claude Debussy was one of the most renowned French composers who stimulated the music of the twentieth-century. Debussy’s life experiences have given an emotional and relatable truth to his work. Works such as Clair de Lune, Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, and La Mer are great achievements of Debussy that are the most familiar today. Debussy is worth reviewing because he uniquely structured his compositions that served as a base for musicians in the past, and will easily continue to motivate musical masterpieces for years to come. Claude Debussy (born Achille-Claude Debussy) was born August 22, 1862, in St-Germain-en-Laye, France.
Jacquet was born in 1665, in Paris, France. She was born into a family of artisans, who were master instrument builders, instrumentalists and singers. It was from her father, Claude Jacquet, that she got her first professional music training. She was fortunate that her parents valued her music education, as at that time it was rare that girls received the same high-quality education as boys.
Claude Monet was born on November 14, 1840, in Paris, France and moved to LeHavre with his family at age five (Skira 21). As a schoolboy, Monet doodled in the margins of his books. His artistic career began by drawing caricatures of his schoolmasters distorting their faces and profiles outrageously. By the time he was fifteen, people would pay ten or twenty francs for one of his drawings (Skira 22).
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in the Russian Empire in 1840. His father was an engineer, and served as a lieutennant colonel in the Department of Mines. His mother awas the ssecond of his father’s three wives. They were both trained in the arts, including music. He had four brothers, one sister, and one half-sister from his father’s first wife. In 1843, they hired a French governess to look after the children. At the age of five, Tchaikovsky started taking piano lessongs. His family was supportive, and encouraged his study of the piano. In 1850 they sent him to the Imperial School of Jurisprudence in Saint Petersburg.
Mozart was born on Jan. 27, 1756, in Salzburg, Austria. His father was Leopold Mozart, a composer and a popular violinist. Mozart received his early musical training from his father. At the early age of 3 Mozart showed signs of being a musical genius. Then, at the age of five Mozart started composing. Beginning in 1762 Mozart’s father took young Mozart and his older sister, Maria Anna, on tours in Europe where they played the piano, harpsichord, violin, and organ, together and separately. Mozart learned to play the piano, harpsichord, and violin from his father. He gave public concerts and played at numerous courts and received several commissions.
Jean-Christophe Novelli was born on February 22, 1961 in Arras, Pas-de-Calais, France. He began his exciting career age a stunning age of 14 when he left school, as a baker in his home town in Arras, Northern France. By the age of 19 he became the private head chef to Elie de Rothschild in Paris. By the age of 20 he became thee personal chef for the Rothschild family.
Franz Liszt was a Hungarian born composer. He was one of the best, and most respected pianist of his time. He was a very accomplished conductor, and one of the foremost educational instructors in history. In 1836, King Charles Halle described Franz Liszt as the following. "He is tall and very thin, his face very small and pale, his forehead remarkably high and beautiful; he wears his perfectly lank hair so long that it spreads over his shoulders, which looks very odd, for when he gets a bit excited and gesticulates, it falls right over his face and one sees nothing of his nose. He is very negligent in his attire, his coat looks as if it had just been thrown on, and he wears no cravat, only a narrow white collar. This curious figure is in perpetual motion: now he stamps with his feet, now waves his arms in the air, now waves his arms in the air, now he does this, now that." Franz Liszt, was born on October 22, 1811, In the Hungarian town of Raiding. Liszt was taught to play piano at a very young age by his father, who was also very involved in music. His father, Adam played the cello, and many other instruments, as he was a very passionate musician. Adam taught Franz to the extent that he was giving concerts by the age of nine and starting to compose his own pieces. His father, having obtained permission from his employer, Prince Nicholas Esterhazy, accompanied the young Franz to Vienna. Franz Liszt was financially supported by a man by the name of Antonio Salieri, who gave him free tuition in composition. The boy, Franz, gave some very successful performances before prominent people in Vienna and gained a lot of fame. He became very well known for his ability to take a melody provided by a member of the audience and work it into a...
Beethoven was born in Bonn Germany. At 14, he held the occupation of a court organist. Sadly, his father was a drunken singer, and barely supported his family. Consequently, the money Beethoven earned assisted his family. In 1778, he traveled to Vienna and met Wolfgang A. Mozart who instantly acknowledged his brilliance. However, on account of his mother’s illness, he returned to his home town, and had to support his brothers after her death. He gave music lessons in Bonn, in addition to playing the viola in the theater orchestra. Settling in Vienna in 1792, he studied with masters such as Joseph Haydn. He appeared as a pianist and gaine...