Erik Alfred Leslie Satie, born May 17th 1866 to Scottish born Jane Leslie Anton and Norman born Alfred Satie in Honfleur, France. Satie is a well-remembered figure of 20th Century composers and pianist, who had always described himself as “a medieval musician who had wandered by mistake into the 20th Century”(1). Satie had suffered family tragedies in his early childhood losing his mother, Jane, at the age of 6. He was sent to live with his grandparents in 1872, along with his siblings. When he lived with his grandparents he started his musical career. At the age of ten, he had piano lessons from Vinot, local organist from St. Catherine’s church. According to Rollo H. Myers’s book of Erik Satie, there are two prominent figures in Erik’s life, his uncle Adrien who, like his nephew, had an odd character and his first piano teacher Vinot. After his grandmother passed away in 1878, Erik and his brother were sent to live with their father, Alfred Satie, whom one year later, married Mademoiselle Eugénie Barnetsche who was a pianist and teacher. Erik took quite a dislike to his new stepmother when she tried to teach Satie what she believed to be the correct and more traditional way to learn music. This was too strict for Satie. It is clear from this point in his early musical career that Satie was not going to be the traditional composer and wanted to break the traditional learning barriers. He died on the 1st of July 1925 in Arcueil, France from cirrhosis of the liver.
It is thought that having both Scottish and Norman blood relations that created this very creative, yet slightly rebellious characteristic known with Erik Satie. It is thought that because Erik Satie was close with his Uncle Adrian, also known as the “Sea-bird” who was ...
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B. J Hare, Ph. D “The Uses and Aesthetics of Musical Borrowing in Erik Satie’s Humoristic Piano Suites, 1913-1917” The University of Texas at Austin, December 2005. Copyright B. J. Hare 2005 [Accessed 22 Dec 2013]
Erik Satie. 2013. The Famous People website. Available from: http://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/erik-satie-308.php [Accessed 29 Dec 2013]. http://imslp.org/wiki/Gnossiennes_(Satie,_Erik) PDF download of the 6 Gnossiennes musical example purposes.
http://imslp.org/wiki/3_Gymnopédies_(Satie,_Erik)#Sheet_Music
PDF download of the Gymnopedies for musical example purposes http://www.satie-archives.com/web/article1.html An article by Olof Höjer - a Swedish pianist and Satie expert. Taken from his CD: Erik Satie - the complete piano music vol. 1. © 1996 Prophone Records, Stockholm, Sweden. [Accessed 27 Dec 2013]
A. 20th Century Repertoire. Lipscomb University, 2007 -. Web. The Web. The Web. 8 Apr. 2016.
It was not only until the spring of that year that he for first time left Hamburg professionally. He undertook a tour with the Hungarian violinist Eduard Remenyi for the purpose of introducing himself and his works. At Gottingen they gave a concert in which the young pianist made a deep impression upon the musicians present. He and Remenyi were to play Beethoven?s Kreutzer sonata, but at the last moment it was discovered that the piano was half a tone too low.
Bamboula, one of Gottschalk’s early solo piano works, is part of a set of four pieces called the L...
Schwartz, Boris. Music and Musical Life in Soviet Russia, 1917-1981. 2nd edition. Indiana University Press, 1983.
The son of Jewish immigrants and the youngest of five children, Aaron, grew up above his parent’s successful Brooklyn, New York department store. He credited his business abilities to his experience helping to run his parents store. His sister, Laurine, introduced young Aaron to ragtime, opera and was his first piano teacher. At the age of seven, he was making up tunes at the piano and was notating short pieces at twelve years old. Aaron’s first formal piano lessons were under the instruction of Leopold Wolfsohn (1913-17) and later he studied under Victor Wittgenstein (1917-19) and Clarence Adler (1919-21) (Pollack, 1:Life). However, lessons in composition and music theory were under the tutelage of Rubin Goldmark, “an old-fashioned teacher...against whom Copland rebelled” (naxos.com). During this time, Aaron was enamored with Scriabin, Debussy and Ives (which Goldmark called “dangerous”) and he scoured New York’s public libraries for the latest American and European scores. Finally, Aaron’s dream of studying in Paris came to fruition (1921-4) taking piano instruction from Ricardo Vines and studying composi...
Music throughout time has not only reflected the feeling of the musician but rather the feelings of a group of people at any one time It is important when learning about a period of time to look at the music of the period because it most likely shows the mood of the people and current events of the country. One time period specifically music greatly reflected the political and social culture of the time is the United States of America in the 1960s. One artist during this time was Bob Dylan. His most widely known song was called, “The Times They Are A-Changin”.
Said to be the father of jazz, Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington, born on April 29, 1899, was an American composer, pianist, and leader of a jazz orchestra. Duke Ellington was known and is remembered for his unique and profound style of jazz music. His development in jazz was one of the most spectacular in the history of music, as demonstrated by more than fifty years of sustained achievement as an artist which led him to be known as one of the greatest musicians of the 20th century. Duke’s music was so original, he called it “American Music” rather than jazz. Based on his success, it’s unlikely to think that he was not even attracted to music in his younger years, however music clearly became a very important part of his life, as he still reigns
Historical. This brilliant composition is considered as one of the two most important violin concertos of the German Romantic period, with Mendelssohn’s vi...
The last Piece of the program was Symphony No1. In g minor, op7 (1891-1892), features the work of the composer Carl Nielsen (18...
Pogue, David and Scott Speck. “Classical Music for Dummies.” Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1997. Print.
Jackson Pollock born on 29th January 1912 in Wyoming. Pollock studied with Thomas Hart before leaving traditional techniques to explore abstract and expressionism. Pollock’s father was an abusive alcoholic which he then left the house. Then Charles, Pollock’s brother was like a father for Jackson Pollock. Charles was an artist he was considered the best in the family. Charles greatly influenced Pollock. Pollock enrolled in a manual art school from which he was expelled twice. Pollock then abandons his creative pursuits. Pollock then studies with Charles’s art teacher. During the depression president Franklin Roosevelt created Public works of art project. Pollock and Sanford (Pollock’s other brother)
Liszt was a pianist who played a piece one time and then he “began to transpose simple passages into octaves and thirds, trills into sixths and to add phrases on his own until, in Brorodin’s words, what emerged ‘was not the same piece but an improvisation of it’” (Perenyi 205).
Igor Stravinsky was born near St. Petersburg, Russia into a very musical family. His father was famous for being an operatic bass and his mother was a pianist. Their home was filled with art, literature, and music, and Igor started piano lessons at age nine. But his parents didn’t want him to follow in their footsteps, so they encouraged him to study law, which he did. He went to a university to study, and it was there that he befriended Vladimir Rimsky-Korsakov, a celebrated composer, who Stravinsky was apprenticed under for three years. After a year and a half of this excellent music instruction, Stravinsky began his first symphony. It was around this time that he graduated from the university and married his cousin, Catherine Nossenko. When he and his wife went to the country that summer, Stravinsky promised Rimsky-Korsakov, his good friend as well as mentor, that he’d send him the finished music of the piece he was working on. A few weeks later, he sent the completed composition, his well-known Firworks, to him. But the parcel was returned with a message: “Not delivered owing to the death of the addressee”. This was a sad time for Stravinsky, but it was also one full of promise, because before his death Rimsky-Korsakov arranged for some of Stravinsky’s music to be performed. In the audience of one of these performances was Sergei Diaghilev, a dire...
Salome, Frank. (2205). Jazz and its Impact on European Classical Music. Journal of Popular Culture, 38(4), pg. 732. Retrieved from
Samuel Pepys is a prime example of how changing political landscapes can impact a person significantly. Pepys career started as an active participant and a careful chronicler of the major events of England through the late 17th century. Early in Pepys career he was an open supporter of the commonwealth, but after Charles the 1st’s execution, he quickly changed to support the royalists during the Restoration. There are two potential reasons why Pepys may have done this, the first one is that he might have secretly agreed with the power of monarchs all along, or he just is just a bandwagon supporter and decided that supporting the Restoration puts his career in the best position. Either way, this shows how shifting political events can change