Difference between revisions of "Nadia Boulanger"

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'''Nadia Boulanger''' (1887-1979) was a [[France|French]] pianist, composer, and teacher who was one of the most influential figures for at least three generations of composers from all over the world, especially the [[[USA]]. She taught a veritable who's who list of American musicians: [[Aaron Copland]], [[Leonard Bernstein]], Virgil Thompson, Walter Piston, [[Philip Glass]], Robert Russell Bennett, Burt Bacharach, and around 600 others. Ironically, she was credited with introducing American composers in the 1920's to [[jazz]], encouraging them to use it in their own compositions.<ref>Robert Morgan, ''Twentieth-Century Music,'' 1991.</ref>
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'''Nadia Boulanger''' (1887-1979) was a [[France|French]] pianist, composer, and teacher who was one of the most influential figures for at least three generations of composers from all over the world, especially the [[USA]]. She taught a veritable who's who list of American musicians: [[Aaron Copland]], [[Leonard Bernstein]], Virgil Thompson, Walter Piston, [[Philip Glass]], Robert Russell Bennett, Burt Bacharach, and around 600 others. Ironically, she was credited with introducing American composers in the 1920's to [[jazz]], encouraging them to use it in their own compositions.<ref>Robert Morgan, ''Twentieth-Century Music,'' 1991.</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 12:01, April 28, 2009

Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979) was a French pianist, composer, and teacher who was one of the most influential figures for at least three generations of composers from all over the world, especially the USA. She taught a veritable who's who list of American musicians: Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein, Virgil Thompson, Walter Piston, Philip Glass, Robert Russell Bennett, Burt Bacharach, and around 600 others. Ironically, she was credited with introducing American composers in the 1920's to jazz, encouraging them to use it in their own compositions.[1]

References

  1. Robert Morgan, Twentieth-Century Music, 1991.