List of music students by teacher: A to B

This is a list of students of music, organized by teacher.

this teacher's teachers
Abaza (1843–1915) studied with teachers including Alexander Dreyschock and Camille Everardi.
this teacher's teachers
Abendroth (1883–1956) studied with teachers including Ludwig Thuille.
this teacher's teachers
Abrahamsen (born 1952) studied with teachers including György Ligeti, Per Nørgård, and Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen.
this teacher's teachers
Adam (1803–1856) studied with teachers including Charles-Simon Catel, François Benoist, and François-Adrien Boieldieu.
this teacher's teachers
Adam (1758-1848) studied with teachers including Jean-Frédéric Edelmann.
this teacher's teachers
Adams (born 1953) studied with teachers including Leonard Stein and James Tenney.
this teacher's teachers
Adaskin (1906–2002) studied with teachers including John Weinzweig.
this teacher's teachers
Adler (1855–1941) studied with teachers including Anton Bruckner and Felix Otto Dessoff.
this teacher's teachers
Adler (born 1928) studied with teachers including Aaron Copland, Paul Hindemith, Serge Koussevitzky, Walter Piston, and Randall Thompson.
this teacher's teachers
Aitken (1908–1981) studied with teachers including Emil von Sauer.
this teacher's teachers
Alard (1815–1888) studied with teachers including François-Joseph Fétis and François Habeneck.
this teacher's teachers
Alberti (1642–1710) studied with teachers including Vincenzo Albrici and Werner Fabricius.
this teacher's teachers
Albrechtsberger (1736–1809) studied with teachers including Georg Matthias Monn and Leopold Pittner.
this teacher's teachers
Albrici (1631 – 1695/1696) studied with teachers including Giacomo Carissimi.
this teacher's teachers
Albright (1944 – 1998) studied with teachers including Hugh Aitken, Leslie Bassett, Max Deutsch, Ross Lee Finney, Michael Kurek, Marilyn Mason, Olivier Messiaen, and George Rochberg.
this teacher's teachers
Alcock (1861–1947) studied with teachers including John Stainer and Arthur Sullivan.
this teacher's teachers
Aldrich (1904–1975) studied with teachers including Wanda Landowska and Tobias Matthay.
this teacher's teachers
Aldridge (1866–1956) studied with teachers including Jenny Lind.
this teacher's teachers
Alexander (1891–1969) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder and Tobias Matthay.
this teacher's teachers
Alkan (1813–1888) studied with teachers including Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmermann.
this teacher's teachers
Allen (1869–1946) studied with teachers including unknown .
this teacher's teachers
Alsleben studied with teachers including Siegfried Dehn.
this teacher's teachers
Álvarez (b. 1956) studied with teachers including Mario Lavista.
this teacher's teachers
Alwyn (1905–1985) studied with teachers including John Blackwood McEwen, William Wallace, and Daniel Wood.
this teacher's teachers
Anacker (1790–1854) studied with teachers including Johann Gottfried Schicht and Friedrich Schneider.
this teacher's teachers
Anderson (b. 1967) studied with teachers including Alexander Goehr, John Lambert, and Tristan Murail.
this teacher's teachers
Andreae (1879–1962) studied with teachers including Fritz Brun, Friedrich_Wilhelm Franke, Isidor Seiss, and Franz Wüllner.

this teacher's teachers
Andricu (1894–1974) studied with teachers including Gabriel Fauré, Vincent d'Indy, and Dumitru Georgescu Kiriac.
this teacher's teachers
H. Andriessen (1892–1981) studied with teachers including Bernard Zweers.
this teacher's teachers
L. Andriessen (1939–2021) studied with teachers including Kees van Baaren and Luciano Berio.
this teacher's teachers
Ansorge (1862–1930) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Antheil (1900–1959) studied with teachers including Ernest Bloch, Nadia Boulanger, and Constantin Sternberg.
this teacher's teachers[165]
Antonini (1901–1983) studied with teachers including Arturo Toscanini.
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this teacher's teachers
Aprile (1731–1813) studied with teachers including Gregorio Sciroli.
this teacher's teachers
Arensky (1861–1906) studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
this teacher's teachers
Argento (born 1927) studied with teachers including Luigi Dallapiccola, Howard Hanson, Alan Hovhaness, Bernard Rogers, and Hugo Weisgall.
this teacher's teachers
Arnell (1917-2009) studied with teachers including John Ireland.
this teacher's teachers
Arom (born 1930) studied with teachers including Jean Devémy.
this teacher's teachers
Arrau (1903–1991) studied with teachers including Martin Krause.
this teacher's teachers
Artôt (1835–1907) studied with teachers including Francesco Lamperti and Pauline Viardot.
this teacher's teachers
Asencio (1908-1979) studied with teachers including Frank Marshall, Enric Morera i Viura, Joaquín Turina, and Ernesto Halffter.
this teacher's teachers
Ashley (1930–2014) studied with teachers including Ross Lee Finney, Roberto Gerhard, and Wallingford Riegger.
this teacher's teachers
Asioli (1769–1832) studied with teachers including Angelo Morigi.
this teacher's teachers
Attwood (1765-1838) studied with teachers including Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, James Nares, and Edmund Ayrton.
this teacher's teachers
Auber (1782–1871) studied with teachers including Luigi Cherubini.
this teacher's teachers
Aubert (1877–1968) studied with teachers including Louis Diémer and Gabriel Fauré.
this teacher's teachers
Aubin (1907–1981) studied with teachers including Paul Dukas, Noël Gallon, and Philippe Gaubert.
this teacher's teachers
Auer (1845–1930) studied with teachers including Jakob Dont, Joseph Joachim, and Ridley Kohné.
this teacher's teachers
Austin (born 1930) studied with teachers including Violet Archer, Andrew Imbrie, and Darius Milhaud.
this teacher's teachers
Avison (1709–1770) studied with teachers including Francesco Geminiani.
this teacher's teachers
Ayrton (1734-1808) studied with teachers including James Nares.
 
this teacher's teachers
Baaren (1906–1970) studied with teachers including Willem Pijper.
this teacher's teachers
Babbitt (1916–2011) studied with teachers including Marion Bauer and Roger Sessions.
this teacher's teachers
A. W. Bach (1796–1869) studied with teachers including Carl Friedrich Zelter.

this teacher's teachers
C.P.E. Bach (1714–1788) studied with teachers including Johann Sebastian Bach.
this teacher's teachers
J.C. Bach (1735–1782) studied with teachers including Johann Sebastian Bach and Giovanni Battista Martini.
this teacher's teachers
J.S. Bach (1685–1750) studied with teachers including Georg Böhm, his brother Johann Christoph Bach, and Dieterich Buxtehude
this teacher's teachers
W.F. Bach (1710–1784) studied with teachers including Johann Sebastian Bach.
this teacher's teachers
Back (1879–1963) studied with teachers including Jakob Grün, César Thomson, and Eugène Ysaÿe.
this teacher's teachers
Backer Grøndahl (1847–1907) studied with teachers including Hans von Bülow, Halfdan Kjerulf, Theodor Kullak, Ludvig Mathias Lindeman, Franz Liszt, and Richard Wüerst.
this teacher's teachers
Bacon (1898–1990) studied with teachers including Ernest Bloch and Alexander Raab.
this teacher's teachers
Baermann (1839–1913) studied with teachers including Peter Cornelius, Franz Lachner, and Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Baillot (1771–1842) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Viotti.
this teacher's teachers
Bainbridge (born 1952) studied with teachers including John Lambert and Gunther Schuller.
this teacher's teachers
Baini (1775–1844) studied with teachers including Giuseppe Jannacconi.
this teacher's teachers
Bairstow (1874–1946) studied with teachers including Walter Galpin Alcock, Frederick Bridge, and John Farmer.
this teacher's teachers
Baker studied with teachers including Samuel Adler and Warren Benson.
this teacher's teachers
Baker studied with teachers including Leonardo De Lorenzo, William Kincaid and Marcel Tabuteau .
this teacher's teachers
Balakirev (1837-1910) studied with teachers including Alexandre Dubuque and Karl Eisrich.
this teacher's teachers
Balasanian (1902-1982) studied with teachers including Dmitry Kabalevsky.
this teacher's teachers
Balbastre (1724–1799) studied with teachers including Pierre Février and Jean-Philippe Rameau.
this teacher's teachers
Banerjee (1931–1986) studied with teachers including Allauddin Khan.
this teacher's teachers
Bantock (1868–1946) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder and Gordon Saunders.
this teacher's teachers
Barbandt (1716–after 1775) studied with teachers including unknown .
this teacher's teachers
Barber (1910–1981) studied with teachers including Rosario Scalero and Isabelle Vengerova.
this teacher's teachers
Barcewicz (1858–1929) studied with teachers including Jan Hřímalý, Apolinary Kątski, Ferdinand Laub, and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
this teacher's teachers
Bargiel (1828–1897) studied with teachers including Siegfried Dehn, Niels Gade, Ignaz Moscheles, and Julius Rietz.
this teacher's teachers
Barlow studied with teachers including Karlheinz Stockhausen and Bernd Alois Zimmermann.

this teacher's teachers
Barnby (1838–1896) studied with teachers including Charles Lucas and Cipriani Potter.
this teacher's teachers
Barrère (1876–1944) studied with teachers including Paul Taffanel.
this teacher's teachers
Barth (1847 – 1922) studied with teachers including Hans von Bronsart and Carl Tausig.
this teacher's teachers
Bartók (1881–1945) studied with teachers including Ernő Dohnányi, Hans von Koessler, and István Thomán.
this teacher's teachers
Bartolo (1606–1656) studied with teachers including G.B. de Bellis.
this teacher's teachers
Barton (1865–1938) studied with teachers including John Francis Barnett and Charles Villiers Stanford.
this teacher's teachers
Bassett (1923–1966) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Mario Davidovsky, Ross Lee Finney, and Homer Keller.
this teacher's teachers
Harold Bauer (1873–1951) studied with teachers including Ignacy Jan Paderewski.
this teacher's teachers
Bauer (1882–1955) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Paul Ertel, André Gedalge, and Walter Henry Rothwell.
this teacher's teachers
Bautista (1901–1961) studied with teachers including Conrado del Campo.
this teacher's teachers
Bax (1883–1953) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder and Tobias Matthay.
this teacher's teachers
Bayley (1810–1858) studied with teachers including Unknown .
this teacher's teachers
Bazin (1816–1878) studied with teachers including Daniel Auber, Henri-Montan Berton, and Fromental Halévy.
this teacher's teachers
Bazzini (1818–1897) studied with teachers including Faustino Camisani.
this teacher's teachers
Beadell (1925–1994) studied with teachers including Darius Milhaud and Leo Sowerby.
this teacher's teachers
Beck (1734–1809) studied with teachers including Baldassare Galuppi and Johann Stamitz.
this teacher's teachers
Bedford (1909–1985) studied with teachers including Lyell Gustin, Percy Grainger, Carl Friedberg, and Robert Casadesus.
this teacher's teachers
Beeson (1921–2010) studied with teachers including Béla Bartók, Howard Hanson, and Bernard Rogers.
this teacher's teachers
this teacher's teachers
D. Behrman (born 1937) studied with teachers including Gordon Mumma, Henri Pousseur, and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
this teacher's teachers
F. Benda (1708–1768) studied with teachers including Bohuslav Matěj Černohorský.
this teacher's teachers
Benda (1709–1786) studied with teachers including Johann Georg Pisendel, Carl Heinrich, and Graun .
this teacher's teachers
Benedict (1804–1885) studied with teachers including Johann Nepomuk Hummel and Carl Maria von Weber.
this teacher's teachers
Benevoli (1605–1672) studied with teachers including Vincenzo Ugolini.
this teacher's teachers
Ben-Haim (1897–1984) studied with teachers including Friedrich Klose.
this teacher's teachers
Benjamin (1893–1960) studied with teachers including Frederic Cliffe, Thomas Dunhill, and Charles Villiers Stanford.
this teacher's teachers
Bennett (1936–2012) studied with teachers including Howard Ferguson, Leonnox Berkeley, and Pierre Boulez.
this teacher's teachers
Bennett (1816–1875) studied with teachers including William Crotch, William Henry Holmes, and Cipriani Potter.
this teacher's teachers
Bennewitz (1833–1926) studied with teachers including Moritz Mildner.
this teacher's teachers
Benoist (1794–1878) studied with teachers including Charles Simon Catel.
this teacher's teachers
1834–1901 studied with teachers including François-Joseph Fétis.
this teacher's teachers
Yara Bernette studied with teachers including Jose Kliass.
this teacher's teachers
Berg (1885–1935) studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Berger (1912–2003) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Darius Milhaud, and Walter Piston.
this teacher's teachers
Bergsma (1921–1994) studied with teachers including Howard Hanson and Bernard Rogers.
this teacher's teachers
Beringer (1844–1922) studied with teachers including Ignaz Moscheles and Karl Tausig.
this teacher's teachers
Berkeley (1903–1989) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger.
this teacher's teachers
Berio (1925–2003) studied with teachers including Luigi Dallapiccola and Giorgio Federico Ghedini.
this teacher's teachers
Bériot (1833–1914) studied with teachers including Sigismond Thalberg.
this teacher's teachers
Berlioz (1803–1869) studied with teachers including Jean-François Le Sueur and Anton Reicha.
this teacher's teachers
Bernabei (1622–1687) studied with teachers including Orazio Benevoli.
this teacher's teachers
Bernacchi (1685–1756) studied with teachers including Francesco Antonio Pistocchi.
this teacher's teachers
Bernier (1664–1734) studied with teachers including Antonio Caldara.
this teacher's teachers
Bertoni (1725–1813) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Martini.
this teacher's teachers
Berwald (1796–1868) studied with teachers including Édouard Du Puy.
this teacher's teachers
Berwald (1864-1948) studied with teachers including Josef Rheinberger.
this teacher's teachers
Bianchi (1752–1810) studied with teachers including Pasquale Cafaro and Niccolò Jommelli.
this teacher's teachers
Biggs (1906–1977) studied with teachers including G. D. Cunningham.
this teacher's teachers
Birtwistle (born 1934) studied with teachers including Milton Babbitt, Richard Hall, and Reginald Kell.
this teacher's teachers
Bishop (1787–1856) studied with teachers including Francesco Bianchi.
this teacher's teachers
Blacher (1903–1975) studied with teachers including Friedrich Koch.

this teacher's teachers
Blackwood (born 1933) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Paul Hindemith, and Olivier Messiaen.
this teacher's teachers
Bloch (1880–1959) studied with teachers including Émile Jaques-Dalcroze, Ludwig Thuille, and Eugène Ysaÿe.
this teacher's teachers
Blomdahl (1916–1968) studied with teachers including Hilding Rosenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Bloom (1908–1994) studied with teachers including Marcel Tabuteau.
this teacher's teachers
Blow (1649–1708) studied with teachers including Henry Cooke and Christopher Gibbons.
this teacher's teachers
Blumenfeld (1863–1931) studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Anton Rubinstein, and Fedor Stein.
this teacher's teachers
Bochsa (1789–1856) studied with teachers including Franz Beck, Charles-Simon Catel, and François Joseph Naderman.
this teacher's teachers
Bocklet (1801–1881) studied with teachers including Bedřich Diviš Weber.

this teacher's teachers
J. Böhm (1795–1876) studied with teachers including Pierre Rode.
this teacher's teachers
Boieldieu (1775–1834) studied with teachers including Charles Broche.
this teacher's teachers
Bolcom (born 1938) studied with teachers including Berthe Poncy Jacobson, George Frederick McKay, Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud, and John Verrall.
this teacher's teachers
Bonno (1711–1788) studied with teachers including Francesco Durante, Leonardo Leo, and Johann Georg Reinhardt.
this teacher's teachers
Bononcini (1642–1678) studied with teachers including Marco Uccellini.
this teacher's teachers
Boretz (born 1934) studied with teachers including Milton Babbitt, Lukas Foss, Darius Milhaud, and Roger Sessions.
this teacher's teachers
Boschi (1917–1990) studied with teachers including Alfred Cortot and Yvonne Lefébure.
this teacher's teachers
Bossi (1861–1925) studied with teachers including Amilcare Ponchielli.
this teacher's teachers
Boulanger (1887–1979) studied with teachers including Gabriel Fauré and André Gedalge.

Neither Boulanger nor Annette Dieudonné, her lifelong friend and assistant, kept a record of every student who studied with Boulanger. In addition, it is virtually impossible to determine the exact nature of an individual's private study with Boulanger. All in all, Boulanger is believed to have taught a very large number of students from Europe, Australia, Mexico, Argentina and Canada, as well as over 600 American musicians.

A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
V
W
X
Y
Z
this teacher's teachers
Boulez (1925–2016) studied with teachers including René Leibowitz and Olivier Messiaen.
this teacher's teachers
Boult (1889–1983) studied with teachers including Hugh Allen.
this teacher's teachers
Bowen (1884–1961) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder, Alfred Izard, and Tobias Matthay.
this teacher's teachers
Boyce (1711–1779) studied with teachers including Maurice Greene and Johann Christoph Pepusch.
this teacher's teachers
Boykan (1931–2021) studied with teachers including Paul Hindemith and Walter Piston.
this teacher's teachers
Brahms (1833–1897) studied with teachers including Carl Maria von Bocklet and Eduard Marxsen.
this teacher's teachers
Brassin (1840–1884) studied with teachers including Ignaz Moscheles.
this teacher's teachers
Bresnick (born 1946) studied with teachers including John Chowning and György Ligeti.
this teacher's teachers
Brewer (1879–1941) studied with teachers including Charles Harford Lloyd.
this teacher's teachers
Bridge (1879–1941) studied with teachers including Hubert Parry and Charles Villiers Stanford.
this teacher's teachers
Bridge (1844–1924) studied with teachers including John Goss.
this teacher's teachers
Brocá (1805-1882) studied with teachers including Dionisio Aguado.
this teacher's teachers
Brodsky (1851–1929) studied with teachers including Joseph Hellmesberger Sr..
this teacher's teachers
Brodsky (1907–1997) studied with teachers including Lucien Capet and Efrem Zimbalist.
this teacher's teachers
Brower (1869–1928) studied with teachers including Amy Fay.
this teacher's teachers
Brown (born 1943) studied with teachers including Lennox Berkeley and Boris Blacher.
this teacher's teachers
Bruch (1838–1920) studied with teachers including Ferdinand Hiller and Carl Reinecke.
this teacher's teachers
Bruckner (1824–1896) studied with teachers including Simon Sechter.
this teacher's teachers
Brun (1878–1959) studied with teachers including Franz Wüllner.
this teacher's teachers
Brün (1918–2000) studied with teachers including Eli Friedman, Frank Pelleg, and Stefan Wolpe.
this teacher's teachers
Buchner (1483–1538) studied with teachers including Paul Hofhaimer.
this teacher's teachers
Buck (1839–1909) studied with teachers including Louis Plaidy.
this teacher's teachers
Buck (1871–1947) studied with teachers including Francis Davenport, Charles Joseph Frost, Charles Harford Lloyd, Walter Parratt, and Hubert Parry.
this teacher's teachers
Bullock (1890–1979) studied with teachers including Edward Bairstow.
this teacher's teachers
Bülow (1830–1894) studied with teachers including Carl Eberwein, Moritz Hauptmann, Franz Liszt, Henry Litolff, Louis Plaidy, and Friedrich Wieck.

this teacher's teachers
Busch (1891–1952) studied with teachers including Willy Hess and Bram Eldering.

this teacher's teachers
Bush (1900–1999) studied with teachers including Frederick Corder and Tobias Matthay.
this teacher's teachers
Busoni (1866–1924) studied with teachers including Salomon Jadassohn, Wilhelm Mayer, and Carl Reinecke.
this teacher's teachers
Büsser (1872–1973) studied with teachers including César Franck and Ernest Guiraud.
this teacher's teachers
Bussler (1838–1900) studied with teachers including Siegfried Dehn and Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht.
this teacher's teachers
Butterworth (1923–2014) studied with teachers including Richard Hall.
this teacher's teachers
Buxtehude (c. 1637/1639 – 1707) studied with teachers including Johann Theile.

See also

edit

References

edit

Citations

  1. ^ Lewis, Uncle Dave. Nikolai Roslavets at AllMusic. Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  2. ^ Randel (1996), p. 1.
  3. ^ Stoddard, Hope (1957). Symphony Conductors of the U.S.A., p.320. Crowell. [ISBN unspecified].
  4. ^ "Review: Brahms Symphony No 1 etc", Gramophone.co.uk.
  5. ^ Eder, Bruce. "Wilhelm Schuchter biography", AllMusic.com.
  6. ^ Summers, Jonathan (2008). "About this Recording: 8.111296", Naxos.com.
  7. ^ a b "Jörgen Dafgård". Unique International. No. 1. Issuu. 12 July 2014. p. 14. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  8. ^ Sadie & Samuel (1994), p.160.
  9. ^ Randel (1996), p. 206.
  10. ^ Jones (2014), p.164.
  11. ^ Charlton, David. "Poise, Ferdinand (born 1828), composer". OxfordIndex.OUP.com. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.21986. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  12. ^ Carew, Derek (2008). The Companion to the Mechanical Muse: The Piano Pianism and Piano Music, c.1760–1850. Ashgate Publishing. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-7546-8671-2.
  13. ^ Mason (1917), p.100.
  14. ^ Denis Havard de la Montagne. "Joseph Daussoigne-Méhul". www.musimem.com.
  15. ^ a b c Brubaker, Bruce and Gottlieb, Jane; eds. (2000). Pianist, Scholar, Connoisseur: Essays in Honor of Jacob Lateiner, p. 39. Pendragon. ISBN 978-1-57647-001-5.
  16. ^ "Corey Dragel". FracturedAtlas.org. "|| Bucknell University". Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 20 September 2015.. [1]. [2].
  17. ^ "Liner notes: 118". Innova.mu. [3], [4].
  18. ^ "About". RyanMacguireMusic.com.
  19. ^ "Todd Tarantino". matafestival.org.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Griffiths, Paul (2004). The Penguin Companion to Classical Music, [unpaginated]. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-0-14-190976-9.
  21. ^ Jones (2014), p.501.
  22. ^ MacDonald, Malcolm (2008). Schoenberg. Oxford. p. 32n4. ISBN 978-0-19-803840-5.
  23. ^ Shawn, Allen (2003). Arnold Schoenberg's Journey. Harvard University. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-674-01101-4.
  24. ^ Martin Amlin, Requiem Survey.
  25. ^ "IU Jacobs School, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra to present free concert in Bloomington", NewsInfo.IU.edu.
  26. ^ "Biography Archived 31 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine", RogerBriggs.com.
  27. ^ Bryer, Jackson R.; Davison, Richard Allan (2005). The Art of the American Musical: Conversations with the Creators. Rutgers. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-8135-3613-2.
  28. ^ "Faculty: Crumb Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine", UOregon.edu.
  29. ^ "Biography", GregDanner.com.
  30. ^ Anspach, Barret (April 2008). "Students Throw Adler a Musical Birthday Party", Juilliard.edu.
  31. ^ "Conductor Jeffrey Milarsky Leads the Juilliard Orchestra in Annual Evening of World Premieres by Juilliard Student Composers on Monday, February 25 at 8 PM in Juilliard's Peter Jay Sharp Theater", Juilliard.edu.
  32. ^ "Jay Greenberg Archived 14 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine", IMGArtists.com.
  33. ^ Randel (1996), p. 355.
  34. ^ Randel (1996), p. 403.
  35. ^ Chute, James (2001). "Ince, Kamran". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers.
  36. ^ "So it does : for 6 players by Mark Isaacs : Work : Australian Music Centre". www.australianmusiccentre.com.au. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  37. ^ "Biography", MichaelIsaacson.com.
  38. ^ a b Halbert, Katey J. (May 2022). "Annette LeSiege's Compositions for Horn". The Horn Call. 52 (3): 36–37 – via The Free Library.
  39. ^ "Scott Lindroth", BMOP.org.
  40. ^ "Marc Mellits Biography", AllMusic.com.
  41. ^ "Carter Pann", p.1. Vivo.Colorado.edu. Accessed February 2016. Also [5].
  42. ^ a b "Famous Composers I (Almost) Studied With", RobertPaterson.com.
  43. ^ "Paul Phillips", Vivo.Brown.edu @ [6].
  44. ^ "Faculty: Reller", USF.edu.
  45. ^ "Bio", MichaelAlecRose.com.
  46. ^ "[7]", Jonathan Schwabe | UNI School of Music
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  48. ^ "Faculty: Gordon Stout", Ithaca.edu. "Biography Archived 27 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine", GordonStout.net.
  49. ^ "Biography", FisherTull.com. [8] Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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  51. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 450
  52. ^ Herbert, Victor (1908). The World's Best Music: Famous compositions for the piano, p. 1368. University Society. [ISBN unspecified].
  53. ^ "Dreyschock & Kullak: Piano Concertos", Hyperion-Records.co.uk.
  54. ^ Bomberger, E. Douglas (1999). Brainard's Biographies of American Musicians, p. 67. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-30782-9.
  55. ^ Randel (1996), p. 79.
  56. ^ Randel (1996), p. 310.
  57. ^ a b Greene (1985), p. 739.
  58. ^ a b "Georg Friedrich Kauffmann" and "Johann Friedrich Alberti", Bach-Cantatas.com.
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  60. ^ van Boer (2012), p. 66.
  61. ^ Greene (1985), p. 356.
  62. ^ van Boer (2012), p. 120.
  63. ^ Randel (1996), p. 255.
  64. ^ Jones (2014), p. 203.
  65. ^ Freeman, Robert N. (2001). "Albrechtsberger, Johann Georg". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.00478. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. His studies in composition under G. M. Monn (if accurately reported by Albrechtsberger's pupil Johann Fuss) must have taken place during this period.
  66. ^ Randel (1996), p. 399.
  67. ^ Randel (1996), p. 435.
  68. ^ Wier (1938), p. 924.
  69. ^ "Composers: Ignaz Moscheles", Musicalics.com.
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  71. ^ Randel (1996), p. 696.
  72. ^ Lehrer, Charles-David (2002). "Antoine Reicha's 24 Wind Quintets: Introductory Commentary", IDRS.org. [9]
  73. ^ Randel (1996), p. 746.
  74. ^ a b c d e f Thomas Christensen, ed. (2002). The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory, unpaginated. Cambridge. ISBN 978-1-316-02548-2.
  75. ^ van Boer (2012), p. 532.
  76. ^ Randel (1996), p. 973.
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