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  1. Symphony No. 1 (Frankel) The Symphony No. 1, Op. 33 was the first of eight symphonies composed by English composer Benjamin Frankel, written in 1958. It is a dodecaphonic symphony, deeply serious in tone. [1] It was premiered on March 25, 1959 in Lünen by the Westphalia Symphony conducted by Hubert Reichert, [2] while the British premiere took ...

  2. Explore music from Benjamin Frankel. Shop for vinyl, CDs, and more from Benjamin Frankel on Discogs.

  3. Robert Orlando Morgan (16 March 1865 – 16 May 1956) was an English music teacher, composer and musicologist. He is best remembered as an influential teacher at the Guildhall School of Music in London, where he taught for 64 years, from 1887 to 1951, as Professor of Pianoforte and Composition. His pupils included the composer Benjamin Frankel ...

  4. En 1921, un pequeño grupo de estudiantes universitarios en La Universidad de Illinois se juntó alrededor de un estudiante rabínico llamado Benjamin Frankel. El joven de 24 años era un asistente habitual en la sinagoga Sinaí ubicada en Champaign, Frankel oraba allí junto a sus compañeros judíos. [1]

  5. Dave, seeking easy money, joins a criminal gang headed by Mr Gregory, which has its headquarters in a suburban palais-de-danse. Dave is shot by Paul Baker, Gregory's right-hand man, and staggers, fatally wounded, into the back of Ted's taxicab while Ted is away. When Ted returns to find Dave's body in his cab, he resolves to find the murderer.

  6. Benjamin Frankel. Film score for The Curse of the Werewolf (1961) His 8 symphonies (see e.g. the article on Symphony No.1 (Op.33, 1958)) either use the twelve-tone technique, or serial techniques with other kinds of rows, or both; Lou Harrison. Rapunzel (1952) Symphony on G (1952) Josef Matthias Hauer

  7. In 1921, a small group of college students at the University of Illinois came together, led by a local rabbinical student named Benjamin Frankel. The 24-year-old, who was interning at Temple Sinai in Champaign, described his Jewish peers as being in a state of "intellectual flux".