Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Joseph Joachim (1831–1907) was an internationally renowned violin virtuoso, quartet player, conductor, educator, administrator, composer of a short but laudable catalog of works, and a collaborator in the careers and creative works of others. As such, he interacted with and affected virtually every major European musical figure of his time.

  2. Joseph Joachim poco più che ventenne in un pastello di Adolph von Menzel del 1853. Joseph Joachim (in ungherese: Joachim József; Köpcsény, 28 giugno 1831 – Berlino, 15 agosto 1907) è stato un violinista, direttore d'orchestra, compositore e insegnante ungherese

  3. 25 de nov. de 2023 · Joseph Joachim, el violinista más importante del romanticismo. Periodista y melómano. Ha sido corresponsal internacional, editor de información y editor general de medios de comunicación escritos en Ecuador. No es exagerado cuando se dice que el joven violinista austrohúngaro Joseph Joachim (1831-1907) fue elevado al Olimpo de los grandes ...

  4. 7 de oct. de 2022 · The Creative Worlds of Joseph Joachim - December 2021. Mendelssohn had met the twelve-year-old violin prodigy around the middle of 1843, and promptly began addressing him alternatim as “Posaunenengel” (trombone cherub) and “Teufelsbraten” (devil's brat).

  5. Joseph Joachim Berlin 14 February, 1906”). The joke stems from many years earlier, in England, when a group of his songs appeared on a program as “Leider by Joachim” instead of “Lieder by Joachim.” (“Unfortunately by Joachim” instead of “Songs by Joachim”) Joachim often told that story at his own expense.

  6. Joseph Joachim. Married to Amalie Joachim from 1863 to 1884. Leader of the Joachim Quartet from 1877, joining Heinrich De Ahna (1877-97) Carl Halir (from 1897) 2nd vl , Emanuel Wirth on viola and Robert Hausmann (1879-) on cello.

  7. Joseph Georg Maria Joachim [1] (zeitgenössisch auch Josef Joachim; * 28. Juni 1831 in Kittsee bei Pressburg, Ungarn, seit 1921 Burgenland; † 15. August 1907 in Charlottenburg bei Berlin) [2] war ein österreichisch-ungarischer Violinist, Dirigent und Komponist. Er galt als einer der bedeutendsten Violinisten seiner Zeit.