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  1. Wittgenstein's incredible life gave music a new repertoire. This is a film about Paul Wittgenstein, who as a result of great personal suffering, commissioned the most distinguished composers of his day to create the left hand alone piano repertoire.

  2. WITTGENSTEIN’S REPERTOIRE. The madness of war cost pianist Paul Wittgenstein his right arm. Wittgenstein's incredible life gave music a new repertoire. This is a film about Paul Wittgenstein, who as a result of great personal suffering, commissioned the most distinguished composers of his day to create the left hand alone piano repertoire.

  3. 9 de nov. de 2020 · Some of the greatest two-handed pianists in the world have tackled the repertoire left behind by Wittgenstein, all of them adopting different strategies for what to do with their unused right...

    • Wittgenstein's Repertoire1
    • Wittgenstein's Repertoire2
    • Wittgenstein's Repertoire3
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    • Wittgenstein's Repertoire5
  4. IMDB. 2017, 55 minutes. Music portrait of left-hand alone pianist Paul Wittgenstein. The madness of war cost pianist Paul Wittgenstein his right arm. Wittgenstein's incredible life gave music a new repertoire.

  5. 5 de abr. de 2018 · It may be that the ‘emancipated’ reader or reading can interpret irony, metaphors and other narrative strategies that are part of Wittgenstein’s philosophical repertoire as pedagogical tools, in the Nietzschean sense, that are meant to educate us through suspicion and agonistic or interrogative style (Lachance, Citation 2010).

  6. Wittgenstein’s Repertoire explores a fascinating and little-known corner of the musical world: the several generations of pianists, starting with and inspired by Paul Wittgenstein (maimed in WWI), and continuing through Leon Fleisher in the 1960s and Keith Porter-Snell today, who have lost the use of their right hand. Rather than retreat from music or bask in victimhood, these musicians (and ...

  7. Welcome to The Ludwig Wittgenstein Project, a multilingual website that aims to make Wittgenstein's works available free of charge and with a free licence. Wittgenstein's works are in the public domain in those countries where rights expire 70 years or fewer after the death of the author : this includes most of the European Union, Africa, Asia and Oceania, most Latin American Countries and ...