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  1. Arthur Rubinstein, KBE (honoraria) (Lodz, Imperio Ruso, 28 de enero de 1887 - Ginebra, 20 de diciembre de 1982) fue un pianista polaco-estadounidense de origen judío, célebre por sus interpretaciones de Chopin y de muchos otros compositores.

  2. Arthur Rubinstein in 1937, by Carl Van Vechten. Arthur Rubinstein KBE OMRI (Polish: Artur Rubinstein; 28 January 1887 – 20 December 1982) was a Polish-American pianist. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time.

    • Library of Congress
    • Artur Rubinstein correspondence, 1921-1984
  3. Arthur Rubinstein (Lódz, 1886 - Ginebra, 1982) Pianista polaco. Hijo de un matrimonio de industriales y el último de siete hermanos, Arthur Rubinstein mostró de niño un precoz talento musical.

  4. Arthur Rubinstein (January 28, 1887 – December 20, 1982) was a Polish-American pianist. He received praise from around the world for his playing of the music of a selection of composers (many call him the greatest Chopin player of the century).

  5. Arthur Rubinstein (January 28, 1887 – December 20, 1982) was a Polish -American pianist. [1] His first recording was made in 1910, but his major recording career was between 1928 and 1976.

    Year Of Issue
    Album Details
    Recording Date (s)
    Record Label
    1999
    Rubinstein Collection, Vol. 1 [3] Brahms: ...
    1929/1932
    1999
    Rubinstein Collection, Vol. 2 [4] Chopin: ...
    1928–1937
    RCA Red Seal
    1999
    Rubinstein Collection, Vol. 3 [5] Brahms: ...
    1932/1936
    RCA Red Seal
    1999
    Rubinstein Collection, Vol. 4 [6] Chopin: ...
    1928–1935
    RCA Red Seal
  6. Arthur Rubinstein, KBE (honoraria) fue un pianista polaco-estadounidense de origen judío, célebre por sus interpretaciones de Chopin y de muchos otros compositores. Fue nombrado por The New York Times y mejores especialistas como uno de los grandes pianistas del siglo XX.

  7. Classic interview with Arthur Rubinstein: 'I’ve told my family to shoot me if I go on too long'. The legendary pianist speaks to Alan Blyth (Gramophone, November 1968)