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Leginska: Forgotten Genius of Music
Ethel Leginska was a talented and successful musician,
unique in her talents and pioneering in the paths she
pursued as a woman. Born in Hull, England, she was an
admired child performer whose abilities allowed her
career to blossom worldwide. Her forceful personality
and prodigious abilities enabled Ethel to become much
more than an acclaimed concert pianist. Settling in
America, she wrote music as diverse as nursery rhymes
and opera, became a renowned conductor, founded a
number of trailblazing women’s orchestras and remained
to her death in 1970 an inspirational teacher. Hers
was a most individual and interesting life, a story
which deserves to be told and celebrated; this
biography does just that.
Click here to read more about Leginska.
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Great Pianists of the Golden Age
In his foreword to this book remembering 25 great
pianists from 1900-1950, Vladimir Ashkenazy writes:
"It has been thoroughly and sympathetically researched
with care and love, and it gives an insight into the
lives of the artists of former days. I have enjoyed
reading it, and commend it to other lovers of the
piano."
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An Edwardian Quintet
This book provides incisive outlines of five very
different Edwardian musicians. Its accessible
portraits afford us an understanding of: the world’s
greatest piano teacher, Leschetizky; successful but
forgotten composer MacDowell; enduringly popular
composers Elgar and Debussy; and legendary tenor
Enrico Caruso.
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The Melody Lingers On
They don’t come bigger or better than the four great
American songwriters Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, Cole
Porter and George Gershwin or the brilliant composers
and performers Scott Joplin, 'Jelly Roll' Morton and
'Fats' Waller (pictured). Ten of the all-time giants of popular
music are brought back to life in this fascinating
book.
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