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  1. Franz Peter Schubert was born in Vienna, Austria, on January 31, 1797, the fourth son of Franz Theodor Schubert, a schoolmaster, and Elizabeth Vietz, a domestic servant in Vienna. Encouraged to pursue his talents in music, Franz received instruction in the violin from his father, his older brother Ignaz, and Michael Holzer, the organist at the ...

  2. Franz Schubert was born in Vienna, Austria. In addition to playing several instruments, Franz also sang very well. When he was 10, he was accepted at the Imperial and Royal Seminary, which trained boys for the Court Chapel Choir. That choir still exists today as the Vienna Boys’ Choir.

  3. Franz Schubert (31 January 1797 – 19 November 1828), a Viennese composer of the late Classical to early Romantic eras, left a very extensive body of work notwithstanding his short life. He wrote over 1,500 items, or, when collections, cycles and variants are grouped, some thousand compositions.

  4. Sekitar 1000 karya. Franz Peter Schubert ( pelafalan dalam bahasa Jerman: [ˈfʁant͡s ˈʃuːbɐt]; 31 Januari 1797 – 19 November 1828) adalah seorang komposer Austria yang terkenal. Hidupnya cukup singkat, ia hidup hanya 31 tahun, dari tahun 1797 hingga 1828. Namun dalam waktu yang singkat ini, ia memberikan kontribusi besar bagi ...

  5. Category:Schubert, Franz. A list of works in the composer category that are not included here can be found on this page. Please consult the manual of style for creating composer work lists. The table below gives the following information (where applicable):

  6. 50 Songs (Schubert, Franz) Sonntags-musik (Pauer, Ernst) Streich-Quartett-Album (Zanger, Gustav) Symphonien für Klavier zu vier Händen (Schubert, Franz) T. Transcriptionen beliebter Lieder von Franz Schubert, Op.117 (Kummer, Friedrich August) Transcriptions pour piano de 40 mélodies (Schubert, Franz) 40 Transcriptions (Oesterle, Louis)

  7. Franz Schubert. Born: Himmelpfortgrund (Vienna), January 31, 1797. Died: Vienna, November 19, 1828. Schubert's music neatly bridges the Classical and Romantic periods through its use of lovely melodies, inventive scoring, and nature imagery, wedded to the traditional classical forms while at the same time expanding them. In his tragically short ...

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