Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Ossip Gabrilowitsch in 1915 Ossip Gabrilowitsch with his wife Clara Clemens. Ossip Salomonovich Gabrilowitsch (Осип Сoломонович Габрилович, Osip Solomonovich Gabrilovich; he used the German transliteration Gabrilowitsch in the West) (7 February [O.S. 26 January] 1878 – 14 September 1936) was a Russian-born American pianist, conductor and composer.

  2. Ossip Gabrilowitsch was a Russian-born American pianist noted for the elegance and subtlety of his playing. After study with two of the outstanding pianists of his day—Anton Rubinstein in St. Petersburg and Theodor Leschetizky in Vienna—Gabrilowitsch toured widely in Europe and the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Gabrilowitsch, Ossip. Born in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1878, Ossip Gabrilowitsch toured as a pianist before turning to a career in conducting. While touring as a concert pianist, he met and married Clara Clemens, the daughter of author Samuel Clemens, perhaps better known as Mark Twain. From 1910 to 1914, Gabrilowitsch was the conductor of the ...

  4. Sep 26, 2021 · Ossip was released, the Gabrilowitsch family fled Germany for Switzerland, and then New York. As he charted a new life in the waning days of World War I, Gabrilowitsch had two things in mind. He ...

    • Tim Kiska
  5. 1878-1936. Mr. Gabrilowitsch is one of the foremost pianists of this time. His art is rich in its spiritual exaltation, its intellectual grasp and its emotional sincerity. Here is a pianist who can play Chopin with poetic imagination, but without loss of virility. Whatever of tenderness and absorption one can feel in this music he will ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Gabrilowitsch, Ossip (Salomonovich), notable Russian-American pianist and conductor; b. St. Petersburg, Feb. 7, 1878; d. Detroit, Sept. 14, 1936. From 1888 to 1894 he was a pupil at the St. Petersburg Cons., studying piano with A. Rubinstein and composition with Navratil, Liadov, and Glazunov. He graduated as winner of the Rubinstein Prize, and ...

  8. December 21, 1921: Carnegie Hall, New York City, New York – Benefit Concert – · SAINT-SAËNS: Variations for Two Pianos on a theme by Beethoven, Op.35 – Wilhelm Backhaus, Harold Bauer, Alfredo Casella, Ignaz Friedman, Ernest Schelling, Germaine Schnitzer, Zygmunt Stojowski, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, Ernest Hutcheson, Alexander Lambert, Josef Lhévinne, Yolanda Mérö, Elly Ney, pianos

  1. People also search for