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Paul Abraham (Hungarian: Ábrahám Pál; 2 November 1892 – 6 May 1960) was a Jewish-Hungarian composer of operettas, who scored major successes in the German-speaking world. His specialty – and own innovation – was the insertion of jazz interludes into operettas.
Oct 13, 2014 · 14 October, 2014. The German journalist Klaus Waller has written a 240 pages biography of Paul Abraham: Der tragische König der Operette. It is the first full-length bio of the superstar of Weimar Republic jazz operetta, who was driven out of German immediately by the Nazis in 1933. Because his hits – Viktoria und ihr Husar (1930), Blume von ...
Paul Abraham was a Jewish-Hungarian composer best known for his operettas that achieved great success during his lifetime. He was born on November 2, 1892, in Apatin, Hungary. His interest in music led him to study at the Budapest Academy of Music, where he honed his skills as a composer. After completing his studies, Paul Abraham embarked on a ...
Paul Abraham was a Jewish-Hungarian composer of operettas, who scored major successes in the German-speaking world. His specialty – and own innovation – was the insertion of jazz interludes into operettas. Abraham was born in Apatin, Austria-Hungary, and studied at the Royal National Hungarian Academy of Music in Budapest from 1910 to 1916. He studied cello with Adolf Schiffer and ...
Paul Abraham (Hungarian: Ábrahám Pál; 2 November 1892 – 6 May 1960) was a Jewish-Hungarian composer of operettas, who scored major successes in the German-speaking world. His specialty – and own innovation – was the insertion of jazz interludes into operettas. Abraham was born in Apatin, Austria-Hungary (today Serbia), and studied at ...
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Paul Abraham (Hungarian: Ábrahám Pál; 2 November 1892 – 6 May 1960) was a Jewish-Hungarian composer of operettas, who scored major successes in the German-speaking world. His specialty – and own innovation – was the insertion of jazz interludes into operettas.