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  2. Arthur Wynne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Wynne

    While in Pittsburgh, Wynne worked on the Pittsburgh Press newspaper [3] and played the violin in the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. [4] He later moved to New York City and worked on the New York World newspaper. He is best known for the invention of the crossword puzzle in 1913, when he was a resident of Cedar Grove, New Jersey. [5]

  3. Johannes Brahms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Brahms

    To this period also belong his first two Piano Quartets (Op. 25 and Op. 26) and the first movement of the third Piano Quartet, which eventually appeared in 1875. [28] The end of the decade brought professional setbacks for Brahms. The premiere of the First Piano Concerto in Hamburg on 22 January 1859, with the composer as soloist, was poorly ...

  4. Mischa Elman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mischa_Elman

    Moses or Moishe Elman [5] was born to a Jewish family in Talnoye, Umansky Uyezd, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire (today Talne, Ukraine). [4]His grandfather Yosele Elman was a klezmer, a Jewish professional traditional musician who played the violin, and his father Saul Iosipovich Elman was a melamed and amateur violinist.

  5. Piano Quartet No. 3 (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Quartet_No._3_(Brahms)

    The second movement is a tempestuous scherzo (ternary form) in compound duple meter in C minor, the same key as the first movement. Donald Francis Tovey argues that Brahms puts the scherzo in the same key as the first movement because the first movement does not sufficiently stabilize its own tonic and requires the second movement to "[furnish] the tonal balance unprovided for by the end of ...

  6. History of music in the biblical period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_music_in_the...

    David Playing the Harp by Jan de Bray, 1670.. Knowledge of the biblical period is mostly from literary references in the Bible and post-biblical sources. Religion and music historian Herbert Lockyer, Jr. writes that "music, both vocal and instrumental, was well cultivated among the Hebrews, the New Testament Christians, and the Christian church through the centuries."

  7. Efrem Zimbalist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Efrem_Zimbalist

    Efrem Zimbalist was born on April 9, 1889, [1] [2] [3] O.S., equivalent to April 21, 1889, in the Gregorian calendar, as reported in many newspaper obituaries, in the southwestern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, the son of Jewish parents Maria (née Litvinoff) and Aron Zimbalist (Цимбалист, Russian pronunciation [tsɪmbaˈlʲist]), who was a conductor. [5]

  8. Violin Concerto (Mendelssohn) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Violin_Concerto_(Mendelssohn)

    Although the first movement is mostly in the conventional sonata form, Mendelssohn has the first theme played by the solo violin and then by the orchestra. Classical concertos typically opened with an orchestral introduction followed by a version of essentially the same material that incorporates the soloist.

  9. Édouard Lalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Édouard_Lalo

    For several years, Lalo worked as a string player and teacher in Paris. In 1848, he joined with friends to found the Armingaud Quartet, in which he played the viola and later, second violin. His earliest surviving compositions are songs and chamber works. Two early symphonies were destroyed.