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Marc-André Hamelin, OC, OQ (born September 5, 1961) is a Canadian virtuoso pianist and composer [1] who has received 11 Grammy Award nominations. [2] He is on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music .
Judd Palmer, The Maestro (children's book, 2002): the second volume in Palmer's Preposterous Fables for Unusual Children; set in Hamelin 30 years after the Piper has stolen the children, a girl who arrives in the village to live with her aunt and uncle commits the sin of singing and is exiled from Hamelin, beginning a journey that leads her to ...
Corigliano partially based the form of the work on Robert Browning's narrative poem "The Pied Piper of Hamelin," arguably the most famous version of the tale. However, the composer altered the narrative to better fit a musical setting, explaining, "The biggest problem was that the legend per se had no elements of virtuosity in it; the Pied ...
André Prévost: Quatre préludes for 2 pianos (1961) Marc-André Hamelin: Prélude et fugue (Étude No. 12) for piano solo (1986) December 1992 Doberman-Yppan: 1993, 2008 Martinů: Chamber Music; Marc-André Hamelin (piano, harpsichord); Alain Marion (flute); Angèle Dubeau (violin) Sonata for flute, violin and piano, H 254 (1937)
In 2024, Book 1: Hamelin, the first book in The Children of the Piper series by Peter Smart, was published by PiperHaus (ISBN 978-1-966158-01-1) and is a fully illustrated twist on the classic tale told from the point of view of 13-year-old Sofia Müller, a girl living in Hamelin at the time. Instead of asking for gold or silver to get rid of ...
The Rats of Hamelin: A Piper's Tale (Moody Publishers, 2005) is a historical fantasy/fairy tale fantasy novel by Adam McCune and Keith McCune. Gachi-Changjo Publishing Company published a Korean translation entitled 6월 26일, 하멜른 (June 26, Hamelin) in 2007. Set in medieval Germany, the story is based on the legend of the Pied Piper of ...
Richard-Hamelin was born in Lanaudière, Quebec, [3] and took his first piano lessons with his father. [1] He studied at McGill University , where he received his bachelor's degree in 2011. He completed his master's degree at Yale School of Music in 2013.
Gaston Hamelin (27 May 1884 – 8 September 1951) was a French clarinetist and teacher. Born in Saint-Georges-sur-Baulche , Hamelin won the first prize for clarinet at the Paris Conservatory in 1904 under professor Charles Turban .