Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Heinrich Marschner ( Zittau, 16 de agosto de 1795 - Hanóver, 16 de diciembre de 1861), fue un compositor alemán que destacó en ópera entre Weber y Wagner . Biografía. Compuso veintitrés óperas y singspiel. Fue rival de Carl Maria von Weber y amigo de Beethoven y Mendelssohn.

  2. Heinrich August Marschner (16 August 1795 – 14 December 1861) was a German composer best known for his operas. He is considered to be the most important composer of German opera between Weber and Wagner. [1] [2] Biography. Marschner was born in Zittau and was originally intended for a legal career.

  3. Heinrich August Marschner (born Aug. 16, 1795, Zittau, Saxony—died Dec. 14, 1861, Hannover, Hanover) was a composer who helped establish the style of German Romantic opera. Marschner studied law at Leipzig, but, encouraged by Ludwig van Beethoven, whom he met in Vienna in 1817, and others, he turned to composing.

  4. Heinrich August Marschner (* 16. August 1795 in Zittau; † 14. Dezember 1861 in Hannover) war ein deutscher Komponist der Romantik, Musikdirektor in Dresden und Kapellmeister in Leipzig, ab 1831 königlicher Hofkapellmeister in Hannover. Seine Opern machten ihn zwischen 1830 und 1850 zu einem der führenden deutschen Opernkomponisten ...

  5. 9 de dic. de 2003 · Heinrich Marschner. Although his work has been generally neglected in the 20th century, was a leading figure in German Opera in the period between Weber and Wagner, and wrote twenty-two operas and singspiels. He was born in Zittau, in 1795, and although studied law at the University of Leipzig, spent a considerable time developing ...

  6. Heinrich Marschner, fue un compositor alemán que destacó en ópera entre Weber y Wagner.

  7. Heinrich Marschner (1795-1861) is recognized as the most important composer of German Romantic Opera in the period between Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826) and Richard Wagner (1813-1883). Many people may know of his dark, supernatural operas, Der Vampyr (1828), Der Templer und die Jüdin (1829), and Hans Heiling (1833), which were extremely ...