About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Gerard Hengeveld, Harry Bannink, Klaas de Vries, Charles Deenen, Willem van Otterloo, Hans Henkemans, Kees van Baaren, Jacob de Haan, Adrianus Petit Coclico, Kristoffer Zegers, Amina Figarova, Leo Smit, Juan de Urrede, Ton de Leeuw, Guus Janssen, Jan Vriend, Reine Colaco Osorio-Swaab, Jan Koetsier, Joey Roukens, Jan Brandts Buys, Margriet Hoenderdos, Henriette Bosmans, Thomas Fabri, Ig Henneman, Bernard Wagenaar, Jaap Blonk, Jakob van Domselaer, Harry van Hoof, Joseph Borremans, Jan van Wintelroy, Jacob van Eyck, Willem Kes, Hans Kockelmans, Nicolas Vallet, Hein Van de Geyn, Carolus Souliaert, Gilius van Bergeijk, Emmy Wegener, Cornelis Boscoop, Gerard Kockelmans, Marco de Goeij, Jonny Heykens, Scott Bloemendaal, Theodor Evertz, Catherine Rennes, Joseph Ascher, Norbert Wissing, Emiel Pijnaker, Daan Manneke, Chiel Meijering, Josina van Aerssen, Guillaume le Rouge, Guillaume Landre, Martijn Padding, Huib Emmer, Josquin Baston, Jacob ter Veldhuis, Dirk Schafer, Gheerkin de Hondt, Jan Baptist Verrijt, Peter van Steeden, Emmanuel Adriaenssen, Johannes de Cleve, Leopold van Gilse van der Pals, Jan Mul, Cornelis de Bondt. Excerpt: Klaas de Vries (born 15 July 1944) is a Dutch composer. De Vries teaches composition at the conservatory of Rotterdam and can be described as influential in the Dutch musical life. Klaas de Vries was born on 15 July 1944 in Terneuzen, in the province of Zeeland in the Netherlands. From 1965 to 1972 he studied piano, theory and composition on the conservatory of Rotterdam. He continued studying composition from 1972 at the conservatory of The Hague with the Dutch composer Otto Ketting, winning the compositionprize there in 1974. After winning this prize de Vries studied with the Croatian composer Milko Kelemen in Stuttgart, Germany. De Vries won the Matthijs Vermeulen Award twice: in 1984 for his ...