About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Philip Herschkowitz, Anatol Vieru, Jan Tausinger, Liana Alexandra, George Draga, Maia Ciobanu, Ion Ivanovici, Francis Chagrin, Eugen Doga, Felicia Donceanu, Pascal Bentoiu, Dan-Alexandru Voiculescu, Constantin Br iloiu, Myriam Marbe, Filip Laz r, erban Nichifor, Adrian Enescu, Liviu Marinescu, Rudolf Wagner-Regeny, Mansi Barberis, Gavriil Musicescu, Valentin Gheorghiu, Constantin Dimitrescu, Dan Grigore, Irina Hasna, Ion Vidu, Raoul Gunsbourg, Marina Marta Vlad, Norbert von Hannenheim, Maya Badian, Ana-Maria Avram, Gic Petrescu, Carmen Petra-Basacopol, Simion Stanciu, Cornelia Tautu, Paul Constantinescu, Nicolae Bretan, tefan Niculescu, Berta Bock, Mihail Jora, Wilhelm Georg Berger, Dorin Liviu Zaharia, George Steph nescu, Irina Odagescu, Maria Chefaliady-Taban, Liviu Comes, Mihai Brediceanu, Mircea Ciugudean, Harry Brauner, Dan Andrei Aldea, Cristian Matei, Ioan Luchian Mihalea, Hilda Jerea, Cristian Pa urc, Tiberiu Brediceanu, Nicolae Kirculescu, Doina Rotaru, Eduard Caudella, Cornel Tr ilescu, Fred Popovici, Sabin Dr goi, Sorin Lerescu, Petru Stoianov, Octavian Nemescu, Mihail Andreescu-Skeletty, George Balint, Nonna Otescu. Excerpt: Philipp Herschkowitz (Romanian: Russian:, Filipp Gershkovich) (September 7, 1906 - January 5, 1989) was a Romanian-born composer and music theorist, pupil of Alban Berg and Anton Webern, who spent 47 years, from 1940 to 1987, in the Soviet Union. Born to a Jewish family in Ia i, he graduated from the conservatory in the city in 1927 and entered the Music Academy in Vienna, Austria, where he studied with Joseph Marx. Then he studied privately with Berg (1928-1931), and with Webern (1934-1939). He left Nazi German-occupied Austria and arrived in the Soviet Union in 1940, settling first in Chernovtsy, which he left on June 22, 1941 at the beginning of the German ...