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The building, apart from the exhibition rooms on the first floor, is now the independent primary school "Clara Schumann". [1] [2] Among the exhibition rooms are the Schumann Salon, where the Schumanns received guests; the Travel Room, which is concerned with concert tours to Denmark in 1842 and Russia in 1844; [3] and the Sound Room (Klangraum), designed in the style of the Biedermeier period ...
In Zwickau August Schumann, the composer's father, founded a bookstore with his brother, who was already living there. There was a school with a good reputation in the town (later named the Lyzeum) for the Schumann sons. [1] Robert Schumann attended this school from 1820 until 1828; in that year he moved to Leipzig to study law. [2]
The Little Richard House and Museum, dedicated to Little Richard – Macon [143] Illinois. Place de la Musique – Barrington Hills; Rock N Roll McDonald's (1983–2017†) – Chicago [144] Illinois Rock & Roll Museum on Rt. 66 – Joliet [145] David Adler Music and Arts Center – Libertyville; Sousa Archives and Center for American Music ...
Schumann House, Leipzig; August Schumann; Clara Schumann; Eugenie Schumann; Song of Love (1947 film) Spring Symphony (film) Symphony No. 9 (Schubert) V. Alice Verne ...
House where Robert Schumann was born 1810, museum at Hauptmarkt 5. In the city centre there are three museums: an art museum from the 19th century and the houses of priests from 13th century, both located next to St. Mary's church. Just around the corner there is the Robert-Schumann museum.
Sergei Rachmaninoff with a Blüthner piano. [17] Photo ca. 1905. Numerous royals, composers, conductors, artists, authors and performers have owned Blüthner pianos. They include Willhelm II, Emperor Franz Joseph I, Johannes Brahms, Gustav Mahler, Liberace, Béla Bartók, Claude Debussy, George Formby, Dodie Smith, Max Reger, Richard Wagner, Johann Strauss, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Dmitri ...
Das Robert-Schumann-Haus in Zwickau. Nationale Forschungs- und Gedenkstätten der klassischen Deutschen Literatur, Weimar 1958, Literature by and about Georg Eismann in the German National Library catalogue. Robert Schumann. Tagebücher. Volume 1: 1827–1838. Deutscher Verlag für Musik, Leipzig 1971. 2nd edition 1987, ISBN 978-3-370-00039-9
In 1849, Robert Schumann explored the horn as a solo instrument, dedicating to it an "Adagio and Allegro," Op. 70, before embarking on the composition of an orchestral work featuring four solo horns (having also composed the "Five Songs based on Heinrich Laube's Hunting Compendium" for men's choir and four horns, Op. 137 that same year).