Adolphe Danhauser
Adolphe-Léopold Danhauser (born February 26, 1835 in Paris , † June 9, 1896 ibid) was a French composer and music teacher.
Danhauser studied harmony with François Bazin and composition with Jacques Fromental Halévy and Napoléon-Henri Reber . In 1863 he won a "premier Second Grand Prix de Rome" . He taught solfège at the Conservatoire de Paris and in 1875 became inspector for singing lessons at schools in Paris.
He composed a musical drama ( Le Proscrit , 1866), a three-act opera ( Maures et Castillans ) and the choral work Soirées Orpheoniques . He also published several music pedagogical writings with Henry Lemoine .
Fonts
- Théorie de la musique , 1872 (new edition 1994) ( digitized )
- Questionnaire. Appendice de la théorie de la musique , 1879
- Abrégé de la théorie de la musique , 1879 (reprinted 1990)
- Solfège des solfèges , three volumes, 1881–1907 (digital copies of volume 1 , volume 2 , volume 3 )
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Danhauser, Adolphe |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Danhauser, Adolphe-Léopold (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | French composer and music teacher |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 26, 1835 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Paris |
DATE OF DEATH | June 9, 1896 |
Place of death | Paris |