List of music students by teacher: R to S

This is part of a list of students of music, organized by teacher.

this teacher's teachers
Raab (1882–1958) studied with teachers including Robert Fuchs and Theodor Leschetizky.
this teacher's teachers
Rachmaninoff (1873–1943) studied with teachers including Anton Arensky, Alexander Siloti, Sergei Taneyev, and Nikolai Zverev.
this teacher's teachers
Radcliffe (1905-1986) studied with teachers including Edward Joseph Dent and Henry Moule.
this teacher's teachers
Rainier (1903–1986) studied with teachers including John Blackwood McEwen, Nadia Boulanger, and Rowsby Woof.
this teacher's teachers
Randall (1929–2014) studied with teachers including Milton Babbitt and Leonard Shure.
this teacher's teachers
Rands (born 1934) studied with teachers including Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez, Luigi Dallapiccola, and Bruno Maderna.

this teacher's teachers
Rault studied with teachers including Michel Blavet.
this teacher's teachers
Rauzzini (1746–1810) studied with teachers including Muzio Clementi, Domenico Corri, Nicola Porpora, and Giuseppe Santarelli.
this teacher's teachers
Rawsthorne (1905–1971) studied with teachers including Carl Fuchs, Frank Merrick, and Egon Petri.
this teacher's teachers
Read (1879–1965) studied with teachers including Tobias Matthay and Henry Wood.
this teacher's teachers[48]
Ravel (1875–1937) studied with teachers including Henri Ghys, Émile Decombes, Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot, Émile Pessard, André Gedalge, and Gabriel Fauré.
this teacher's teachers
Read (1913–2005) studied with teachers including Howard Hanson, Bernard Rogers, Aaron Copland, and Ildebrando Pizzetti.
this teacher's teachers
Reber (1807–1880) studied with teachers including Jean-François Le Sueur and Anton Reicha.
this teacher's teachers
Janine Reding (1920–2015) studied with teachers including Arthur De Greef, Kurt Leimer, Erich Kleiber, and Berthe Laventurier.
this teacher's teachers
Reger (1873–1916) studied with teachers including Hugo Riemann.
this teacher's teachers
Reicha (1770–1836) studied with teachers including Johann Georg Albrechtsberger.
this teacher's teachers
Reinecke (1824-1910) studied with teachers including Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, and Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Reiner (1888–1963) studied with teachers including Béla Bartók, István Thomán, and Leo Weiner.
this teacher's teachers
Reisenauer (1863–1907) studied with teachers including Louis Köhler and Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Reisenberg (1904–1983) studied with teachers including Leonid Nikolayev and Josef Hofmann.
this teacher's teachers
Respighi (1879–1936) studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
this teacher's teachers
studied with teachers including Antonio Cotogni and Giovanni Sbriglia.
this teacher's teachers
Reynolds (born 1934) studied with teachers including Ross Lee Finney and Roberto Gerhard.

University of California, San Diego

Yale (while visiting professor)

this teacher's teachers
Rheinberger (1839–1901) studied with teachers including Franz Lachner.
this teacher's teachers
Richter (1808–1879) studied with teachers including Christian Theodor Weinlig.
this teacher's teachers
de Ridder (1887–1966) studied with teachers including Hermann Abendroth, Fritz Steinbach, and Johan Wagenaar.

this teacher's teachers
Riegger (1885–1961) studied with teachers including Percy Goetschius.
this teacher's teachers
Rieti (1898–1994) studied with teachers including Giuseppe Frugatta.
this teacher's teachers
Rietz (1812–1877) studied with teachers including Bernhard Romberg.
this teacher's teachers
Rihm (born 1952) studied with teachers including Wolfgang Fortner, Klaus Huber, and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
this teacher's teachers
Riley (born 1935) studied with teachers including Robert Erickson, Pran Nath, and Seymour Shifrin.
this teacher's teachers
Rimbault (1773–1837) studied with teachers including .
this teacher's teachers
G. Rimski-Korsakov (1901–1965) studied with teachers including Maximilian Steinberg, Nikolay Sokolov, Sergei Liapunov, and Leonid Nicolai.
this teacher's teachers
Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908) studied with teachers including Mily Balakirev and Anton Gerke.
this teacher's teachers
Rinck (1770–1846) studied with teachers including Johann Christian Kittel.
this teacher's teachers
Risler (1873–1929) studied with teachers including Émile Decombes, Louis Diémer, and Théodore Dubois.
this teacher's teachers
Ritter (1840–1886) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Rivarde (1865–1940) studied with teachers including Charles Dancla, František Ondříček, and Henryk Wieniawski.
this teacher's teachers
Rivier (1896–1987) studied with teachers including Georges Caussade and Jean Gallon.
this teacher's teachers
Sylvio Robazzi studied with teachers including Yara Bernette.
this teacher's teachers
Robert (1861–1924) studied with teachers including Julius Epstein, Franz Krenn, and Anton Bruckner.
this teacher's teachers
Robinson-Duff (died 1934) studied with teachers including Mathilde Marchesi and George Henschel.
this teacher's teachers
Rochberg (1918–2005) studied with teachers including Leopold Mannes, Gian Carlo Menotti, Rosario Scalero, George Szell, and Hans Weisse.
this teacher's teachers
Rockstro (1823–1895) studied with teachers including William Sterndale Bennett and Felix Mendelssohn.
this teacher's teachers
Rode (1774–1830) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Viotti.
this teacher's teachers
Roemhildt (1684–1756) studied with teachers including Johann Kuhnau and Johann Schelle.
this teacher's teachers
Roger-Ducasse (1873–1954) studied with teachers including Émile Pessard, André Gedalge, and Gabriel Fauré.
this teacher's teachers
Rogers (1893–1968) studied with teachers including Ernest Bloch, Nadia Boulanger, and Percy Goetschius.
this teacher's teachers
Rolla (1757–1841) studied with teachers including Giovanni Andrea Fioroni.
this teacher's teachers
Romberg (1767–1841) studied with teachers including Anton Romberg.
this teacher's teachers
Röntgen (1855–1932) studied with teachers including Franz Lachner and Carl Reinecke.
this teacher's teachers
Rooke (1794–1847) studied with teachers including Philip Cogan.
this teacher's teachers
Rootham (1875–1938) studied with teachers including Marmaduke Barton, Walter Parratt, Hubert Parry, Daniel Rootham, and Charles Villiers Stanford.
this teacher's teachers[191]
Rorem (1923–2022) studied with teachers including Margaret Bonds, Aaron Copland, Rosario Scalero, Leo Sowerby, and Virgil Thomson.
this teacher's teachers
Rosenberg (1892–1985) studied with teachers including Ernst Ellberg and Wilhelm Stenhammar.
this teacher's teachers
Rosenboom (born 1947) studied with teachers including Kenneth Gaburo, Lejaren Hiller, and Salvatore Martirano.
this teacher's teachers
Rosenhoff (1844–1905) studied with teachers including Niels Gade.
this teacher's teachers
Rosenthal (1862–1946) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt, Rafael Joseffy, and Karol Mikuli.
this teacher's teachers
Rothwell (1872–1927) studied with teachers including Gustav Mahler.
this teacher's teachers
Rouse (born 1949) studied with teachers including Randolph Coleman, George Crumb, and Robert Moffat Palmer.
this teacher's teachers
Roussel (1869–1937) studied with teachers including Vincent d'Indy and Eugène Gigout.
this teacher's teachers
Roxburgh (born 1937) studied with teachers including Herbert Howells, Terence MacDonagh, Nadia Boulanger, and Luigi Dallapiccola.
this teacher's teachers
Rubbra (1901–1986) studied with teachers including Gustav Holst and R. O. Morris.
this teacher's teachers
Rubin de Cervin (1936–2013) studied with teachers including Luigi Dallapiccola, Roberto Lupi, Bruno Maderna, Gian Francesco Malipiero, Virgilio Mortari, and Goffredo Petrassi.
this teacher's teachers
Rubinstein (1829–1894) studied with teachers including Siegfried Dehn and Adolf Bernhard Marx.
this teacher's teachers
Rubinstein (1887-1982) studied with teachers including Karl Heinrich Barth.
this teacher's teachers
Rubinstein (1835–1881) studied with teachers including Theodor Kullak, Siegfried Dehn, and Alexander Villoing.
this teacher's teachers
Rudorff (1840–1916) studied with teachers including Woldemar Bargiel, Moritz Hauptmann, Ignaz Moscheles, Louis Plaidy, Carl Reinecke, and Julius Rietz.
this teacher's teachers
Rufer (1893–1985) studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg and Alexander von Zemlinsky.
this teacher's teachers
Ruggi (1767–1845) studied with teachers including Fedele Fenaroli.
this teacher's teachers
Rungenhagen (1778–1851) studied with teachers including Carl Friedrich Zelter.
this teacher's teachers
Russo (1928–2003) studied with teachers including Lennie Tristano.
this teacher's teachers
Sabaneyev, B. (−1918) studied with teachers including Sergei Taneyev.
this teacher's teachers
Sabaneyev, L. (1881–1968) studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Sergei Taneyev, and Nikolai Zverev.
this teacher's teachers
Sabino (1588−1649) studied with teachers including Prospero Testa.
this teacher's teachers
Sacchini (1730–1786) studied with teachers including Francesco Durante.
this teacher's teachers
Safonov (1852–1918) studied with teachers including Louis Brassin, Theodor Leschetizky, and Nikolai Zaremba.
this teacher's teachers
Saint-Saëns (1835–1921) studied with teachers including François Benoist, Fromental Halévy, and Camille-Marie Stamaty.
this teacher's teachers
Sala (1713–1801) studied with teachers including Nicola Fago and Lionardo Leo.
this teacher's teachers
Salaman (1814–1901) studied with teachers including William Crotch, Henri Herz, Charles Neate, and Stephen Francis Rimbault.
this teacher's teachers
Ney Salgado (1935–2015) studied with teachers including Jose Kliass.
this teacher's teachers
Salieri (1750–1825) studied with teachers including Christoph Willibald Gluck, Giovanni Battista Pescetti, and Giuseppe Simoni.
this teacher's teachers
Salvatore (ca.1620–ca.1688) studied with teachers including Erasmo Bartolo and Giovanni Maria Sabino.
this teacher's teachers
Salzer (1904–1986) studied with teachers including Heinrich Schenker and Hans Weisse.
this teacher's teachers
Sametini (1886–1944) studied with teachers including Bram Eldering, Otakar Ševčík, and Eugène Ysaÿe.
this teacher's teachers
Sanctis (1824–1916) studied with teachers including Giuseppe Baini and Raffaele Muti-Papazzurri.

this teacher's teachers
Sándor (1912–2005) studied with teachers including Béla Bartók and Zoltán Kodály.
this teacher's teachers
Sangiorgi (1894–1962) studied with teachers including Goffredo Petrassi and Arnold Schoenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Santa Cruz (1899–1987) studied with teachers including Alberto Guerrero.
this teacher's teachers
Santoro (1919–1989) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger and Hans-Joachim Koellreutter.
this teacher's teachers
Sarasate (1844–190) studied with teachers including Jean-Delphin Alard.
this teacher's teachers
Saratelli (1714–1762) studied with teachers including Antonio Lotti.
this teacher's teachers
Sargent (1895–1967) studied with teachers including Benno Moiseiwitsch.
this teacher's teachers
Sarti (1729–1802) studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Martini.
this teacher's teachers
Satie (1866–1925) studied with teachers including Émile Decombes, Albert Lavignac, Georges Mathias, Antoine Taudou, and Gustave Vinot.
this teacher's teachers
Sauer (1862–1942) studied with teachers including Ludwig Deppe, Franz Liszt, and Nikolai Rubinstein.
this teacher's teachers
Saunders (1837–1912) studied with teachers including Edward John Hopkins, Henry Litolff, William Rea, and Elizabeth Stirling.
this teacher's teachers
Sauret (1852–1920) studied with teachers including Charles Auguste de Bériot, Salomon Jadassohn, Henri Vieuxtemps, and Henryk Wieniawski.
this teacher's teachers
Sauzay (1809–1901) studied with teachers including Pierre Baillot and Anton Reicha.
this teacher's teachers
Savard (1814–1881) studied with teachers including Fromental Halévy and Jules Massenet.
this teacher's teachers
Savaria (born 1916) studied with teachers including Louis Aubert, Claude Champagne, Jean-Yves Daniel-Lesur, Lazare Lévy, Marguerite Long, and Olivier Messiaen.
this teacher's teachers
Saxton (born 1953) studied with teachers including Robin Holloway and Robert Sherlaw Johnson.
this teacher's teachers
Scalero (1870–1954) studied with teachers including César Thomson and Eusebius Mandyczewski.
this teacher's teachers
Scarlatti (1660–1725) studied with teachers including Giacomo Carissimi.
this teacher's teachers
1660 – 1725 studied with teachers including Alessandro Scarlatti.
this teacher's teachers
P. Scharwenka (1847–1917) studied with teachers including Heinrich Dorn and Richard Wüerst.
this teacher's teachers
X. Scharwenka (1850–1924) studied with teachers including Theodor Kullak.
this teacher's teachers
Scheidemann (1595–1663) studied with teachers including Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck.
this teacher's teachers
Schelle (1648–1701) studied with teachers including Heinrich Schütz.
this teacher's teachers
Schenker (1868–1935) studied with teachers including Johann Nepomuk Fuchs.
this teacher's teachers
Scherchen (1891–1966) studied with teachers including unknown .
this teacher's teachers
Schering (1877–1941) studied with teachers including Joseph Joachim and Hermann Kretzschmar.
this teacher's teachers
Schierbeck (1888–1949) studied with teachers including Carl Nielsen.
this teacher's teachers
Schiffer (1873-1950) studied with teachers including David Popper.
this teacher's teachers
Schiller 1843-1911 studied with teachers including Charles Hallé, Julius Benedict, and Ignaz Moscheles.
this teacher's teachers
Schillings (1868–1933) studied with teachers including Josef Rheinberger.

this teacher's teachers
Schiøler (1899–1967) studied with teachers including Ignaz Friedman and Artur Schnabel.
this teacher's teachers
Schmitt (1788–1866) studied with teachers including Johann Anton André.
this teacher's teachers
Schnabel (1882–1951) studied with teachers including Theodor Leschetizky, Hans Schmitt, and Anna Yesipova.
this teacher's teachers
Schoenberg (1874–1951) studied with teachers including Oskar Adler, Joseph Labor, and Alexander von Zemlinsky.
this teacher's teachers
Scholz (1835–1916) studied with teachers including Ernst Pauer.

this teacher's teachers
Schoen-René (1864–1942) studied with teachers including Pauline Viardot.
this teacher's teachers
Schradieck (1846–1918) studied with teachers including Ferdinand David and Hubert Léonard.
this teacher's teachers
Schreker (1878–1934) studied with teachers including Robert Fuchs.

this teacher's teachers
Schuëcker (1860–1911) studied with teachers including Antonio Zamara.
this teacher's teachers
Schulhoff (1825–1898) studied with teachers including Ignaz Amadeus Tedesco and Václav Tomášek.
this teacher's teachers
Schuller (born 1925) studied with teachers including Eduard Steuermann.
this teacher's teachers
Schuman (1910–1992) studied with teachers including Roy Harris.
this teacher's teachers
C. Schumann (1819–1896) studied with teachers including Christian Theodor Weinlig and Friedrich Wieck.
this teacher's teachers
R. Schumann (1810–1856) studied with teachers including Heinrich Dorn and Friedrich Wieck.

this teacher's teachers
Schütz (1585–1672) studied with teachers including Giovanni Gabrieli.

Heinrich Schütz, often called the "father of German music",[380] composer of what is traditionally regarded as the "first German opera" Dafne (1627, lost), and transmitter of the Italian style of his teacher Giovanni Gabrieli to Germany had many pupils, including many of the musicians who sang or played under him as Kapellmeister in composition.

this teacher's teachers
Schwantner (born 1943) studied with teachers including Alan Stout.
this teacher's teachers
Schwemmer (1621–1696) studied with teachers including Johann Erasmus Kindermann.
this teacher's teachers
Schwenke (1767–1822) studied with teachers including Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and Johann Kirnberger.
this teacher's teachers
Sculthorpe (1929–2014) studied with teachers including Egon Wellesz.
this teacher's teachers
Scriabin (1872–1915) studied with teachers including Anton Arensky, Georgi Conus, Vasily Safonov, Alexander Siloti, Sergei Taneyev, and Nikolai Zverev.
this teacher's teachers
Searle (1915–1982) studied with teachers including Anton Webern.
this teacher's teachers
Sechter (1788–1867) studied with teachers including Leopold Kozeluch.

this teacher's teachers
Sedivka (1917–2009) studied with teachers including Otakar Ševčík.
this teacher's teachers
Seger (1716–1782) studied with teachers including Felix Benda, Bohuslav Matěj Černohorský, František Tůma, and Jan Zach.
this teacher's teachers
Seiber (1905–1960) studied with teachers including Zoltán Kodály and Adolf Schiffer.
this teacher's teachers
Seiss studied with teachers including Moritz Hauptmann and Friedrich Wieck.
this teacher's teachers
Sellick studied with teachers including Isidor Philipp and Cuthbert Whitemore.
this teacher's teachers
Sembrich studied with teachers including Giovanni Battista Lamperti, Joseph Hellmesberger Sr, and Julius Epstein (pianist).
this teacher's teachers
this teacher's teachers
Serkin (1903-1991) studied with teachers including Richard Robert, Joseph Marx, and Arnold Schoenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Serry Sr. (1915–2003) studied with teachers including Robert Strassburg, Joseph Rossi, Albert Rizzi, and Gene Von Hallberg.
this teacher's teachers
Serwaczyński (1790-1859) studied with teachers including Jan Barcicki and Michal Serwaczyński.
this teacher's teachers
Sessions studied with teachers including Ernest Bloch, Edward Burlingame Hill, and Horatio Parker.
this teacher's teachers
Setaccioli (1868–1925) studied with teachers including Cesare de Sanctis and Filippo Franceschini.

this teacher's teachers
Ševčík (1852–1934) studied with teachers including Antonín Bennewitz.
this teacher's teachers
Seyfried (1776–1841) studied with teachers including Johann Georg Albrechtsberger and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
this teacher's teachers
Sgambati (1841–1914) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt.
this teacher's teachers
Shankar studied with teachers including Allauddin Khan and Ali Akbar Khan.
this teacher's teachers
Shapero studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Paul Hindemith, Ernst Krenek, Walter Piston, and Nicolas Slonimsky.
this teacher's teachers
Shebalin studied with teachers including Nikolai Myaskovsky.
this teacher's teachers
Shelley (1858–1947) studied with teachers including Dudley Buck, Antonín Dvořák, and Gustave J. Stoeckel.
this teacher's teachers
Sheng studied with teachers including Leonard Bernstein and George Perle.
this teacher's teachers
Sherlaw Johnson studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Jacques Février, and Olivier Messiaen.
this teacher's teachers
Shifrin (1926–1979) studied with teachers including Otto Luening, Darius Milhaud, and William Schuman.
this teacher's teachers
Shlonsky (1905–1990) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Edgard Varese, Max Deutsch, Artur Schnabel, and Egon Petry.
this teacher's teachers
Shostakovich (1906–1975) studied with teachers including Alexander Glazunov, Nikolai Malko, Leonid Nikolayev, Alexander Ossovsky, Elena Rozanova, Nikolay Sokolov, and Maximilian Steinberg.
this teacher's teachers
Shure (1910–1995) studied with teachers including Artur Schnabel.
this teacher's teachers
Sibelius (1865–1957) studied with teachers including Martin Wegelius, Ferruccio Busoni, Robert Fuchs, Arnold Becker, and Karl Goldmark.
this teacher's teachers
Siccardi (1897–1963) studied with teachers including Felipe Boero, Pablo Berutti, Ernesto Drangosch, Gilardo Gilardi, and Gian Francesco Malipiero.
this teacher's teachers
Siegmeister studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger.
this teacher's teachers
Sierra studied with teachers including György Ligeti.
this teacher's teachers
Siklós (1878–1942) studied with teachers including Hans von Koessler.
this teacher's teachers
Sikorski (1895–1986) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger, Adolf Chybiński, and Felicjan Szopski.
this teacher's teachers
Siloti (1863–1945) studied with teachers including Franz Liszt, Nikolai Rubinstein, Nikolai Zverev, Sergei Taneyev, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, and Nikolai Hubert.

this teacher's teachers
Simon (1783–1861) studied with teachers including Charles-Simon Catel and François-Joseph Gossec.
this teacher's teachers
Simonelli (1618-1696) studied with teachers including Virgilio Mazzocchi.
this teacher's teachers
Sitt (1850–1922) studied with teachers including Antonín Bennewitz, Johann Friedrich Kittl, and Josef Krejčí.
this teacher's teachers
Slenczynska studied with teachers including Sergei Rachmaninoff, Artur Schnabel, Egon Petri, Alfred Cortot, and Josef Hofmann.
this teacher's teachers
Sollberger studied with teachers including Jack Beeson and Otto Luening.
this teacher's teachers
Solomon (1937–2008) studied with teachers including Guido Agosti, Myra Hess, Charles Rosen, and Kendall Taylor.
this teacher's teachers
Soloviev (1846–1916) studied with teachers including Nikolai Zaremba.
this teacher's teachers
Soltys (1890–1968) studied with teachers including Robert Kahn and Johannes Wolf.
this teacher's teachers
Somis (1686–1763) studied with teachers including Arcangelo Corelli.
this teacher's teachers
Spitta (1841–1894) studied with teachers including unknown .
this teacher's teachers
Spohr (1784–1859) studied with teachers including Lieutenant Dufour, Franz Eck, and Charles Louis Maucourt.
this teacher's teachers
Stainer (1840–1901) studied with teachers including William Bayley, George Cooper, Frederick Ouseley, and Charles Steggall.
this teacher's teachers
Stamaty (1811–1870) studied with teachers including Friedrich Kalkbrenner and Felix Mendelssohn.
this teacher's teachers
A. Stamitz (1750 – c.1800) studied with teachers including Christian Cannabich and Johann Stamitz.
this teacher's teachers
Stanford (1852–1924) studied with teachers including Robert Prescott Stewart, Michael Quarry, Ernst Pauer, Arthur O'Leary, and Carl Reinecke.
this teacher's teachers
Statkowski studied with teachers including Władysław Żeleński.
this teacher's teachers
Stavenhagen (1862–1914) studied with teachers including Friedrich Kiel, Franz Liszt, and Ernst Rudorff.
this teacher's teachers
Steffan (1726–1797) studied with teachers including Georg Christoph Wagenseil.
this teacher's teachers
Steffani (1654–1728) studied with teachers including Johann Caspar Kerll.
this teacher's teachers
Stein (1818–1864) studied with teachers including August Ferdinand Anacker.
this teacher's teachers
Stein (1916–2004) studied with teachers including Arnold Schoenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Steinbach studied with teachers including Anton Door, Vinzenz Lachner, Gustav Nottebohm, and Emil Steinbach.
this teacher's teachers
Steinberg (1883–1946) studied with teachers including Alexander Glazunov, Anatoly Lyadov, and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.

this teacher's teachers
Sternberg (1852–1924) studied with teachers including Theodor Coccius, Heinrich Dorn, Theodor Kullak, Ignaz Moscheles, and Ernst Richter.
this teacher's teachers
Steuermann studied with teachers including Ferruccio Busoni, Engelbert Humperdinck, Vilém Kurz, and Arnold Schoenberg.
this teacher's teachers
Stevens (1916–1983) studied with teachers including Arthur Benjamin, Edward Joseph Dent, Gordon Jacob, Constant Lambert, R. O. Morris, and Cyril Rootham.
this teacher's teachers
Stevens (1908-1989) studied with teachers including William Berwald and Ernest Bloch.
this teacher's teachers
Stirling (1819–1895) studied with teachers including Edward Holmes, W. B. Wilson, James Alexander Hamilton, and George Alexander Macfarren.
this teacher's teachers
J. Stockhausen (1826–1906) studied with teachers including Manuel García, Jr., Charles Hallé, and Camille-Marie Stamaty.
this teacher's teachers
Karlheinz Stockhausen (22 August 1928 – 5 December 2007) studied with teachers including Hermann Schroeder, Frank Martin, Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud, and Werner Meyer-Eppler.
this teacher's teachers
Stoessel (1894–1943) studied with teachers including Willy Hess and Emanuel Wirth.
this teacher's teachers
Stokes studied with teachers including Dominick Argento and Paul Fetler.
this teacher's teachers
Stolyarsky (1871–1944) studied with teachers including Stanisław Barcewicz and Emil Młynarski.
this teacher's teachers
Stolzenberg (1827–1908) studied with teachers including Heinrich Dorn.
this teacher's teachers
Stotijn (1891–1970) studied with teachers including Dirk van Emmerik.
this teacher's teachers
Stout (born 1932) studied with teachers including Henry Cowell, Vagn Holmboe, Wallingford Riegger, and John Verrall.
this teacher's teachers[593]
Strassburg (1915–2003) studied with teachers including Paul Hindemith, Walter Piston, and Igor Stravinsky.
this teacher's teachers
Strauss (1864–1949) studied with teachers including August Tombo, Benno Walter, and Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer.
this teacher's teachers
Stravinsky studied with teachers including Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
this teacher's teachers
Stucky studied with teachers including Robert Moffat Palmer.
this teacher's teachers
Subotnick studied with teachers including Robert Erickson, Leon Kirchner, and Darius Milhaud.
this teacher's teachers
Suitner (1922-2010) studied with teachers including Clemens Krauss, Franz Ledwinka, and Fritz Weidlich.
this teacher's teachers

Kenneth Sutherland

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this teacher's teachers
Sverjensky studied with teachers including Alexander Glazunov.
this teacher's teachers
Swarowsky (1899-1975) studied with teachers including Felix Weingartner, Richard Strauss, Arnold Schoenberg, and Anton Webern.
this teacher's teachers
Swift studied with teachers including Leonard B. Meyer.
this teacher's teachers
Szabelski studied with teachers including Roman Statkowski and Karol Szymanowski.

this teacher's teachers
Szeligowski (1896–1963) studied with teachers including Nadia Boulanger and Paul Dukas.
this teacher's teachers
Szell studied with teachers including Max Reger and Richard Robert.
this teacher's teachers
Szymanowski studied with teachers including Zygmunt Noskowski.

References

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Citations

  1. ^ "About Ernst Bacon". The Ernst Bacon Society. Archived from the original on 6 February 2006. Retrieved 7 November 2008.
  2. ^ "Vera Bradford 1904-2004". Australian Women's History Forum. Archived from the original on 5 March 2013. Retrieved 19 July 2008.
  3. ^ Mathiesen, Thomas J.; Rivera, Benito V.; Buelow, George J. (1995). Festa Musicologica: Essays in Honor of George J. Buelow. Pendragon Press. p. 491. ISBN 978-0-9451-9370-8.
  4. ^ "Muriel Kerr". Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  5. ^ "Portfolio: Steven Heitman". Steven Heitman. Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved 7 November 2008.
  6. ^ "Mortimer Markoff". Palo Alto online. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Sumner Marshall". Encyclopedia of Music in Canada. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  8. ^ "Robert Owens". The African American Art Song Alliance. Archived from the original on 29 May 2008.
  9. ^ Jeannie Gayle Pool (19 December 2008). American Composer Zenobia Powell Perry: Race and Gender in the 20th Century. Scarecrow Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-8108-6377-4. Born in Hinckley, Illinois, he grew up in Abingdon, Illinois, and received his B.M. degree from Knox College and his M.M. degree from the Chicago Musical College, where he studied with Maurice Aronson, Alexander Raab, and Lillian Powers.
  10. ^ Randel (1996), p. 40
  11. ^ a b "English – Andre von Frasunkiewicz". Archived from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  12. ^ "Jeremy Dibble". The Conversation. 19 February 2016. Archived from the original on 16 March 2016.
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  14. ^ Opie, June (1988). 'Come and Listen to the Stars Singing': Priaulx Rainer : a Pictorial Biography. Alison Hodge Publishers. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-9067-2017-2. The eminent Australian composer Nigel Butterley, who studied with Priaulx, wrote: Michael Tippett recommended Priaulx Rainier to me, describing her as the best teacher in his opinion in London.
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  344. ^ Hinson (1993), p.133.
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  348. ^ Gagné (2012), p.158. "Despite his claims to the contrary, he never studied with Anton Webern or Arnold Schoenberg."
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  351. ^ Southern California Symphony Association (1966). Pavilion. Vol. 3. Huber Publications. p. 13. Hans Swarowsky is Viennese, although he was born in Budapest. He studied musical theory with Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern and conducting with Richard Strauss...
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  353. ^ a b Hinkle-Turner (2006), p. 79
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  355. ^ Mason (1917), p.94.
  356. ^ Noble, Clyde E. (1964). The Psychology of Cornet and Trumpet Playing: Scientific Principles of Artistic Performance. Mountain Press. p. 24. LCCN 64018927. Walter B. Rogers was born in Delphi, Ind. in 1865 ... According to Clarke (1934), Rogers studied violin at the Cincinnati Conservatory under Schradieck and composed several brass ensembles while there...
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  363. ^ "A music life Archived 19 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine", DalliCardillo.com.
  364. ^ Jones (2014), p.174.
  365. ^ Gagné (2012), p.80.
  366. ^ Michael Hall (2015). Music Theatre in Britain: 1960-1975. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 189. ISBN 978-1-7832-7012-5. ...and took up serious composition in his early twenties, studying first with Mátyás Seiber, then with Anthony Milner and Alexander Goehr at Morley College, London, and later with Gunther Schuller at Tanglewood.
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  368. ^ Jones (2014), p.401.
  369. ^ P. 36: Peterson, Jonathon (2002). "Tuning in thirds: A new approach to playing leads to a new kind of guitar". American Lutherie: The Quarterly Journal of the Guild of American Luthiers. 72 (Winter). Tacoma, Washington: The Guild of American Luthiers: 36–43. ISSN 1041-7176. Archived from the original on 21 October 2011. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
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  371. ^ Salzman, Eric; Desi, Thomas (6 November 2008). The New Music Theater: Seeing the Voice, Hearing the Body. Oxford University Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-1997-2321-8. Mark-Anthony Turnage, who studied with Oliver Knussen and Gunther Schuller...
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  373. ^ Jones (2014), p.603.
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  375. ^ Wright, D.C.H. (2019). The Royal College of Music and its Contexts: An Artistic and Social History. Music since 1900. Cambridge University Press. p. 346. ISBN 978-1-1071-6338-6. LCCN 2019013364. Franklin Taylor was an English pianist who had trained in Leipzig with Moscheles, and then in Paris with Clara Schumann.
  376. ^ Seddon, Laura (15 April 2016). British Women Composers and Instrumental Chamber Music in the Early Twentieth Century. Routledge. p. 172. ISBN 978-1-317-17134-8. The elder sister of Alice and Adela, Mathilde Verne studied piano with Franklin Taylor and later Clara Schumann.
  377. ^ Greene (1985), p. 577
  378. ^ "Carl Reinecke (1824- 1910)". oxfordlieder.co.uk. Oxford Lieder. Retrieved 3 April 2022. Carl Heinrich Carsten Reinecke was a German composer, conductor, and pianist in the Middle Romantic Era. He studied under Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann and Franz Liszt.
  379. ^ Cooper, Barry (2008). Beethoven, pp. 47,54. Oxford University Press US. ISBN 978-0-1953-1331-4.
  380. ^ Schönzeler, Hans Hubert (1976). Of German music: a symposium. ... covered with the dust which customarily pervades historical archives, but they had the misfortune to be superseded by that man who, with a large measure of justification, has been termed the father of German music: Heinrich Schutz.
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  382. ^ Mason (1917), p.273.
  383. ^ "Xiaogang Ye Archived 2 February 2013 at archive.today", Schott-Music.com.
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  385. ^ Griffiths (2011), p.421.
  386. ^ "Mark Isaacs : Represented Artist Profile: Australian Music Centre". www.australianmusiccentre.com.au. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
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  388. ^ Who is who in Music. United States: Berghan Publishing Company. 1941. p. 143. LCCN sn86034804. LaLiberté, Alfred — Pianist, Composer. Born in St. Johns, Que., Canada, 1882. Education: Montreal, Berlin and Brussels; pupil of Teresa Carreno and Scriabin.
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  390. ^ a b c Jones (2014), p.218.
  391. ^ "David Gompper". Iowa School of Music. Retrieved 19 November 2020. He studied at the Royal College of Music in London with Jeremy Dale Roberts and Humphrey Searle.
  392. ^ Randel (1996), p. 487
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  395. ^ Mason (1917), p.108.
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  398. ^ Randel (1996), p. 45
  399. ^ "Mátyás Seiber". Schott Music. Archived from the original on 8 August 2019.
  400. ^ "The Gibbs family". IRDP profiles. Archived from the original on 4 February 1999.
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  403. ^ "tentoonstelling Herman Roelstraete (1925-1985)". Orgelkunst (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 7 August 2019.
  404. ^ "Biographical Chronology". Francis Routh. Archived from the original on 21 June 2018.
  405. ^ Podhajski, Marek (2001). "Stefánsson, Fjölnir". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.26608. Archived from the original on 8 August 2019 – via Oxford Index.
  406. ^ Goehr, Alexander (2003). Sing, Ariel: Essays and Thoughts for Alexander Goehr's Seventieth Birthday. Ashgate. pp. xiv. ISBN 978-0-7546-3497-3. He was born in Lancashire in 1932 and read history at Oxford. He then studied with William Lloyd Webber, Anthony Milner, Iain Hamilton and Mátyás Seiber.
  407. ^ The Musical Times and Singing-class Circular. Novello. 1913. p. 713. LCCN 2002201413. Besides the instruction from Hiller (composition) and Isidor Seiss (pianoforte),..
  408. ^ Mason (1917), p.189.
  409. ^ "All the right notes". Town and County. 9 February 2020. p. 25. Retrieved 19 December 2023 – via Issuu. They met at the Royal College of Music where Kevin was studying piano/composition with Peter Wallfisch and Joseph Horowitz and Steven studied piano performance with Phyllis Sellick and Peter Katin.
  410. ^ Hinkle-Turner (2006), p. 124
  411. ^ Randel (1996), p. 824
  412. ^ Mason (1917), p.12-13.
  413. ^ Duffie, Bruce (27 April 1992). "Accordionist Robert Davine". kcstudio. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009.
  414. ^ Obituary Robert Davine on ksanti.net
  415. ^ Montclair State College School of Fine and Performing Arts Presents The American Society of University Composers Region II Conference (PDF). Montclair State College School of Fine and Performing Arts Department of Music. 20 February 1987 – via UTA Libraries. ...he moved... to New York City where he studied the accordion with John Serry and later joined the staff at the Serry Studio...
  416. ^ Newspapers Ancestry: "Michael Torello" Obituary, Bennington Banner, Vermont, 7 September 1994 p. 16, " Mr. Torello was an accomplished musician of the contra bass, piano and accordion.... and staff accordionist with Serry Studios in Jamaica, NY", Michael Torello on Newspapers Ancestry
  417. ^ "Newsletter - AAA Competitions in the '50s" (PDF). American Accordionists' Association. May–June 2020. Roy Appey was a student at John Serry music studio...
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  419. ^ Gagné (2012), p.25.
  420. ^ Randel (1996), p. 94
  421. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 97
  422. ^ Jones (2014), p.162.
  423. ^ Gagné (2012), p.78.
  424. ^ Randel (1996), p. 229
  425. ^ Randel (1996), p. 237
  426. ^ Randel (1996), p. 249
  427. ^ Gagné (2012), p.100.
  428. ^ Randel (1996), p. 382
  429. ^ Hinson (1993), p.130.
  430. ^ Randel (1996), p. 385
  431. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 465
  432. ^ Randel (1996), p. 557
  433. ^ Jones (2014), p.400.
  434. ^ Randel (1996), p. 568
  435. ^ Gagné (2012), p.233.
  436. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 781
  437. ^ Don, Randel (1996). Richard Aaker Trythall, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-37299-3.
  438. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 927
  439. ^ Le Ménestrel (in French). Vol. 83. Paris: Bureaux du Menestrel. 1921. p. 62. Vincenzo di Donato, un des meilleurs élèves de Giacomo Setaccioli.
  440. ^ Mancinelli, Luigi; Mariani, Antonio (2000). Epistolario [Epistolary] (in Italian). Akademos. p. 321. ISBN 978-88-7096-264-2. Giacomo Setaccioli, compositore italiano (Corneto Tarquinia, 1868 - Siena, 1925). Fu insegnante di Vittorio Gui, a Santa Cecilia. [Giacomo Setaccioli, Italian composer (Corneto Tarquinia, 1868 - Siena, 1925). He was Vittorio Gui's teacher in Santa Cecilia.]
  441. ^ Ficher, Miguel; Schleifer, Martha Furman; Furman, John M. (16 October 2002). Latin American Classical Composers: A Biographical Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 416. ISBN 978-1-4616-6911-1. Pádua, Newton de Menezes, Brazilian composer, conductor, teacher, and cellist; b. 3 Nov 1894, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; d. 2 Jun 1966, Rio de Janeiro ... From 1912 to 1914, he went to Rome, Italy, to study cello with Luigi Forino and harmony with Giacomo Setaccioli.
  442. ^ Jan Marak, Housle, p. 60
  443. ^ Ibid.
  444. ^ Greene (1985), p. 1291
  445. ^ Jan Marak, Housle, p. 61
  446. ^ Somerford, Peter (1 September 2019). "Mutual exchange - Obituaries". Strad. 130 (1553): 14. From the age of twelve he studied at the Chicago Music College with Leon Sametini, a student of Ševčík and Ysaÿe...
  447. ^ S. Joseph Krause. Harding, His Presidency and Love Life Reappraised, p.328. AuthorHouse
  448. ^ a b Randel (1996), p. 560
  449. ^ Harris, Craig. "Biography: Krishna Bhatt". Allmusic. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  450. ^ Borah, Prabalika M. (12 February 2009). "Soul Stirring Music". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  451. ^ Leggett, Steve. "Peter Walker – Biography". Allmusic.
  452. ^ Miller-Keller, Andrea; ed. (2012). Alvin Lucier: A Celebration, p.31. Wesleyan University. ISBN 978-0-8195-7280-6.
  453. ^ Randel, Don. Harvard Dictionary of Music. p. 546.
  454. ^ Music in the USSR. VAAP-INFORM. 1986. p. 95. LCCN 86641050. Tatiana Chudova enrolled in the class of the dean Soviet composer Yuri Shaporin at the Moscow Conservatoire.
  455. ^ Greene (1985), p. 1533
  456. ^ Kholopov, Tsenova and Kohanovskaya's Biography of Edison Denisov at Google Books
  457. ^ See Laurel Fay – Shostakovich: A Life at Google Books
  458. ^ Jones (2014), p.332.
  459. ^ Hinson (1993), p.152.
  460. ^ "Andrew Deutsch", Discogs.com.
  461. ^ Jones (2014), p.575.
  462. ^ Randel (1996), p. 156
  463. ^ Gagné (2012), p.301.
  464. ^ van Boer (2012), p.175.
  465. ^ "Artur Malawski - Biography". polishmusic.usc.edu. Polish Music Centre - University of Southern California. 9 April 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2022. Artur Malawski, a prominent composer and conductor, graduated from the Kraków Conservatory of Music (studies under J. Chmielewski) with distinction as a violin virtuoso in 1928, and from the Warsaw Conservatory of Music with diplomas in composition (class of Kazimierz Sikorski) and conducting (class of Walerian Bierdiajew) in 1939.
  466. ^ "Artists - Andrzej Panufnik". culture.pl. Retrieved 23 August 2022. Between 1932 and 1936, Panufnik studied music theory and composition under Kazimierz Sikorski at the Warsaw Music Conservatory...
  467. ^ Wyndham & L'Epine (1915), p. 225
  468. ^ Buelow, George J. (23 November 2004). A History of Baroque Music. Indiana University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-2533-4365-9. Overlooked generally is the significance of Palestrina on Corelli's works, an influence that can be traced to Corelli's contrapuntal studies with Matteo Simonelli (c. 1618-1696), a well-known Roman composer and singer in the Cappella Sistina.
  469. ^ Greene (1985), p. 393
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