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The Musical Leader

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Musical Leader was an American periodical founded in Chicago in 1895 by Florence French and her husband, Charles F. French.[1][2] In 1910 the magazine cooperated with New York City magazine, The Concert Goer, and opened an office there.[2] There were European correspondents of The Musical Leader who provided reports from various cities, including Leipzig, Dresden, Munich, Vienna, Paris and London.[2] By 1913 the magazine had 10,000 subscribers.[2] The publication ran until 1967.

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Transcription

Publishers, editors, authors

  • Charles F. French (1861–1916), founding joint-editor
  • Florence M. French (1868–1941), founding joint-editor
  • J. French Demerath (née Josephine Ethel French; 1893–1975; daughter of Charles & Florence)
  • Evelyn French Smith (née Evelyn French; born 1892; daughter of Charles & Florence)
  • Marion Bauer (1882–1955)[3][4]
  • Emilie Frances Bauer (1865–1926) (Marion's sister)

Worldcat links

  • OCLC 40004899, 8905890, 472475784 OCLC 1605784

References

  1. ^ Obituary: Mrs. Charles F. French, The New York Times, October 16, 1941
  2. ^ a b c d Walter B. Bailey (Spring 2008). ""Will Schoenberg Be a New York Fad?": The 1914 American Premiere of Schoenberg's String Quartet in D Minor". American Music. 26 (1): 37–73. JSTOR 40071688.
  3. ^ Christine Parker Ammer (born 1931), Unsung: A History of Women in American Music, Century ed. Portland: Amadeus Press (2001) ISBN 978-1-57467-058-5
  4. ^ Ammer, 148. Prior to her death in 1926, Bauer had held the post at the Musical Leader — Susan Pickett, From the Wild West to New York Modernism, The Maud Powell Signature, Women in Music, pg 40 (June 2008)


This page was last edited on 28 February 2022, at 13:48
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