Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Heinz_Wallberg> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 96 of
96
with 100 triples per page.
- Heinz_Wallberg abstract "Heinz Wallberg (16 March 1923 – 29 September 2004) was a German conductor.Wallberg was born in Herringen, Westphalia. He studied trumpet, violin and piano. He helped to support his family with his musical training after his father became unable to work. During World War II, he was a morse code operator, and simultaneously directed an army band and led a string quartet.After the war, he studied at the Dortmund and Cologne conservatories. He made his debut as a conductor in Münster with Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro. He became principal music director in Augsburg in 1954, and in Bremen in 1955, concluding in both posts in 1960. In 1957, he recorded a scene from Wagner's Lohengrin, with the Philharmonia Orchestra in London and the singers Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Christa Ludwig, under the production of Walter Legge. He also recorded Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 4 Italian, and his A Midsummer Night's Dream incidental music. He conducted Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier for the Royal Opera, Covent Garden in 1963. In the meantime, at the Vienna and Salzburg festivals he premiered works such as Frank Martin's oratorio Le Mystere de la Nativité (1960) and Rudolf Wagner-Régeny's The Mines at Falun (1961). Wallberg inaugurated the Munich Opera Festival in 1962 with a performance of Richard Strauss's Die schweigsame Frau.From 1964 to 1975, Wallberg was principal conductor of the Tonkünstler Orchestra, Vienna. He held the same post with the Munich Radio Orchestra from 1975 to 1982, and with the Essen Philharmonic from 1975 to 1991. He was the first West German conductor allowed to conduct in East Germany after the partition of Germany. His United States conducting debut did not occur until 1991. For the last 37 years of his life, he appeared every year with Japan's NHK Symphony Orchestra. He conducted the New Zealand premiere of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in 1990.He was nominated for a Grammy award in 1982 for his recording of Weinberger's opera Schwanda the Bagpiper. He gave a concert in St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, for Pope John XXIII in 1959. Heinz Wallberg was highly regarded as a conductor of the symphonies of Anton Bruckner. Other recordings included Engelbert Humperdinck's Königskinder and La bohème of Ruggero Leoncavallo.Wallberg was married twice, to Maritta Ruhlmann, who died in 1967, and later to Murielle Nouget. He had a daughter with Ruhlmann and a son with Nouget. He died in Essen in 2004, aged 81.".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageID "13850212".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageLength "4280".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageOutDegree "61".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageRevisionID "696112081".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink A_Midsummer_Nights_Dream_(Mendelssohn).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Bruckner.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Augsburg.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Bremen.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Category:1923_births.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Category:2004_deaths.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_German_musicians.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Category:German_conductors_(music).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Christa_Ludwig.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Cologne.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Conducting.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Der_Rosenkavalier.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Die_Meistersinger_von_Nürnberg.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Die_schweigsame_Frau.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Dortmund.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Elisabeth_Schwarzkopf.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Engelbert_Humperdinck_(composer).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Mendelssohn.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Martin_(composer).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Grammy_Award.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Herringen.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Jaromír_Weinberger.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Kurt_Eichhorn.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Königskinder.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink La_bohème_(Leoncavallo).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Lamberto_Gardelli.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Lohengrin_(opera).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink London.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Morse_code.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Munich_Radio_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Münster.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink NHK_Symphony_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink New_Zealand.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Oratorio.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Philharmonia_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Pope_John_XXIII.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Strauss.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Wagner.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Opera_House.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Rudolf_Wagner-Régeny.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Ruggero_Leoncavallo.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Salzburg_Festival.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Schwanda_the_Bagpiper.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink St._Peters_Basilica.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink String_quartet.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Symphony_No._4_(Mendelssohn).
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink The_Marriage_of_Figaro.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Tonkünstler_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Trumpet.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Vienna_Festival.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Violin.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Legge.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Weller.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Westphalia.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Heinz Wallberg".
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Wallberg".
- Heinz_Wallberg after Lamberto_Gardelli.
- Heinz_Wallberg after Walter_Weller.
- Heinz_Wallberg before Kurt_Eichhorn.
- Heinz_Wallberg before "Gustav Koslik".
- Heinz_Wallberg title Munich_Radio_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg title Tonkünstler_Orchestra.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:S-culture.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:S-end.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:S-start.
- Heinz_Wallberg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Succession_box.
- Heinz_Wallberg years "1964".
- Heinz_Wallberg years "1975".
- Heinz_Wallberg subject Category:1923_births.
- Heinz_Wallberg subject Category:2004_deaths.
- Heinz_Wallberg subject Category:20th-century_German_musicians.
- Heinz_Wallberg subject Category:German_conductors_(music).
- Heinz_Wallberg hypernym Wallberg.
- Heinz_Wallberg type Thing.
- Heinz_Wallberg comment "Heinz Wallberg (16 March 1923 – 29 September 2004) was a German conductor.Wallberg was born in Herringen, Westphalia. He studied trumpet, violin and piano. He helped to support his family with his musical training after his father became unable to work. During World War II, he was a morse code operator, and simultaneously directed an army band and led a string quartet.After the war, he studied at the Dortmund and Cologne conservatories.".
- Heinz_Wallberg label "Heinz Wallberg".
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs Q76208.
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs Heinz_Wallberg.
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs Heinz_Wallberg.
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs ハインツ・ワルベルク.
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs m.03cl5wr.
- Heinz_Wallberg sameAs Q76208.
- Heinz_Wallberg wasDerivedFrom Heinz_Wallberg?oldid=696112081.
- Heinz_Wallberg isPrimaryTopicOf Heinz_Wallberg.