[Also available: The New Harvard Dictionary of Music]

A TO Z: A SELECTION

This document contains a selection of musicians, from all times and all places, for whom the Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music includes entries. The entries in the Dictionary themselves range in length from a paragraph to five or more pages.

Use this alphabet to jump to a particular letter:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

ABSIL, Jean (b. Bon-Secours, Hainaut, Belgium, 1893; d. Brussels, 1974). Composer.

ACUFF, Roy (Claxton) (b. Maynardville, Tenn., 1903; d. Nashville, 1992). Country-and-western singer, fiddler, songwriter, and publisher.

ADDERLY, Cannonball [Julian Edwin] (b. Tampa, 1928; d. Gary, Ind., 1975). Jazz alto saxophonist and leader of small groups.

ADORNO, Theodor W(iesengrund) (b. Frankfurt am Main, 1903; d. Visp, Switzerland, 1969). Philosopher and writer on music.

ANDERSON, Laurie (b. Chicago, 1947). Composer and performer.

ANDERSON, Marian (b. Philadelphia, 1897; d. Portland, Ore., 1993). Contralto.

ANDREWS, LaVerne,
Maxene [Maxine],
Patti [Patricia]
(b. Minneapolis, 1915; d. Brentwood, Calif., 1967)
(b. Minneapolis, 1918; d. Hyannis, Mass., 1995)
(b. Minneapolis, 1920). Popular vocal trio (Andrews Sisters).

ANNA AMALIA [Amalie] (b. Berlin, 1723; d. there, 1787). Composer, patroness of music, and Princess of Prussia.

ARISTOXENUS (b. Tarentum, ca. 375-60 B.C.E.; d. Athens?). Theorist.

BARTÓK, Béla (b. Nagyszentmiklós, now Sînnicolau Mare, Romania, 1881; d. New York, 1945). Composer and ethnomusicologist.

BETHUNE (Green), Thomas [Blind Tom] (b. Columbus, Ga., 1849; d. Hoboken, 1908). Pianist and composer.

BLAKE, Eubie [James Hubert] (b. Baltimore, 1883; d. New York, 1983). Ragtime and revue pianist and composer.

BLEY, Carla [née Borg] (b. Oakland, Calif., 1938). Jazz composer, bandleader, and entrepreneur.

BOULANGER, Nadia (b. Paris, 1887; d. there, 1979). Teacher, conductor, and composer.

BOULEZ, Pierre

(b. Montbrison, 1925). Composer, conductor, and writer on music.

BUSONI, Ferruccio (Dante Michelangiolo Benvenuto) (b. Empoli, near Florence, 1866; d. Berlin, 1924). Composer, pianist, writer on music.

CAGE, John (b. Los Angeles, 1912; d. New York, 1992). Composer and writer on music.

CARTE, Richard D'Oyly (b. London, 1844; d. there, 1901). Impresario.

CHRÉTIEN [Crétien] DE TROYES (b. Troyes; fl. ca. 1160-90). Trouvère.

CLEMENCIC, René (b. Vienna, 1928). Recorder player, composer, and musicologist.

CLEMENTI, Muzio [Mutius Philippus Vincentius Franciscus Xaverius] (b. Rome, 1752; d. Evesham, England, 1832). Composer, music publisher, and pianist.

COOLIDGE, Elizabeth (Penn) Sprague (b. Chicago, 1864; d. Cambridge, Mass., 1953). Patron of music and composer.

CORNAZANO [Cornazzano], Antonio (b. Piacenza, ca. 1430; d. Ferrara, 1484). Dance theorist.

COWARD, Noël (Pierce) (b. Teddington, Middlesex, 1899; d. Blue Harbor, Jamaica, 1973). Songwriter, playwright, and actor.

CRAWFORD (Seeger), Ruth (Porter) (b. East Liverpool, Ohio, 1901; d. Chevy Chase, Md., 1953). Composer, teacher, and folk music collector.

CURWEN, John (b. Heckmondwike, Yorkshire, 1816; d. Manchester, 1880). Educator and publisher.

CZERNY, Carl (b. Vienna, 1791; d. there, 1857). Piano teacher and composer.

D'ALEMBERT, Jean le Rond (b. Paris, 1717; d. there, 1783). Philosopher and mathematician.

DAN, Ikuma (b. Tokyo, 1924). Composer.

DENNER, Johann Christoph (b. Leipzig, 1655; d. Nuremberg, 1707). Woodwind instrument maker.

DIAGHILEV, Sergei (Pavlovich) (b. Gruzino, Novgorod district, 1872; d. Venice, 1929). Impresario.

DOMINGO, Plácido (b. Madrid, 1941). Tenor and conductor.

DOWLAND, John (b. London? 1563; d. there, 1626). Composer and lutenist.

DUNSTABLE [Dunstaple], John (b. ca. 1390; d. 1453). Composer, mathematician, and astronomer.

EFFINGER, Cecil (b. Colorado Springs, 1914; d. Boulder, 1990). Composer, oboist, inventor.

EL-DABH, Halim (Abdul Messieh) (b. Cairo, 1921). Composer.

ELGAR, Edward (William) (b. Broadheath, near Worcester, 1857; d. Worcester, 1934). Composer.

EMMETT, Dan(iel Decatur) (b. Mt. Vernon, Ohio, 1815; d. there, 1904). Minstrel show musician and composer.

ENESCU, George [Enesco, Georges] (b. Liveni-Virnav [now George Enescu], Romania, 1881; d. Paris, 1955). Composer, conductor, and violinist.

FENDER, (Clarence) Leo (b. Anaheim, Calif., 1909). Electric guitar maker.

FLAGG, Josiah (b. Woburn, Mass., 1737; d. Boston? 1795?). Psalmodist, bandmaster, and engraver.

FLATT, Lester (Raymond) (b. Overton County, Tenn., 1914; d. Nashville, 1979). Bluegrass singer and guitarist.

FORKEL, Johann Nicolaus (b. Meeder, Lower Franconia, 1749; d. Göttingen, 1818). Music historian and bibliographer.

FOSS, Lukas (b. Berlin, 1922). Composer, conductor, and pianist.

FOSTER, Stephen Collins (b. Lawrenceville [now in Pittsburgh], 1826; d. New York, 1864). Composer.

FRANCK, Salomo [Salomon] (bapt. Weimar, 1659; buried there, 1725). Poet and court official.

FRANKLIN, Aretha (b. Memphis, Tenn., 1942). Soul and gospel singer.

FRAUENLOB [Heinrich von Meissen] (b. in or near Meissen?, between 1250 and 1260; d. Mainz, 1318). Minnesinger.

FREDERICK II OF PRUSSIA [Frederick the Great] (b. Berlin, 1712; d. Sanssouci, Potsdam, 1786). Monarch, flutist, and composer.

FUKUSHIMA, Kazuo (b. Tokyo, 1930). Composer.

GALIN, Pierre (b. Samatan, near Toulouse, 1786; d. Bordeaux, 1821). Mathematician and music pedagogue.

GALPIN, Francis W(illiam) (b. Dorchester, Dorset, 1858; d. Richmond, Surrey, 1945). Writer on old musical instruments.

GARCÍA, Manuel (Patricio Rodríguez) (b. Madrid, 1805; d. London, 1906). Singing teacher.

GAY, John (bapt. Barnstaple, 1685; d. London, 1732). Poet and dramatist.

GAYE [Gay], Marvin (b. Washington, D.C., 1939; d. Los Angeles, 1984). Soul singer and songwriter.

GHENT, Emmanuel (Robert) (b. Montreal, 1925). Composer and psychoanalyst.

GIRAUT [Guiraut] de Bornelh [de Borneill] (b. Excideuil, near Périgeux, ca. 1140; d. ca. 1200). Troubadour.

GIUNTA [Junta]. Family of printers and booksellers (late 15th to 17th century Florence, Venice, Rome, Lyons, and Spain).

GOLDBERG, Johann Gottlieb (bapt. Danzig, 1727; buried Dresden, 1756). Organist, harpsichordist, and composer.

GOLDONI, Carlo (b. Venice, 1707; d. Paris, 1793). Librettist and playwright.

GORDY, Berry, Jr. (b. Detroit, 1929). Soul songwriter, record producer, and record company executive.

GRAINGER, (George) Percy (Aldridge) (b. Melbourne, Australia, 1882; d. White Plains, N.Y., 1961). Composer, pianist, folk song collector, and musical inventor.

GREGORY THE GREAT [Gregory I] (b. Rome, ca. 540; d. there, 604). Pope.

HAMMERSTEIN, Oscar (Greeley Clendenning), II (b. New York, 1895; d. Doylestown, Pa., 1960). Lyricist and librettist.

HAMMOND, Laurens (b. Evanston, Ill., 1895; d. Cornwall, Conn., 1973). Inventor and entrepreneur.

HANSLICK, Eduard (b. Prague, 1825; d. Baden, near Vienna, 1904). Critic.

HARRELD, Kemper (b. Muncie, Ind., 1884; d. Detroit, 1972). Violinist and music educator; helped organize the National Association of Negro Musicians.

HASLINGER, Tobias (b. Zell, Upper Austria, 1787; d. Vienna, 1842). Music publisher.

HEFTI, Neal (b. Hastings, Nebr., 1922). Jazz, film, and television composer and arranger.

HENRICI, Christian Friedrich [Picander] (b. Stolpen, Saxony, 1700; d. Leipzig, 1764). Poet.

HENSEL, Fanny (Cäcilie) Mendelssohn (Bartholdy) (b. Hamburg, 1805; d. Berlin, 1847). Composer.

HILDEGARD OF [VON] BINGEN (b. Bemersheim, near Alzey, Rheinhessen, 1098; d. Rupertsberg, near Bingen, 1179). Abbess, mystic, writer, and composer.

HINDEMITH, Paul (b. Hanau, near Frankfurt am Main, 1895; d. Frankfurt, 1963). Composer, theorist, violist, and conductor.

HOPKINSON, Francis (b. Philadelphia, 1737; d. there, 1791). Musician, statesman, and inventor.

HOTTETERRE, Jacques(-Martin) ["Le Romain"] (b. Paris, 1674; d. there, 1763). Woodwind player and maker, theorist, and composer.

HSU, John (Tseng-Hsin) (b. Shantou, 1931). Viol player, barytonist, and cellist.

IKENOUCHI, Tomojiro (b. Tokyo, 1906). Composer.

INDY, (Paul Marie Théodore) Vincent d' (b. Paris, 1851; d. there, 1931). Composer.

IRINO, Yoshiro (b. Vladivostok, 1921; d. Tokyo, 1980). Composer.

ISIDORE OF SEVILLE (b. Cartagena?, ca. 559; d. Seville, 636). Cleric and encyclopedist.

IVES, Charles (Edward) (b. Danbury, Conn., 1874; d. New York, 1954). Composer.

JACKSON, Mahalia (b. New Orleans, 1911; d. Chicago, 1972). Gospel singer.

JACQUET DE LA GUERRE, Élisabeth-Claude (b. ca. 1666-67; d. Paris, 1729). Harpsichordist and composer.

JEHAN DES MURS [Johannes de Muris] (b. diocese of Lisieux, ca. 1300; d. ca. 1350). Astronomer and music theorist.

JOHANNES DE GARLANDIA [Johannes Gallicus] (fl. ca. 1240). Theorist.

JOHN [João] IV, KING OF PORTUGAL (b. Villa Viçosa, 1604; d. Lisbon, 1656). Writer on music, collector, and composer.

JOHN DAMASCENE [John of Damascus] (b. Damascus, ca. 675; d. St. Sabas, near Jerusalem, ca. 749). Theologian and hymnographer.

JOHNSON, Frank [Francis] (b. Martinique?, ca. 1792; d. Philadelphia, 1844). Dance and military bandmaster.

JONES, Quincy (Delight, Jr.) (b. Chicago, 1933). Composer, arranger, conductor, producer, and bandleader.

JONES, Thad(deus Joseph) (b. Pontiac, Mich., 1923; d. Copenhagen, 1986). Jazz trumpeter, cornetist, flugelhorn player, composer, and bandleader; brother of Elvin and Hank Jones.

JOPLIN, Scott (b. near Marshall, Tex., or Shreveport, La., 1868; d. New York, 1917). Composer, pianist.

JOSQUIN DESPREZ [Juschino; Jodocus Pratensis; Joducus a Prato] (b. Picardy?, northern France, ca. 1440; d. Condé-sur-Escaut, Hainaut, 1521). Composer.

KALLMAN, Chester (b. Brooklyn, 1921; d. Athens, 1975). Poet, librettist, and translator.

KALOMIRIS, Manolis (b. Smyrna, Turkey, 1883; d. Athens, 1962). Composer.

KHAN, Ali Akbar (b. Shibpur, Bengal, 1922). Sarod player and composer.

KIMBALL, Jacob (b. Topsfield, Mass., 1761; d. there, 1826). Composer and tunebook editor.

KIRCHGÄSSNER [Kirchgessner], Marianne (Antonia) (b. Bruchsal, 1769; d. Schaffhausen, 1808). Glass harmonica player.

KITT, Eartha (b. North, S.C., 1928). Popular singer, actress, dancer.

KODÁLY, Zoltán (b. Kecskemét, Hungary, 1882; d. Budapest, 1967). Composer and ethnomusicologist.

KOMEDA [Trzcinski], Krzysztof (b. Poznan, 1931; d. Warsaw, 1969). Film and jazz composer, and jazz pianist.

LARA, Agustín (b. Tlacotalpán, Mexico, 1900; d. Mexico City, 1970). Popular songwriter.

LASSUS, Orlande de [Orlando (di) Lasso, Orlandus Lassus, Roland Delattre] (b. Mons, Hainaut, 1532; d. Munich, 1594). Composer.

LENYA, Lotte [Blamauer, Karoline Wilhelmine] (b. Vienna, 1898; d. New York, 1981). Actress and singer.

LEOPOLD I (b. Vienna, 1640; d. there, 1705). Holy Roman Emperor and composer.

LEWIS, Meade (Anderson) "Lux" (b. Chicago, 1905; d. Minneapolis, 1964). Boogie-woogie pianist.

LILI'UOKALANI [Kamaka'eha Paki, Lydia] (b. Honolulu, 1838; d. there, 1917). Queen, songwriter.

LISZT, Franz [Franciscus] (b. Raiding, Hungary [now Austria], 1811; d. Bayreuth, 1886). Pianist and composer.

LOBKOWITZ, Joseph Franz Maximilian (b. Roudnice nad Labem, 1772; d. Trebon, 1816). Singer and patron of the arts.

LOWRY, Robert (b. Philadelphia, 1826; d. Plainfield, N.J., 1899). Hymn writer.

LYSENKO [Lissenko], Nicolay (Vitalyevich) (b. Grinki, near Kremenchug, Ukraine, 1842; d. Kiev, 1912). Composer, pianist, and folk song collector.

MACHITO [Frillo, Frank Raul] (b. Tampa, Fla., 1912; d. London, 1984). Jazz and salsa bandleader, singer, and maraca player.

MAELZEL, Johann[es] Nepomuk (b. Regensburg, 1772; d. in the harbor of La Guiara, Venezuela, 1838). Inventor (Panharmonicon, musical chronometer).

MARLEY, Bob [Robert Nesta] (b. Rhoden Hall, St. Ann, Jamaica, 1945; d. Miami, 1981). Reggae singer, songwriter, and guitarist.

MASON, Lowell (b. Medford, Mass., 1792; d. Orange, N.J., 1872). Educator and composer.

MATHEWS, Max V(ernon) (b. Columbus, Nebr., 1926). Computer scientist and composer.

MATTHESON, Johann (b. Hamburg, 1681; d. there, 1764). Composer, theorist, and lexicographer.

MERCER, Johnny [John Herndon] (b. Savannah, Ga., 1909; d. Los Angeles, 1976). Popular lyricist, songwriter, and singer.

METASTASIO, Pietro [Trapassi, Antonio Domenico Bonaventura] (b. Rome, 1698; d. Vienna, 1782). Librettist.

MIYAGI [Wakabe; Suga], Michio [Nakasuga Kengyo] (b. Kobe, 1894; d. Kariya, 1956). Composer and performer of the zoku-so (13-string koto).

MOOG, Robert A(rthur) (b. Flushing, N.Y., 1934). Engineer and inventor.

MOSCHELES, Ignaz (b. Prague, 1794; d. Leipzig, 1870). Teacher, pianist, composer.

MUMMA, Gordon (b. Framingham, Mass., 1935). Composer and performer of electronic music.

MUSET, Colin (fl. ca. 1200-1250). Trouvère and jongleur.

NEWLIN, Dika (b. Portland, Oreg., 1923). Musicologist and composer.

NIELSEN, Carl (August) (b. Nörre-Lyndelse, near Odense, 1865; d. Copenhagen, 1931). Composer.

NILSSON [Svennsson], (Märta) Birgit (b. Västra Karups, Sweden, 1918). Soprano.

NONO, Luigi (b. Venice, 1924; d. there, 1990). Composer.

NORDOFF, Paul (b. Philadelphia, 1909; d. Herdecke, Germany, 1977). Composer and music therapist.

OBRECHT [Hobrecht], Jacob (b. Bergen op Zoom? or Sicily?, 1450; d. Ferrara, 1505). Composer.

OFFENBACH, Jacques (b. Cologne, 1819; d. Paris, 1880). Composer.

OGINSKI, (Prince) Michal Kleofas (b. Guzów, near Warsaw, 1765; d. Florence, 1833). Composer, diplomat, and politician.

OLIVEROS, Pauline (b. Houston, 1932). Composer and performer.

ORFF, Carl (b. Munich, 1895; d. there, 1982). Composer and music educator.

ØRSTED PEDERSEN, Niels-Henning (b. Osted, Denmark, 1946). Jazz double bass player.

OZAWA, Seiji (b. Fenytien [now Shenyang, Liaoning, China], 1935). Conductor.

PACHECO, Johnny [John] (b. Dominican Republic, 1935). Jazz and salsa flutist, percussionist, and bandleader.

PADEREWSKI, Ignacy Jan (b. Kurylówka, Poland, 1860; d. New York, 1941). Pianist, composer, premier.

PARRY, John (b. Bryn Cynan [northern Wales], ca. 1710; d. Ruabon, 1782). Harp player and poet.

PAUL, Les [Polfus, Lester] (b. Waukesha, Wis., 1915). Popular guitarist, inventor (solid-body electric guitar, several forms of electric guitar pickup; pioneered multitrack recording and overdubbing).

PETERS, Carl Friedrich (b. Leipzig, 1779; d. Sonnenstein, Bavaria, 1827). Music publisher.

PETRILLO, James C(aesar) (b. Chicago, 1892; d. there, 1984). Labor leader.

PETRUCCI, Ottaviano (dei) (b. Fossombrone, 1466; d. Venice, 1539). Printer.

POTHIER, Joseph (b. Bouzemont, Vosges, 1835; d. Conques, Belgium, 1923). Editor of Gregorian chant.

POUND, Ezra (Loomis) (b. Hailey, Idaho, 1885; d. Venice, 1972). Poet and amateur composer.

PRAN NATH (b. Lahore, India [now Pakistan], 1918). Classical Indian vocalist and composer.

PROUT, Ebenezer (b. Oundle, 1835; d. Hackney, 1909). Scholar and editor.

PUCCINI, Giacomo (Antonio Domenico Michele Secondo Maria) (b. Lucca, 1858; d. Brussels, 1924). Composer.

QUANTZ, Johann Joachim (b. Oberscheden, Hanover, 1697; d. Potsdam, 1773). Flutist and composer.

QUINAULT, Philippe (b. Paris, 1635; d. there, 1688). Dramatist, librettist, and poet.

RAN, Shulamit (b. Tel Aviv, 1949). Composer.

REVELLI, William D(onald) (b. Spring Gulch, Colo., 1902). Band director.

RICE, Thomas Dartmouth ("Daddy") (b. New York, 1808; d. there, 1860). Minstrel performer.

RICHARD I, COEUR DE LION (b. Oxford, 1157; d. Limoges, 1199). King of England (1189-99), trouvère poet and composer.

RILEY, Terry (Mitchell) (b. Colfax, Calif., 1935). Composer and performer.

ROBERTS, (Charles) Luckey (Luckeyeth) (b. Philadelphia, 1887; d. New York, 1968). Ragtime, musical theater, and jazz pianist and composer.

ROBESON, Paul (b. Princeton, N.J., 1898; d. Philadelphia, 1976). Bass-baritone and actor.

ROCKEFELLER, Martha Baird (b. Madera, Calif., 1895; d. New York, 1971). Philanthropist and pianist.

RODGERS, Richard (Charles) (b. Hammels Station, N.Y., 1902; d. New York City, 1979). Popular songwriter.

RODRÍGUEZ (Amador), Augusto (Alejandro) (b. San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1904). Chorusmaster, conductor, and composer.

ROMANOS THE MELODE (b. Emesia?, Syria, late 5th century; d. Constantinople, after 555). Hymn writer.

RORE, Cypriano de (b. Machelen, Flanders, Mechelen, or Ronse, 1515 or 1516; d. Parma, 1565). Composer.

ROSENBOOM, David (b. Fairfield, Iowa, 1947). Composer; designer and maker of electronic instruments.

ROSPIGLIOSI, Giulio, Pope Clement IX (b. Pistoia, 1600; d. Rome, 1669). Librettist.

RUSSOLO, Luigi (b. Portogruaro, 1885; d. Cerro di Laveno, Varese, 1947). Composer, inventor, painter.

SACHS, Hans (b. Nuremberg, 1494; d. there 1576). Meistersinger and poet.

SAINT-SAËNS, (Charles) Camille (b. Paris, 1835; d. Algiers, 1921). Composer.

SAUVEUR, Joseph (b. La Flèche, 1653; d. Paris, 1716). Acoustician.

SAX, Adolphe [Antoine Joseph] (b. Dinant, Belgium, 1814; d. Paris, 1894). Instrument maker (including the saxophone).

SAYGUN, Ahmet Adnan (b. Izmir, 1907; d. Istanbul, 1991). Composer and ethnomusicologist.

SCHULLER, Gunther (b. New York, 1925). Composer, conductor, author, educator.

SCHUMAN, William (Howard) (b. New York, 1910; d. New York, 1992). Composer, educator, administrator.

SCHUYLER, Philippa Duke (b. New York, 1931; d. Danang, Vietnam, 1967). Pianist, composer, author.

SCHWEITZER, Albert (b. Keysersberg, Alsace, 1875; d. Lambaréné, Gabon, 1965). Organist, Bach scholar, theologian, physician, and humanitarian.

SECHTER, Simon (b. Friedberg, Bohemia, 1788; d. Vienna, 1867). Teacher, theorist.

SEEGER, Pete(r R.) (b. Patterson, N.Y., 1919). Folk singer, songwriter, banjo player, and guitarist.

SHANKAR, Ravi (b. Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India, 1920). Sitar player and composer.

SHUDI [Schudi, Tschudi, Tshudi], Burkat [Burkhardt] (b. Schwanden, canton of Glarus, 1702; d. London, 1773). Harpsichord maker.

SMITH [née Robinson], Mamie (b. Cincinnati, 1883; d. New York, 1946). Blues and vaudeville singer.

SONDHEIM, Stephen (Joshua) (b. New York City, 1930). Popular composer and lyricist.

SUN RA [Blount, Herman ("Sonny"); Le Sony'r Ra] (b. Birmingham, Ala., 1914; d. there, 1993). Jazz bandleader, composer, and keyboard player.

SUZUKI, Shin'ichi (b. Nagoya, 1898). Violinist and teacher.

SWEENEY, Joel Walker [Joe] (b. Appomattox, Va., ca. 1810; d. there, 1860). Banjo player and maker.

TERRY, Sonny [Terrell, Sanders] (b. Greensboro, Ga., 1911; d. Mineola, N.Y., 1986). Blues singer and harmonica player.

THIELEMANS, Toots [Jean Baptiste] (b. Brussels, 1922). Jazz harmonica player, guitarist, and whistler.

TIPPETT, Michael (Kemp) (b. London, 1905). Composer.

UM KALTHOUM [Kalthum, Ibrahim Um] (b. Tamayet el Zahayra, Sinbellawein, Egypt, 1898; d. Cairo, 1975). Singer.

VAUGHAN, Sarah (Lois) (b. Newark, N.J., 1924; d. Hidden Hills, 1990). Jazz singer.

VERDI, Giuseppe (Fortunino Francesco) (b. Le Roncole, near Parma, 1813; d. Milan, 1901). Composer.

VILLA-LOBOS, Heitor (b. Rio de Janeiro, 1887; d. there, 1959). Composer.

WALLER, Fats [Thomas Wright] (b. New York, 1904; d. Kansas City, Mo., 1943). Jazz and popular pianist, organist, singer, bandleader, and composer.

WEILL, Kurt (Julian) (b. Dessau, 1900; d. New York, 1950). Composer.

WELLS, Kitty [Muriel Ellen Deason] (b. Nashville, 1919). Country singer and songwriter.

WHITE, Josh(ua Daniel) [Pinewood Tom] (b. Greenville, S.C., 1915; d. Manhasset, N.Y., 1969). Blues, gospel, and folk singer and guitarist.

YAMADA, Kosaku [Kosçak] (b. Tokyo, 1886; d. there, 1965). Composer.

ZAPPA, Frank [Francis Vincent] (b. Baltimore, 1940; d. Los Angeles, 1993). Rock songwriter and guitarist, composer.

ZARLINO, Gioseffo [Gioseffe] (b. Chioggia, 1517; d. Venice, 1590). Music theorist and composer.

ZILDJIAN. Family of cymbal makers (Avedis Zildjian Co. of Norwell, Mass., and K. Zildjian of Istanbul).

ZWILLICH, Ellen Taaffe (b. Miami, 1939). Composer.


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