Català > compositor: 3 sentits > nom 1, person Sentit | someone who composes music as a profession. |
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Sinònim | compositora |
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Espècimens | Aaron Copland | United States composer who developed a distinctly American music (1900-1990) |
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Alban Berg | Austrian composer in Schoenberg's twelve-tone music system (1885-1935) |
Aleksandr Borodin, Borodin | Russian composer (1833-1887) |
Ambròs de Milà | (Roman Catholic Church) Roman priest who became bishop of Milan |
Andrew Lloyd Webber | English composer of many successful musicals (some in collaboration with Sir Tim Rice) (born in 1948) |
Anton Bruckner, Bruckner | Austrian organist and composer of romantic music (1824-1896) |
Antonio Vivaldi, Vivaldi | Italian baroque composer and violinist (1675-1741) |
Aram Khatxaturian | Russian composer (born in Armenia) whose works are romantic and reflect his interest in folk music (1903-1978) |
Arcangelo Corelli, Corelli | Italian violinist and composer of violin concertos (1653-1713) |
Arnold Schoenberg, Arnold Schönberg | United States composer and musical theorist (born in Austria) who developed atonal composition (1874-1951) |
Arthur Honegger, Honegger | Swiss composer (born in France) who was the founding member of a group in Paris that included Erik Satie and Darius Milhaud and Francis Poulenc and Jean Cocteau (1892-1955) |
Arthur Sullivan, Sullivan | English composer of operettas who collaborated with the librettist William Gilbert (1842-1900) |
Artur Schnabel, Schnabel | United States composer (born in Austria) and pianist noted for his interpretations of the works of Mozart and Beethoven and Schubert (1882-1951) |
Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach | German baroque organist and contrapuntist |
Bedrich Smetana, Smetana | Czech composer (1824-1884) |
Beethoven, Ludwig van Beethoven | German composer of instrumental music (especially symphonic and chamber music) |
Bellini, Vincenzo Bellini | Italian composer of operas (1801-1835) |
Benjamin Britten, Britten, Edward Benjamin Britten | major English composer of the 20th century |
Berlioz, Hector Berlioz | French composer of romantic works (1803-1869) |
Bizet, Georges Bizet | French composer best known for his operas (1838-1875) |
Brahms, Johannes Brahms | German composer who developed the romantic style of both lyrical and classical music (1833-1897) |
Carl Maria von Weber | German conductor and composer of romantic operas (1786-1826) |
Carl Nielsen | Danish composer (1865-1931) |
Cesar Franck, Franck | French composer and teacher who influenced a generation of composers (1822-1890) |
Chavez | Mexican composer of nationalistic works using themes from Indian folk music (1899-1978) |
Cherubini, Luigi Cherubini | Italian composer of church music and operas (1760-1842) |
Chopin, Frederic François Chopin, Frédéric François Chopin, Fryderyk Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin | French composer (born in Poland) and pianist of the romantic school (1810-1849) |
Claudio Monteverdi, Monteverdi | Italian composer (1567-1643) |
Cole Porter | United States composer and lyricist of musical comedies (1891-1946) |
Constant Lambert, Lambert | English composer and conductor (1905-1951) |
Darius Milhaud, Milhaud, Milhau | French composer of works that combine jazz and polytonality and Brazilian music (1892-1974) |
Debussy | French composer who is said to have created Impressionism in music (1862-1918) |
Deems Taylor, Joseph Deems Taylor | United States composer and music critic (1885-1966) |
Delibes, Leo Delibes | French composer of operas (1836-1891) |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Shostakovich | Russian composer best known for his fifteen symphonies (1906-1975) |
Donizetti, Gaetano Donizetti | Italian composer of operas (1797-1848) |
Dukas, Paul Dukas | French composer (1865-1935) |
Dvorak | Czech composer who combined folk elements with traditional forms (1841-1904) |
Edvard Grieg, Grieg | Norwegian composer whose work was often inspired by Norwegian folk music (1843-1907) |
Edward MacDowell | United States composer best remembered as a composer of works for the piano (1860-1908) |
Elgar, Sir Edward Elgar | British composer of choral and orchestral works including two symphonies as well as songs and chamber ... / chamber music and music for brass band (1857-1934) |
Engelbert Humperdinck, Humperdinck | German composer of six operas and other incidental music (1854-1921) |
Erik Satie | French composer noted for his experimentalism and rejection of Romanticism (1866-1925) |
Ernest Bloch | United States composer (born in Switzerland) who composed symphonies and chamber music and choral music and a piano sonata and an opera (1880-1959) |
Felix Mendelssohn, Mendelssohn | German musician and romantic composer of orchestral and choral works (1809-1847) |
Francis Poulenc, Poulenc | French pianist and composer (1899-1963) |
Franz Joseph Haydn, Haydn, Joseph Haydn | prolific Austrian composer who influenced the classical form of the symphony (1732-1809) |
Franz Liszt, Liszt | Hungarian composer and piano virtuoso (1811-1886) |
Franz Schubert, Schubert | Austrian composer known for his compositions for voice and piano (1797-1828) |
Frederick Delius | English composer of orchestral works (1862-1934) |
Frederick Loewe | United States composer (born in Austria) who collaborated with Lerner on several musicals (1901-1987) |
Fyodorovich Stravinsky, Igor Stravinsky, Stravinsky | composer who was born in Russia but lived in the United States after 1939 (1882-1971) |
Georg Philipp Telemann, Telemann | German baroque composer (1681-1767) |
George Enescu, Georges Enesco | Romanian violinist and composer (1881-1955) |
George Frederick Handel, George Frideric Handel, George Frideric Händel, Handel | A prolific British baroque composer (born in Germany) remembered best for his oratorio Messiah (1685-1759) |
George Gershwin, Gershwin | United States composer who incorporated jazz into classical forms and composed scores for musical comedies (1898-1937) |
Giacomo Meyerbeer, Meyerbeer | German composer of operas in a style that influenced Richard Wagner (1791-1864) |
Giacomo Puccini, Puccini | Italian operatic composer noted for the dramatic realism of his operas (1858-1924) |
Gian Carlo Menotti | United States composer (born in Italy) of operas (born in 1911) |
Gioachino Rossini, Rossini | Italian composer remembered for his operas (1792-1868) |
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Palestrina, Praeneste | Italian composer (1526-1594) |
Giuseppe Verdi, Verdi | Italian operatic composer (1813-1901) |
Glinka, Mikhail Glinka, Mikhaïl Glinka | Russian composer (1804-1857) |
Gluck | German composer of more than 100 operas (1714-1787) |
Gounod | French composer best remembered for his operas (1818-1893) |
Gustav Mahler, Mahler | Austrian composer and conductor (1860-1911) |
Heitor Villa-Lobos | Brazilian composer (1887-1959) |
Henry Purcell | English organist at Westminster Abbey and composer of many theatrical pieces (1659-1695) |
Hindemith, Paul Hindemith | German neoclassical composer and conductor who believed that music should have a social purpose (1895-1963) |
Hugo Wolf | Austrian composer (1860-1903) |
Ives | United States composer noted for his innovative use of polytonality (1874-1954) |
Jacques Offenbach, Offenbach | French composer of many operettas and an opera (1819-1880) |
Jean-Philippe Rameau, Rameau | French composer of operas whose writings laid the foundation for the modern theory of harmony (1683-1764) |
Jean Baptiste Lully, Lully | French composer (born in Italy) who was the court composer to Louis XIV and founded the national French opera (1632-1687) |
Jean Sibelius, Sibelius | Finnish composer (1865-1957) |
Jerome Kern | United States composer of musical comedies (1885-1945) |
Joaquim, Joseph Joachim, Sant Joaquim | Hungarian violinist and composer (1831-1907) |
Johann Strauss, Strauss | Austrian composer and son of Strauss the Elder |
Johann Strauss, Strauss | Austrian composer of waltzes (1804-1849) |
John Cage | United States composer of avant-garde music (1912-1992) |
John Dowland | English lutenist and composer of songs for the lute (1563-1626) |
John Philip Sousa, Sousa | A United States bandmaster and composer of military marches (1854-1932) |
Kurt Weill | German composer |
Leonard Bernstein | United States conductor and composer (1918-1990) |
Manuel de Falla | Spanish composer and pianist (1876-1946) |
Marc Blitzstein | United States pianist and composer of operas and musical plays (1905-1964) |
Massenet | French composer best remembered for his pop operas (1842-1912) |
Maurice Ravel, Ravel | French composer and exponent of Impressionism (1875-1937) |
Max Bruch | German composer (1838-1920) |
Modest Mússorgski, Modest Mussorgsky, Mussorgsky | Russian composer of operas and orchestral works (1839-1881) |
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | prolific Austrian composer and child prodigy |
Noel Coward | English dramatist and actor and composer noted for his witty and sophisticated comedies (1899-1973) |
Ottorino Respighi, Respighi | Italian composer remembered for his symphonic poems (1879-1936) |
Percy Grainger | United States composer (born in Australia) who lived in London and collected English folk songs (1882-1961) |
Pierre Boulez | French composer of serial music (born in 1925) |
Prokofiev | Russian composer of ballets and symphonies and operas (1891-1953) |
Rachmaninoff, Rachmaninov, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sergei Rachmaninov | composer and piano virtuoso born in Russia (1873-1943) |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Vaughan Williams | English composer influenced by folk tunes and music of the Tudor period (1872-1958) |
Richard Rodgers | United States composer of musical comedies (especially in collaboration with Oscar Hammerstein II and with Lorenz Hart) (1902-1979) |
Richard Strauss, Strauss | German composer of many operas |
Richard Wagner, Wagner, Wilhelm Richard Wagner | German composer of operas and inventor of the musical drama in which drama and spectacle and music are fused (1813-1883) |
Rimski-Korsakov | Russian composer of operas and orchestral works |
Robert Alexander Schumann, Robert Schumann, Schumann | German romantic composer known for piano music and songs (1810-1856) |
Roger Huntington Sessions, Roger Sessions | United States composer who promoted 20th century music (1896-1985) |
Roland de Lassus | Belgian composer (1532-1594) |
Roy Orbison | United States composer and rockabilly tenor popular in the 1950s (1936-1988) |
Saint-Saens | French pianist and composer (1835-1921) |
Samuel Barber | United States composer (1910-1981) |
Schumann | German pianist and composer of piano music |
Scott Joplin | United States composer who was the first creator of ragtime to write down his compositions (1868-1917) |
Segòvia | Spanish guitarist who made classical guitar a concert instrument (1893-1987) |
Sigmund Romberg | United States composer (born in Hungary) who composed operettas (1887-1951) |
Stephen Sondheim | United States composer of musicals (born in 1930) |
Steve Reich | United States composer (born in 1936) |
Tchaikovsky | Important Russian composer whose works are noted for their expressive melodies (1840-1893) |
Thomas Tallis | English organist and composer of church and secular music |
Varese | United States composer (born in France) whose music combines dissonance with complex rhythms and the use of electronic techniques (1883-1965) |
Virgil Thomson | United States composer who collaborated with Gertrude Stein (1896-1989) |
W. C. Handy, William Christopher Handy | United States blues musician who transcribed and published traditional blues music (1873-1958) |
Walter Piston | United States neoclassical composer (1894-1976) |
William Byrd | English organist and composer of church music |
William Walton | English composer (1902-1983) |
Específic | autor, compositora de cançons, compositor de cançons, compositor, lletrista | A composer of words / words or music for popular songs |
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contrapuntista | A composer who specializes in counterpoint |
psalmista, salmista | A composer of sacred songs |
simfonista | A composer of symphonies |
General | músic | artist who composes or conducts music as a profession |
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Anglès | composer |
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Espanyol | compositora, compositor |
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Verbs | compondre, integrar, redactar | Write music |
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