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Charles Naginski : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles Naginski Charles Naginski (Cairo, Egypt, May 29, 1909 – Lenox, Massachusetts, August 4, 1940)〔Carmen et al. ''Art Song in the United States, p. 250〕 was an American composer of art songs and other musical works. ==Biography== Charles Naginski was the son of Russian Jewish parents.〔Some sources (Friedberg, e.g.) claim that his mother was Greek, but ship manifests, census records and naturalization papers available on ancestry.com prove this to be incorrect.〕 His father, who was his first piano teacher, recognized his talent for music and composition at a very early age. From 1928 to 1933 Naginski held a fellowship at the Juilliard Graduate School as a pupil of Rubin Goldmark. Other students there at the time included composers Paul Nordoff, Sergius Kagen, Celius Dougherty, and Vittorio Giannini. One of his other Juilliard colleagues, George Newton, reported that he "spoke five languages, including English, all equally badly." As a result, the Juilliard dean asked Newton to help Naginski with his English, so the two traded lessons in English grammar for accompanying lessons.〔Letter to Ruth Friedberg, August 17, 1982, Friedberg, v. II, p. 158-159〕 He also studied with Roger Sessions. Later he studied at the American Academy in Rome, winning the American Rome Prize in 1938. In the summer of 1940 he went to the Tanglewood institute to study with Paul Hindemith. He died by drowning in Lenox, Massachusetts, on August 4, 1940.〔Friedberg, v. II, p. 158〕
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