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・ Fraser & DeBolt
・ Fraser & Isham Law Office
・ Fraser (surname)
・ Fraser Academy
・ Fraser Agnew
・ Fraser Aird
・ Fraser Album
・ Fraser alphabet
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・ Françoise Gasse
・ Françoise Gauthier
・ Françoise Gignoux
・ Françoise Gilot
・ Françoise Giroud
・ Françoise Gouny
Françoise Groben
・ Françoise Grossetête
・ Françoise Guégot
・ Françoise Hardy
・ Françoise Hardy (1962 album)
・ Françoise Hardy (1963 album)
・ Françoise Hardy (1965 album)
・ Françoise Hardy (1968 album)
・ Françoise Hardy (disambiguation)
・ Françoise Hardy canta per voi in italiano
・ Françoise Hardy Sings in English
・ Françoise Harteveld
・ Françoise Henneron
・ Françoise Henry
・ Françoise Hostalier


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Françoise Groben : ウィキペディア英語版
Françoise Groben
Françoise Groben (4 December 1965 – 28 May 2011) was a Luxembourg cellist who performed widely and won several awards. She made recordings for radio, television and CDs.〔"Groben, Françoise", ''Luxemburger Lexikon'', Editions Guy Binsfeld, 2006.〕
==Biography==
Born on 4 December 1965 in Luxembourg City, Groben first studied the cello with Georges Mallach at the Conservatoire de Luxembourg. She continued with Boris Pergamenshikov at the Musikhochschule, Cologne, and subsequently with William Pleeth, Daniil Shafran, as well as with members of the Amadeus Quartet. In 1990 she won 2nd prize in the International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow.〔("Performance Today: Zehetmair Quartet" ), ''NPR''. Retrieved 28 December 2010.〕〔("Françoise Groben, Cello" ), ''Cecilia-cmc-de''. Retrieved 28 December 2010.〕
She played with a number of prestigious orchestras including the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the NHK Symphony Orchestra, Leningrad Philharmonic, Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, and the Russian State Orchestra and participated in many music festivals around the globe. In 1998, she became the cellist in the Zehetmair Quartet founded by Thomas Zehetmair, playing in Lisbon, Munich, Leipzig, Cologne, Salzburg, Paris, Brussels, Vienna and Berlin as well as on tour in the United States, Australia and the Far East. Thanks to the support of Banque Générale de Luxembourg, she played a Matteo Goffriller cello from 1695.〔
Françoise Groben died on 28 May 2011 when she was only 45 years old.〔(Thierry Hick, "Décès de la violoncelliste luxembourgeoise Françoise Groben" ), ''Luxemburger Wort'', 2 June 2011. Retrieved 4 June 2011.〕
==Discography==

*Corelli, Haydn, Mozart, Solistes Européens Luxembourg with Françoise Groben (SEL Classics)
*Luigi Boccherini: Concertos pour violoncelle, Solistes Européens Luxembourg a Françoise Groben (SEL Classics)
*Music Made in Luxembourg, Solistes Européens Luxembourg with Françoise Groben and others. (SEL Classics)
*String Quartets Nos. 1 & 3 by Robert Schumann with the Zehetmair Quartet ECM Record (Universal) (11 February 2003)
*Works for Chamber Ensemble by Francis Poulenc Vol. 2 played by Alexandre Tharaud, Françoise Groben and others. Naxos (3 April 2000)
*Busoni-Edition (Chamber Music) by Ferruccio Busoni played by Rainer Wehle, Françoise Groben and others. Capriccio (DELTA MUSIC) (27 December 2000)

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