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・ Frederick Hawksworth
・ Frederick Hayday
・ Frederick Haynes Newell
・ Frederick Hazell
・ Frederick Hazlitt Brennan
・ Frederick Head
・ Frederick Heath
・ Frederick Heath (architect)
・ Frederick Heath (cricketer)
・ Frederick Heath (footballer)
・ Frederick Heckwolf
・ Frederick Hedges
・ Frederick Hedlund
・ Frederick Heiden
・ Frederick Heiskell
Frederick Hemke
・ Frederick Henderson
・ Frederick Henninger
・ Frederick Henry
・ Frederick Henry (bishop)
・ Frederick Henry (cyclist)
・ Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener
・ Frederick Henry Baddeley
・ Frederick Henry Bay
・ Frederick Henry Bradley
・ Frederick Henry Cooper
・ Frederick Henry Handcock
・ Frederick Henry Henshaw
・ Frederick Henry Johnson
・ Frederick Henry Litchfield


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Frederick Hemke : ウィキペディア英語版
Frederick Hemke

Fred Hemke, DMA ''(né'' Frederick Leroy Hemke, Jr.; born 11 July 1935 Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American virtuoso classical saxophonist and influential, long-standing professor of saxophone at Northwestern University. Hemke helped raise the popularity of classical saxophone, particularly among leading American composers and helped raise the recognition of classical saxophone in solo, chamber, and major orchestral repertoire. For a half century, from 1962 to 2012, Hemke was a full-time faculty music educator at Northwestern University's Bienen School of Music. In 2002, Hemke was named Associate Dean Emeritus of the School of Music.〔〔〔〔〔〔〔〔〔 Hemke retired from Northwestern University in 2012. From the start of his career in the early 1960s, building on the achievements of earlier influential American teachers of classical saxophone — including those of Larry Teal, Joseph Allard, Cecil Leeson, Sigurd Raschèr, and Vincent Abato — Hemke, and a handful of peer American saxophonists — including Eugene Rousseau and Donald Sinta — helped build American saxophone repertoire through composers that included Muczynski, Creston, Stein, Heiden, and Karlins.〔〔 Journalist and author Michael Segell, in his 2005 book, ''The Devil's Horn,'' called Hemke "The Dean of Saxophone Education in America."〔〔
== Formal education ==

From 1955 to 1956, Hemke studied saxophone with Marcel Mule at the Paris Conservatoire National de Musique et de Declamation, earning in 1956 the Premier Prix diploma.〔 Hemke holds the distinction of being the first American saxophonist to earn a Premier Prix diploma from the Paris Conservatory. In 1958, Hemke earned a Bachelor of Science degree in music education from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. In 1962, he earned a Master of Music degree from the Eastman School of Music. In 1975, Hemke earned an A.Mus.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.〔
In primary and secondary school, until the start of college, Hemke studied saxophone with Eddie Schmidt, a jobbing teacher, band director in Milwaukee, and a close friend of Ralph Joseph Hermann (1914–1994) — musician, composer, songwriter, and music publisher. Hemke was highly influenced by Schmidt's recording of Marcel Mule — and also of his recordings of Al Gallodoro, and Freddy Gardner. At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Hemke studied with Jay Morton, teacher of woodwinds. Hemke did not have a formal saxophone teacher at Eastman, but while there, studied reeds with clarinetist Stanley Hasty (1920–2011), flute repertoire with Joseph Mariano (1911–2007), and oboe repertoire with Robert Sprenkle (1914–1988).〔''(Fostering Artistry and Pedagogy: Conversations With Artist-Teachers Frederick Hemke, Eugene Rousseau, and Donald Sinta, )'' (PhD dissertation), by Julia Nolan, University of British Columbia (2012)〕〔"An Interview with Frederick Hemke," by Jonathan Helton, ''The Saxophone Journal'', Vol. 31, No. 1, pps. 26–31 (2006)〕

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