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Herbert Zipper : ウィキペディア英語版 | Herbert Zipper Herbert Zipper (April 24, 1904 in Vienna, Austria – April 21, 1997 in Santa Monica, California) was an internationally renowned composer, conductor, and arts activist. As an inmate at Dachau concentration camp in the late 1930s, he arranged to have crude musical instruments constructed out of stolen material, and formed a small secret orchestra which performed on Sunday afternoons for the other inmates. Together with a friend, he composed the "Dachau Lied" ("Dachau Song"), which was learned by the other prisoners.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Herbert Zipper )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Dachau Song (Dachau Lied) )〕 Released in 1939, he accepted an invitation to conduct the Manila Symphony Orchestra.〔〔 Jailed for four months by the Japanese during their occupation of the Philippines, after his release, he worked secretly for the Allies, transmitting shipping information by radio.〔 After the war, he emigrated to the United States in 1946, where he conducted the Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra〔〔 and promoted music education. ==Early life== He was born to a prosperous engineer and inventor in Vienna, Austria.〔 He grew up in an affluent Jewish family in the cultural center of Europe, rubbing shoulders with many of the leading writers and artists of the time, and "studied at the Vienna Music Academy with Maurice Ravel and Richard Strauss."〔 He worked as a composer and conductor.
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