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Lee Pattison : ウィキペディア英語版 | Lee Pattison Lee Pattison (July 22, 1890, Grand Rapids, Wisconsin - December 22, 1966, Claremont, California) was a noted American pianist, composer, arranger, opera director, and teacher. From about 1919 until 1931 he was a member of the popular two-piano team of Guy Maier and Lee Pattison.〔“Friendly Split,” Time, March 2, 1931.〕 Lee Pattison Recital Hall at Scripps College in Claremont, California, is named for him.〔“Rites Held for Pianist Lee M. Pattison, 76,” Los Angeles Times, December 25, 1966, A4.〕 ==Early life== Lee (Marion) Pattison was born in Grand Rapids, Wisconsin, on July 22, 1890. His father, Joseph Marion Pattison, was a public school teacher, and his mother, Mary Alice McVicker, a private music teacher. While he was still a boy, his family moved to Iowa.〔U.S. Census for 1900; “Friendly Split,” Time, March 2, 1931.〕 He studied piano and composition at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, where his principal piano teacher was Carl Baermann (1839–1913), a friend and pupil of Franz Liszt. Following graduation in 1910, he became a member of the New England faculty. Pattison met Guy Maier, who was then a student at the New England Conservatory. Following Maier’s graduation in 1913, Maier and Pattison left together for Europe, where they hoped to become pupils of Harold Bauer (1873–1951), Josef Hofmann (1876–1957), or Arthur Schnabel (1882–1951), all eminent pianists of the time. They found that Bauer was away and Hofmann took no pupils, but Schnabel was willing to teach them. So they went to Berlin, where Schnabel coached them for about a year.〔“The ‘Piano Twins’ Tell How They Do It,” The Musician, March 1926, 11.〕 Maier and Pattison returned to Boston in 1914.〔“Guy Maier,” Etude, December 1956, 6.〕
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