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・ Mary Hopkins
・ Mary Hopper
・ Mary Horgan Mowbray-Clarke
・ Mary Horner Lyell
・ Mary Hortense Webster
・ Mary Houghton
・ Mary Howard
・ Mary Howard (romance novelist)
・ Mary Howard de Liagre
・ Mary Howard, Duchess of Norfolk
・ Mary Howard, Duchess of Norfolk (d. 1705)
・ Mary Howard, Duchess of Norfolk (d. 1773)
・ Mary Howard, of the Holy Cross
・ Mary Howarth
・ Mary Howarth (journalist)
Mary Howe
・ Mary Howell
・ Mary Howitt
・ Mary Hoyt Wiborg
・ Mary Hubler
・ Mary Hudson
・ Mary Hudson (organist)
・ Mary Hughes
・ Mary Hughes (disambiguation)
・ Mary Hungerford
・ Mary Hunt
・ Mary Hunt Affleck
・ Mary Hunter Austin
・ Mary Hunter Wolf
・ Mary Hutchinson


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Mary Howe : ウィキペディア英語版
Mary Howe

Mary Howe (April 4, 1882 – September 14, 1964) was an American composer and pianist.
==Biography==
She was born Mary Carlisle in Richmond, Virginia, at the home of her maternal grandparents. She would live most of her life in the Washington, DC. Her family was extremely wealthy; her father, Calderon Carlisle, was a well known and successful lawyer. This privilege helped her get piano lessons with Hermione Seron, an accomplished pianist. By the time she was 18, she was performing publicly and was accepted into Baltimore's Peabody School of Music. It was there that she began studying with Richard Burmeister, who taught her to be quite accomplished on the piano. She also studied composition with Gustav Strube, Ernest Hutcheson, and Harold Randolph, and in 1933 went to Paris to study with the famous French pianist Nadia Boulanger.
Shortly thereafter, she started performing with her friend Anne Hull, one of their most notable performances being Mozart’s "Concerto for Two Pianos". However, she much preferred composition. She notably emulated neo-romanticism, with an unusually open mind for modernism. Her early compositions were almost exclusively for piano. However, she began to develop an interest in themes in nature and American themes, paving the way for some of her most famous orchestral works (which include Sand, Stars, Rock, "Three Pieces after Emily Dickinson" and "Chain Gang Song" for orchestra and chorus). Her "Chain Gang Song" was especially praised for its lack of femininity; after the chorus and orchestra called her up to bow after its first performance, a man from the audience praised the conductor for the piece and asked why the woman was bowing with the ensemble.
Later in life, Howe developed a passion for singing, and wrote many songs. In support of her country during World War II, she composed vigorous pieces in support of the troops that incorporated the texts of William Blake, which were also written for voice.
She died in 1964 at the age of 82, ten years after the death of her husband, Walter Bruce Howe. They were survived by their three children: Bruce, Calderon, and Molly.

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