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・ Oskar Pollak
・ Oskar Potiorek
・ Oskar Quarg
・ Oskar R. Lange
・ Oskar Reinhart
・ Oskar Rescher
・ Oskar Rieding
・ Oskar Ritter
・ Oskar Robertsson
・ Oskar Roehler
・ Oskar Rohr
・ Oskar Romm
・ Oskar Rosenfeld
・ Oskar Ruut
・ Oskar Rönningberg
Oskar Sala
・ Oskar Sandberg
・ Oskar Saville
・ Oskar Schade
・ Oskar Schindler
・ Oskar Schindler's Enamel Factory
・ Oskar Schlemmer
・ Oskar Schmidt (ice hockey)
・ Oskar Schmiedel
・ Oskar Schnirch
・ Oskar Schultz
・ Oskar Schulz
・ Oskar Schäfer
・ Oskar Seidlin
・ Oskar Seyffert


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Oskar Sala : ウィキペディア英語版
Oskar Sala

Oskar Sala (18 July 1910 – 26 February 2002) was a 20th-century German physicist, composer and a pioneer of electronic music born in Greiz. He played an instrument called the Trautonium, a predecessor to the synthesizer.
==Studies==

Sala studied piano and organ during his youth, performing classical piano concerts as a teenager. In 1929, he moved to Berlin to study piano and composition with composer and violinist Paul Hindemith at the Berlin conservatory. He also followed the experiments of Dr. Friedrich Trautwein, at the school’s laboratory, learning to play with Trautwein's pioneer electronic instrument, the Trautonium.〔
On 20 June 1930 Sala and Paul Hindemith gave a public performance at the Berliner Musikhochschule Hall called “Neue Musik Berlin 1930″ to introduce the Trautonium. Later Sala toured Germany with the Trautonium; in 1931 he was the soloist in a performance of Hindemith's Concert for Trautonium with String Quartet.〔 He also soloed in the debut of Hindemith student Harald Genzmer's “Concert for Trautonium AND Orchestra”.
Sala studied physics at the University of Berlin between 1932 and 1935. He helped to develop the "Volkstrautonium", a Trautonium that Telefunken hoped to popularize. In 1935 he built a "Radio-Trautonium", and in 1938 a portable model, the "Konzerttrautonium".〔

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