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・ Suzanne Goin
・ Suzanne Goldenberg
・ Suzanne Goldish
・ Suzanne Goodwin
・ Suzanne Graff
・ Suzanne Grandais
・ Suzanne Grant
・ Suzanne Greenberg
・ Suzanne Grossmann
・ Suzanne Gunzburger
・ Suzanne Haik Terrell
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Suzanne Haïk-Vantoura
・ Suzanne Henriette of Lorraine
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・ Suzanne Hoschedé
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・ Suzanne J. Levinson Prize
・ Suzanne Jacob
・ Suzanne Jenniches
・ Suzanne Jeskewitz
・ Suzanne Juyol
・ Suzanne Kaaren
・ Suzanne Kelly
・ Suzanne Klotz


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Suzanne Haïk-Vantoura : ウィキペディア英語版
Suzanne Haïk-Vantoura
Suzanne Haïk-Vantoura (''née'' Vantoura) (13 July 1912 – 22 October 2000) was an organist, music teacher, composer and music theorist. Her ''magnum opus'' was in the field of musicology.
==Personal life==

Vantoura was born in Paris on 13 July 1912. In 1931 Vantoura started studying at Conservatoire National Superieur de Paris, (CNSMDP), and in 1934 earned a First Prize in Harmony. Four years later, she was earned a First Prize in Fugue (1938). She was a pupil of the great organist and composer Marcel Dupré from 1941 to 1946.
During World War II, Vantoura and her family fled from the Nazis to southern France. There she studied the cantillation marks, (melodic accents or Ta'amim), in the Hebrew Bible (Masoretic Text), forming the basic hypothesis of her system for decoding the Masoretic cantillation. After the war she put aside this work and did not resume it until, after her retirement in 1970, she finally published her system in ''La Musique de la Bible révélée'' (1st ed.: 1976). She died on 22 October 2000 in Lausanne, Switzerland at the age of 88. Her husband Maurice Haïk had died in 1976. The couple had no children.

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