Bibliography (1959/64) and Robert Bignell: Difference between pages

Tchaikovsky Research
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<includeonly>Peter Tschaikowsky and the Nutcracker ballet</includeonly><noinclude> {{bibitem  |id=1959/64  |Contributors=Wheeler, Opal (author)<br/>Price, Christine, 1928-1980 (illustrator) |Title=Peter Tschaikowsky and the Nutcracker ballet    |Imprint=New York : E. P. Dutton & Co., [1959] |Extent=95 p. ; illus.  |Format=Book |Language=English |Notes=A fictionalised biography of the composer for young children, including some short piano pieces and only a small section on [[The Nutcracker]] |Related=Reprinted as {{bib|1960/55}} (1960)  }}  [[Category:Bibliography (1959)]] {{DEFAULTSORT:Bibliography (1959/064)}}</noinclude>
Belgian violinist (b. 8 January 1863<ref name="note1"/> in the Hague; d. 13 September 1919 in [[Hamburg]]), born '''''Robbert Wilhelmus Bignell'''''.
 
Bignell spent most of his life in [[Hamburg]] (he resided in the nearby town of Altona, now a suburb of the Hanseatic city), playing first in the orchestra set up in [[Hamburg]] by [[Julius Laube]], and eventually becoming leader of the Philharmonic Society's orchestra. It was as a member of the former ensemble that Bignell took part in a concert organized by [[Laube]] on 6/18 January 1888 in honour of Tchaikovsky, who had come to [[Hamburg]] as part of his first tour of Germany as a conductor of his own works. Bignell went to Russia with the rest of [[Laube]]'s orchestra when the latter, thanks to Tchaikovsky's endorsement, was engaged to perform at the famous concerts at [[Pavlovsk]] every summer from 1888 to 1891.
 
==Correspondence with Tchaikovsky==
One letter from Tchaikovsky to Robert Bignell has survived, dating from 1890, and has been translated into English on this website:
* '''[[Letter 3999a]]''' – 8/20 January 1890, from [[Moscow]].
 
==External Links==
* {{viaf|17152742995227732815}}
 
==Notes and References==
<references>
<ref name="note1">Some sources give his year of birth as 1834 or 1852.</ref>
</references>
 
[[Category:People|Bignell, Robert]]
[[Category:Correspondents|Bignell, Robert]]
[[Category:Violinists|Bignell, Robert]]

Revision as of 13:55, 8 August 2023

Belgian violinist (b. 8 January 1863[1] in the Hague; d. 13 September 1919 in Hamburg), born Robbert Wilhelmus Bignell.

Bignell spent most of his life in Hamburg (he resided in the nearby town of Altona, now a suburb of the Hanseatic city), playing first in the orchestra set up in Hamburg by Julius Laube, and eventually becoming leader of the Philharmonic Society's orchestra. It was as a member of the former ensemble that Bignell took part in a concert organized by Laube on 6/18 January 1888 in honour of Tchaikovsky, who had come to Hamburg as part of his first tour of Germany as a conductor of his own works. Bignell went to Russia with the rest of Laube's orchestra when the latter, thanks to Tchaikovsky's endorsement, was engaged to perform at the famous concerts at Pavlovsk every summer from 1888 to 1891.

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

One letter from Tchaikovsky to Robert Bignell has survived, dating from 1890, and has been translated into English on this website:

External Links

Notes and References

  1. Some sources give his year of birth as 1834 or 1852.