William Haesche
There isn't much information about Mr. Haesche online. The most I could find was the following:
William Edwin Haesche was born April 11, 1867, in New Haven, Connecticut, to Henry William and Rosina (Safney) Haesche. He married Nora Russell, a soprano, in 1890. He earned a Bachelor of Music from Yale University in 1897, studying violin with Bernhard Listemann, piano with Ernst Perabo, and composition and theory with Dr. H. W. Parker. Haesche became a member of faculty at Yale and led the music theory department. He also helped organize the New Haven Symphony Orchestra. He made is home in Hollins, Virginia, and died in Roanoke, Virginia, January 26, 1929.
The following are his most known compositions: A Forest Idylle (1896), Fridthjol and Ingeborg (1897), Springtime (overture - 1899), Symphony in A-flat (1901), Young Lovel's Bride (1898), Sonata in E-minor for violin and piano, The Haunted Oak of Maunau (1902), The South (symphonic poem for orchestra), Hungarian Dance, Souvenir de Wieniawski, Symphonetta for Orchestra in Four Movements, Red Godwin's Wooing, and various other pieces.
The information for this biography was found on prabook.com, which I accessed August 5, 2016. There were other sites I found with him mentioned, however, they gave the same or less information than the one I have mentioned.
William Edwin Haesche was born April 11, 1867, in New Haven, Connecticut, to Henry William and Rosina (Safney) Haesche. He married Nora Russell, a soprano, in 1890. He earned a Bachelor of Music from Yale University in 1897, studying violin with Bernhard Listemann, piano with Ernst Perabo, and composition and theory with Dr. H. W. Parker. Haesche became a member of faculty at Yale and led the music theory department. He also helped organize the New Haven Symphony Orchestra. He made is home in Hollins, Virginia, and died in Roanoke, Virginia, January 26, 1929.
The following are his most known compositions: A Forest Idylle (1896), Fridthjol and Ingeborg (1897), Springtime (overture - 1899), Symphony in A-flat (1901), Young Lovel's Bride (1898), Sonata in E-minor for violin and piano, The Haunted Oak of Maunau (1902), The South (symphonic poem for orchestra), Hungarian Dance, Souvenir de Wieniawski, Symphonetta for Orchestra in Four Movements, Red Godwin's Wooing, and various other pieces.
The information for this biography was found on prabook.com, which I accessed August 5, 2016. There were other sites I found with him mentioned, however, they gave the same or less information than the one I have mentioned.
Marguerite Waltz
(viola and piano - here the piano is probably a midi file)
Performer not identified, but the video was posted by "EvansMSOrchestra."
(viola and piano - here the piano is probably a midi file)
Performer not identified, but the video was posted by "EvansMSOrchestra."