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as violinist and composer. Until 1898 he played recitals as violinist and learned conducting independently. He also studied conducting with
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From 1944 until his death in 1960, Cooper conducted for
Pauline Donalda's Opera Guild of Montreal.
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He emigrated to the West in 1924, and was a long-time staff conductor at the
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Pauline
Donalda: The Life and Career of a Canadian Prima Donna
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Musical directors, St
Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra
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281:Conductors (music) from the Russian Empire
16:Russian and American conductor (1877–1960)
253:Musical directors, Latvian National Opera
56:[ɪˈmʲilʲɐlʲˈbʲɛrtɐvʲɪt͡ɕˈkupʲɪr]
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296:Soviet emigrants to the United States
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148:on April of 1914. He also conducted
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195:(Montreal: Eagle, 1975), p. 96.
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99:He graduated music school in
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136:'s epic Third Symphony, '
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144:'s gloomy and turbulent
158:in January 1917 at the
75:) – November 16, 1960,
48:Эмиль Альбертович Купер
35:Emil Albertovich Cooper
24:Portrait of Emil Cooper
52:Russian pronunciation:
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155:Kashchey the Immortal
63:(December 13 , 1877,
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140:' on 23 March 1912,
129:The Golden Cockerel
191:Brotman, Ruth C.,
171:Metropolitan Opera
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263:Georg Schneevoigt
260:Succeeded by
233:Succeeded by
219:Alexander Khessin
59:), also known as
28:Aleksandr Golovin
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257:1925–1928
243:Preceded by
230:1920–1923
216:Preceded by
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79:) was a Russian
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150:Rimsky-Korsakov
134:Reinhold Glière
124:Rimsky-Korsakov
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146:Third Symphony
117:Western Europe
109:Leonid Sobinov
105:Arthur Nikisch
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275:Categories
180:References
142:Myaskovsky
91:ancestry.
61:Emil Kuper
208:Biography
132:in 1909;
126:'s opera
111:and bass
95:Biography
85:violinist
81:conductor
40:‹See Tfd›
77:New York
89:English
73:Ukraine
65:Kherson
44:Russian
30:. 1919.
164:Moscow
101:Odessa
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