Aleksander Eduard Thomson

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Aleksander_Eduard_Thomson an entity of type: Thing

Aleksander Eduard Thomson (* 19. Januarjul. / 31. Januar 1845greg. in Pringi, damals Kirchspiel Sangaste, Livland; † 20. Oktober 1917 in Petrograd, Russland) war ein estnischer Komponist. rdf:langString
Aleksander Eduard Thomson (31 January 1845, in Pringi – 20 October 1917, in Petrograd) was an Estonian composer. He is regarded as the founder of Estonian national choral music. In 1865, he graduated from Latvian musical pedagogue Jānis Cimze's seminar in Valga. From 1870 to 1872 he studied mathematics at the University of Tartu. He then worked as a teacher in Kanepi and Vana-Võidu near Viljandi and in the German church school in Petergof, Russia. At that time he was already organizing choral events with a relatively large number of participants. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Aleksander Eduard Thomson
rdf:langString Aleksander Eduard Thomson
xsd:integer 67218816
xsd:integer 1075817505
rdf:langString Aleksander Eduard Thomson (* 19. Januarjul. / 31. Januar 1845greg. in Pringi, damals Kirchspiel Sangaste, Livland; † 20. Oktober 1917 in Petrograd, Russland) war ein estnischer Komponist.
rdf:langString Aleksander Eduard Thomson (31 January 1845, in Pringi – 20 October 1917, in Petrograd) was an Estonian composer. He is regarded as the founder of Estonian national choral music. In 1865, he graduated from Latvian musical pedagogue Jānis Cimze's seminar in Valga. From 1870 to 1872 he studied mathematics at the University of Tartu. He then worked as a teacher in Kanepi and Vana-Võidu near Viljandi and in the German church school in Petergof, Russia. At that time he was already organizing choral events with a relatively large number of participants. Thomson is considered to be one of the founders of the folk music choral tradition in Estonia. He had written about 70 choral songs, of which best known are "Kannel" ('Kantele') and "Laula, laula, suukene" ('Sing, sing o mouth'). Many of his songs are based on folk tunes. He often took the texts of his songs from folk poetry, but also from the works of Carl Robert Jakobson, Lydia Koidula and Friedrich Robert Faehlmann. During arranging the songs, he tried to remove anything related to German. Thomson married Ida Alvine Jakobson, who was the sister of Estonian writer, politician and teacher Carl Robert Jakobson.
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