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Leo Ornstein
December 2, 1893 - February 24, 2002
born in Kremenchuk, Ukraine, composed during the Modern period
Biography
Leo Ornstein was born the son of a Jewish cantor. As a child, Ornstein demonstrated exceptional talent at the piano, and was sent at age ten to the St. Petersburg Conservatory on a recommendation from his uncle, legendary pianist Josef Hofmann. Owing to renewed hostility towards Jews in Russia, Ornstein's family fled to the United States in 1907. In the U.S., Ornstein studied with Bertha Fiering Tapper at the New England Conservatory of Music and Percy Goetschius at the Institute for Music Art in New York City (later Julliard). Ornstein made his debut as pianist in New York in March 1911.

In 1913, Ornstein composed Danse sauvage (Wild Men's Dance), a violently rhythmic piano piece that is entirely dissonant and fashioned out of large tone clusters. This was followed by a series of such works, including Two Impressions of Notre Dame and Suicide in an Airplane (both 1914), A la chinoise (1917) and others. Beginning in 1914, Ornstein appeared in programs combining these pieces and those of Schoenberg, Ravel's Gaspard de la nuit, Bartók, Kodály, Debussy, Scriabin, among others, advertised as "Futurist music." Ornstein was soon recognized as the foremost advocate of difficult, ultramodern music.
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