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First name: Ingolf
Last name: Dahl
Dates: 1912-1970
Category: Quartet
Nationality: American
Opus name: Piano Quartet (1957)
Publisher: Schott
Peculiarities: www.sheetmusicplus.com/title; and: http://www.halleonard.com/search/search.do?publisher=&publishercode=&isbnean=&series=&voicing=&instrument=Piano Quartet&format=&pianolevel=&bandlevel=&searchtype=product&page=2
Information: Ingolf Dahl is an american composer, conductor, pianist and music educator. Of Swedish-German parentage, Dahl began his formal musical education at the Cologne Hochschule für Musik under Philipp Jarnech and Hermann Abendroth, then fled the Nazi regime to continue his studies in Switzerland at the Zurich Conservatory under Volkmar Andreae and Walter Frey and the University of Zurich. Later he studied composition with Nadia Boulanger in California. His professional career began with coaching and conducting at the Zurich Stadtoper. In 1938 he left Europe for the US and settled in Los Angeles. From then on the range of his musical activities and involvements was immens, including works for radio and film studios, composing, conducting, giving solo piano concerts, and lecturing. He joined the faculty of the University of Southern California in 1945 and remained there until his death. Among his better known former students are the conductor Micheal Tilson Thomas and the composer Frederick Myrow. In addition to teaching composition, conducting, and music history at the university, he also directed the university's symphony orchestra (1945-1958), performing much contemporary music in addition to the standard repertory. Although Dahl wrote music from an early age, his output was fairly small; his varied career provided little time for composing, and he wrote slowly and meticulously. Though his work reflected the changes in his musical environment, the individuality of his style remained strong. His early works exhibit the dissonant and densely polyphonic texture typical of German expressionism in the 1920's. The impact of America, and later, his collaboration with Stravinsky resulted in increasing clarification of texture, a trend towards diatonicism, and a pronounced interest in timbre and instrumental virtuosity. Dahl also used serial techniques in his music and evolved large, imaginatively conceived structures held together by motivic and tonal inter-relationships and complex but compelling harmonic forces.