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Dieter Schnebel

Dieter Schnebel (14 March 1930 – 20 May 2018) was a German composer, theologian and musicologist. He composed orchestral music, chamber music, vocal music and stage works. From 1976 until his retirement in 1995, Schnebel served as professor of experimental music at the Hochschule der Künste, Berlin.

Dieter Schnebel
Born(1930-03-14)14 March 1930
Lahr, Baden, Germany
Died20 May 2018(2018-05-20) (aged 88)
Berlin, Germany
Resting placeDahlem Cemetery
EducationUniversity of Tübingen
Occupations
  • Composer
  • Theologian
  • Musicologist
OrganizationHochschule der Künste, Berlin
Awards

Career edit

Schnebel was born in Lahr/Baden. He began general private music studies with Wilhelm Siebler from 1942 until 1945, when he started piano lessons with Wilhelm Resch, and continued study with him until 1949 at the age of 19.[1] He continued with music history through 1952, under Eric Doflein.[2] Simultaneously he began to study composition, from 1950, with Ernst Krenek, Theodor W. Adorno and Pierre Boulez, among others. He entered formal studies at the University of Tübingen where he took musicology with Walter Gerstenberg, as well as theology, philosophy and further piano studies.[3] In 1955, he left with a degree in theology,[1] but with a dissertation about Arnold Schoenberg.[4] Soon after, he married Camilla Riegger in 1956, and the couple had a son and daughter. Schnebel became a minister, and taught theology and religion until 1963 when he began teaching philosophy and psychology.[4] After his first wife died, he underwent a period of psychoanalysis. In 1970 he married translator Iris von Kaschnitz[4] (1928–2014), daughter of Marie Luise Kaschnitz, and began teaching religious studies and music in Munich, which he continued until 1976.[2] His students included Australian composer Norma Tyer. In 1976, he began teaching in Berlin as a professor of experimental music and music research, a chair created for him. He held it until his retirement in 1995.[4][5]

 
Tombstone, Dahlem Cemetery

Invited by Walter Fink, he was the sixth composer featured in the annual Komponistenporträt of the Rheingau Musik Festival in 1996, where his Schau-Stücke for voices and gestures premiered.[6]

Schnebel died of a heart ailment in Berlin on 20 May 2018 at the age of 88.[7] His and his wife's grave is in Dahlem Cemetery.

Cycles and style edit

Schnebel composed several cycles of works, sometimes over a long time.[4] One of them was called Versuche (Essays), consisting of four works written 1953 to 1956. They concern serial techniques, exploring space by placing performers at separate positions. His religious music includes a cycle Für Stimmen (...missa est) (For voices ...), consisting of four works written 1956 to 1969). They use the human voice and organ in experimental settings of prayers and biblical texts. A cycle Produktionsprozesse is a group of compositions related to "language and body" which concerns the physical sound production, with the performers utilizing speech and breathing organs in unusual ways.[8][3]

His earliest works were strongly influenced by his fellow Darmstadt students Karlheinz Stockhausen, about whose early works he wrote an extended essay, and Mauricio Kagel, about whom he edited a book. Starting in 1959, he also came under the influence of John Cage.[9][10][3])

Schnebel made arrangements of works by Bach, Beethoven, Webern and Wagner, called Re-Visions, sometimes using their traditional concepts to reflect new techniques and different ways of looking at them.[3]

Awards edit

Schnebel's awards include the Arts Prize of Lahr in 1991. He received the first European Church Music Prize in Schwäbisch Gmünd the same year. He was a member of the Berlin Akademie der Künste from 1991, and of the Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste since 1996.[4] In 2015, he was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande.

Works edit

Schnebel's works are held by the German National Library.[11] Many of them are published by Schott Music.[12]

Music with orchestra edit

  • Compositio (1955–56, rev. 1964/1965)
  • Orchestra / Symphonische Musik für mobile Musiker (1974–1977)
  • Canones (1975–1977; 1993/1994)
  • Schubert-Phantasie (Re-Visionen I5, for divided orchestra and voices) (1978, rev. 1989 as Blendwerk, for string orchestra)
  • Thanatos-Eros (Traditione III1), symphonic variations for large orchestra (1979–82, rev.1984–85)
  • Sinfonie-Stücke (Traditione III2) (1984–85)
  • Missa, Dahlem Mass for four solo voices, two mixed choirs, orchestra and organ (1984–1987)[11]
  • Mahler-Moment, for strings (1985)
  • Sinfonie X (Tradition VI) (1987–1992; 2004/2005)
  • Mozart-Moment (1988/1989)
  • Schumann-Moment (Re-Visionen II2, for voices, winds, harp, and percussion (1989)[2]
  • Verdi-Moment (Re-Visionen II5, for orchestra (1989)[2]
  • St. Jago (Tradition IV2, 3 speakers, 4 singers, and ensemble: music and images to Heinrich von Kleist (1989–1991)[2] (rev. 1995)[citation needed]
  • Janáček-Moment (Re-Visionen II1), for orchestra (1991)[2]
  • Totentanz, ballet-oratorio for two speakers, soprano, bass, choir, orchestra and live electronic (1992–1994)
  • inter, for chamber orchestra (1994)
  • O Liebe! – süßer Tod..., five sacred songs after Johann Sebastian Bach for mezzo-soprano, chamber choir, and small orchestra (1995)
  • Ekstasis for soprano, speaker, two children's voices, percussion, choir and large orchestra (1996/1997; 2001/2002)

Chamber music edit

  • Analysis, for strings and percussion (1953)[2]
  • Stücke, for string quartet or string octet (1954–55)[2]
  • Fragment, for chamber ensemble and voice obligato (1955)[2]
  • Das Urteil after Franz Kafka, Raummusik für Instrumente, Stimmen und sonstige Schallquellen (Space music for instruments, voices and other sound sources) (1959, rev. 1990)
  • Glossolalie (1959–61), instructions for composition[2]
    • Glossolalie 61 (1959–1961)[13][2]
    • Glossolalie 94 (1994)[2]
  • Maulwerke (1968–74);[2] staged in 1977 by Achim Freyer at the Musiktheaterwerkstatt Wiesbaden Version 2010[citation needed]
  • Körpersprache / Organkomposition (Body Language / Organ Composition), for 3–9 players (1979/1980)
  • Memento, for voice and accordion (1981)
  • Montiano-Song, for one or more voices and instruments (1983)
  • Beethoven-Symphonie (Re-Visionen I2), for chamber ensemble (1985)
  • Metamorphosenmusik, for voice and chamber ensemble (1986/1987)[citation needed]
  • Metamorphosen des Ovid or Die Bewegung von den Rändern zur Mitte hin und umgekehrt, incidental music for 11 voices and 11 strings (1986–87)[2]
  • Mit diesen Händen, for voice and cello with curved bow (1992)[14]
  • Baumzucht (J. P. Hebel), musical reading after Johann Peter Hebel for speaker and chamber ensemble (1992/1995)
  • Schau-Stücke (Body Études) (1995)[6]
    • Keine grossen Sprünge, for two performers[2]
    • Kopfschütteln, for five performers[2]
    • Schlängeln, for two performers[2]
  • Magnificat (1996/97)[15]
  • String Quartet No. 2 (2000–2007)
  • Flipper, chamber music for Spielautomaten, actors, instruments and tape (2002/2003)
  • String Quartet No. 3 "Im Raum" (2005–2006)
  • Drei Kafka-Dramolette, Der plötzliche Spaziergang, Entschlüsse and Gib's auf! (2009)[16]

Vocal edit

  • Für Stimmen (… missa est): I. dt 31,6 for 12 vocal groups (1956–58), II. AMN for 7 vocal groups (1958–67), III. :! (madrasha II) for 3 choir groups and magnetic tape ad lib. (1958–68), IV. Choralvorspiele I/II for organ, side instruments, magnetic tape and amplifier (1966–69)
  • Maulwerke, for amplified voices and electronics (1968–74)[2]
  • Körper-Sprache, for 3–9 performers (1979–80)[2]
  • Bach-Contrapuncti (I, VI, XI) (Re-Visionen I1, for voices (1972–76); revised as O Liebe! – süsser Tod (1984–95)[2]
  • Motetus I, for two choruses (1989–93)[2]
  • "Mein Herz ruht müde", for alto voice and piano (1994)[2]
  • Motetus II, for two choruses (1997–98)[2]
  • Behütet ... : Psalm 121, for chorus (SSMezAATTBarBB), with organ or synthesizer ad lib. (2012)[11]

Bibliography edit

Sources

  • Anon. (n.d.a). "Compositions by Dieter Schnebel". German National Library. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  • Anon. (n.d.b) "Dieter Schnebel", Bayerisches Musiker-Lexikon Online [de]. Munich: Ludwig-Maximilians Universität (accessed 22 May 2018). (in German)
  • Anon. (24 January 2010). "Melancholie der Pneumatik, auf minimalistische Schrittfolgen reduziert". Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.
  • Anon. (2015). "Dieter Schnebel". Akademie der Künste. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  • Anon. (20 May 2018a). "Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben". Deutschlandfunk. Retrieved 21 May 2018.
  • Anon. (21 May 2018b). "Nachruf: Deutscher Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben". Kleine Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  • Attinello, Paul. "Schnebel, Dieter (Wolfgang)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, 29 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001.
  • Clements, Andrew. "Schnebel, Dieter". The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols., edited by Stanley Sadie. London: Macmillan Publishers, 1992.
  • Deutsche Presse-Agentur. Mit 88 Jahren: Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben. Schweriner Volkszeitung (2018; accessed 21 May 2018).
  • Göbel, Andreas. "Zum Tod des Komponisten Dieter Schnebel: Neugierig auf ungehörte Töne". Deutschlandfunk (2018; accessed 22 May 2018).
  • Herman, Michael. "German and Austrian Symphonies / From The 19th Century To The Present" (PDF). musicweb-international.com, 2017. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  • Schell, Michael. "Dieter Schnebel (1930–2018): Radical Reverential Music". Second Inversion (July 11, 2018).
  • Schnebel, Dieter. "Schau-Stücke". Schott Music, 1997. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  • Schnebel, Dieter. "Mit diesen Händen / With These Hands". Stuttgart and Wissembourg: Bach-Bogen.de (n.d.; accessed 21 May 2018).
  • Schott Music. "Dieter Schnebel: Works". Schott Music website (accessed 22 May 2018).
  • Zimmerlin, Michael (2018). "Komponist Dieter Schnebel ist gestorben: Ein Experimentator, der keine Grenzen scheute". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 22 May 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Gligo, Nikša. "Schrift ist Musik? Ein Beitrag zur Aktualisierung eines nur anscheinend veralteten Widerspruchs". International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 18 (1987), 1, pp. 145–162 (part 1); 19 (1988), 1, pp. 75–115 (part 2) (includes an analysis of Schnebel's project MO-NO: Musik zum Lesen)
  • Pöllmann, Rainer, and Achim Freyer. "Zum Tod von Dieter Schnebel Ein radikaler Avantgardist". Deutschlandfunk Kultur (20 May 2018; accessed 25 May 2018). (in German)
  • Stolba, K. Marie. The Development of Western Music: A History. Boston: McGraw Hill, 1998.
  • Warnaby, John. "Dieter Schnebel and His Sinfonie X". Tempo, New Series, no. 186 (September 1993), pp. 26–31.
  • Weiland, Andreas. "KÖRPERSPRACHE. Eine Organkomposition von Dieter Schnebel, uraufgeführt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen am 24. März 1986". Art in Society, No. 11 (Spring/Summer, 2011):[page needed].
  • Weiland, Andreas. "Die Metamorphosen für Mezzosopran und kleines Orchester Dieter Schnebels, uraufgeführt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen". Art in Society, No. 11 (Spring/Summer, 2011):[page needed].

External links edit

  • Literature by and about Dieter Schnebel in the German National Library catalogue
  • International Composers: Dieter Schnebel Schott Music
  • "Dieter Schnebel (biography, works, resources)" (in French and English). IRCAM.
  • Dieter Schnebel discography at Discogs  
  • Dieter Schnebel in der Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst (HfMDK) Frankfurt, 23. und 24.11. 2016 / Zwischen Nostalgie und Utopie hboscaiolo.blogspot.de 2016
  • (archive from 20 February 2009, from the original), FLAC files made from high-quality LP transcriptions

dieter, schnebel, march, 1930, 2018, german, composer, theologian, musicologist, composed, orchestral, music, chamber, music, vocal, music, stage, works, from, 1976, until, retirement, 1995, schnebel, served, professor, experimental, music, hochschule, künste,. Dieter Schnebel 14 March 1930 20 May 2018 was a German composer theologian and musicologist He composed orchestral music chamber music vocal music and stage works From 1976 until his retirement in 1995 Schnebel served as professor of experimental music at the Hochschule der Kunste Berlin Dieter SchnebelBorn 1930 03 14 14 March 1930Lahr Baden GermanyDied20 May 2018 2018 05 20 aged 88 Berlin GermanyResting placeDahlem CemeteryEducationUniversity of TubingenOccupationsComposer Theologian MusicologistOrganizationHochschule der Kunste BerlinAwardsAkademie der Kunste Bayerische Akademie der Schonen Kunste European Church Music Prize Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande Contents 1 Career 2 Cycles and style 3 Awards 4 Works 4 1 Music with orchestra 4 2 Chamber music 4 3 Vocal 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksCareer editSchnebel was born in Lahr Baden He began general private music studies with Wilhelm Siebler from 1942 until 1945 when he started piano lessons with Wilhelm Resch and continued study with him until 1949 at the age of 19 1 He continued with music history through 1952 under Eric Doflein 2 Simultaneously he began to study composition from 1950 with Ernst Krenek Theodor W Adorno and Pierre Boulez among others He entered formal studies at the University of Tubingen where he took musicology with Walter Gerstenberg as well as theology philosophy and further piano studies 3 In 1955 he left with a degree in theology 1 but with a dissertation about Arnold Schoenberg 4 Soon after he married Camilla Riegger in 1956 and the couple had a son and daughter Schnebel became a minister and taught theology and religion until 1963 when he began teaching philosophy and psychology 4 After his first wife died he underwent a period of psychoanalysis In 1970 he married translator Iris von Kaschnitz 4 1928 2014 daughter of Marie Luise Kaschnitz and began teaching religious studies and music in Munich which he continued until 1976 2 His students included Australian composer Norma Tyer In 1976 he began teaching in Berlin as a professor of experimental music and music research a chair created for him He held it until his retirement in 1995 4 5 nbsp Tombstone Dahlem CemeteryInvited by Walter Fink he was the sixth composer featured in the annual Komponistenportrat of the Rheingau Musik Festival in 1996 where his Schau Stucke for voices and gestures premiered 6 Schnebel died of a heart ailment in Berlin on 20 May 2018 at the age of 88 7 His and his wife s grave is in Dahlem Cemetery Cycles and style editSchnebel composed several cycles of works sometimes over a long time 4 One of them was called Versuche Essays consisting of four works written 1953 to 1956 They concern serial techniques exploring space by placing performers at separate positions His religious music includes a cycle Fur Stimmen missa est For voices consisting of four works written 1956 to 1969 They use the human voice and organ in experimental settings of prayers and biblical texts A cycle Produktionsprozesse is a group of compositions related to language and body which concerns the physical sound production with the performers utilizing speech and breathing organs in unusual ways 8 3 His earliest works were strongly influenced by his fellow Darmstadt students Karlheinz Stockhausen about whose early works he wrote an extended essay and Mauricio Kagel about whom he edited a book Starting in 1959 he also came under the influence of John Cage 9 10 3 Schnebel made arrangements of works by Bach Beethoven Webern and Wagner called Re Visions sometimes using their traditional concepts to reflect new techniques and different ways of looking at them 3 Awards editSchnebel s awards include the Arts Prize of Lahr in 1991 He received the first European Church Music Prize in Schwabisch Gmund the same year He was a member of the Berlin Akademie der Kunste from 1991 and of the Bayerische Akademie der Schonen Kunste since 1996 4 In 2015 he was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande Works editSchnebel s works are held by the German National Library 11 Many of them are published by Schott Music 12 Music with orchestra edit Compositio 1955 56 rev 1964 1965 Orchestra Symphonische Musik fur mobile Musiker 1974 1977 Canones 1975 1977 1993 1994 Schubert Phantasie Re Visionen I5 for divided orchestra and voices 1978 rev 1989 as Blendwerk for string orchestra Thanatos Eros Traditione III1 symphonic variations for large orchestra 1979 82 rev 1984 85 Sinfonie Stucke Traditione III2 1984 85 Missa Dahlem Mass for four solo voices two mixed choirs orchestra and organ 1984 1987 11 Mahler Moment for strings 1985 Sinfonie X Tradition VI 1987 1992 2004 2005 Mozart Moment 1988 1989 Schumann Moment Re Visionen II2 for voices winds harp and percussion 1989 2 Verdi Moment Re Visionen II5 for orchestra 1989 2 St Jago Tradition IV2 3 speakers 4 singers and ensemble music and images to Heinrich von Kleist 1989 1991 2 rev 1995 citation needed Janacek Moment Re Visionen II1 for orchestra 1991 2 Totentanz ballet oratorio for two speakers soprano bass choir orchestra and live electronic 1992 1994 inter for chamber orchestra 1994 O Liebe susser Tod five sacred songs after Johann Sebastian Bach for mezzo soprano chamber choir and small orchestra 1995 Ekstasis for soprano speaker two children s voices percussion choir and large orchestra 1996 1997 2001 2002 Chamber music edit Analysis for strings and percussion 1953 2 Stucke for string quartet or string octet 1954 55 2 Fragment for chamber ensemble and voice obligato 1955 2 Das Urteil after Franz Kafka Raummusik fur Instrumente Stimmen und sonstige Schallquellen Space music for instruments voices and other sound sources 1959 rev 1990 Glossolalie 1959 61 instructions for composition 2 Glossolalie 61 1959 1961 13 2 Glossolalie 94 1994 2 Maulwerke 1968 74 2 staged in 1977 by Achim Freyer at the Musiktheaterwerkstatt Wiesbaden Version 2010 citation needed Korpersprache Organkomposition Body Language Organ Composition for 3 9 players 1979 1980 Memento for voice and accordion 1981 Montiano Song for one or more voices and instruments 1983 Beethoven Symphonie Re Visionen I2 for chamber ensemble 1985 Metamorphosenmusik for voice and chamber ensemble 1986 1987 citation needed Metamorphosen des Ovid or Die Bewegung von den Randern zur Mitte hin und umgekehrt incidental music for 11 voices and 11 strings 1986 87 2 Mit diesen Handen for voice and cello with curved bow 1992 14 Baumzucht J P Hebel musical reading after Johann Peter Hebel for speaker and chamber ensemble 1992 1995 Schau Stucke Body Etudes 1995 6 Keine grossen Sprunge for two performers 2 Kopfschutteln for five performers 2 Schlangeln for two performers 2 Magnificat 1996 97 15 String Quartet No 2 2000 2007 Flipper chamber music for Spielautomaten actors instruments and tape 2002 2003 String Quartet No 3 Im Raum 2005 2006 Drei Kafka Dramolette Der plotzliche Spaziergang Entschlusse and Gib s auf 2009 16 Vocal edit Fur Stimmen missa est I dt 31 6 for 12 vocal groups 1956 58 II AMN for 7 vocal groups 1958 67 III madrasha II for 3 choir groups and magnetic tape ad lib 1958 68 IV Choralvorspiele I II for organ side instruments magnetic tape and amplifier 1966 69 Maulwerke for amplified voices and electronics 1968 74 2 Korper Sprache for 3 9 performers 1979 80 2 Bach Contrapuncti I VI XI Re Visionen I1 for voices 1972 76 revised as O Liebe susser Tod 1984 95 2 Motetus I for two choruses 1989 93 2 Mein Herz ruht mude for alto voice and piano 1994 2 Motetus II for two choruses 1997 98 2 Behutet Psalm 121 for chorus SSMezAATTBarBB with organ or synthesizer ad lib 2012 11 Bibliography edit a b Herman 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Attinello 2001 a b c d Zimmerlin 2018 a b c d e f Anon 2018b Anon n d b a b Schnebel 1997 Deutsche Presse Agentur 2018 Gobel 2018 Clements 1992 Schell 2018 a b c Anon n d a Schott 2018 Anon 2018a Schnebel n d Anon 2015 Anon 2010 Sources Anon n d a Compositions by Dieter Schnebel German National Library Retrieved 22 May 2018 Anon n d b Dieter Schnebel Bayerisches Musiker Lexikon Online de Munich Ludwig Maximilians Universitat accessed 22 May 2018 in German Anon 24 January 2010 Melancholie der Pneumatik auf minimalistische Schrittfolgen reduziert Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung Anon 2015 Dieter Schnebel Akademie der Kunste Retrieved 21 May 2018 Anon 20 May 2018a Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben Deutschlandfunk Retrieved 21 May 2018 Anon 21 May 2018b Nachruf Deutscher Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben Kleine Zeitung in German Retrieved 22 May 2018 Attinello Paul Schnebel Dieter Wolfgang The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition 29 vols edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Clements Andrew Schnebel Dieter The New Grove Dictionary of Opera 4 vols edited by Stanley Sadie London Macmillan Publishers 1992 Deutsche Presse Agentur Mit 88 Jahren Komponist Dieter Schnebel gestorben Schweriner Volkszeitung 2018 accessed 21 May 2018 Gobel Andreas Zum Tod des Komponisten Dieter Schnebel Neugierig auf ungehorte Tone Deutschlandfunk 2018 accessed 22 May 2018 Herman Michael German and Austrian Symphonies From The 19th Century To The Present PDF musicweb international com 2017 Retrieved 22 May 2018 Schell Michael Dieter Schnebel 1930 2018 Radical Reverential Music Second Inversion July 11 2018 Schnebel Dieter Schau Stucke Schott Music 1997 Retrieved 22 May 2018 Schnebel Dieter Mit diesen Handen With These Hands Stuttgart and Wissembourg Bach Bogen de n d accessed 21 May 2018 Schott Music Dieter Schnebel Works Schott Music website accessed 22 May 2018 Zimmerlin Michael 2018 Komponist Dieter Schnebel ist gestorben Ein Experimentator der keine Grenzen scheute Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German Retrieved 22 May 2018 Further reading editGligo Niksa Schrift ist Musik Ein Beitrag zur Aktualisierung eines nur anscheinend veralteten Widerspruchs International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 18 1987 1 pp 145 162 part 1 19 1988 1 pp 75 115 part 2 includes an analysis of Schnebel s project MO NO Musik zum Lesen Pollmann Rainer and Achim Freyer Zum Tod von Dieter Schnebel Ein radikaler Avantgardist Deutschlandfunk Kultur 20 May 2018 accessed 25 May 2018 in German Stolba K Marie The Development of Western Music A History Boston McGraw Hill 1998 Warnaby John Dieter Schnebel and His Sinfonie X Tempo New Series no 186 September 1993 pp 26 31 Weiland Andreas KORPERSPRACHE Eine Organkomposition von Dieter Schnebel uraufgefuhrt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen am 24 Marz 1986 Art in Society No 11 Spring Summer 2011 page needed Weiland Andreas Die Metamorphosen fur Mezzosopran und kleines Orchester Dieter Schnebels uraufgefuhrt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen Art in Society No 11 Spring Summer 2011 page needed External links editLiterature by and about Dieter Schnebel in the German National Library catalogue International Composers Dieter Schnebel Schott Music Dieter Schnebel biography works resources in French and English IRCAM Dieter Schnebel discography at Discogs nbsp Dieter Schnebel in der Hochschule fur Musik und Darstellende Kunst HfMDK Frankfurt 23 und 24 11 2016 Zwischen Nostalgie und Utopie hboscaiolo blogspot de 2016 Dieter Schnebel at the Avant Garde Project archive from 20 February 2009 from the original FLAC files made from high quality LP transcriptions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dieter Schnebel amp oldid 1182552414, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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