Brahms









Brahms


Brahms [brahmz; German brahms] Examples noun

  1. Jo·han·nes [yoh-hah-nuh s] /yoʊˈhɑ nəs/, 1833–97, German composer.

Related formsBrahms·i·an, adjectiveBrahms·ite, noun Examples from the Web for brahms Contemporary Examples of brahms

  • Few authors write more transparently about music than Swafford, who has also penned memorable lives of Brahms and Ives.

    The Best Biographies of 2014, Including Lives of Gandhi, the Koch Brothers, and Jefferson Davis

    William O’Connor

    December 8, 2014

  • Historical Examples of brahms

  • Why not be content with song-cycles or ballads, or lieder like Brahms’s and Schumann’s?

    War Letters of a Public-School Boy

    Paul Jones.

  • In 1862 Brahms located in Vienna, where he has almost ever since resided.

    A Popular History of the Art of Music

    W. S. B. Mathews

  • Brahms thought well of everybody, if he thought of any one at all.

    Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great – Volume 14

    Elbert Hubbard

  • Brahms, so it is said, was an avowed enemy of the feline tribe.

    Old Fogy

    James Huneker

  • Schumann has had his day, Wagner is having his, and Brahms will be ruler of all tomorrow.

    Old Fogy

    James Huneker

  • British Dictionary definitions for brahms Brahms noun

    1. Johannes (joˈhanəs). 1833–97, German composer, whose music, though classical in form, exhibits a strong lyrical romanticism. His works include four symphonies, four concertos, chamber music, and A German Requiem (1868)
    48 queries 0.575