Fannie Lovering Skinner Explained
Fannie Lovering Skinner (1856 - June 8, 1938)[1] was an American composer[2] and singer.[3]
Skinner was born in New Hampshire to Albert and Jennie Lovering. By 1895, she had married George Skinner and was living in New York, where she died in 1938. She studied voice with Hermine Küchenmeister-Rudersdorf.[4]
Skinner taught voice[5] in New York City and gave a series of recitals with her students there which attracted 100 or more attendees.[6] She composed the following songs:
Notes and References
- Web site: Skinner . Fannie Lovering . ancestry.com . 2022-03-07 . www.ancestry.com.
- Book: Stern, Susan . Women composers : a handbook . 1978 . Scarecrow Press . 0-8108-1138-3 . Metuchen, N.J. . 3844725.
- Book: Hixon, Donald L. . Women in music : an encyclopedic biobibliography . 1993 . Scarecrow Press . Don A. Hennessee . 0-8108-2769-7 . 2nd . Metuchen, N.J. . 28889156.
- Book: Anya, Laurence . Women of notes : 1 000 women composers born before 1900 . 1978 . Richards Rosen Press . 1137758426.
- Book: Stewart-Green, Miriam . Women composers : a checklist of works for the solo voice . 1980 . G.K. Hall . 0-8161-8498-4 . Boston, Mass. . 6815939.
- Book: Werner, Edgar S. . Werner's Magazine . 1895 . E.S. Werner . en.
- Book: Cohen, Aaron I. . International Encyclopedia of Women Composers . 1987 . Books & Music (USA) . 978-0-9617485-2-4 . en.
- Book: Ebel, Otto . Women composers : a biographical handbook of women's work in music . 1913 . Brooklyn, N.Y. : Chandler-Ebel . Harvard University.
- Book: Ebel, Otto . Les femmes compositeurs de musique: dictionnaire biographique . 1910 . P. Rosier . fr.