1904 in music
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| List of years in music | 
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| (table) | 
 This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1904. 
Specific locations
Events
- January 9 – Estampes by Claude Debussy, receives its initial performance at the Societe Nationale de Musique in Paris.
 - January 13 – Béla Bartók's symphonic poem Kossuth is premiered in Budapest, becoming his first major work to be performed.
 - January 21 – The Deutsches Nationaltheater in Brno premiers Leoš Janáček's opera Její pastorkyňa (later known as Jenůfa), with Czech libretto by the composer.
 - January 28 – The Russian Symphony Orchestra formed by conductor Modest Altschuler gives its first concert at Cooper Union in New York City. (The orchestra is an American one with a Russian name, not a Russian orchestra touring the United States.)
 - February 1 – Enrico Caruso records the aria "Vesti la giubba" from Ruggero Leoncavallo's Pagliaci for the Victor Company, his first recording in the United States.
 - February 4 – Jules Massenet's ballet La Cigale is performed for the first time at the Opera-Comique in Paris.
 - February 8 – Jean Sibelius conducts the premiere of his Violin Concerto in D minor, Op.47 in Helsinki, Finland; Viktor Nováček is soloist.
 - February 17 – Puccini's opera Madama Butterfly debuts at La Scala in Milan to no great acclaim.
 - February 18 – Camille Saint-Saëns's opera Helene premieres at Monte Carlo.
 - February 28 – Vincent d'Indy's Symphony No.2 in B-flat Major, Op.57 is performed for the first time by the Lamoureux Orchestra in Paris.
 - February 29 – Bela Bartok's Scherzo Burlesque for Piano and Orchestra, Op.2, premieres in Budapest.
 - March 2 – Emma Calve sings Carmen at the New York Metropolitan Opera. This is her farewell performance with this opera company.
 - March 5 – Maurice Ravel's String Quartet in F major receives its first performance in Paris, given by the Societe Nationale de Musique; it is the only quartet by the composer.
 - March 16 – The Hallé Orchestra of Manchester gives the first performance of the concert overture In the South, by Edward Elgar, conducted by the composer.
 - March 18 – Anatoly Liadov's symphonic poem Baba-Yaga premieres in Saint Petersburg.
 - March 21 – Tone poem Symphonia domestica by Richard Strauss receives its premiere at Carnegie Hall, New York City, conducted by the composer on his first visit to the United States.
 - March 25 – Antonín Dvořák's last opera, Armida, is produced in its original Czech version in Prague.
 - March 30 – The first opera of English composer Frederick Delius, Koanga, premieres at the Stadttheater in Elberfeld, Germany.
 - April 25 – Jean Sibelius' Valse triste premieres in Helsinki, Finland, the composer conducting.
 - May 10 – Hugo Alfven's rhapsody for orchestra Midsommervaka is premiered in Stockholm, Sweden.[1]
 - May 16 – The Diamond Jubilee of violinist Joseph Joachim's first appearance in the UK is celebrated at Queen's Hall, London.
 - May 17 
- Maurice Ravel's Sheherezade and Albert Roussel's Resurrection are premiered on the same program at a concert of the Societe Nationale de Musique in Paris.
 - Vincent d'Indy's Choral varie Op.55, a composition featuring the saxophone as solo instrument, premieres in Paris
 
 - May 28 – A revised three-act version of Giacomo Puccini's Madama Butterfly is performed in Brescia with enormous praise.
 - June 9 – The Queen's Hall Orchestra, under Sir Henry Wood, plays its first concert under its new name of the London Symphony Orchestra.
 - June 15 – The first transmission of wireless telegraphy featuring music and dialogue takes place in Salzburg with Otto Nußbaumer making the transmission.[2]
 - June 27 – Raoul Laparra is awarded the first Grand Prix de Rome by the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Paris with his cantata Alyssa. Maurice Ravel was a contestant.
 - July 5 – Composer Edward Elgar is knighted in Great Britain by King Edward VII.
 - July 15 – Soprano Agnes Nicholls marries conductor Hamilton Harty.[3]
 - July – The Act of Touch in All Its Diversity by pianist Tobias Matthay is published in London by Longmans, Green and Co.
 - September 7 – Sir Hubert Parry's choral work The Love that Casteth Out Fear premieres at the Gloucester Music Festival. This work, about the passion of Christ, has a text by the composer.
 - September 12 – Pianist Ignacy Jan Paderewski gives a concert in Wellington, New Zealand.
 - October 
- Alban Berg begins his studies under Arnold Schoenberg.
 - The Gramophone Company records the Bach-Gounod Ave Maria (G.C. 03033) performed by Dame Nellie Melba with Jan Kubelík on violin.
 
 - October 16 – Pan Voyevoda, a four-act opera by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, receives its first performance in Saint Petersburg.
 - October 18 – Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 5 is premiered by the Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne under the composer's baton; it is also first published this year.
 - November 4 – Franco Alfano's four-act opera Risurrezione based on Tolstoy's novel receives its first performance in Turin
 - November 5 – Emil Oberhoffer conducts the first concert of the newly established Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.
 - November 10 
- Ferruccio Busoni gives the world premiere of his Piano Concerto at the Beethoven-Saal in Berlin.
 - Arthur Nikisch and the Berlin Philharmonic record Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No.5 in C minor for the Gramophone Company, the first recording of a complete symphony.
 
 - November 13 – Caprice andalou by Camille Saint-Saëns, scored for violin and orchestra, receives its initial performance in Paris
 - November 16 – Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, in his first trip to the United States, conducts the first American performance of his The Song of Hiawatha.
 - November 20 – The Hague Philharmonic Orchestra gives its inaugural concert, conducted by Henri Viotta.
 - November 22 – Pope Pius X issues his Motu proprio Tra le sollecitudini a papal document in which he puts forth rules for performance and interpretation of Gregorian chant.
 - November 29 – Ernst von Dohnanyi's 4 Rhapsodies for Piano, Op.11, are premiered in Vienna, the composer performing.
 - December 10 – Serge Rachmaninoff, Sergei Taneyev and Alexander Scriabin are among the winners of the first annual Glinka Award for best composition by Russian composers.
 - December 13 – Ruggero Leoncavallo's opera Der Roland von Berlin premieres at Berlin. The opera is a failure.
 - December 24 
- Theodore Thomas conducts his final concert with the Chicago Orchestra.
 - The Metropolitan Opera in New York City gives the first performance outside Bayreuth of Richard Wagner's Parsifal, despite copyright objections raised by Cosima and Siegried Wagner.
 
 - December 26 – Dancer Isadora Duncan makes her Russian debut in Saint Petersburg to music by Frédéric Chopin.
 - December 29 – The Seattle Symphony Orchestra gives its first concert, conducted by Harry West at Christensen's Hall.
 - Heckelphone introduced from Wilhelm Heckel's workshop.
 - Claudio Monteverdi's opera L'Orfeo is given a modern debut in concert version in Paris.
 
Published popular music

- "Abraham" w. Sterling m. Von Tilzer
 - "Absinthe Frappe" w. Glen MacDonough m. Victor Herbert
 - "Ain't It Funny What a Difference Just a Few Hours Make" w. Henry Blossom m. Alfred G. Robyn. Introduced by Raymond Hitchcock in the Broadway show The Yankee Consul
 - "Al Fresco" w. Glen MacDonough m. Victor Herbert
 - "Alexander" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry Von Tilzer
 - "All Aboard For Dreamland" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry Von Tilzer
 - "Back, Back To Baltimore" w. Harry H. Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
 - "Big Indian Chief" w. Bob Cole m. J. Rosamond Johnson
 - "Billy" w. Edgar Malone m. Ted S. Barron
 - "Blue Bell" w. Edward Madden, Dolly Morse m. Theodore F. Morse
 - "By The Old Oak Tree" w. George V. Hobart m. Max Hoffmann
 - "Come Back To Sorrento" (Original title "Torna A Surriento") w.m. Ernesto de Curtis & Claude Aveling
 - "Come Down From The Big Fig Tree" w. Edward Madden m. Theodore Morse
 - "Come Take A Trip In My Airship" w. Ren Shields m. George Evans
 - "Cordalia Malone" Jerome, Schwartz
 - "The Countess Of Alagazam" w.m. Bob Cole
 - "The Day That You Grew Colder" w.m. Paul Dresser
 - "Don't Cry, Katie, Dear" Mills
 - "Down In The Subway" Jerome, Schwartz
 - "Down On The Brandywine" w. Vincent P. Bryan m. J. B. Mullen
 - "Fascination" w. Dick Manning m. F. D. Marchetti Words 1932.
 - "Fishing" w. James Weldon Johnson m. J. Rosamond Johnson
 - "Following In Father's Footsteps" w.m. E. W. Rogers
 - "Fu' The Noo" w. Harry Lauder & Gerald Grafton m. Harry Lauder
 - "The Ghost That Never Walked" w. William Jerome m. Jean Schwartz
 - "Gimme De Leavins" w. James Weldon Johnson m. Bob Cole
 - "Give My Regards to Broadway" w.m. George M. Cohan
 - "Good-bye Flo" w.m. George M. Cohan
 - "Goodbye, Little Girl, Goodbye" w. Will D. Cobb m.. Gus Edwards
 - "Goodbye, My Lady Love" w.m. Joseph E. Howard
 - "The Goo-Goo Man" Stoddard, Schindler, Jerome
 - "Hannah, Won't You Open That Door" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry von Tilzer
 - "Have You Seen Maggie Riley?" Von Tilzer
 - "He Done Me Wrong" w.m. Hughie Cannon
 - "Heinie" Rose, Snyder
 - "I Love You All The Time" w.m. Will R. Anderson
 - "I Want To Be A Soldier" w.m. William Cahill
 - "I'm Longing For My Old Kentucky Home" w. Vincent Bryan m. J. B. Mullen
 - "In The Days Of Old" w. Henry Blossom m. Alfred G. Robyn
 - "In Zanzibar – My Little Chimpanzee" w. Will D. Cobb m. Gus Edwards
 - "Just An Ever-Loving Girl" w. Vincent Bryan m. J. B. Mullen
 - "Just For The Sake Of Society" w. Alfred Bryan m. Kerry Mills
 - "Kiss Me Good Night, Dear Love" w.m. Malcolm Williams & Israel Zangwill
 - "Let's All Go Up To Maud's" w. Joseph C. Farrell m. Kerry Mills
 - "Life's a Funny Proposition After All" w.m. George M Cohan
 - "A Little Boy Called "Taps"" w. Edward Madden m. Theodore F. Morse
 - "The Man Behind" w. Vincent Bryan m. J. B. Mullen
 - "The Man With The Ladder And Hose" w.m. T. Mayo Geary
 - "La Mattinata" m. Ruggiero Leoncavallo
 - "Maureen Of Ballinasloe" w. J. Francis Barron m. J. Airlie Dix
 - "Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Kerry Mills
 - "Mexico" w. James Weldon Johnson & Bob Cole m. Bob Cole
 - "Mister Wilson, That's All" w. Henry Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
 - "My Honey Lou" w.m. Thurland Chattaway
 - "My Kangaroo" Farrell & Kohlman
 - "Nan! Nan! Nan!" by Edward Madden
 - "Oh Bliss! Oh Joy!" Mullen
 - "Oh Gee! It's Great To Be Crazy" Carle, Bowers
 - "Oh! Oh! Sallie" Hartlett
 - "On The Warpath" Raymond A. Browne (composer)
 - "One Fine Day" (Original title "Un Bel Di") w. L. Illica & G. Giacosa m. G. Puccini
 - "Please Come And Play In My Yard" w. Edward Madden m. Theodore F. Morse
 - "Preacher and the Bear" w.m. George Fairman
 - "Saint Louis Rag" m. Tom Turpin
 - "Scissors To Grind" w.m. Thomas S. Allen
 - "Seminole" w. Harry Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
 - "Shame On You" Larkin, Smith
 - "She Went to the City" by Paul Dresser
 - "Since Little Dolly Dimples Made A Hit" w. William Jerome m. Jean Schwartz
 - "St. Louis Tickle" m. Barney & Seymore
 - "The Story Of A Clothes Line" m. James W. Tate w. Frank Clifford Harris
 - "Sweet Thoughts Of Home" w. Stanislaus Stange m. Julian Edwards
 - "Teasing" w. Cecil Mack m. Albert Von Tilzer
 - "Those Songs My Mother Used To Sing" w.m. H. Wakefield Smith
 - "Three Green Bonnets" w. Harris m. Guy d'Hardelot
 - "Tippecanoe" w. Harry Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
 - "The Trumpeter" by Francis Barron
 - "What The Brass Band Played" Drislane, Morse
 - "Why Adam Sinned" w.m. Alex Rogers
 - "Won't You Fondle Me" w.m. James Kendis & Herman Paley
 - "The Yankee Doodle Boy" w.m. George M. Cohan
 - "Your Mother Wants You Home Boy" w.m. Paul Dresser
 
Classical music
- Béla Bartók 
- Piano Quintet
 - Rhapsody, Op. 1
 
 - Hakon Børresen – Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in G major
 - František Alois Drdla – Souvenir in D major
 - Edward Elgar
 - Alexander Glazunov – Violin Concerto in A minor
 - Enrique Granados – Allegro de concierto
 - Hamilton Harty – An Irish Symphony
 - Gustav Mahler – Kindertotenlieder (Songs of the Death of Children) (song-cycle)
 - Erkki Melartin – Sleeping Beauty, Op.22
 - Selim Palmgren – Piano Concerto No.1 in G minor
 - Max Reger – Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Hiller
 - Alexander Scriabin – Symphony No. 3
 - Cyril Scott 
- Scherzo, Op.25
 - 2 Pierrot Pieces, Op.35
 - 2 Piano Pieces, Op.37
 
 - Petar Stojanović – Violin Concerto No. 1
 - Igor Stravinsky – Piano Sonata in F-sharp minor
 
- Franco Alfano – Risurrezione
 - Frederick Delius – Koanga
 - Antonín Dvořák – Armida
 - Leoš Janáček – Jenůfa (Její pastorkyňa)
 - Ruggero Leoncavallo – Der Roland von Berlin
 - Giacomo Puccini – Madama Butterfly
 - Sergei Rachmaninoff – The Miserly Knight
 - Nikolai Rimski-Korsakov – Pan Voyevoda
 - Camille Saint-Saëns – Helene
 - Amedeo Vives – Bohemios
 
- A rátartós királykisasszony (The Haughty Princess) by Victor Jacobi. First performed on December 17 at Budapest.
 
- La Cigale by Jules Massenet's is performed for the first time at the Opera-Comique in Paris (Feb.4)
 
- The Catch of the Season London production opened at the Vaudeville Theatre on September 9 and ran for 621 performances
 - The Cingalee (Lionel Monckton, Adrian Ross and Percy Greenbank) – London production opened at Daly's Theatre on March 5 and ran for 365 performances
 - It Happened in Nordland Broadway production opened at the Lew M. Fields Theatre on December 5 and ran for 254 performances
 - Little Johnny Jones (book, music, lyrics, direction and featuring George M. Cohan) Broadway production opened at the Liberty Theatre on November 7 and ran for 52 performances
 - Paris by Night (Music: Alfred Solmon Book: Harry Marshall) Broadway production opened at the Madison Square Roof Garden on July 2 and ran for 50 performances. Starring Ben Welch.
 - The Rogers Brothers In Paris Broadway production opened at the New Amsterdam Theatre on September 5 and ran for 72 performances
 - Sergeant Brue London production opened at the Strand Theatre on June 14
 - The Yankee Consul Broadway production opened at the Broadway Theatre on February 22 and ran for 115 performances
 
Births
- January 10 – Ray Bolger, singer and dancer (d. 1987)
 - January 13 – Richard Addinsell, composer (d. 1977)
 - January 15 
- Eddie DeLange, bandleader and lyricist (d. 1949)
 - Leonid Jacobson, Russian dancer, choreographer and ballet master (d. 1975)
 
 - January 18 – Anthony Galla-Rini, accordionist, composer and conductor (d. 2006)
 - January 22 – George Balanchine, Russian choreographer (d. 1983)
 - February 3 – Luigi Dallapiccola, composer (d. 1975)
 - February 23 – Allan Gray, film composer (d. 1973)
 - February 29 – Jimmy Dorsey, bandleader (d. 1957)
 - March 1 – Glenn Miller, trombonist and bandleader (m. 1944)
 - March 4 – Joseph Schmidt, Austrian-Hungarian tenor and actor (d. 1942)
 - March 8 – Nikos Skalkottas Greek composer (d.1949)
 - April 9 – Sharkey Bonano, jazz musician (d. 1972)
 - April 16 – Fifi D'Orsay, actress and singer (d. 1983)
 - April 18 – Pigmeat Markham, all-round entertainer (d. 1981)
 - April 29 
- Russ Morgan, orchestra leader (d. 1969)
 - Pedro Vargas, Mexican singer and actor (d. 1989)
 
 - May 21 – Fats Waller, American pianist and comedian (d. 1943)
 - May 23 – Libby Holman, US singer and actress (d. 1971)
 - May 25 – Kurt Thomas, German choral conductor (d.1973)
 - May 26 – George Formby, English music hall performer, singer, actor and songwriter (d. 1961)
 - May 28 – Margaret Harris, opera costume and set designer (d. 2000)
 - May 29 – León Zuckert, conductor, composer and arranger (d. 1992)
 - June 3 – Jan Peerce, American tenor (d. 1984)[4]
 - June 6 – Raymond Burke, clarinettist (d. 1986)[5]
 - June 7 – Don Murray, clarinettist (d. 1929)[6]
 - June 11 – Pinetop Smith, jazz pianist (d. 1929)[7]
 - June 15 – Anna Mahler, musician and sculptor (d. 1988)[8]
 - June 21 – Mack Gordon, Polish-born US lyricist (d. 1959)
 - June 24 
- Phil Harris, jazz musician (d. 1995)[9]
 - Olga Olgina, Polish opera singer and teacher (d. 1979)[10]
 
 - July 9 – Robert Whitney, British conductor (d. 1986)
 - July 14 – Nadia Reisenberg, Litvian pianist (d. 1983)
 - July 15 
- Dorothy Fields, librettist and lyricist (d. 1974)
 - Vladimir Bourmeister, Russian dancer and choreographer (d.1971)
 
 - July 16 
- Goffredo Petrassi, composer (d. 2003)
 - Mabel Wayne – US composer (d. 1978)
 
 - July 18 – Harold Spivacke, music librarian and administrator (d. 1977)
 - July 24 
- Leo Arnaud – film composer (d. 1991)
 - Anton Dolin – English dancer and choreographer (d.1983)
 
 - July 26 – Jack Westrup, musicologist (d. 1975)
 - August 13 – Charles "Buddy" Rogers, actor and singer (d. 1989)
 - August 17 – Leopold Nowak, Austrian musicologist (d. 1991)
 - August 21 – Count Basie, pianist and bandleader (d. 1984)
 - September 2 – Set Svanholm, Swedish operatic tenor (d.1964)
 - September 7 –Ernst Glaser, Norwegian violinist, orchestra conductor, and music teacher (died 1979).[11]
 - September 17 – Sir Frederick Ashton, dancer and choreographer (d. 1988)
 - October 11 – Tita Merello, tango singer, dancer and actress (d. 2002)
 - October 20 – Anna Neagle, actress and singer (d. 1986)
 - October 24 – Moss Hart, musical theatre director (d. 1961)
 - October 26 
- Boris Khaykin, Russian conductor (died 1978)
 - Torbjørn Knutsen, Norwegian composer and violinist (died 1987)[12]
 
 - October 29 – Vivian Ellis, English composer (d. 1996)
 - November 1 or November 14 – Aleksey Zhivotov, composer (d. 1964)
 - November 11 – Joseph Lockwood, record company executive (d. 1991)
 - November 14 – Dick Powell, actor and singer (d. 1963)
 - November 18 – Masao Koga, Japanese composer (d. 1978)
 - November 20 – Alexandra Danilova, Russian dancer and teacher (d.1997)
 - November 21 – Coleman Hawkins, saxophonist (d. 1969)
 - November 25 – Toni Ortelli, Italian composer and alpinist (d. 2000)
 - December 9 – Elsie Randolph, English actress, dancer and singer (d. 1982)
 - December 18 – Wilf Carter, country singer (d. 1966)
 - December 26 – Alejo Carpentier, musicologist (d. 1980)
 - December 30 – Dmitry Kabalevsky, Soviet pianist and composer (d.1987)
 - December 31 
- Umm Kulthum, Egyptian singer and actress (d. 1975)
 - Nathan Milstein, Russian violinist (d.1992)
 
 
Deaths
- January 2 – Peter Jurgenson, Russian music publisher (b.1836)
 - January 4 – Mitrofan Belyayev, music publisher (b. 1836)
 - January 10 – Antoinette Sterling, singer
 - January 15 – Eduard Lassen, Danish-born composer and conductor (born 1830)[13]
 - January 20 – Maria Louisa Bustill, mother of Paul Robeson (b. 1853) (domestic accident)
 - February 8 – Malvina Garrigues, soprano and composer (b. 1825)
 - March 10 – Giovanni Cesari, castrato singer (b. 1843)
 - March 11 – Charles Grisart, opera composer (b. 1837)
 - March 20 – Louisa Pyne, operatic soprano and opera company manager (b. 1832)
 - March 31 – Sophia Karp, actress and singer (b. 1861)
 - February 8 – Malwine Schnorr von Varolsfeld, German soprano (b.1825)
 - April 29 – Nellie Farren, burlesque actress and singer (b. 1848)
 - May 1 – Antonín Dvořák, Czech composer (b. 1841)
 - May 14 – Morrison Foster, editor and brother to Stephen Foster (born 1823)
 - May 19 – Korla Awgust Kocor, conductor and composer (b. 1822)
 - May 29 – Maria Paulina Åhman, Swedish harpist (born 1812)[14]
 - May 30 – Laura Joyce Bell, contralto singer and actress (b. 1854)
 - June 28 – Dan Emmett, founder of the Virginia Minstrels (b. 1815)
 - July 13 – Giulia Warwick, operatic soprano and actress (b. 1857)
 - July 20 – Arthur Lloyd, music hall entertainer and songwriter (b. 1839)[15]
 - August 6 – Eduard Hanslick, music critic (b. 1825)
 - September 26 – Patrick Lafcadio Hearn, translator (born 1850)
 - October 31 – Dan Leno, English music hall comedian, clog dancer and singer (b. 1860)
 - November 30 – Aldine Silliman Kieffer, music teacher and publisher (b. 1840)
 - date unknown – Antonio Galassi, operatic baritone (b. 1845)
 
References
- ^ Overture: The Magazine of the Baltimore Symphony. Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Association. 1981. p. 16.
 - ^ "Nußbaumer, Otto". Biographien. Austria-Forum (in German). 9 March 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
 - ^ Greer, David Clive (1978). Hamilton Harty: his life and music. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-76015-0 – via Google Books.
 - ^ "Jan Peerce – Broadway Cast & Staff". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
 - ^ Notice de personne "Burke, Ray (1904-1986)" [Person notice "Burke, Ray (1904-1986)"] (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. 24 May 2018. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
 - ^ Senior, Andy (28 May 2021). "Don Murray". The Syncopated Times. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
 - ^ Notice de personne "Smith, Pine Top (1904-1929)" [Person notice "Smith, Pine Top (1904-1929)"] (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. 31 March 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
 - ^ Notice de personne "Mahler, Anna (1904-1988)" [Person notice "Mahler, Anna (1904-1988)"] (in French). Bibliothèque nationale de France. 16 May 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
 - ^ "Benny Show's Phil Harris Dies at 89". Los Angeles Times. August 13, 1995. Retrieved July 27, 2022. 
Phil Harris, the bandleader who became famous by portraying himself as a flashy, hard-drinking musician on the old Jack Benny radio show, died. … He was 89.
 - ^ "Olgina Olga". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Retrieved 14 August 2025.
 - ^ Kortsen, Bjarne (2009-02-13). "Ernst Glaser". In Helle, Knut (ed.). Biography (in Norwegian). Norsk Biografisk Leksikon. Retrieved 2015-05-10.
 - ^ "Torbjørn Knutsen". Store Norske Leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. 2013-11-18. Retrieved 2017-04-21.
 - ^ Singer, Isidore; Sohn, Joseph (1906). "LASSEN, EDUARD". The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. p. 626. Retrieved 20 December 2021 – via JewishEncyclopedia.com.
 - ^ Åshede, Ulla. "Maria Paulina (Marie Pauline) Åhman". Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon. Translated by Grosjean, Alexia. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
 - ^ Richard Anthony Baker (31 May 2014). British Music Hall: An Illustrated History. Pen and Sword. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-1-4738-3718-8.
 
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