• soldier Albert Coates (professor) (1896–1989), founder and long-time director of the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina Al Coates (disambiguation)...
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  • Thumbnail for Albert Coates (musician)
    Albert Coates (* 11 jul./23 April 1881greg. [deviant: 1882] – 11 December 1953) was an English conductor and composer. Born in Saint Petersburg, where...
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    coat came to embody the most formal wear for daytime. Especially so when double-breasted with peaked lapels, a style sometimes called a Prince Albert...
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  • Albert Coates (1896–1989) was the founder and long-time director of the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina. Coates earned a bachelor's...
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  • Thumbnail for Albert Coates (surgeon)
    Sir Albert Ernest Coates OBE, FRCS (1895–1977) was an Australian surgeon and soldier. He served as a medical orderly in World War I serving on Gallipoli...
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    Hall on 15 November 1920 by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Albert Coates. The innovative nature of Holst's music caused some initial hostility...
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  • Coates is an English and Scottish surname. One origin is a locational name from any of several places in England, such as Coates in Cambridgeshire or Cotes...
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    the film Two Girls and a Sailor (1944) with an orchestra conducted by Albert Coates. In the early 1930s, Burns and Allen appeared in several short films...
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  • – Michel Fokine, Russian dancer and choreographer (d. 1942) 1882 – Albert Coates, English composer and conductor (d. 1953) 1888 – Georges Vanier, Canadian...
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  • Institution and at Imperial College London. Coates was made MBE in 1980. Coates died on 7 October 1993. "William Albert Coates (1919-1993)". Retrieved 24 November...
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  • with Elisabeth Schumann and the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Albert Coates in sessions in 1929 at Kingsway Hall, London. She sang in the St Matthew...
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    footballer Albert Coates (1882–1953), English conductor and composer Albert Coates (1895–1977), Australian surgeon and soldier Albert Coates (1896–1989)...
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  • Walter Albert Coates (4 April 1895 – 8 November 1936) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Fulham, Hartlepools United, Leeds...
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  • Coates may refer to: Al Coates (broadcaster), Canadian sports broadcaster Al Coates (ice hockey) (born 1945), National Hockey League executive Albert...
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    afterlife and celebrating instead a pantheistic renewal of Nature. When Albert Coates presented the work in London in 1922, its atheism offended some believers...
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  • Look up Prince Albert in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Prince Albert most commonly refers to: Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1819–1861), consort...
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  • and wholly complete recording of Beethoven's Fifth was only made by Albert Coates around 1920. Another Fifth by François Ruhlmann and an unnamed orchestra...
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    Vladimir Rosing presented the world's first televised opera: Pickwick by Albert Coates. 1938 – 'The Pickwick Papers', Orson Welles's Mercury Theater on the...
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  • Breslau, Poland (now Wrocław). His great-grandfather was conductor Albert Coates.[citation needed] Wallfisch has been nominated for multiple awards,...
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  • Thumbnail for Edward Elgar
    the composer conducted, the rest of the programme was conducted by Albert Coates, who overran his rehearsal time at the expense of Elgar's. Lady Elgar...
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  • Thumbnail for Mass in B minor
    in 1929, with a large choir and the London Symphony Orchestra led by Albert Coates. As of 2013, a database lists over 200 recordings with many different...
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    shootout in front of Baechtel's store, leaving Abraham Coates, Henry Coates, Albert Coates, Thomas Coates and Elisha Frost dead on the street. Three others...
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  • Thumbnail for Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
    Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Franz August Karl Albert Emanuel; 26 August 1819 – 14 December 1861) was the husband of Queen Victoria. As such...
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  • Thumbnail for Cello Concerto (Elgar)
    the composer conducted, the rest of the programme was conducted by Albert Coates, who overran his rehearsal time at the expense of Elgar's. Lady Elgar...
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    the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, hiring its first music director Albert Coates. Figured for its value in 1932, the year of Eastman's death, $100 million...
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  • Thumbnail for Vladimir Horowitz
    UK based affiliate, was of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 with Albert Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra, the world premiere recording of that...
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    These new laneways are named for figures in medicine: Jane Bell Lane, Albert Coates Lane, Artemis Lane, and Red Cape Lane. At the centre of the site is...
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  • the Moscow Conservatory's Large Hall by the Moscow Philharmonic under Albert Coates. The international première was carried out (and recorded) in New York...
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  • recording by a symphony orchestra and choir to match, conducted by Albert Coates. Beginning in the late 1960s, historically informed performances paved...
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    decided on this story as an operatic subject in 1914, and the conductor Albert Coates, of the Mariinsky Theatre, encouraged Prokofiev to compose this opera...
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