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  1. Hanns Eisler was born in Leipzig on 6 July 1898 and went to school in Vienna. After two years as a common soldier in the first world war, he became a student of Arnold Schoenberg in 1919, dedicating his Sonata for Piano op. 1 to his teacher in 1923.

  2. The composer Hanns Eisler was born in Leipzig on July 6, 1898, the son of the Austrian philosopher Rudolph Eisler, and grew up in Vienna. During World War I, he served in a Hungarian infantry regiment, while continuing his autodidactic attempts at composition, begun somewhat earlier.

  3. Hanns Eisler (July 6, 1898 - September 6, 1962) was born in Germany, but his (Jewish) family moved to Vienna when Eisler was 3 years old, so by upbringing and training he was Austrian. In 1919, after a stint in the Austrian army during WW1, he started a four year period of study under Arnold Schoenberg , who thought very highly of him.

  4. The Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler Berlin in Berlin, Germany, is one of the leading universities of music in Europe. It was established in East Berlin in 1950 as the Deutsche Hochschule für Musik (German: German Academy of Music) because the older Hochschule für Musik Berlin (now the Berlin University of the Arts) was in West Berlin.

  5. Hanns Eisler sírja halála 50. évfordulóján 1947-ben, a hidegháborús hisztéria tetőpontján az Amerika-ellenes Tevékenységet Vizsgáló Bizottság tevékenységének első áldozata Eisler. Csak a nemzetközi közvélemény nyomására volt kénytelenek megengedni, hogy a zeneszerző saját jószántából elhagyhassa az USA-t.

  6. Hanns Eisler (6. července 1898 Lipsko – 6. září 1962 Berlín) byl rakouský hudební skladatel. Jeden z významných členů Druhé vídeňské školy . Je znám pro svou spolupráci s Bertolt Brechtem , jako autor hymny Německé demokratické republiky i jako autor filmové hudby.

  7. Hanns Eisler (1898-1962) Marxist composer Hanns Eisler spent his life practising his politics through music. Despite the dangerous political implications of doing so, Eisler stayed true to his Communist ideals, fleeing Nazi Germany in the 1930s and America in the 1940s.