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  1. Charles Ansbacher (October 5, 1942 – September 12, 2010) was an American conductor. After undergraduate and graduate work at Brown University ('65) and the University of Cincinnati (M.M. 1968, D.M.A. 1979), he studied conducting at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria.

  2. Aug 2, 2016 · CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Maestro Charles Ansbacher, whose great passion was to bring orchestral music to the public and to those corners of the world where it was needed most, died on Sunday. The founder and conductor of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, Ansbacher succumbed to an incurable brain tumor.

  3. Sep 14, 2010 · Charles Ansbacher, former director of the Colorado Springs Symphony and most recently the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, died of a brain tumor Sunday at his Cambridge, Mass., home. He was 67.

    • Virginia Culver
  4. Sep 14, 2010 · In Tuesday’s (9/14) Boston Globe, Jeremy Eichler writes, “Charles Ansbacher, the founding conductor of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, whose free concerts at the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade and in many city neighborhoods brought live classical music to thousands of Bostonians, died on Sunday in his home in Cambridge. The cause was a brain ...

  5. Sep 12, 2010 · CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 12 /PRNewswire/ -- The Board and Overseers of the Boston Landmarks Orchestra announced today that its founder and conductor, Charles Ansbacher, died on September 12,...

  6. Charles Ansbacher (October 5, 1942 – September 12, 2010) was an American conductor. After undergraduate and graduate work at Brown University (’65) and the University of Cincinnati (M.M. 1968, D.M.A. 1979), he studied conducting at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria.

  7. Ansbacher was the conductor and musical director of the Colorado Springs Symphony Orchestra from 1970 to 1989,[1][2] and, in 2000, founded the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, which gives free...