National Conservatory of Music of America

Facade of the National Conservatory of Music of America (Jeannette Meyers Thurber's) at 47-49 West 25th Street.

The National Conservatory of Music of America was an institution for higher education in music founded in 1885 in New York City by Jeannette Meyers Thurber. The conservatory was officially declared defunct by the state of New York in 1952, although for all practical pedagogical purposes, it had ceased to function much earlier than that. Between its founding and about 1920, however, the conservatory played an important part in the education and training of musicians in the United States, and for decades Thurber attempted to turn it into a federally-supported national conservatory in a European style. A number of prominent names are associated with the institution, including that of Victor Herbert and Antonín Dvořák, director of the conservatory from Sep. 27, 1892 to 1895.[1] (It was at the conservatory that Dvořák composed his famous E minor Symphony and subtitled it, at Thurber's suggestion, From the New World.)[2]

  1. ^ Finck, Henry Theophilus (1916). Thirty Years of the National Conservatory of Music of America. NCMA. 34pp. Dvorak was compensated $15,000/year.
  2. ^ Rubin, Emanuel (Autumn 1990). "Jeannette Meyers Thurber and the National Conservatory of Music". American Music. 8 (3): 294–325. doi:10.2307/3052098. JSTOR 3052098.

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