About: Atwood Cochran   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Atwood Cochran was a music teacher in Grantville. He taught at the junior high school and had a studio where he gave lessons in guitar and banjo. He also had a weekly program on the Voice of America called Adventures in Great Music. It was this program which led Giouan Battista Veraldi, who he called "John", to seek him out and become his student. In later years, he would actually have a school, as Veraldi would periodically return and bring other students with him.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Atwood Cochran
rdfs:comment
  • Atwood Cochran was a music teacher in Grantville. He taught at the junior high school and had a studio where he gave lessons in guitar and banjo. He also had a weekly program on the Voice of America called Adventures in Great Music. It was this program which led Giouan Battista Veraldi, who he called "John", to seek him out and become his student. In later years, he would actually have a school, as Veraldi would periodically return and bring other students with him.
dcterms:subject
type of appearance
  • Direct
dbkwik:ericflint/p...iPageUsesTemplate
Appearance
  • 1636(xsd:integer)
  • Ring of Fire III
Spouse
Name
  • Atwood Cochran
Children
  • Ginny Cochran, Sarah Beth Cochran
Occupation
  • Music teacher
Family
  • Thad Cochran
Birth
  • 1951(xsd:integer)
Nationality
  • United States of Europe
abstract
  • Atwood Cochran was a music teacher in Grantville. He taught at the junior high school and had a studio where he gave lessons in guitar and banjo. He also had a weekly program on the Voice of America called Adventures in Great Music. It was this program which led Giouan Battista Veraldi, who he called "John", to seek him out and become his student. In later years, he would actually have a school, as Veraldi would periodically return and bring other students with him. He had a high-quality portable cassette-tape recording rig that could run on batteries, and a number of blank chromium dioxide cassettes. It was known to be working as late as January 1636, when he used his last unopened cassette to record Marla Linder's performance of Das Lied des Volke, Friedrich von Logau's translation of "Do You Hear the People Sing?" from the musical Les Misérables.
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