Robert Stumpf writes: >I recently received a private collection CD set of a live concert with >Leopold Stokowski conducting the American Symphony Orchestra. Aside from >containing the most primative, powerful and intense Carmina Burana I have >ever heard, it also contains a piece, Canto di aspirazione, by Felix >Labunski. The Classical Net even doesn't have any information about him. >The music is very good. Can anyone tell me anything about him? No info is >in the CD insert. We used to hear a certain amount of his music in Kansas City because his brother, Wiktor Labunski, was a professor of piano at the Kansas City Conservatory (no the conservatory of the University of Missouri - Kansas City). Here's what I find in Baker's: Felix Labunski, Polish-American composer and teacher, brother of Wiktor Labunski; b. Ksawerynow, Dec. 27, 1892, d. Cincinnati, April 28, 1979. Brought up in a musical environment (his father, a civil engineer, was an amateur singer; his mother played the piano), he began playing the piano as a child; then entered the Warsaw Conservatoire, where he was a student of Marczewski and Maliszewski. He met Paderewski, who arranged for him a stipend at the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris, where he studied with Nadia Boulanger and Paul Dukas. In 1927 he formed with Czapski, Perkowski and Wiechowicz, the Association of Young Polish Musicians in Paris. Returning to Poland, Labunski held the post of director of the department of classical music of the Polish Radio in Warsaw (1934-36). In 1936 he emigrated to America; became a naturalized citizen in 1941. He lived in NY until 1945, when he joined the staff of the Cincinnati College of Music, continuing in this position when it merged with the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music in 1955; he retired in 1964 as professor emeritus in composition. In his music, Felix Labunski remains faithful to the legacy of Romanticism as cultivated in Poland and Russia. Scott Morrison