2024
DOI: 10.1590/1980-5764-dn-2023-0108
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Expressive amusia and aphasia: the story of Maurice Ravel

Sultan Darvesh,
Meghan Kirsten Cash,
Earl Martin
et al.

Abstract: The French composer, Maurice Ravel, at the peak of his career, showed signs of a progressive disorder that affected his ability to function with verbal and musical language, as noted by the neurologist Théophile Alajouanine. The worsening of the disease led to a craniotomy, performed in 1937, which failed to reveal the cause of his illness, and he died shortly thereafter. A lack of post-mortem neuropathological evidence precluded a definitive diagnosis of the illness, which remained enigmatic. Speculations abo… Show more

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