Proper noun
Stockhausen (plural Stockhausens)
A surname from German.
Then Thursday Coyle had his left wrist tied to his right ankle and was still beating this new kid Stockhausen until Schtitt sent Tex Watson down to tell him to knock it off. David Foster Wallace
Sir Thomas Beecham was asked if he had ever conducted any Stockhausen. He said, "No, but I once trod in some." Karlheinz Stockhausen
Cologne was also an important hotbed for electronic music in the 1950s (Studio für elektronische Musik, Karlheinz Stockhausen ) and again from the 1990s onward. Source: Internet
In August 1951, just after his first Darmstadt visit, Stockhausen began working with a form of athematic serial composition that rejected the twelve-tone technique of Schoenberg (Felder 1977, 92). Source: Internet
"A Seventieth-Birthday Festschrift for Karlheinz Stockhausen (Part Two): Guest Editor's Introduction". Source: Internet
"A Seventieth-Birthday Festschrift for Karlheinz Stockhausen (Part One): Guest Editor's Introduction". Source: Internet