Julius Weismann
Julius Weismann (1879–1950) was a German pianist, conductor, and composer[1] of classical music.
Weismann was born in Freiburg im Breisgau on 26 December 1879, and died 22 December, 1950 in Singen am Hohentweil, Lake Constance.[1]
Weismann studied with Josef Rheinberger and Ludwig Thuille. As a composer he left over 150 opus numbers and numerous works without opus number. His works include 6 operas, 3 symphonies, three piano concertos, 4 violin concertos, 11 string quartets (two of these recently recorded in string orchestra arrangement on a cpo recording[2]), piano music, chamber works (including a violin sonata[3]) and about 200 lieder.[4]
Weismann's 6 operas were [5] Schwanenweiß (1920, premiered 1923) and Ein Traumspiel (1924, premiered 1925) both to libretti after August Strindberg; Leonce und Lena (1924, premiered 1925) after a text by Georg Büchner; Regina del Lago (1926, premiered 1928), Erica Stuber after a text by Walter Calé; Die Gespenstersonate (The Ghost Sonata) - Strindberg again (1930); and Die pfiffige Magd after Ludvig Holberg (1938, premiered 1939).
Weismann was also a teacher, whose students included Hans Heinsheimer.[6]
Notes
- See LCCN.
- description of two Weismann string quartets CD from Records International
- see IMSLP.
- this partial list of works from Dutch Wikipedia.
- "Operone" (in German). Retrieved May 25, 2014.
- Correspondence, 1925-1935 (Adorno), p. 11, at Google Books. Note 6.
Further reading
- Rataj, Gerd. "Bertold Hummel commentaries". Retrieved 2014-05-31. A biography of Weismann, part of a series of biographies about people around the composer Bertold Hummel made for the record label Musikproduktion Dabringhaus und Grimm.
- "Kurzbiographie" (in German). Retrieved 2014-05-31.
- Falcke, Wilm. (1955). Verzeichnis sämtlicher Werke von Julius Weismann : Verzeichnis des Schrifttums und der Ansprachen über Julius Weismann und seine Werke. [Duisburg]: [s.n.] OCLC 16779223 (see also OCLC 16510727).
External links