Werner Jaegerhuber
Werner Anton Jaegerhuber (17 March 1900 - 20 May 1953)[1] was a Haitian composer known for composing "Messe sur les Airs Vodoussques",[2] "Musique pour Aieules", "Naissa"[3] and many others.
Werner Jaegerhuber was the son of Anton Jaegerhuber, a naturalized American citizen of German origin and Anna Maria Tippenhauer, a member of a mulatto Haitian family.[4] Jaegerhuber studied in Germany from 1915 to 1937 (roughly the same time as the US occupation of Haiti) and later went on to compose classical music and operas. His interest in peasant music made a major contribution to the world of music by combining traditional Haitian folkloric music with classical European music.
Death
Jaegerhuber died in Pétion-Ville, Haiti on May 20, 1953.[1]
References
- Société de Recherche et de Diffusion de la Musique Haïtienne -- Biographies
- Werner Jaegerhuber's "Messe sur les airs vodouesques": The Inculturation of Vodou in a Catholic Mass, Robert Grenier and Claude Dauphin, Black Music Research Journal, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Spring, 2009), pp. 51-82 Published by: University of Illinois Press
- Music in Latin America and the Caribbean: An Encyclopedic History, Volume 2: Performing the Caribbean Experience, Edited by Malena Kuss, ISBN 978-0-292-70951-5
- Largey, Michael, ed. (2006). "Vodou Nation: Haitian Art Music and Cultural Nationalism". p. 209. ISBN 0226468631. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
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