scholarly journals »Johannes Brahms und Anton Bruckner im Spiegel der Musiktheorie«. Internationales musikwissenschaftliches Symposium im Rahmen der BrucknerTage 2008, Stift St. Florian, 17. bis 20. August 2008

Author(s):  
Sinem Derya Kılıç
Author(s):  
Beth Abelson Macleod

This chapter examines the experience of U.S. music students in late nineteenth-century Vienna as well as the musical scene at that time. In the 1870s and 1880s, Viennese audiences attended the premieres of works by Johannes Brahms, Anton Bruckner, Richard Wagner, and Giuseppe Verdi. They also flocked to piano recitals by Rafael Joseffy, Anton Rubinstein, Hans von Bülow, and Franz Liszt. The chapter considers Fanny Blumenfeld's living conditions, her struggles with health problems, and her studies with Theodor Leschetizky, which culminated in successful performances before Viennese critics that provided her with the European stamp of approval that was almost always necessary for success in the United States. It also recounts her first meeting with her future husband, Sigmund Zeisler.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 154-174
Author(s):  
Christian Storch

Zwar haben Besuche von "großen" Künstlern wie Ludwig van Beethoven in Teplice, Franz Schubert in Bad Gastein oder Johannes Brahms und Anton Bruckner in Bad Ischl bereits die Aufmerksamkeit punktuell auf Badeorte gelenkt. Die vermeintliche geografisch wie kulturell periphere Lage gerade kleinerer Badeorte und deren kaum dokumentierte und aufgearbeitete Musik- und Theatergeschichte haben jedoch dazu beigetragen, eine Beachtung, Rekonstruktion, Analyse und Einordnung in die allgemeine Musikgeschichte zu unterlassen. Am Beispiel des Comödienhauses (heute Kurtheater) im Kurort Bad Liebenstein im ehemaligen Herzogtum Sachsen-Meiningen wird dieser Forschungslücke begegnet, es werden außerdem weitere Anreize geliefert, sich Badeorten als musikhistorischem Sujet intensiver zu widmen. Dabei stehen folgende Fragestellungen im Vordergrund: 1. Für welche musikalischen und theatralischen Aktivitäten wurde das Gebäude genutzt und welchen kulturellen Stellenwert nahm es innerhalb des Kurbetriebes ein, vor allem in Bezug auf die Publikumsstruktur? 2. Wie gestaltete sich das Repertoire in der ersten Saison und welche Vergleichsmomente zu den kulturellen Zentren der Zeit lassen sich hieraus ablesen? 3. Kann man aus dem Repertoire ein bäderspezifisches Theater- und Musikleben deduzieren? 4. Welche Rolle spielte, stellvertretend für zahlreiche Kurtheater deutschlandweit, das Comödienhaus in Liebenstein für die Rezeptionsgeschichte von Oper und Schauspiel im ländlichen Raum um 1800?


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Münster
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 382-390
Author(s):  
Robert Pascall ◽  
Michael Struck
Keyword(s):  

Die 1877 entstandene Symphonie D-Dur von Johannes Brahms entstand in bemerkenswert kurzer Zeit und wird von vielen für ein eher pastoral-idyllisches Werk gehalten. Gerade weil Brahms im Streben nach einer dauerhaften Musik alles zu verbergen suchte, was diesem Ideal noch nicht entsprach - also Skizzen und Entwürfe -, ist es eine Forderung an die Edition, solche Prozesse sichtbar zu machen. bms online (Schöner, Oliver)


Music ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Aschauer

Bruckner was born in Ansfelden (rural Upper Austria) in 1824 and was originally trained as a schoolmaster. He only left this career path in his early thirties when he assumed the organist position at the Linz cathedral, his first full-time employment as a musician. It was also in Linz that he completed six years of training in harmony and counterpoint with Simon Sechter (1855–1861) as well as lessons in form and orchestration with Otto Kitzler (1861–1863) after which he commenced work on his first symphony in 1865. Bruckner’s three large masses also date from his Linz period. Concert tours to France in 1869 and England in 1871 brought Bruckner major successes as organ improvisor. In 1868 Bruckner became professor of counterpoint and thoroughbass as well as professor of organ at the Vienna conservatory. Success as a composer did not follow suit as quickly. His passionate admiration of Wagner—to whom he dedicated his Third Symphony in 1873—rendered Bruckner the target of hostility from the supporters of Brahms in Vienna, especially of music critic Eduard Hanslick. The latter was also instrumental in obstructing Bruckner’s employment at the University of Vienna until 1875, when Bruckner finally became lecturer of harmony and counterpoint at the university. Despite his fame as an organist and music theorist, Bruckner saw himself, above all else, as a symphonic composer and it is the development of the symphony as a genre that occupied most of his compositional interest throughout his career. Accordingly, the multiple versions of Bruckner’s symphonies have long been a main focal point of Bruckner scholarship. These revisions were variously motivated. Earlier works, including the three masses and symphonies 1–5, underwent reworking during Bruckner’s “revision period” (1876–1880), largely as a result of the composer’s evolving notions of phrase and period structure. Later revisions were often the results of performances or were made to prepare the manuscripts for publication. Bruckner’s former students, most notably Franz and Josef Schalk and Ferdinand Löwe, were involved in these revisions, although the extent of this involvement has never been entirely revealed. Starting in the 1920s, scholars began to raise questions about the validity of the revisions made during the preparations of the editions published during the 1880s and 1890s. While some accepted the authenticity of these texts, other influential figures—among them Robert Haas, coeditor of the first Bruckner complete edition—claimed that Bruckner’s students had urged the composer, wearied by rejection in Vienna, into making ill-advised changes or, worse yet, altered his scores without his knowledge and permission. The resulting debate, the Bruckner Streit, involved serious source-critical issues, but eventually devolved on ideological claims more than factual analysis. The process led to the first Bruckner Gesamtausgabe, which published the manuscript versions of Bruckner’s works starting in 1934, first under the editorship of Robert Haas and later of Leopold Nowak. However, these editions are now largely outdated due to the many manuscript sources that have become available since the mid-20th century. Haas’s work has also been criticized in more recent years for rather subjectively mixing sources. Therefore, two new complete editions have recently been started. Another topic that has fascinated Bruckner scholarship for much of the last century is the unfinished finale of the 9th symphony and its possible completion.


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elaine Kelly

The early-music revival provoked much heated debate in the second half of the nineteenth century. The leading scholars of the era, Philipp Spitta and Friedrich Chrysander were keen to encourage performances and editions of early music that presented it in the spirit in which it was conceived. This approach met with vociferous opposition from Robert Franz and his supporters, who embraced a Darwinian aesthetic. Although committed to reviving the past, Franz believed that the tastes of nineteenth-century listeners had become too sophisticated to enjoy early music in its original state and modernized it accordingly. The source of the most heated debates was the issue of continuo realization, a topic in which Brahms, through his performing and arranging activities, had a vested interest. Franz, who dismissed the musicologists as artistic philistines, found a difficult adversary in Brahms. Brahms's scholarly inclinations have been well documented, and predictably, his approach to reviving Baroque music reflected a high level of historical awareness. He was, however, first and foremost a creative musician, and as a consequence, aesthetic issues were paramount in his performances and publications. Considerable tensions arose between Franz, and Brahms, and Chrysander, which are explored here in relation to the latter's editions of Handel's Italian duets and trios. The difficulties surrounding continuo practice were not confined to opposition from Franz; even among musicologists there was much disagreement about how the music should be performed. Brahms's approach to continuo realization is considered in this context.


1937 ◽  
Vol 78 (1129) ◽  
pp. 227
Author(s):  
H. G. ◽  
Edwin Evans Senior ◽  
Johannes Brahms
Keyword(s):  

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