Herma Studeny (4 January 1886 - 28 June 1973) was a German violin virtuoso, [1] composer, [2] and author who is best remembered today for writing the Book of the Violin. [3]
Studeny was born in Munich [1] to Hermine Niemeczek and medical doctor Alfred S. Studeny. She married the painter Julius Nitsche in 1921. [4]
Studeny made her debut as a violinist in 1903. She attended the Prague Conservatory, where she studied with Antonin Dvorak and Otakar Sevcik, and later with Richard Schrammel. [5] Studeny’s students included Joseph “Nipso” Brantner, [6] Juan Wolfgang Granat, [7] Herbert Hirschmann, Michael Mann, and Gerhard Seitz. [8]
Studeny said that her “credo” was three bars of the Chaconne from Bach’s Partita No. 2. [9] She performed as a soloist, and also formed the Studeny String Quartet in Munich with Alf Beckmann, Lotte Harburger, and Karl List. [10] Guenter Henle sometimes accompanied her on the piano. [11] Her performing career slowed after World War II when she was accused of belonging to the Third Reich’s Chamber of Music, but she eventually resumed performing.[ citation needed ]
Studeny’s violin book was published by Gustav Bosse. [12] Her publications include:
Julia Fischer is a German classical violinist and pianist. She teaches at the Munich University of Music and Performing Arts and performs up to 60 times per year.
Renate Eggebrecht was a German violinist and record producer.
G. Henle Verlag is a German music publishing house specialising in Urtext editions of classical music. The catalogue includes works by composers from different epochs periods, in particular composers from the Baroque to the early twentieth century whose works are no longer subject to copyright. In addition to sheet music, G. Henle Publishers also produces scholarly complete editions, books, reference works, and journals. Since 1995, Henle the range also includes pocket scores. In 2016 Henle began offering the Urtext editions in digital format in an app for iOS and Android tablets.
Maria Josepha Weber was a German soprano of the classical era. She was a sister-in-law of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and the first to perform the role of The Queen of the Night in Mozart's opera The Magic Flute (1791).
The Henschel Quartet is a German string quartet comprising the Henschel siblings; Christoph and Markus (violinists), Monika (viola) and Mathias Beyer-Karlshøj (cellist), who joined them in 1994. Brother Markus left the quartet in 2010, and was succeeded by Daniel Bell in 2012. In 2016–2018 Catalin Desaga took the place of the second violin. Today the Quartet consists of following members: Christoph Henschel and Teresa La Cour (violinists), Monika Henschel (viola) and Mathias Beyer-Karlshøj (cello).
Grete von Zieritz was an Austrian-German composer and pianist.
Margit L. McCorkle is a musicologist, music bibliographer, editor, translator, pianist, and harpsichordist.
Hans-Christian Bartel was a German violist and composer.
Beatrice Braverman Witkin was an American composer and pianist who was best known for her electronic music, especially the theme she composed for the TV show Wild, Wild World of Animals in 1973.
American composer and pianist Betty Rose Wishart was born on September 22, 1947, in Lumberton, North Carolina. She earned music degrees from Queens College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, then pursued further studies in New York City. Her major teachers were Roger Hannay, Richard Bunger Evans, Donald Waxman, Michael Zenge, and Wolfgang Rose.
Edwina Florence Wheeler Wills was an American artist and composer who played cello and piano. A native of Des Moines, Iowa, she received a B.A. from Grinnell College. On Feb 3, 1939, she married Luther Max Wills and they had four children.
Mary Elise Fellows White was an American author, composer, and violinist who recorded for Schirmer records.
Carole Dawn Reinhart is an American musician. She is a trumpet soloist and Professor Emeritus at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna.
Lukas Florian David was an Austrian classical violinist.
Elise (Sara) Henle Levi was a German Jewish writer, dramatist, and poet. She was the author of numerous dramatic comedies, opera libretti, poems, and cookbooks.
Heinz Richard Schubert was a German composer and conductor. He is not related to the more well known composer Franz Schubert.
Kathe Volkart-Schlager was an Austrian composer and music educator, and pianist.
Helene Meyerstein was a German composer, singer, and pianist who toured throughout the United States during the 1920s and was interred in the Theresienstadt (Czechoslovakia) concentration camp during World War II. She performed and published her music under the name Lena Stein-Schneider.
Mary Helen Snow McCarty was an American composer, organist/pianist, and publisher who wrote The Waveform Music Book: Composing, Teaching, Performing Electronic Music with the ARP 2600 Synthesizer in 1977. She published most of her work under the names Mary Snow or Mary McCarty Snow.
Barbara Koerppen was a German violinist. She was a professor at the Hochschule für Musik Hannover, and founded a youth symphony orchestra, playing as its concertmaster.
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