|
(born
Brand, Upper Palatinate, 19 March 1873; died Leipzig, 11 May 1916).
He studied
with Riemann (1890-95) in Munich and Wiesbaden (where his drinking habits
began); in 1901 he settled in Munich, and in 1907 he moved to Leipzig
to take a post as professor of composition at the university, though he
was also active internationally as a conductor and pianist. He was appointed
conductor of the court orchestra at Meiningen in 1911 and in 1915 moved
to Jena. During
a composing life of little more than 20 years, he produced a large output
in all genres, nearly always in abstract forms. He was a firm supporter
of 'absolute' music and saw himself in a tradition going back to
Bach,
through Beethoven,
Schumann and
Brahms. his organ music, though also affected
by Liszt, was provoked by that tradition. Of his orchestral pieces, his
symphonic and richly elaborate Hiller Variations and Mozart Variations
are justly remembered; of his chamber music the lighter-textured trios
have retained a place in the repertory, along with some of the works for
solo string instruments. His late piano and two-piano music places him
as a successor to Brahms in the central German tradition. He pursued intensively,
and to its limits, Brahms's continuous development and free modulation,
often also invoking, like Brahms, the aid of Bachian counterpoint: Many
of his works are in variation and fugue forms; equally characteristic
is a great energy and complexity of thematic growth.
|