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my stories

[edit]

story on 25 December 2024:

Merry Christmas!

On Christmas Day 1724,
Bach led the first performance of
Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ, BWV 91,
based on the Christmas hymn
written by Martin Luther
in 1524.

watch

25 December 2024

(from User:Gerda Arendt/Stories)

This is the 2024 archive of my daily stories which began in January 2023, with an overview at User:Gerda Arendt/Story list that also features example stories. This archive has daily entries up to the day of the year while those following may be overwritten by new ones. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 10:48, 1 January 2024 (UTC)

January

[edit]

1 January 2024

[edit]

2 January 2024

[edit]

"Lobpreiset all zu dieser Zeit",
(Praise all at this time)
for New Year
in the German Catholic hymnal
Gotteslob, takes two stanzas
from a 1851 song by Heinrich Bone,
a third stanza and refrain from 1969,
and a 1529 popular melody by Luther.

31 January 2021

3 January 2024

[edit]

Bass-baritone
Johann-Werner Prein
(born 3 January 1954)
took part in the 1994 premiere
of Erwin Schulhoff's only opera, Flammen,
which the Nazis had suppressed.

3 January 2022

Le Laudi

4 January 2024

[edit]

Josef Suk
(4 January 1874 – 29 May 1935)
dedicated his
Asrael Symphony
"to the exalted memory of Dvořák and Otilie",
his father-in-law for whose memory he began the work,
and his daughter, the composer's wife.

4 January 2024

5 January 2024

[edit]

The new
Catalogue of Works of Carl Friedrich Abel,
listing 420 compositions,
was introduced
at a festival
celebrating Abel's tercentenary
in Köthen

5 January 2024

6 January 2024

[edit]

Instruments in Bach's cantata
for Epiphany,
Sie werden aus Saba alle kommen, BWV 65
(They will all come from Sheba),
have been compared
to the salamiya and zurna.

6 January 2024

Stern über Bethlehem

7 January 2024

[edit]
see 7 January 2023: Concentricities

Hermann Baumann,
a pioneer of the natural horn in the revival
of both Baroque and Classical period music,
recorded Mozart's Horn Concertos
with Nikolaus Harnoncourt
and premiered Ligeti's Horn Trio.

7 January 2024

Stern über Bethlehem

8 January 2024

[edit]

Dmitri Shostakovich's
Symphony No. 15 in A major, Op. 141,
his final symphony,
intended to be a cheerful work
to mark his 65th birthday,
was premiered on
8 January 1972,
conducted by his son,
Maxim Shostakovich.

9 January 2024

[edit]

A 1974 recording of
Mozart's Così fan tutte with
Ryland Davies
as Ferrando was used in a 1995 film
by the Salzburg Marionette Theatre.

9 January 2024

The Advent song
"Macht hoch die Tür"
is number 1 in the German Protestant hymnal.

3 December 2017

10 January 2024

[edit]

Chris Karrer
was a pioneer of experimental krautrock
with the band Amon Düül II (pictured),
founded in the spirit
of the 1960s student movement,
and later played world music with Embryo
and flamenco guitar.

10 January 2024

The Firebird

11 January 2024

[edit]

Bright Angel,
composed by Graham Waterhouse
for three bassoons and contrabassoon,
relates to the Bright Angel Trail of the Grand Canyon
which the composer hiked
with his father
at the age of nine.

23 April 2011

Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud

12 January 2024

[edit]
see 12 January 2023: Volodymyr Kozhukhar, Galina Pisarenko

Kihwan Sim
from South Korea
appeared as Mozart's Figaro
at the Oper Frankfurt
in the first production with the new music director,
acting with a hint at the French Revolution.

12 January 2024

Joy to the world

13 January 2023

[edit]

Guido Dessauer
(7 November 1915 – 13 January 2012),
a German executive and art collector,
registered more than 30 patents
in paper technology
and started the career of Horst Janssen
as a lithographer.

23 January 2012

Selig sind, die da Leid tragen

14 January 2023

[edit]

In
Ach Gott, wie manches Herzeleid, BWV 3
(Oh God, how much heartache),
a chorale cantata first performed
on 14 January 1725
at the Thomaskirche,
based on Moller's hymn in 18 stanzas,
the first cantus firmus is sung
by the bass supported by a trombone.

23 January 2016

15 January 2024

[edit]

Wie liegt die Stadt so wüst
(How Deserted Lies the City),
a motet composed by Rudolf Mauersberger
after the bombing of Dresden,
was first performed
in the destroyed Kreuzkirche.

15 January 2024

listen to 1951 recording

16 January 2024

[edit]

Thomas Fritzsch,
a viol player
who rediscovered compositions
by Carl Friedrich Abel,
established a festival dedicated to him
in Köthen
where he was born 300 years before.

16 January 2024

listen

17 January 2024

[edit]

The youthful Handel
composed four operas
for the Oper am Gänsemarkt in Hamburg
where they were performed
between 1705 and 1708,
but the music of three of them is lost,
of Nero, Florindo and Daphne.

(article by Brian Boulton)

17 January 2024

18 January 2024

[edit]

Tamara Milashkina,
the first Soviet Russian soprano trained at La Scala,
portrayed Russian characters
with emotion and authenticity
touring with the Bolshoi Theatre
as Tchaikovsky's Tatiana at the Vienna State Opera
and as Lisa at the Metropolitan Opera.

18 January 2024

19 January 2023

[edit]

Romuald Twardowski,
a prolific Polish composer
who studied in Vilnius, Warsaw and Paris,
composed operas such as Maria Stuart,
a Violin Concerto,
and sacred music for both Catholic use
and the Orthodox Church including the
Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom.

19 January 2024

20 January 2023

[edit]
see 20 January 2023: Mother and Child

St. Joseph,
a 1909 Catholic church
in the Romanesque Revival style
in Berlin-Wedding,
has served as an interim cathedral
since 2018.

20 January 2024

For the beauty of the earth

21 January 2024

[edit]
see 21 January 2023: Elisabeth Waterhouse

Vivi Vassileva,
a percussionist who was the youngest member
of the German national youth orchestra,
has played Gregor Mayrhofer's Recycling Concerto
on instruments derived from garbage.
listen

21 January 2024

(from User:Gerda Arendt/Stories)

22 January 2024

[edit]
see 23 January 2023: [[Messe in A (Tambling)

Henri Dutilleux
(22 January 1916 – 22 May 2013)
composed his
Symphony No. 2 Le Double
in 1959 as
a concerto for twelve soloists from the orchestra
in a semi-circle around the conductor
as a mirror of the larger group.

listen

23 January 2024

[edit]

Maria, Königin des Friedens,
a Brutalist pilgrimage church
in Neviges, Germany,
has become the signature building
of architect
Gottfried Böhm
(23 January 1920 – 9 June 2021).

24 January 2024

[edit]

Ewa Podleś
was a Polish coloratura contralto,
performing Rossini's Rosina,
La Cenerentola, Isabella and Tancredi,
and Handel's Rinaldo and Giulio Cesare
on leading stages of the world.

24 January 2024

25 January 2024

[edit]

The Late Gothic appearance
of the church of
St. Martin in Oestrich
was destroyed in the Thirty Years' War
and restored only in 1894.

"Shalom chaverim"
('Peace, friends'),
a Hebrew traditional folk song,
has been sung at events
commemorating the Holocaust
and victims of anti-Semitic violence.

25 January 2024

26 January 2024

[edit]

Before the age of thirty,
Anna Nekhames
performed the dual role
of Venus and Chief of the Gepopo
in Ligeti's Le Grand Macabre,
one of opera's most demanding coloratura soprano roles.

26 January 2024

27 January 2024

[edit]
see 27 January 2023: Elena Manistina, Clytus Gottwald

Franz Fink conducted
Monteverdi's Vespro della Beata Vergine,
dedicated to the pope
on 1 September 1610,
at St. Martin, Idstein
on 1 September 2019.

Cum sanctis tuis in aeternum

28 January 2024

[edit]
see 27 January 2023: St. Peter, Syburg

Gerd Uecker
was artistic director of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich,
and from 2003 to 2010 of the Semperoper in Dresden
where he staged operas related to Dresden.

28 January 2024

Ich bin vergnügt mit meinem Glücke, BWV 84

29 January 2024

[edit]

Gertrude Pitzinger,
who toured Europe and the United States,
where she became known as
"the German Lieder singer",
recorded the alto part of Mozart's Requiem,
conducted by Ferenc Fricsay.

29 January 2016

30 January 2024

[edit]
see 30 January 2023: Kreuzschule

A clinic in Mopti, Mali,
is named after
Werner Bardenhewer,
born 90 years ago today,
who was for decades
priest of St. Bonifatius, Wiesbaden,
and then founded
a charity group.

30 January 2019

Herr, unser Herr,
wie bist du zugegen


February

[edit]

1 February 2024

[edit]
see 1 February 2023: Lobt Gott, ihr Christen alle gleich

Max van Egmond
(born 1 February 1936)
recorded the bass arias
of Bach's St Matthew Passion
with Claudio Abbado
and the words of Jesus with Gustav Leonhardt.

2 April 2010

2 February 2023

[edit]
see 2 February 2023: Melitta Muszely, Ich habe genug, BWV 82

Bishop of Limburg
Franz Kamphaus
(born 2 February 1932)
opposed the pope,
"convinced that our way of counselling women
would save the lives
of many more children".

2 February 2014

Missa primi toni octo vocum

3 February 2024

[edit]
see 3 February 2023: August Röckel

In her opera
Inferno,
premiered in 2021 at the Oper Frankfurt,
Lucia Ronchetti
(born 3 February 1963)
gave the main character Dante
a speaking voice and
an inner voice of four male singers.
7 August 2021

4 February 2024

[edit]

Michael Herrmann
(born 4 February 1944)
is founder-director
of the Rheingau Musik Festival,
which holds about 150 concerts every season
in vineyards and historical buildings.

25 August 2011

Leichtgesinnte Flattergeister, BWV 181

5 February 2024

[edit]
see 5 February 2023: Hans Krieger

Josef Protschka
(born 5 February 1944),
who sang as a soloist
in Stockhausen's Gesang der Jünglinge at age 12,
later appeared in leading tenor roles
in the Mozart cycles staged by Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
at the Cologne Opera and the Zürich Opera House.

5 February 2020

6 February 2024

[edit]
see 6 February 2023: Nicolas Joel

Magna Lykseth
appeared as Isolde
when Wagner's Tristan und Isolde
was first performed
at the Royal Swedish Opera in 1909.

6 February 2024

7 February 2024

[edit]
see 7 February 2023: Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22

Stephen Gould,
an American heldentenor,
performed three roles
at the 2022 Bayreuth Festival:
Tannhäuser, Siegfried and Tristan,
earning him nicknames such as "Iron Man".

7 February 2024

Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe

8 February 2024

[edit]
see 8 February 2023: Domen Križaj

Oskar Negt
(1 August 1934 – 2 February 2024),
assistant of Jürgen Habermas in Frankfurt,
mentor of the APO and
professor of sociology in Hanover,
believed that democracy was
a form of government
that had to be learned.

8 February 2024

9 February 2024

[edit]
see 9 February 2023: Der Kontrabaß

Baritone
Wolfgang Schöne
(born 9 February 1940)
created the role of the tomcat
"Tom, Minette's lover"
in the opera Die englische Katze by Hans Werner Henze
at the Schwetzingen Festival.

16 April 2010

10 February 2024

[edit]
see 10 February 2023: Oksana Shvets

Alfred Grosser
(1 February 1925 – 7 February 2024),
whose Jewish family had to move
from Frankfurt to France in 1933,
was instrumental to Franco-German cooperation,
paving the way for the 1963 Élysée Treaty,
and writing books towards better understanding
between the Germans and the French.

10 February 2024

11 February 2024

[edit]
see 11 February 2023: Heinz Winbeck

Bach composed his cantata
Jesus nahm zu sich die Zwölfe, BWV 22,
for the last Sunday before Lent
as an audition piece
for the post of Thomaskantor in Leipzig,
displaying a
"sheer range of forms
and musical expression".

22 February 2013

12 February 2024

[edit]
see 12 February 2023: Da pacem Domine (Pärt), Responsories (Reger)

Seiji Ozawa
(September 1, 1935 – February 6, 2024),
the first star conductor from Japan,
studied in Tanglewood from 1960
with Charles Munch
from the Boston Symphony Orchestra,
became artistic director there in 1970
and was the orchestra's music director
from 1973 for 29 years.

12 February 2024

13 February 2024

[edit]
see 13 February 2023: Helene Wildbrunn

Helga Paris
photographed people and streetscapes
in East Germany,
Garbage Collectors, Berliner Kneipen,
Leipzig Hauptbahnhof, self portraits,
and houses and faces from Halle over three years,
and then the exhibition was cancelled.

13 February 2024

look

14 February 2024

[edit]
see 14 February 2023: Alte Liebe

Voltaire's tragedy Olimpie
premiered in 1762
and Henze's opera
Elegie für junge Liebende
(Elegy for Young Lovers)
in 1961 at the
Schlosstheater Schwetzingen.

12 December 2011

Zeige uns, Herr, deine Allmacht und Güte

15 February 2024

[edit]
see 15 February 2023: George Alexander Albrecht

Felix Mendelssohn subtitled
Sechs Lieder, Op. 59,
six songs for four voices
setting poems by Eichendorff and others,
"Im Freien zu singen"
("To be sung outdoors").

17 September 2020

O Täler weit, o Höhen

16 February 2024

[edit]

Hans-Dieter Bader
(16 February 1938 - 18 June 2022)
performed the title role
of Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari's opera Sly,
recorded live at the Staatsoper Hannover,
"as written", while Plácido Domingo
had to cut and change the part.

3 May 2016

17 February 2024

[edit]

18 February 2024

[edit]
see 18 February 2023: Robert Hammerstiel

Bassoonist William Waterhouse
(18 February 1931 – 5 November 2007)
considered the rapport
between violist Cecil Aronowitz and cellist Terence Weil
the special distinction of the Melos Ensemble,
playing in the premiere of Britten's War Requiem.

28 October 2009

Zeige uns, Herr, deine Allmacht und Güte

19 February 2024

[edit]
see 19 February 2023: Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud

Johanna von Koczian
had a breakthrough in the 1959 film Wir Wunderkinder,
landed the schlager hit "Das bißchen Haushalt",
and portrayed Florence Foster Jenkins on stage at age 77.

19 February 2024

20 February 2024

[edit]
see 20 February 2023: Johann Georg Reißmüller

Ladislav Burlas,
a composer and musicologist
at the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava
from 1951 to 1990,
studied the music history of Slovakia
with a focus on the 20th century.

20 February 2024

21 February 2024

[edit]
see 21 February 2023: John Bröcheler

Rudolf Jansen,
a pianist who taught at the Sweelinck Conservatory,
focused on accompanying singers
Elly Ameling, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and many more,
"unravelling all the intricacies
of the often independent piano parts".

21 February 2024

22 February 2024

[edit]
see 22 February 2023: Olivier Latry

For his ordination
at the Altrossgarten Church,
Georg Weissel wrote the text of the hymn
"Such, wer da will, ein ander Ziel"
(Search, whoever wants, for a different goal),
often sung for funerals,
to his friend's melody
for a wedding song.

17 March 2016

23 February 2024

[edit]
see 23 February 2023: Nele Hertling

Max Beckschäfer
(born 23 February 1952)
composed an organ version of
Max Reger's Hebbel-Requiem
and played in the 1985 premiere
at the Marktkirche, Wiesbaden
by a choir formed for the occasion
conducted by Gabriel Dessauer.

25 November 2010

Seele, vergiß sie nicht

24 February 2024

[edit]
see 24 February 2023: Artemy Vedel, Prayer for Ukraine

Gabriele Schnaut
(24 February 1951 – 19 June 2023)
recorded alto parts in Bach cantatas in the 1970s,
and appeared as Waltraute and Second Norne
in the Jahrhundertring film in 1980,
as Isolde in 1985,
and as Widow Begbick
in Weill's Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny in 2014.

17 December 2013

Prayer for Ukraine

25 February 2024

[edit]
see 23 February 2023: Selva morale e spirituale

Raymund Weber wrote
the penitential song
"Zeige uns, Herr, deine Allmacht und Güte"
(Show us, Lord, your power and mercy)"
to be sung with a modern melody,
but it appears in the German Catholic hymnal
with a Baroque cruciform melody.

\relative c' { \time 3/4 e dis g fis }

listen

13 April 2019

26 February 2024

[edit]

The art of Ruth-Margret Pütz
(26 February 1930 – 1 April 2019)
a leading coloratura soprano of the 1960s,
was published in a 2018 Recital,
including excerpts as Konstanze and Zerbinetta.

11 June 2019

27 February 2024

[edit]
see 23 February 2023: Piano Concerto (Reger)

Russian Jewish painter
Marc Chagall
created the windows
of the church of
St Stephan in Mainz
as a sign of
Jewish-German reconciliation.

5 December 2006

Take the "A" Train

28 February 2024

[edit]
see 23 February 2023: Doris Stockhausen

Elisabeth Waterhouse
(born 28 February 1933)
founded the
National Chamber Music Course
summer school
in 1974
and has managed it since.

21 January 2023

String Sextet (Waterhouse)
listen as she did on 5 November 2022

29 February 2024

[edit]

Gioachino Rossini
(born 29 February 1792)
scored the last of his "sins of old age",
the Petite messe solennelle,
for twelve singers, two pianos, and harmonium.
listen
When Heather Phillips
made her European debut
in Rossini's Bianca e Falliero,
her nuanced coloraturas served
to portray Bianca's development.

March

[edit]

1 March 2024

[edit]
see 1 March 2023: Krzysztof Penderecki

Soprano
Rotraud Hansmann
(born 1 March 1940)
performed six roles in three Monteverdi operas
conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
including Euridice in L'Orfeo.

28 March 2016

2 March 2024

[edit]
see 2 March 2023: Herr Christ, der einig Gotts Sohn, Erfurt Enchiridion

Erna Berger sang the title role
of The Bartered Bride by
Bedřich Smetana
(2 March 1824 – 12 May 1884)
in a 1955 recording with Wilhelm Schüchter
and the Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie.
10 August 2010

Kurt Honolka's mid–20th century German translation
of Smetana's Dalibor
was still being performed in 2019
in a new Oper Frankfurt production.
5 January 2020

3 March 2024

[edit]
see 2 March 2023: Opernhaus Dortmund, Liselotte Hammes

Gabriela Grillo
(19 August 1952 – 25 February 2024),
who won a gold medal in team dressage
at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal,
later worked as a journalist,
managed the family business
and served the community voluntarily.

3 March 2024

Gott sei gelobet und gebenedeiet

4 March 2024

[edit]
see 4 March 2023: F. W. Bernstein

Benjamin Britten
composed many viola parts for
Cecil Aronowitz,
(4 March 1916 – 7 September 1978)
a co-founder of the Melos Ensemble.

14 October 2009

5 March 2024

[edit]
see 4 March 2023: Elisabeth Schärtel

The early
Sonata for horn, trumpet and trombone
by Francis Poulenc
was described as offering a
"variety of tone colors, striking rhythms,
delicious dissonances, and elegant wit".

5 March 2017

6 March 2024

[edit]
see 6 March 2023: Siegfried Vogel

Dutch soprano
Jo Vincent
(6 March 1898 – 28 November 1989)
appeared in Willem Mengelberg's 1939 recording
of Bach's St Matthew Passion,
and, with Kathleen Ferrier and Peter Pears,
in the world premiere
of Britten's Spring Symphony in 1949.

10 April 2020

7 March 2024

[edit]
see 7 March 2023: Willigis Jäger

Hans-Karl von Kupsch
(7 March 1937 – 26 April 2020),
who was instrumental in the unification
of the East and West German booksellers' associations,
ran a gallery of contemporary art together with his wife,
offering works by Walter Stöhrer
and Karlheinz Oswald.

8 April 2022

8 March 2024

[edit]
see 8 March 2023: Hana Blažíková

Catherine Rückwardt,
who was Generalmusikdirektorin
at the Staatstheater Mainz for a decade
and one of only four women in such a position in Germany,
conducted a recording of the First Symphony by Hans Rott.

8 March 2018

C. P. E. Bach: Magnificat

9 March 2024

[edit]
see 9 March 2023: Azio Corghi

The titular character of
Verdi's Nabucco,
the opera that established his fame
when it premiered on 9 March 1842
at La Scala in Milan,
is a combination
of three historic rulers.

15 April 2022

10 March 2024

[edit]
see 10 March 2023: Delores Ziegler

When Friedrich Spitta revised
"Im Frieden dein, o Herre mein",
(In your peace, o my Lord)
a 1530 German Lutheran communion hymn
based on the biblical Nunc dimittis,
he completely changed the meaning.

2 February 2019

11 March 2024

[edit]
see 11 March 2023: The Lord is my Shepherd (Rutter)

German stage director
Tobias Kratzer
nominated two versions of
Verdi's Rigoletto
(premiered 11 March 1851)
for an international competition,
pretending to be an American woman
in the first instance,
and a Bulgarian in the second.
10 May 2018

12 March 2024

[edit]

Odile Pierre
(12 March 1932 – 29 February 2020),
who became interested in the organ
at a recital by Marcel Dupré at the age of seven,
later served as the organist of La Madeleine in Paris
and played around 2,000 recitals herself.

22 March 2020

13 March 2024

[edit]
see 13 March 2023: Hans Krieger

Frank Beermann
(born 13 March 1965)
conducted the first recording
of Bruno Maderna's Requiem,
the German premiere
of Péter Eötvös's opera Love and Other Demons
at the Chemnitz Opera,
and Der Ring in Minden.

11 July 2017

14 March 2024

[edit]
see 14 March 2023: Ludwig Finscher

Gioachino Rossini
scored the last of his
"sins of old age", the
Petite messe solennelle
(premiered 14 March 1864)
for twelve singers, two pianos,
and harmonium.

Dona nobis pacem.

14 March 2024

15 March 2024

[edit]
see 15 March 2023: Lorenzo Viotti

Françoise Garner,
first a coloratura soprano at the Opéra-Comique,
brought French singing tradition to Europe,
portraying Gounod's Marguerite at La Scala
and his Juliette at the Verona Arena.

16 March 2024

[edit]
see 15 March 2023: Volodymyr Kozhukhar

Guy Touvron,
a French classical trumpet player
for whom 25 concertos were composed,
wrote a biography
of his teacher Maurice André
published in 2003.

16 March 2024

17 March 2024

[edit]

Arvo Pärt
composed the motet
The Deer's Cry
on a commission from Louth, Ireland,
setting the conclusion
of Saint Patrick's Breastplate,
"Christ with me".

listen

17 March 2019

18 March 2024

[edit]

Christa Wolf
(18 March 1929 – 1 December 2011)
wrote Der geteilte Himmel
in a "quest for personal integrity
within a flawed system",
published in East Germany in 1963
and called a "socialist bestseller".

1 May 2019

19 March 2024

[edit]

Requiem
by Max Reger
(19 March 1873 – 11 May 1916)
is a musical setting
not of the Latin Requiem,
but of a poem "Requiem"
written by the dramatist Friedrich Hebbel

19 July 2010

20 March 2024

[edit]
see 20 March 2023: Stefan Keil

Aribert Reimann
composed
Medea
for a 2010 premiere
at the Vienna State Opera,
based on the drama by Franz Grillparzer.

look and listen

20 March 2024

21 March 2024

[edit]
see 21 March 2023: Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191, Gächinger Kantorei

Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen
(lit.'I will gladly carry the cross-staff'), BWV 56,
a church cantata composed
by Johann Sebastian Bach
(born 21 March 1685)
is one of few works that
he referred to as a cantata.

Mezzo-soprano
Pamela Dellal,
who recorded music by Hildegard von Bingen
and Fanny Mendelssohn,
translated all texted works by Bach.

21 March 2016

22 March 2024

[edit]
see 22 March 2023: Margit Bokor

23 March 2024

[edit]
see 23 March 2023: Maria Friesenhausen

Cecelia Hall
has portrayed title roles,
of women such as
Dido, La Cenerentola, and María de Buenos Aires,
and of men including
Serse, Ascanio in Alba and Hänsel.

23 March 2024

24 March 2024

[edit]
see 24 March 2023: Annette Dasch

25 March 2024

[edit]

26 March 2024

[edit]
see 26 March 2023: Jörg Streli

When Kelsey Lauritano
portrayed Mozart's Cherubino in 2023,
a reviewer from the FAZ noted her
"almost metallic-brittle approach that spreads androgynous infatuation".

26 March 2024

As music director of the Oper Hagen,
Florian Ludwig
promoted a wide repertoire that included
contemporary operas such as Barber's Vanessa and crossover projects.

27 March 2024

[edit]
see 27 March 2023: Klassische Philharmonie Bonn

... sofferte onde serene ...
(serene waves suffered)
is a composition for piano and tape
written by Luigi Nono
in collaboration with pianist
Maurizio Pollini
(pictured).

24 February 2019

28 March 2024

[edit]
see 28 March 2023: Tilge, Höchster, meine Sünden, BWV 1083

29 March 2024

[edit]
see 29 March 2023: Leonore Kirschstein

... that on Good Friday 2020,
Benedikt Kristjánsson
sang all roles in a chamber arrangement of
Bach's St John Passion,
composed for Good Friday 1724,
broadcast live from the composer's burial place.

look and listen · look forward

22 May 2020

30 March 2024

[edit]
see 30 March 2023: Jan Müller-Wieland

In his opera
Tri sestry
(Three Sisters),
composer Péter Eötvös
wanted the three sisters from Chekhov's play
to be sung by countertenors.

30 March 2024

31 March 2024

[edit]
see 31 March 2023: Munich Biennale

For Easter 1724,
his first as Thomaskantor in Leipzig,
Johann Sebastian Bach revived
Christ lag in Todes Banden,
(Christ lay in death's bonds)
BWV 4,
a chorale cantata
he had composed in his twenties,
using in all seven movements
the words and tune
of Luther's 1524 Easter chorale.

24 April 2011

listen

April

[edit]

1 April 2024

[edit]
see 1 April 2023: Rotraud Hansmann

The opening chorus of
Bach's cantata
for the Second Day of Easter,
Erfreut euch, ihr Herzen, BWV 66,
first performed in 1724
has been termed
"one of the longest and
most exhilarating of Bach's early works".
25 April 2011

listen

2 April 2024

[edit]
see 2 April 2023: Alchymic Quartet

At age 22,
Judith Hemmendinger
helped rehabilitate
nearly 100 child survivors
of the Buchenwald concentration camp,
among them Elie Wiesel.

2 April 2024

3 April 2024

[edit]
see 3 April 2023: Renate Behle

Ladislav Burlas,
a musicologist at the Slovak Academy of Sciences
for almost 40 years,
wrote more than 150 works during his career.

3 April 2024

Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud

4 April 2024

[edit]
see 4 April 2023: Hans-Karl von Kupsch, Karlheinz Oswald

Karsten Januschke's
conducting of Offenbach's Die Banditen
was described as producing
a "lean, dry, delicate" sound
with an ensemble of 22 soloists, including 11 tenors.

29 March 2024

5 April 2024

[edit]
see 5 April 2023: Marjon Lambriks

Tilmann Köhler
directed Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro in 2023
as playful "serious games"
in which the women win by "wit, cleverness and presence of mind".

5 April 2024

6 April 2024

[edit]
see 6 April 2023: Tristis est anima mea

Appalachian Spring,
a 1944 ballet by
choreographer Martha Graham,
and composer Aaron Copland,
follows Bride and Husbandman
in 19th-century Pennsylvania,
with themes of war present
throughout the story,
and the Shaker tune "Simple Gifts".

6 April 2024

listen

7 April 2024

[edit]
see 7 April 2023: Passions (Homilius)

Bach created an "operatic scene"
in his cantata
Halt im Gedächtnis Jesum Christ, BWV 67
(Keep Jesus Christ in mind),
for the Sunday after Easter in 1724,
with Jesus serenely repeating
"Peace be with you"
against the raging of the enemies.

listen

19 April 2012

8 April 2024

[edit]
see 8 April 2023: O Mensch, bewein dein Sünde groß

Notker Wolf OSB,
abbot of St. Ottilien Archabbey in Bavaria
and from 2000 to 2016
Abbot Primate of the international
Benedictine Confederation,
played and recorded
with the rock band Feedback.

watch

8 April 2024

9 April 2024

[edit]
see 9 April 2023: Messe solennelle (Vierne), Surrexit a mortuis

After being denied the use
of Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C.,
contralto
Marian Anderson
gave an open-air concert
at the Lincoln Memorial
on 9 April 1939.

listen

9 April 2024

10 April 2024

[edit]
see 10 April 2023: [[Erfreut euch, ihr Herzen, BWV 66

Gerhard Lohfink
was professor of the New Testament
at the University of Tübingen until 1986
when he moved to a Catholic Integrated Community,
following thoughts from his book
Jesus and Community. The Social Dimension of Christian faith.

listen to him lecturing

10 April 2024

11 April 2024

[edit]
see 11 April 2023: Heinz Hennig

The Finnish concert organist and improvisor
Kalevi Kiviniemi,
the first to record the complete organ works by Jean Sibelius,
recorded works from different eras
on organs of the world to match,
such as French organ music
on the Cavaillé-Coll organ of the Church of St. Ouen, Rouen.
listen
11 April 2024

12 April 2024

[edit]
see 12 April 2023: Günther Leib

Denn alles Fleisch, es ist wie Gras,
und alle Herrlichkeit des Menschen
wie des Grases Blumen.
Das Gras ist verdorret und die Blume abgefallen.

Aber des Herrn Wort bleibet in Ewigkeit.

listen

Der Herr ist mein getreuer Hirt

13 April 2024

[edit]

The first performance of Handel's celebrated oratorio
Messiah
took place in Dublin on 13 April 1742.

13 April 2024

Part II contains the famous Hallelujah Chorus
and the oratorio's longest movement, the air for alto
He was despised.

29 July 2011

14 April 2024

[edit]
see 14 April 2023: Eleonore Schönborn
Baroque oboe d'amore
Baroque oboe d'amore

Johann Sebastian Bach
set the theme of the Good Shepherd
in his cantata for the second Sunday after Easter,
Du Hirte Israel, höre, BWV 104,
as a pastorale,
a trio of oboes playing triplets to pedal points.

listen

8 May 2011

15 April 2024

[edit]
see 15 April 2023: Ik sta voor U in leegte en gemis

Michael Boder
conducted many world premieres of operas,
Reimann's Medea at the Vienna State Opera ,
Haas' Morgen und Abend at the Royal Opera House,
and operas by composers including
Friedrich Cerha, Pascal Dusapin, Hans Werner Henze,
Luca Lombardi, Krzysztof Penderecki, and Manfred Trojahn.

listen to him

14 April 2024

16 April 2024

[edit]
see 16 April 2023: Johanna Geisler

Dieter Rexroth,
responsible for the concert programs
of Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin from 1996,
shaped the festivals
Frankfurter Feste at the Alte Oper and Young Euro Classic.

16 April 2024

17 April 2024

[edit]
see 17 April 2023: Lichtental Church

The second of
Henry Purcell's two settings of
Thou knowest, Lord, the secrets of our hearts
was composed in an earlier style
for the funeral
of Queen Mary II of England.

listen

17 April 2020

18 April 2024

[edit]
see 18 April 2023: Herr, unser Herr, wie bist du zugegen

Lorenzo Palomo,
conductor of the Valencia Orchestra
and pianist of the Deutsche Oper Berlin,
composed a song cycle Canciones españolas,
premiered by Montserrat Caballé
at Carnegie Hall in 1987.

listen

18 April 2024

19 April 2024

[edit]
see 19 April 2023: Zeichenstaub

Diego Fasolis
(born 19 April 1958)
conducted L'incoronazione di Poppea
at the reopened Staatsoper Unter den Linden,
adding music by other composers
of Monteverdi's time.

trailer

16 January 2018

20 April 2024

[edit]

John Eliot Gardiner
(born 20 April 1943)
conducted the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage
and described Bach
as the "best writer of dramatic declamation ...
since Monteverdi"
for the dialogue
in Selig ist der Mann, BWV 57.
listen
26 December 2010

Dona nobis pacem

21 April 2024

[edit]
see 21 April 2023: Anna and Bernhard Blume

The first choral section
from the 1714 Bach cantata for Jubilate Sunday,
Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12
(Weeping, lamenting, worrying, fearing),
described as a "deeply affecting" tombeau,
became the Crucifixus of the Mass in B minor.

listen

29 April 2012

22 April 2024

[edit]
see 22 April 2023: Passions (Homilius) · Hans Uwe Hielscher

Kathleen Ferrier CBE
(22 April 1912 – 8 October 1953),
an English contralto singer
of international reputation,
chose to perform only two operatic roles on stage,
Britten's Lucretia and Gluck's Orfeo.

listen

22 April 2024

Brahms: O Tod, wie bitter bist du

23 April 2024

[edit]
see 23 April 2023: Erhard Egidi · Martin Petzold

24 April 2024

[edit]
see 24 April 2023: Matti Lehtinen

The opera
The Devil in Love
by Alexander Vustin
(born 24 April 1943)
took 15 years to be completed
and 30 more years to be premiered,
debuting at the centenary of the
Stanislavski and Nemirovich-Danchenko Theatre.

excerpt

11 June 2020

25 April 2024

[edit]
see 25 April 2023: Schiersteiner Kantorei

Felix Mendelssohn first composed the motet
Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlen
(For He shall give His angels charge)
for an eight-part choir,
and then included it with orchestra
in his oratorio Elijah.

watch

6 April 2019

26 April 2024

[edit]

Contralto Marga Höffgen
(26 April 1921 – 7 July 1995),
known as a Bach singer for Karajan
and as Erda in Bayreuth,
recorded Max Reger's Requiem compositions.

Seele, vergiß sie nicht

16 March 2015

27 April 2024

[edit]
see 27 April 2023: Poèmes pour Mi

Adalbert Kraus
(born 27 April 1937)
portrayed Tom in Henze's Elegy for Young Lovers
at the Staatsoper Hannover
and the tenor part of Peter the Apostle
in Bach's Easter Oratorio.

listen to oratorio

16 April 2010

28 April 2024

[edit]
see 28 April 2023: Quattro pezzi sacri

In Patrick Süskind's play
Der Kontrabaß,
the double bass in the title role
is a "constant handicap" to its player,
"humanly, socially, sexually, musically".

trailer

9 February 2014

Wo gehest du hin? BWV 166

29 April 2024

[edit]
see 29 April 2023: Hana Blažíková

Samuel Kummer
chose for his first recital
as the organist of
the restored Frauenkirche in Dresden
music by Bach, Brahms, Max Reger,
Louis Vierne and his own.

Sortie

29 April 2024

30 April 2024

[edit]
see 30 April 2023: Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4

Oksana Lyniv
founded the
Youth Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine
in 2016 and conducted them
in thirty concerts across ten music festivals
in 2022.

watch

30 April 2024

May

[edit]

1 May 2024

[edit]
see 1 May 2023: Litanies à la Vierge Noire: Lance Ryan

The choir
Groningse Bachvereniging
sang Bach's Magnificat
with Harnoncourts' Concentus Musicus Wien
in the orchestra's first appearance
in the Netherlands in 1970.

listen to a chorale

28 January 2012

2 May 2024

[edit]
see 2 May 2023: Manfred Weiss

The baritone
Johannes Hill
was the voice of Jesus and Pilate
in Bach's Passions,
and of Pope Francis in the premiere
of Peter Reulein's Laudato si'.

listen

29 March 2018

3 May 2024

[edit]

Hans Stadlmair
(3 May 1929 – 13 February 2019),
conductor of the Münchener Kammerorchester for almost four decades,
in 1971 premiered
Wilhelm Killmayer's Fin al punto,
of which the composer said,
"The calm already contains the catastrophe".

7 April 2011

4 May 2024

[edit]
see 4 May 2023: Kurt Huber

5 May 2024

[edit]
see 5 May 2023: Wie als een God wil leven, Solang es Menschen gibt auf Erden

6 May 2024

[edit]
see 6 May 2023: Te Deum

A prize for contemporary art of Styria
is named after
Viktor Fogarassy
(6 May 1911 – 24 March 1989),
the managing director of a department store.

Segne, Vater, diese Gaben

21 August 2019

7 May 2024

[edit]
see 7 May 2023: Te Deum (Reulein)

Peter Demetz,
born in Prague in 1922,
persecuted under the Nazis,
escaped the Communist regime in 1949,
taught German literature at Yale University
from 1956 to 1991,
and wrote the book
Prague in Black and Gold:
Scenes from the Life of a European City
.

7 May 2024

Seele, vergiß sie nicht

8 May 2024

[edit]
see 8 May 2023: Philipp Wolfrum

"Es tönen die Lieder",
a German round
about greeting spring with songs,
first appeared in 1869
in a collection of works by Adolf Spieß,
who developed a series of school-gymnastics steps to it.

listen

8 May 2022

9 May 2024

[edit]
see 9 May 2023: Colin Mawby

Bach's first cantata
for the Feast of the Ascension,
Wer da gläubet und getauft wird, BWV 37,
omits the topic of the Ascension
and derives from the quoted Gospel (Mark 16:16) Lutheran thoughts.

9 May 2013

Ascension Oratorio

watch

10 May 2024

[edit]
see 10 May 2023: Bernd Redmann, Jörg Duda, Bassoon Quintet (Waterhouse)

A reviewer described the approach of soprano
Magdalena Hinterdobler
to her role as Grete in Zemlinsky's Der Traumgörge
(Görgr the Dreamer)
as "bold" and "sassy".

watch her talk about it and sing

10 May 2024

11 May 2024

[edit]


The late-Gothic church
St. Lamberti in Hildesheim
was rebuilt after destruction in World War II,
but a southern annex was kept in ruins
as a memorial?

11 May 2013

12 May 2024

[edit]
see 12 May 2023: Raimund Hoghe

In Bach's cantata
Sie werden euch in den Bann tun, BWV 44
(They will banish you),
for Exaudi Sunday,
the word "töten" (kill) is
"twice emphasized by a sudden, mysterious piano and
 ... chromatically tinged harmonies".

19 May 2012

13 May 2024

[edit]
see 13 May 2023: Kari Løvaas

Klaus Wallrath
(born 13 May 1959)
composed a mass for peace
for the 2018 Katholikentag in Münster,
performed to an audience of more than 30,000
by a choir, an orchestra, and a dance company.

3 May 2022

14 May 2024

[edit]
see 14 May 2023: Wahrlich, wahrlich, ich sage euch, BWV 86

The dancer and cabaret artist
Hedi Schoop
emigrated to California with her husband,
the composer Friedrich Hollaender,
where she created and manufactured
California pottery.

14 May 2019

15 May 2024

[edit]
see 15 May 2023: Zofia Kilanowicz

The Franciscan
Helmut Schlegel
(born 15 May 1943)
wrote the lyrics of an oratorio
Laudato si',
including writings
by Francis of Assisi
and Pope Francis,
and the Magnificat.

Glauben können wie du (listen)

14 November 2019

16 May 2024

[edit]
see 15 May 2023: Faustas Latėnas

Gerhard Müller,
leading bishop of the
United Lutheran Church of Germany
and professor in Erlangen and Göttingen,
wrote a book about
Martin Luther's insights then and now.

16 May 2024

17 May 2024

[edit]
see 17 May 2023: Günter Wewel

The performance of tenor
Julian Prégardien,
first trained in Limburg,
as the Evangelist in Bach's St Matthew Passion
was noted by one reviewer
for its emphatic and penetrating
"profoundly human" nature.
watch
17 May 2024

Ave Maria

18 May 2024

[edit]

Timon Altwegg
(born 18 May 1967)
and his wife Hana Gubenko
recorded a collection entitled
Sonata ebraica (Hebrew Sonata),
after the Viola Sonata by Graham Waterhouse.

20 June 2017

19 May 2024

[edit]
see 19 May 2023: Stephen Varcoe

In his first cantata for Pentecost,
Erschallet, ihr Lieder, erklinget, ihr Saiten!
BWV 172
,
first performed in 1714 in Weimar,
Johann Sebastian Bach
marked to repeat the opening chorus
after the final chorale.

watch

6 April 2010

20 May 2024

[edit]
see 20 May 2023: Christiana Mariana von Ziegler

21 May 2024

[edit]
see 21 May 2023: Irma Blank

Martin Krumbiegel
sang the tenor part in Bach's cantata
Erschallet, ihr Lieder (Resound, ye songs)
and Bach's "Pipe Aria".

listen

21 May 2013

22 May 2024

[edit]
see 22 May 2023: Maria Mies

Baritone
Liviu Holender
chose lieder by five composers
whose music was banned by the Nazis
Schreker, Zemlinsky,
Mahler, Korngold and Schönberg
for a recital at the Oper Frankfurt.
watch one

Verdi: Messa da Requiem 22 May 1874
22 May 2024

23 May 2024

[edit]
see 23 May 2023: Mass in B minor structure


The 1653 hymn
"Jesu, meine Freude"
(Jesus, my joy)
by Johann Franck and Johann Crüger
mentions singing in defiance
of the "old dragon", death, and fear.

listen to Bach

23 May 2014

24 May 2024

[edit]
see 24 May 2023: Cathinka Buchwieser

Ethel Smyth,
whose opera The Wreckers
was premiered in Leipzig in 1906
and revived at the Glyndebourne Festival in 2022,
joined the Women's Social and Political Union
in 1910, giving up music for two years.

listen

24 May 2024

25 May 2024

[edit]
see 25 May 2023: Services in B-flat major

Willi Brokmeier,
a tenor focused on operettas,
participated in the world premiere
of Bernd Alois Zimmermann's Die Soldaten
at the Cologne Opera
and appeared as Beethoven's Jaquino on a tour to Japan.

watch

25 May 2024

26 May 2024

[edit]
see 26 May 2023: Es ist ein trotzig und verzagt Ding, BWV 176

The Lutheran
St. Trinitatis
in Wolfenbüttel, consecrated in 1719,
is a Baroque church
with a facade recalling that of a palace.

26 May 2024

O heilges Geist- und Wasserbad, BWV 165

listen

27 May 2024

[edit]
see 27 May 2023: Surrexit a mortuis

"Ständchen"
(Serenade),
the setting of a poem by A. F. v. Schack
by Richard Strauss,
begins with an appeal to creep out quietly
and ends with a climax of expecting
a rose to glow from the rapture of the night.

listen

27 May 2016

28 May 2024

[edit]
see 28 May 2023: Erschallet, ihr Lieder, erklinget, ihr Saiten! BWV 172

29 May 2024

[edit]
see 29 May 2023: Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt, BWV 68

In the Opernhaus Wuppertal production
of Stravinsky's
The Rite of Spring,
choreographed by Pina Bausch,
the dancers performed on a stage covered with soil.
watch a bit
30 July 2013

30 May 2023

[edit]
see 30 May 2023: Die Elenden sollen essen, BWV 75

Samuel Kummer
chose for his first recital
as the organist of the restored
Frauenkirche in Dresden
music by Bach, Brahms, Max Reger,
Louis Vierne, and himself.

watch him improvising

30 May 2024

Ave verum corpus

31 May 2024

[edit]
see 31 May 2023: Eva Randová

Rolf-Ernst Breuer,
who spent almost his whole career at Deutsche Bank,
as CEO from 1997 to 2002, is credited
with expanding the bank to international importance,
and later supported the Goethe University Frankfurt.

31 May 2024

June

[edit]

1 June 2023

[edit]
see 1 June 2023: Javier Álvarez (composer)


Ludwigsburg Palace,
the "Versailles of Swabia",
was home to four
of Württemberg's rulers?

1 June 2024

listen to 2022 festival

2 June 2024

[edit]
see 2 June 2023: Kölner Domchor

According to John Eliot Gardiner,
Bach was "fired up as never before"
when he began his
second cycle of chorale cantatas
with
O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20
(O eternity, you word of thunder),
on the first Sunday after Trinity
in 1724.

watch

12 June 2012

3 June 2024

[edit]
see 3 June 2023: Michael Hampe

Franz Kafka
(3 July 1883 – 3 June 1924)
wrote the 109
Zürau Aphorisms
at the estate
of his sister Ottla and her husband in Zürau
where he sought recovery from tuberculosis.

3 June 2024

4 June 2023

[edit]
see 4 June 2023: Erasmus Schöfer

During his tenure as director of the Paris Opera,
Hugues Gall
added 60 ballets to the repertoire of the company
and world premieres of operas
by Philippe Fénelon, Philippe Manoury,
Pascal Dusapin and Matthias Pintscher.

3 June 2024

5 June 2024

[edit]
see 5 June 2023: Aile Asszonyi

Peter Demetz,
who taught German literature
at Yale University
from 1956 to 1991,
was born in Prague
where he was persecuted under the Nazis
and escaped the Communist regime in 1949.

5 June 2024

6 Jun 2023

[edit]
see 6 June 2023: Die Himmel erzählen die Ehre Gottes, BWV 76

Alexander Lang,
actor at Deutsches Theater in East Berlin from 1969,
was invited to direct plays by Kleist, Lessing and Goethe
at the Comédie-Française in Paris.

6 June 2024

7 June 2024

[edit]
see 7 June 2023: Kurt Widmer

Dimitri,
a grand opera by Victorin de Joncières,
based on Schiller's incomplete play Demetrius
about the Russian pretender False Dmitriy I,
was first performed in Paris in 1776.

7 June 2024

8 June 2024

[edit]
see 8 June 2023: St. Stephan, Baden

Martin Luther
created the Pentecost hymn
"Komm, Heiliger Geist, Herre Gott"
by adding two stanzas
to an earlier German version of
"Veni Sancte Spiritus",
keeping its melody.

listen

8 June 2014

9 June 2023

[edit]
see 9 June 2023: Haroun and the Sea of Stories, Die Schöpfung

Mozart built the final scene
of his opera Die Zauberflöte
"upon a solemn fugato"
around the chorale
"Ach Gott, vom Himmel sieh darein"
and Bach composed
a chorale cantata
for the Second Sunday after Trinity 1724
based on it.

listen

10 August 2011

10 June 2024

[edit]
see 10 June 2023: Hanns-Martin Schneidt

Ernst Gutstein,
an Austrian operatic baritone
whose signature role was Faninal in Der Rosenkavalier,
created the role of Perlimplin
in Fortner's In seinem Garten liebt Don Perlimplin Belisa
at the 1962 Schwetzingen Festival.

10 June 2019

11 June 2023

[edit]
see 11 June 2023: Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227, Mass in B minor structure

"O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort",
translated as
"Eternity! tremendous Word",
is a hymn by Johann Rist
that served as the basis for
the first work in Bach's chorale cantata cycle.

listen

23 July 2021

Das Wandern ist des Müllers Lust

12 June 2024

[edit]
see 12 June 2023: Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud

"Nun jauchzt dem Herren, alle Welt"
(Now rejoice to the Lord, all the world),
a 1646 paraphrase of Psalm 100
by David Denicke and Justus Gesenius,
appears in current
Protestant and Catholic hymnals.

listen

29 June 2018

13 June 2024

[edit]
see 13 June 2023: Kurt Equiluz

Jürgen Moltmann,
professor of systematic theology
at the University of Tübingen,
was internationally known
for books such as
Theology of Hope,
The Crucified God
and God in Creation.

interview

13 June 2024

14 June 2024

[edit]
see 14 June 2023: Hedwig Fassbender

Andreas Schager
was called a "sensation"
when he first performed Wagner's Tristan
in Minden, and went on
to Siegfried at the Staatsoper Berlin,
La Scala, and The Proms.

watch

14 June 2017

15 June 2024

[edit]
same as 2023

The oboist and composer
Rolf Riehm
(born 15 June 1937)
taught music theory in Frankfurt from 1974 to 2000
and wrote an opera, Sirenen, for a 2014 premiere at the Oper Frankfurt.

20 July 2019

16 June 2024

[edit]
see 16 June 2023: Pascal Rophé (Henri Dutilleux)

In Bach's fourth 1724 chorale cantata,
Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder, BWV 135,
for the third Sunday after Trinity
based on a hymn by Cyriakus Schneegass,
the first movement is a polyphonic chorale fantasia
with the bass as the cantus firmus.

listen

14 July 2011

17 June 2024

[edit]
see 17 June 2023: Albert Dohmen

Four Epigraphs after Escher
is a 1993 piano trio
by Graham Waterhouse
for viola, heckelphone and piano
based on four graphic artworks by
M. C. Escher
(17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972)
including Reptiles.

7 November 2022

18 June 2024

[edit]
see 18 June 2023: Jörg Faerber

In Noye's Fludde,
a one-act opera by Benjamin Britten.
based on a 15th-century Chester "mystery" play
and premiered on 18 June 1968
only the roles of Noye (Noah) and his wife
are intended to be sung by professionals,
the others by child and adolescent performers.

18 June 2024

19 June 2024

[edit]
see 19 June 2023: Jörg Widmann

Éric Tappy,
a member of the Grand Théâtre de Genève,
has been regarded as legendary
for portraying Monteverdi's Orfeo,
Tamino in Mozart's Die Zauberflöte
and Debussy's Pelléas
with a tenor voice of exemplary clarity and diction.
watch
19 June 2024

20 June 2024

[edit]
see 20 June 2023: Sonata ebraica

The main work of sculptor
Fritz Koenig
(20 June 1924 – 22 February 2017)
is The Sphere,
the world's largest bronze sculpture of modern times,
on the plaza beneath the two World Trade towers,
and recovered largely intact from the ruins
after the September 11 attacks.

listen to him

20 June 2024

21 June 2024

[edit]
see 21 June 2023: Gabriele Schnaut

Ernst Pepping composed in 1937
in Nazi Germany
the Evangelienmotette
Jesus und Nikodemus
on John 3:1–15, showing
"the reality of a different, heavenly world".
listen
21 June 2015

22 June 2024

[edit]
see 22 June 2023: Cornel Țăranu

23 June 2024

[edit]
see 23 June 2023: Josef Protschka

John Rutter
wrote the text and music of
A Clare Benediction
for choir and orchestra
to honour
Clare College, Cambridge,
where he had studied.

watch in a service

Nun jauchzt dem Herren, alle Welt

31 July 2019

24 June 2024

[edit]
see 24 June 2023: Rheingau Musik Festival

In the third chorale cantata,
Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam, BWV 7,
first performed
on St. John's Day 1724,
based on Luther's hymn
about the baptism of Jesus,
Bach gave the cantus firmus to the tenor.

watch

24 June 2024

25 June 2024

[edit]
see 25 June 2023: The Company of Heaven

As stage director and scenic designer
of Puccini's Turandot
for the 2024 Internationale Maifestspiele,
Daniela Kerck
crafted a new ending
to the music left unfinished in 1924
and Puccini's "Requiem".
trailer

25 June 2024

26 June 2024

[edit]
see 26 June 2023: Alte Liebe

The first solo album of
Jodie Devos,
second-prize winner of
the Queen Elisabeth Competition in 2014
who appeared as Philine
in Mignon by Ambroise Thomas
at the Opéra Royal de Wallonie,
was Offenbach – Colorature.

in memory

26 June 2024

27 June 2024

[edit]
see 27 June 2023: Doris Stockhausen

The favourite role of
Wilma Schmidt,
who performed at the Staatsoper Hannover
for more than five decades
in German, Italian and Slavic operas,
was the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier.
20 July 2022

Mein Gott, wie schön ist deine Welt

28 June 2024

[edit]
see 28 June 2023: Mass in B minor structure

Richard Strauss
reportedly composed
"Traum durch die Dämmerung"
("Dream in the Twilight"),
from a love poem
by Otto Julius Bierbaum,
in 20 minutes.

listen

28 June 2014

29 June 2024

[edit]
see 29 June 2023: Soňa Červená

Margarita Voites,
from 1969 to 1990 coloratura soprano
at the Estonia Theatre,
portrayed tragic characters
such as Lucia di Lammermoor
and well as comic roles
like La fille du régiment.
watch

29 June 2024

30 June 2024

[edit]
see 30 June 2023: Peter Brötzmann

Paul Gerhardt's hymn
"Du meine Seele singe"
(You my soul sing),
a paraphrase of Psalm 146,
became known for a melody
beginning with a rocket motif.

listen

30 June 2015

July

[edit]

1 July 2024

[edit]
see 1 July 2023: Cantata academica

The first public performance
in Vienna in 1903
of Arnold Schönberg's
Zwei Gesänge, Op. 1,
two expressive lieder of thanks and farewell
to contemporary poems,
with Zemlinsky at the piano,
was met with hostile audience reactions.

listen with score

1 July 2024

2 July 2024

[edit]
see 2 July 2023: Missa brevis in B-flat

In 1724 Johann Sebastian Bach
composed the church cantata
Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10,
based on Luther's German Magnificat,
translating" to "My soul magnifies the Lord",
for the Feast of the Visitation,
as the fifth work in his chorale cantata cycle.

watch

2 July 2024

3 July 2024

[edit]
see 3 July 2023: Rachel Yakar

Libuše Domanínská,
a soprano of Prague's National Theatre,
performed in all operas by
Leoš Janáček
(3 July 1854 – 12 August 1928),
and a recording she made
as his Jenůfa
made his works better known
beyond their home country.

25 February 2021

4 July 2024

[edit]
see 4 July 2023: Christopher Lowrey

Lando Bartolini
was a spinto tenor who performed worldwide,
as Luigi in Puccini's Il tabarro in Philadelphia in 1968,
as Verdi's Ernani at La Scala in 1982,
as Radames in Aida at the Arena di Verona in 1983
and as Calaf in Puccini's Turandot in Beijing in 1999.
listen

4 July 2024

5 July 2023

[edit]

Diana Tishchenko,
a violinist from Ukraine,
played Myroslav Skoryk's
Melody
on a tour of
the Kyiv Symphony Orchestra
to Poland and Germany
in April 2022.

watch

5 July 2022

6 July 2023

[edit]

In 2016,
Leonore von Zadow-Reichling
and Günter von Zadow from
Edition Güntersberg
published
12 Fantasias for Viola da Gamba
by Telemann
that had been lost.

listen to Thomas Fritzsch

18 July 2016

7 July 2024

[edit]
see 7 July 2023: Wolkentanz

Prince Nikolaus Esterházy,
who commissioned
Beethoven's Mass in C major
for his wife's name day,
found it
"unbearably ridiculous and detestable".

listen

7 July 2015

8 July 2024

[edit]
see 8 July 2023: Twelve Fantasias for Viola da Gamba solo

Martti Wallén,
a Finnish bass singer
who was a member of the Royal Swedish Opera from 1975 to 2000,
performed in world premieres by Aulis Sallinen,
in The Horseman at the Savonlinna Opera Festival in 1975,
and in Kullervo in Los Angeles in 1992.

8 July 2024

9 July 2024

[edit]
see 9 July 2023: ensemble amarcord

On the Mozart family grand tour
to the cultural centres of Europe,
undertaken by Leopold Mozart,
his wife Anna Maria,
and their children Maria Anna (Nannerl)
and Wolfgang Theophilus (Wolferl)
from 9 July 1763 to 1766
the Wunderkinder
amazed and gratified their audiences.

9 July 2024

10 July 2024

[edit]

In Bio's Bahnhof,
a German live music talk show series
presented by
Alfred Biolek
(10 July 1934 – 23 July 2021)
in a former train depot,
Kate Bush
made her first television appearance.

watch

30 August 2021

11 July 2024

[edit]
see 11 July 2023: Frank Beermann

Liana Isakadze,
who won the 1970
Jean Sibelius Violin Competition,
recorded as soloist, arranger and conductor
concertos by Otar Taktakishvili
and Tigran Mansurian
with the Chamber Orchestra of Georgia,
in Ingolstadt.

watch

11 July 2024

12 July 2024

[edit]
see 12 July 2023: Frank Stähle

Variations for Cello Solo,
premiered by the composer
Graham Waterhouse
in Vienna in 2020,
depict characteristics
of the members of his family.

watch

7 November 2020

13 July 2024

[edit]
see 13 July 2023: Anthony Gilbert (composer)

Violeta Dinescu
(born 13 July 1953)
composed the children's opera
Der 35. Mai
based on
The 35th of May,
or Conrad's Ride to the South Seas

by Erich Kästner.

watch

10 November 2009

14 July 2024

[edit]
see 14 July 2023: Graham Clark (tenor)

Albert Schweitzer
likened the bass line
of an aria mentioning Satan
in Bach's chorale cantata
for the seventh Sunday after Trinity,
Was willst du dich betrüben,
BWV 107

(Why would you grieve),
"to the contortions of a huge dragon.

watch

8 August 2011

15 July 2024

[edit]
see 15 July 2023: Violeta Hemsy de Gainza

Soprano
Melitta Muszely
appeared as
the four women Hoffmann loves
in Offenbach's opera
in Felsenstein's production
at the Komische Oper Berlin in 1958,
and still sang recitals at age 80.

watch

30 March 2019

16 July 2024

[edit]
see 16 July 2023: Requiem (Reger)

After Mozart's opera
Die Entführung aus dem Serail
premiered at the Burgtheater in Vienna
on 16 July 1782,
Emperor Joseph II anecdotally remarked
that it had "too many notes".

watch in Dresden, 1977

16 July 2024

17 July 2024

[edit]
see 17 July 2023: Yvonne, Prinzessin von Burgund

Marina Kondratyeva,
a leading ballerina
at the Bolshoi Ballet from 1952
described as
"weightless, airy, poetic and spiritual",
was admired as Giselle
also in New York and London
and became a master tutor at the Bolshoi,
passing its tradition for decades.
watch

17 July 2024

18 July 2024

[edit]
see 18 July 2023: Erforsche mich, Gott, und erfahre mein Herz, BWV 136

\header { tagline = ##f }
\layout { indent = 0 \context { \Score \remove "Bar_number_engraver" } }
global = { \key e \minor \time 4/4 \numericTimeSignature \partial 4. \autoBeamOff }
sopranoVoice = \relative c' { \global
  b8 e g | b2 g4. fis8 | fis-. e4. r8
  e8 g b | e2 c4. b8 | b-. a4. r8
  a8 b c | b4. (fis8) b4. a8 | a-. g4. r8
  g8 fis e | b'4-. b-. b-. b-. | b8. a16 g8 fis e \bar "|."
}
verse = \lyricmode {
  \repeat unfold 3 { He -- ve -- nu scha -- lom al -- ei -- chem. }
  He -- ve -- nu scha -- lom, scha -- lom, scha -- lom al -- ei -- chem.
}
\score {
  \new Staff \with { midiInstrument = "clarinet" } { \sopranoVoice }
  \addlyrics { \verse }
  \layout { }
  \midi { \tempo 4=132 }
}

After signing the Camp David Accords in 1978,
Prime Minister Menachem Begin
ended a speech with a desire to sing the peace song
"Hevenu shalom aleichem"
with the people of Israel.
watch

2 November 2023

19 July 2024

[edit]
see 19 July 2023: Martin Janus

When Ruth Hesse
appeared at the Royal Opera House
as the Nurse in Die Frau ohne Schatten,
a critic described her performance as
"tirelessly ingenious and vocally in splendid command".

19 July 2024

20 July 2024

[edit]
see 20 July 2023: Heide Simonis

Thomas Hoepker,
a photojournalist for Stern and Geo
and president of Magnum Photos,
with a desire to photograph human conditions
on assignments around the globe,
took
View from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on Manhattan, 9/11.

As it was

20 July 2024

21 July 2024

[edit]
see 21 July 2023: Casals Forum

In 1524,
Justus Jonas wrote the hymn text
Wo Gott der Herr nicht bei uns hält
(If God the Lord does not remain on our side),
paraphrasing Psalm 124,
and in 1724,
Bach composed the chorale cantata
Wo Gott der Herr nicht bei uns hält, BWV 178,
for the eighth Sunday after Trinity,
with five different chorale settings
for six of its stanzas.
watch
31 July 2012

22 July 2024

[edit]
see 22 July 2023: Empress Elisabeth Bridge

Sarah Gibson,
who formed the piano duo
HOCKET with Thomas Kotcheff,
composed warp & weft for large orchestra,
inspired by the art of Miriam Schapiro
and scheduled for the BBC Proms.

watch duo in 2014

22 July 2024

23 July 2024

[edit]
see 23 July 2023: Valentin Gheorghiu

Gerhard Klingenberg,
who had a successful early career in Austria
as an actor at the Burgtheater in Vienna at age 18
and as stage director at the Stadttheater Klagenfurt
but followed an invitation by Bertold Brecht
to his Berliner Ensemble in East Germany,
was Intendant of the Burgtheater from 1971 to 1976,
bringing in avant-garde European directors
and staging innovative plays
by Thomas Bernhard, Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard.
tribute
23 July 2024

24 July 2024

[edit]
see 24 July 2023: Christian Gerhaher

April Cantelo
created soprano roles such as
Helena in Benjamin Britten's
A Midsummer Night's Dream
and Miss Beswick in Malcolm Williamson's
English Eccentrics.

listen

24 July 2024

25 July 2024

[edit]
see 25 July 2023: Tenebrae (choir)

Max Reger
based four tone poems,
Vier Tondichtungen nach A. Böcklin,
on four paintings by Arnold Böcklin,
including Isle of the Dead.

listen

25 July 2016

26 July 2024

[edit]
see 26 July 2023: Cornel Țăranu

Elena Mauti Nunziata,
who gained international recognition
as Verdi's La traviata
at the Teatro Real in Madrid in 1977,
portrayed Puccini's Mimi
at the Metropolitan Opera
and Madama Butterfly
at the Opéra de Paris.

watch as La Traviate

26 July 2024

27 July 2024

[edit]
see 27 July 2023: Luten Petrowsky

Lothar Zenetti's poem
"Segne dieses Kind"
became a song
of blessing for a child,
often sung
at baptism.

listen

27 July 2016

28 July 2024

[edit]
see 28 July 2023: Silvana Lattmann

In 1724,
Johann Sebastian Bach had
an excellent flauto traverso player
at hand for
Was frag ich nach der Welt, BWV 94
(What should I ask of the world),
the chorale cantata
for the ninth Sunday after Trinity.
listen

1 August 2010

29 July 2024

[edit]
see 29 July 2023: Rhythm Is It!

The
Rheingauer Kantorei
performed Mendelssohn's oratorio
Elias
in the Rheingauer Dom
and in the Marktkirche Wiesbaden.

listen to Handel's Halleluja

29 July 2014

30 July 2024

[edit]
see 30 July 2023: Nun danket all und bringet Ehr

Eugene Sârbu,
who won the 1978 Paganini Competition
and made an international career,
premiered the Violin Concerto
that Einojuhani Rautavaara dedicated to him.

watch Vivaldi

Wo Gott der Herr nicht bei uns hält, BWV 178

30 July 2024

31 July 2024

[edit]
see 31 July 2023: Jahrhundertring

Wolfgang Rihm
composed Dionysos,
an "opera fantasia"
with text only by Nietzsche,
which was voted premiere of the year
after its first performance
at the Salzburg Festival in 2010.

trailer - with Rihm explaining

3 October 2017 and today

August

[edit]

1 August 2024

[edit]
see 1 August 2023: Martin Walser

The opera
Die Hamletmaschine
by Wolfgang Rihm
has been described as
"a total theatre of sound
and nonnarrative, ritualistic drama".

trailer

29 July 2013 and today

2 August 2024

[edit]
see 2 August 2023: Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie

The first stanza of the hymn
"Nun bitten wir den Heiligen Geist",
asking the Holy Spirit
for the right faith most of all,
is documented in German
in the 13th century,
and the later three stanzas
by Martin Luther
relate to faith, love and hope.

listen

13 November 2011

3 August 2024

[edit]
see 3 August 2023: Kurhaus, Wiesbaden

Johann Münzberg
(3 August 1799 – 1 September 1878)
ran leading textile factories in Bohemia
and promoted the building
of the Empress Elisabeth Bridge
over the Elbe in Tetschen.

3 August 2019

4 August 2024

[edit]
see 4 August 2023: Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlen

The central movement
of Bach's cantata
Nimm von uns, Herr, du treuer Gott, BWV 101,
a "furious ritornello" of three oboes,
is followed unexpectedly
by a line of the chorale,
with the melody of
"Vater unser im Himmelreich".

watch

29 August 2011

5 August 2024

[edit]
see 5 August 2023: Nancy Van de Vate

Verses 2 to 6 of
Psalm 97,
"The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice",
in Czech were set to music
by Antonín Dvořák
in his Biblical Songs.
listen

5 August 2019

6 August 2024

[edit]
see 6 August 2023: Olga Bezsmertna

In celebration of the tercentenary of the birth
of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, tenor
Markus Schäfer
performed in his oratorio
Die Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu
at the Rheingau Musik Festival.

listen to Schubert

6 August 2014

7 August 2024

[edit]
see 7 August 2023: Yekaterina Stravinsky, The Firebird

Jürgen Ahrend
restored the Gothic Rysum organ
and the Arp Schnitger organs
in Groningen's Martinikerk
and Hamburg's St. Jacobi.

listen to him and music

7 August 2024

8 August 2024

[edit]
see 8 August 2023: Mariana Sîrbu

Sarah Gibson,
who formed the piano duo
Hocket with Thomas Kotcheff,
composed warp & weft for large orchestra,
inspired by the art of Miriam Schapiro
and scheduled for the BBC Proms.

watch 2022 interview and performance

22 July + 8 August 2024

9 August 2024

[edit]
see 9 August 2023: Leningrad premiere of Shostakovich's Symphony No. 7

10 August 2024

[edit]
see 10 August 2023: Klesie Kelly

The opera
Behold the Sun
by Alexander Goehr
(born 10 August 1932),
about the Anabaptists in Münster,
was premiered at Theater Münster
in an abridged version in German,
but the BBC aired it in full in English.
listen
26 August 2019

11 August 2024

[edit]
see 11 August 2023: Heidi Grant Murphy

12 August 2024

[edit]
see 12 August 2023: Überwasserkirche

Miguel Ángel Gómez Martínez,
chief conductor of the
RTVE Symphony Orchestra,
Nationaltheater Mannheim
and the Orquesta de Valencia,
conducted a recording of
his Sinfonía del descubrimiento.
watch Mahler
12 August 2024

13 August 2024

[edit]
see 13 August 2023: Michael McCown

14 August 2024

[edit]

Countertenor
David Erler
was one of five singers invited by amarcord
for the performance of Monteverdi's Vespers
as the annual Marienvesper
of the Rheingau Musik Festival in Eberbach Abbey.

watch Bach

14 August 2014

15 August 2024

[edit]

After an absence of four years,
the Inkpot Madonna,
holding a naked Baby Jesus
with quill in hand,
returned to the Hildesheim Cathedral
on 15 August 2014.

15 August 2014

Vespro della Beata Vergine

watch

16 August 2024

[edit]
see 16 August 2023: Hans-Jochen Jaschke

The 80th birthday of
Walter Fink
was celebrated at the Rheingau Musik Festival
with compositions of
Kirchner, Lachenmann, Rihm, Widmann and Hosokawa
on 16 August 2010.

16 August 2010

listen

17 August 2024

[edit]
see 17 August 2023: Marie Lehmann (soprano)

Celestina Casapietra,
the glamourous Italian soprano
at the Berlin State Opera
in East Berlin from the 1960s,
was the partner of Franco Corelli
in a DVD of Giordano's Andrea Chénier.

watch

17 August 2024

18 August 2024

[edit]
see 18 August 2023: Rosa Lamoreaux

After Kasper König
curated exhibitions of works
by Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol
in his 20s, he initiated the
Skulptur Projekte Münster
for large sculptures in public space.

interview

18 August 2024

19 August 2024

[edit]
see 19 August 2023: Vilde Frang

Librettist Gerhard Müller
and composer Georg Katzer wrote
Antigone oder die Stadt
in East Germany,
but it premiered at the Komische Oper Berlin
only after reunification.
watch
19 August 2019

20 August 2024

[edit]
see 20 August 2023: Renata Scotto

Christof Nel
directed plays invited to the Berliner Theatertreffen,
like the world premiere of Thomas Brasch's Rotter in 1978,
and operas such as Wagner's Tristan und Isolde in 2003
and the first production in German of Aulis Sallinen's Kullervo in 2011.
watch Aida

20 August 2024

21 August 2024

[edit]
see 21 August 2023: Hans Stadlmair, Wilhelm Killmayer

Hans-Georg Münzberg
(21 August 1916 – 7 November 2000)
continued to work on the development
of the Snecma Atar engine in France
despite being a professor at the Technical University of Berlin.

26 August 2019

22 August 2024

[edit]
see 22 August 2023: Cello Sonata (Debussy)

23 August 2024

[edit]
see 23 August 2023: Vera Nemirova

Zofia Posmysz
(23 August 1923 – 8 August 2022),
Auschwitz inmate No. 7566,
wrote an audio play on her memories,
which became the basis for
her 1962 novel Passenger,
a 1963 film,
and a 1968 opera.

watch

16 March 2018

24 August 2024

[edit]

Conductor Roland Bader
(born 24 August 1938)
recorded late choral works by Max Reger,
including his Hebbel Requiem,
and the First Symphony by Richard Wetz.

listen

23 February 2013

25 August 2024

[edit]
see 25 August 2023: Thomas Gabriel (composer)

Bach composed his chorale cantata
Allein zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 33,
for the 13th Sunday after Trinity
on a hymn by Konrad Hubert
and first performed it
on 3 September 1724.

watch

3 September 2012

26 August 2024

[edit]
see 26 August 2023: Gwendolyn Killebrew

Wolfgang Rihm
said of the music of his 1987 opera
Oedipus:
"Sound is a weapon here – or a scalpel?".

watch trailer

26 August 2024

27 August 2024

[edit]
see 27 August 2023: Gloria Coates

Maryvonne Le Dizès
was violinist of the ensemble intercontemporain,
working with composers
such as Pierre Boulez and György Ligeti,
and commissioning new chamber music works like
a trio for saxophone, trombone, and violin by Gilbert Amy.

listen

27 August 2024

28 August 2024

[edit]
see 28 August 2023: Symphony No. 8 (Dvořák)

Jerzy Artysz,
a baritone who performed title roles
from Orfeo to King Roger
at the Grand Theatre in Warsaw,
created the role of Josep Soler's Oedipus
at the Liceu in Barcelona in 1986.

watch in recital

28 August 2024

29 August 2024

[edit]
see 29 August 2023: Berit Lindholm

MDR Rundfunkchor,
the radio choir of the MDR in Leipzig,
performed Dvořák's Stabat Mater
in the opening concert of the
2019 Rheingau Musik Festival
at Eberbach Abbey.
watch

29 August 2019

30 August 2024

[edit]
see 29 August 2023: Cello Sonata No. 3 (Beethoven)

Siegfried Lorenz
(30 August 1945 – 24 August 2024),
the first lyrical baritone of the Berlin State Opera,
recorded 151 songs by Schubert
and sang, according to Alan Blyth,
"with an enviable control of line and dynamics".
listen

12 February 2018

31 August 2024

[edit]

Of thrice-married composer
Alma Mahler
(31 August 1879 – 11 December 1964)
Tom Lehrer crooned,
"Alma, tell us!
All modern women are jealous
Which of your magical wands
got you Gustav and Walter and Franz".

10 July 2018

September

[edit]

1 September 2024

[edit]
see 1 September 2023: Le Vin herbé, Vespro della Beata Vergine

Jesu, der du meine Seele, BWV 78,
Bach's chorale cantata
for the 14th Sunday after Trinity,
uses the same bass line
in a passacaglia as in
Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12.

watch

2 September 2024

[edit]
see 2 September 2023: Rheingau Musik Festival

Alexander Goehr,
who introduced compositions
of the European avant-garde to England
as.a central figure of the Manchester School,
composed the opera Arianna in 1995,
setting the libretto of Monteverdi's lost opera.
listen

2 September 2024

3 September 2024

[edit]
see 3 September 2023: Inno delle nazioni

Anja Kaesmacher
(born 3 September 1974)
and clarinetist Sabine Meyer were the soloists in
Manfred Trojahn's Ariosi
for soprano, basset horn and orchestra,
conducted by the composer.
listen to Mozart

4 September 2024

[edit]
see 4 September 2023: This too shall pass

Maxim Berezovsky
is thought to have been the first
Russian or Ukrainian
to write an opera and a violin sonata.
watch symphony

4 September 2024

In the motet
Locus iste,
composed for the dedication
of the votive chapel of Linz Cathedral,
Anton Bruckner
(4 September 1824 – 11 October 1896)
requests a pause
"by carefully measuring out five beats".

5 September 2023

[edit]

When Robert Hale
appeared as Wagner's Wotan at the Kennedy Center in 1989,
a reviewer noted that he captured "the spirit,
from tragic grandeur to ironic detachment,
from flooding tenderness to grim rage".

5 September 2023

6 September 2024

[edit]
see 6 September 2023: Nerotalanlagen, Ich steh vor dir mit leeren Händen, Herr

A 2009 recording of Louis Vierne's
Messe solennelle
for choir and two organs at Saint-Sulpice,
where it was first performed in 1901,
was called "musical and spiritual time-travel".

listen in Notre-Dame

3 April 2015

7 September 2024

[edit]
see 7 September 2023: Milka Stojanović

The melody of the Christian hymn
"Ik sta voor U in leegte en gemis"
(I stand before You in emptiness and loss)
is written without bar lines,
reflecting the singer's insecurity and questions.

listen

7 September 2019

8 September 2024

[edit]
see 8 September 2023: Spannungen

Schloss Weilburg,
a Baroque garden palace,
contains a Renaissance palace.

16 October 2018

Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan
watch

9 September 2024

[edit]
see 9 September 2023: Ute Vinzing

International mezzo-soprano
Soňa Červená
(9 September 1925 – 7 May 2023)
won the Alfréd Radok Award for Best Actress
when she was 83 years old.

29 June 2023

Das Lied von der Erde
listen

10 September 2024

[edit]
see 10 September 2023: Ursula Schröder-Feinen

On 10 September 1724
Johann Sebastian Bach
led the first performance of
Jesu, der du meine Seele, BWV 78,
a chorale cantata based on
a passion hymn by Johann Rist.

watch

10 September 2024

11 September 2024

[edit]
see 11 September 2023: Walter Arlen

12 September 2024

[edit]
see 12 September 2023: Anatol Ugorski

Eric Sams remarked
"what bride ever had a finer wedding gift?"
of the song collection
Myrthen
which Robert Schumann dedicated
to Clara.

listen to Widmung

7 November 2023

13 September 2024

[edit]
see 13 September 2023: Clara Schumann

Günter Reich
recorded the role of Moses in
Schoenberg's opera Moses und Aron
with both Michael Gielen and Pierre Boulez.
listen
27 August 2010

Alban Berg dedicated his
Three Pieces for Orchestra
"with immeasurable gratitude and love"
to his teacher,
Arnold Schönberg,
for his fortieth birthday
on 13 September 1914.

13 September 2014

14 September 2024

[edit]
see 14 September 2023: Margherita Rinaldi

Tilman Michael,
who is set to be
the Metropolitan Opera's chorus master
from the 2024/25 season,
helped the Oper Frankfurt win multiple
awards for operatic choir of the year.

listen to him and his work

14 September 2024

Haydn: Stabat Mater

15 September 2024

[edit]
see 15 September 2023: Jessye Norman

The theologian
Friedrich Schorlemmer
was a speaker at the
1989 Alexanderplatz demonstration
in East Berlin,
as a prominent member
of the Peaceful Revolution.

watch

15 September 2024

Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben, BWV 8

16 September 2024

[edit]
see 16 September 2023: Wolfgang J. Fuchs

Lieder singer and voice teacher
Franziska Martienssen-Lohmann's
textbook for singers
Der wissende Sänger
was recommended for general readers
interested in "the human instrument".
watch

16 September 2019

17 September 2024

[edit]
see 17 September 2023: Graham Clark (tenor)

Hans Otto Jung
was a jazz musician during World War II,
ran a winery from the Boosenburg,
and was co-founder
of the Rheingau Musik Festival.

watch

29 December 2017

18 September 2024

[edit]
see 18 September 2023: Grischa Huber

Caterina Valente,
who performed 1,500 songs in 13 languages
as one of few world stars
from a German-speaking country,
knew that she wanted to become a singer
when she heard jazz singer Billie Holiday
at age five.
watch with Count Basie

18 September 2024

19 September 2024

[edit]

Raymond Arritt
(September 19, 1957 – November 14, 2018),
contributing author of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
encouraged a fellow editor:
"go on with life, have a laugh, don't get too upset".

12 January 2019

20 September 2024

[edit]

Georg Christoph Biller (r.)
(20 September 1955 – 27 January 2022)
was the Thomaskantor,
the conductor of the Thomanerchor in Leipzig,
the 16th successor of Johann Sebastian Bach
in this position.

watch

18 April 2010

21 September 2024

[edit]
see 21 September 2023: Freuet euch der schönen Erde

22 September 2024

[edit]
see 22 September 2023: Elisabeth Rethberg

Bach based his chorale cantata
Ach, lieben Christen, seid getrost, BWV 114,
on the hymn by Johannes Gigas
and first performed it on 1 October 1724,
two days after his
previous chorale cantata.
watch

1 October 2012

23 September 2024

[edit]
see 23 September 2023: Werl pilgrimage

Beppe Menegatti
directed first Italian performances
of plays by Beckett and Babel
and productions with his wife,
ballerina Carla Fracci.

watch interview

23 September 2024

24 September 2023

[edit]

For the morning song
"Die güldne Sonne
voll Freud und Wonne
",
the poet found a new metre,
and the composer a new melody,
to reflect the many meanings
of "rising".

listen

16 July 2021

25 September 2024

[edit]
see 25 September 2023: Stephen Gould (tenor)

The Baroque orchestra
L'arpa festante
produced the first recording
of a Passion by Telemann
and played Bach's Mass in B minor
in the Cathedral of Trier.

listen

25 September 2013

26 September 2024

[edit]

A loop from the anthem
O clap your hands,
a setting of verses from Psalm 47
by Ralph Vaughan Williams
for choir, brass, organ and percussion,
was used by the Beatles for "Revolution 9".

listen

26 September 2018

27 September 2024

[edit]
see 27 September 2023: Kloster Gnadenthal, Hesse

Baritone
Franz Grundheber
(born 27 September 1937)
performed the title role
in Alban Berg's Wozzeck in Paris and Berlin,
staged by Patrice Chéreau
and filmed in 1994.

watch (from Vienna)

21 February 2014

28 September 2024

[edit]
see 28 September 2023: François Glorieux

Benny Golson,
a jazz tenor saxophonist
who had played
with John Coltrane in high school,
composed I Remember Clifford
in memory of trumpeter Clifford Brown.
watch

28 September 2024

Le Sacre du printemps

29 September 2024

[edit]
see 29 September 2023: The Company of Heaven

J. S. Bach
led the first performance of
Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir, BWV 130,
based on Paul Eber's hymn
in twelve stanzas about the angels,
for the feast of archangel Michael.

watch

29 September 2024

Bach: Mass in B minor

30 September 2024

[edit]
see 30 September 2023: Kreuzkapelle, Bad Camberg

Mozart conducted
the premiere of his last opera,
Die Zauberflöte
at the Theater auf der Wieden
in a suburb of Vienna
on 30 September 1791.

watch

30 September 2024

October

[edit]

1 October 2024

[edit]
see 1 October 2023: Wir pflügen und wir streuen

"Sozusagen grundlos vergnügt"
("Call it causelessly merry")
was one of about 40 poems
by Mascha Kaléko
set to music on a 2011 album.

listen tp poem

26 December 2018

2 October 2024

[edit]
see 2 October 2023: Dona nobis pacem (Vaughan Williams)

After the Chernobyl disaster
Michael Sladek
and his wife Ursula
initiated a movement to become
independent of nuclear energy
and achieved green power for Schönau.

watch them

2 October 2024

3 October 2024

[edit]
see 3 October 2023: The Creation (Haydn)

Maryvonne Le Dizès,
the first woman to win
the Paganini Competition,
became violinist of the ensemble intercontemporain,
playing the solo
in Ligeti's Violin Concerto.

listen to Bartók

3 October 2024

4 October 2024

[edit]
see 4 October 2023: Le Laudi

In 2016 Peter Reulein
conducted the premiere of his oratorio
Laudato si',
described as a Franciscan Magnificat,
with more than 250 performers
at the Limburg Cathedral.

watch

27 January 2017

5 October 2024

[edit]
see 4 October 2023: Daniel Behle

Stoika Milanova,
who made an international career
after winning the 1970 Carl Flesch Competition,
passed her father's violin teaching method
to students in Venezuela and Bulgaria.

listen to her and Radu Lupu

5 October 2024

6 October 2024

[edit]
see 6 October 2023: Claus Wisser

A solo viola part
in Bach's chorale cantata
Wo soll ich fliehen hin, BWV 5,
has been described as
"the cleansing motions of
some baroque washing machine".
watch
4 November 2011

Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir, BWV 29

7 October 2024

[edit]
see 7 October 2023: Russell Sherman

Rohan de Saram,
the cellist of the Arditti Quartet
trained by Pablo Casals
played Sequenza XIV that Luciano Berio wrote for him,
inspired by his Kandyan drumming.

listen with score

7 October 2024

8 October 2024

[edit]

Tabea Zimmermann
(born 8 October 1966)
prepared her own version of Bartók's Viola Concerto
from the composer's sketches,
and played it at the Casals Forum,
with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony
conducted by Christoph Eschenbach.

watch

9 October 2023

[edit]

Alain Altinoglu
(born 9 October 1975)
conducted the opening concert of the
2023 Rheingau Musik Festival
at Eberbach Abbey,
featuring Poulenc's Stabat Mater
with the MDR Rundfunkchor
and the Frankfurt Radio Symphony.

watch

10 October 2024

[edit]

The baritone Björn Bürger
(born 10 October 1985),
who won the
Bundeswettbewerb Gesang Berlin in 2012,
performed the title role
in Arnulf Herrmann's Der Mieter
in its 2017 world premiere
at the Oper Frankfurt.

watch talk about Gaveston

11 October 2024

[edit]
see 11 October 2023: Jacqueline Dark

Martin Lücker
(born 11 October 1953)
played 3,000 free organ concerts
at the Katharinenkirche in Frankfurt.

watch portrait

11 October 2014

12 October 2023

[edit]
see 12 October 2023: Reiner Goldberg

Helmut Bauer,
emerited auxialiary bishop in Würzburg,
was responsible for church music in the diocese
and presided the commission
for the common Gotteslob hymnal.

watch conclusion of cathedral service
boys' choir
Requiem

12 October 2024

If ye love me

13 October 2023

[edit]
see 13 October 2023: Maurice Bourgue. Kommt ein Vogel geflogen

The opening chorus
of Bach's chorale cantata
Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele, BWV 180,
has been regarded as
"perfectly tailored to the idea of the soul
dressing itself up in all its wedding finery".

listen

10 November 2011

14 October 2024

[edit]
see 14 October 2023: Robert Hale (bass-baritone)

Amaury du Closel,
a French conductor and composer,
founded the Forum Voix Etouffées
to raise attention to
the music of composers persecuted or exiled
by totalitarian regimes of the 20th century.

listen

14 October 2024

Suscepit Israel

15 October 2023

[edit]
see 15 October 2023: Jorge Lavelli

Violinist
Mela Tenenbaum
recorded in the United States works
that Dmitri Klebanov had composed for her in Ukraine,
including Japanese Silhouettes
for soprano, viola d'amore and ensemble.
listen

30 September 2014

Ubi caritas et amor

16 October 2024

[edit]
see 16 October 2023: Glauben können wie du

Beginning in 2016
Leif Segerstam
conducted recordings of
the four Symphonies by Johannes Brahms,
each paired with one of his own,
Nos. 288, 289, 294 and 295.

watch excerpt and him,
listen to 295

16 October 2024 ?

17 October 2023

[edit]

The tenor
Thomas Mohr,
who sang the roles
of Loge, Siegmund, and Siegfried
in Der Ring in Minden,
and Florestan in Fidelio in Hamm,
hosts concerts in his cowshed.

17 October 2019

18 October 2024

[edit]
see 18 October 2023: Unionskirche

When pianist
Clara Wieck
composed her
Piano Concerto in A minor
as a teenager,
her future husband
Robert Schumann
helped with the orchestration.

watch

18 October 2019

19 October 2023

[edit]
see 19 October 2023: Maria, dich lieben ist allzeit mein Sinn

20 October 2023

[edit]
see 20 October 2023: Hans Steinbrenner (sculptor)

When Bach composed
the chorale cantata
Aus tiefer Not schrei ich zu dir, BWV 38,
on Luther's 200-year old hymn
based on Psalm 130,
he let four trombones, two oboes and strings
all play with the voices.

watch

25 October 2015

21 October 2024

[edit]
see 21 October 2023: Sozusagen grundlos vergnügt

Barbara Owen
worked as organist in Newburyport for 40 years,
as pipe voicer,
librarian of the Organ Library
of the American Guild of Organists
at Boston University,
and wrote books such as
The Organ Music of Johannes Brahms.

watch 90th birthday

21 October 2024

22 October 2024

[edit]
see 22 October 2023: Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele, BWV 180

Garbis Aprikian,
who was born in Egypt,
grew up in the Armenian Diaspora
and studied at the Conservatoire de Paris,
conducted the Armenian mixed chorus Sipan-Komitas for around 50 years,
composing music fusing Armenian melodies
with Western harmonies and counterpoint.

listen to Namor

22 October 2024

23 October 2024

[edit]
see 23 October 2023: Hatto Beyerle

Toshio Hosokawa
(born 23 October 1955)
composed several operas
based on Japanese Noh theatre, including
Vision of Lear after Shakespeare,
and the oratorio
Voiceless Voice in Hiroshima.

watch Voiceless Voice

7 December 2018

24 October 2024

[edit]
see 24 October 2023: Carmen Petra Basacopol

Swiss composer Hermann Suter's
symphonic oratorio
Le Laudi
(The Praises)
is a setting of St. Francis of Assisi's
Canticle of the Sun
in Italian
for choir, soloists, voci di ragazzi,
organ and orchestra.

watch

24 October 2012

25 October 2024

[edit]
see 25 October 2023: Elsa Reger

Peruvian theologian
Gustavo Gutiérrez,
a founder of
Latin American liberation theology,
focused on connecting salvation and liberation
through the option for the poor.

watch him

25 October 2024

26 October 2043

[edit]
see 26 October 2023: Miku Nishimoto-Neubert

Janusz Olejniczak,
at age 18 placed at the Chopin Competition,
played Chopin's works on modern and period instruments,
portrayed the composer in Andrzej Żuławski's 1991 film Blue Note,
and played piano music in Polanski's 2002 film The Pianist,
some as the hand double.

watch him talk · and play

26 October 2024

27 October 2024

[edit]
see 27 October 2023: Michael Schneider (conductor)

Bach created
a "musical sleep scene ...
that could have graced any opera of the time"
in his chorale cantata
Mache dich, mein Geist, bereit, BWV 115.

watch

4 November 2012

28 October 2024

[edit]
see 28 October 2023: Isabelle Cals

Barbara Kolb,
the first women to win the Rome Prize,
composed Millefoglie for chamber orchestra and tape
while in residence at IRCAM,
premiered at the Centre Pompidou in 1985
by the Ensemble intercontemporain
conducted by Peter Eötvös.
listen to album Millefoglie
28 October 2024

29 October 2024

[edit]
see 29 October 2023: Percy Grainger (29 October 2013)

Walter Jacob
a Reform rabbi
at the Rodef Shalom Congregation in Pittsburgh
from 1955 to 1997,
co-founded and presided
the Abraham Geiger College,
the first rabbinic seminary in Central Europe
since the Holocaust, in 1999.

watch homage

29 October 2024

30 October 2024

[edit]
see 30 October 2023: István Láng

Rodolfo Halffter
(30 October 1900 – 14 October 1987),
who left for Mexico
after the Spanish Civil War,
was the first composer there
to use Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique,
in Tres hojas de album.

listen

31 October 2024

[edit]
see 31 October 2023: Gott der Herr ist Sonn und Schild, BWV 79

Cucurbita
is a genus of herbaceous fruits
in the gourd family
native to the Andes and Mesoamerica,
with edible species grown
known as squash, gourd or pumpkin.

31 October 2024

Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott, BWV 80

watch

November

[edit]

1 November 2024

[edit]
1 November 2023: Herr, unser Herr, wie bist du zugegen

The Ukrainian mixed chamber choir
OREYA
won a special prize
for the best interpretation
of a religious choral work at the 14th
International Chamber Choir Competition Marktoberdorf.

listen to Prayer for Ukraine (2000 CD)

1 November 2016

2 November 2024

[edit]
2 November 2023: Hevenu shalom aleichem

Bishop
Franz Kamphaus
opposed Pope John Paul II,
"convinced that
our way of counselling women
would save the lives
of many more children".

photos

2 February 2014

Epitaphium

3 November 2024

[edit]
3 November 2023: Zdeněk Mácal

Salve Regina,
composed by Arvo Pärt
to venerate the Golden Madonna
of the Essen Cathedral,
"builds very gradually
to a late, majestic climax".

listen

23 May 2015

Four Epigraphs after Escher

4 November 2024

[edit]
4 November 2023: Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227, Jesu, meine Freude

"Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud",
written by Paul Gerhardt
after the Thirty Years War,
was translated as
"Go Forth, My Heart, and Seek Delight".

watch 12 singers

19 February 2015

5 November 2024

[edit]
5 November 2023: Biserka Cvejić

Monika Buczkowska,
who made her stage debut as a student in Poznań
as Mozart's Susanna,
was a soloist in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
at a charity concert for Ukraine
at the Alte Oper Frankfurt in April 2022.

watch

20 April 2022

6 November 2024

[edit]

On 6 November 2016
Peter Reulein
conducted the premiere
of his oratorio
Laudato si',
subtitled
A Franciscan Magnificat,
with more than 250 performers
at the Limburg Cathedral.

see us and listen

29 January 2017

7 November 2024

[edit]
7 November 2023: also Myrthen

Bach composed four dialogues for his cantata
O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60,
first performed 7 November 1723,
three between Fear and Hope,
and one between Fear and the Voice of Christ.

watch chorale

14 November 2010 · 7 November 2024

8 November 2024

[edit]
8 November 2023: Astrid Schirmer

Silvana Lattmann,
biologist, poet and author,
published the memoir
Nata il 1918
in 2019.

28 July 2023

9 November 2024

[edit]
9 November 2023: Der Schuhu und die fliegende Prinzessin

Russian Jewish painter
Marc Chagall
created the stained-glass windows
of the church of St. Stephan in Mainz
as a sign of Jewish-German reconciliation.

look and listen

5 December 2006

Vertraut den neuen Wegen

10 November 2024

[edit]
10 November 2023: Nun bitten wir den Heiligen Geist

Paul Gerhardt's
song of thanks and praise
"Nun danket all und bringet Ehr"
was first published
along with 17 of his other hymns
in 1647, during the Thirty Years' War.

watch

4 June 2018

Ach wie flüchtig, ach wie nichtig, BWV 26

11 November 2024

[edit]
11 November 2023: St. Martin, Idstein

Madeleine Riffaud
wrote poems,
fought in the French Resistance,
reported on the Algerian War
for the Communist L'Humanité,
worked in Vietnam for the Viet Cong resistance,
wrote poems.
watch
10 November 2024

Reger: Seele, vergiß sie nicht

12 November 2024

[edit]
12 November 2023: Harald Heckmann

The dissertation of
Barbara Stühlmeyer
(born 12 November 1964)
about the chants
by Hildegard of Bingen
became a standard work.

listen

13 November 2024

[edit]
13 November 2023: Mir nach, spricht Christus, unser Held

Johannes Beutler SJ,
who taught theology at the
Sankt Georgen Graduate School of Philosophy and Theology
and the Pontifical Gregorian University,
is known for his 2013
A Commentary on the Gospel of John.

13 November 2024

14 November 2024

[edit]

In 2016,
Edition Güntersberg
published
Twelve Fantasias for Viola da Gamba solo
by Georg Philipp Telemann
that had been lost.

22 July 2017

Leonore von Zadow-Reichling and Günter von Zadow (r.)
received the first biennial Abel Prize of Köthen
for their efforts to retrieve and publish
compositions by Carl Friedrich Abel.

15 November 2024

[edit]
15 November 2023: Hevrin Khalaf

Barbara Aland
was internationally recognized
for her work on the
Novum Testamentum Graece
and the Greek New Testament,
which she undertook with
her husband, Kurt Aland.

15 November 2024

16 November 2024

[edit]

The 1964 church
for the new parish
Zu den heiligen Engeln
(To the Holy Angels)
in Hannover
was designed by Josef Bieling
to symbolize the tent of God among men.

18 December 2018

Nun bitten wir den Heiligen Geist
Nun danket all und bringet Ehr

17 November 2024

[edit]
see 17 November 2023: Rachel Yakar

Marina Kondratyeva,
a leading ballerina
at the Bolshoi Ballet from 1952
described as
"weightless, airy, poetic and spiritual",
was admired as Giselle
also in New York and London
and became a master tutor at the Bolshoi,
passing its tradition for decades.
watch

17 July 2024

18 November 2024

[edit]

Andris Nelsons
(born 18 November 1978)
conducted
Bartok's Viola Concerto
and Mahler's Fifth Symphony
in the final concert with his
Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie.

2 August 2010

19 November 2024

[edit]
Young-Chang Cho
was still in his twenties
when appointed professor for cello
at the Folkwang Hochschule.

19 November 2009

20 November 2024

[edit]
Helmut Bauer,
responsible for church music
in Würzburg
and president of the commission
for the Gotteslob hymnal,
confirmed around
150,000 young people,
including 500 in Tanzania.

Requiem

20 November 2024

21 November 2024

[edit]

22 November 2024

[edit]

Benjamin Britten
(22 November 1913
– 4 December 1976)
was said to have composed his
Canticle V:
The Death of Saint Narcissus

"in the face of death".

Pablo Barragán
was the clarinet soloist
for an arrangement of
Bartók's Romanian Folk Dances
for clarinet, cimbalom and strings.

22 November 2024

23 November 2024

[edit]

In 2005, composer
Krzysztof Penderecki
added a Ciaccona for strings
to his Polish Requiem,
begun in 1980.

1 March 2010

24 November 2024

[edit]

Bach used
a trio of oboes for a Totentanz
in his chorale cantata
Ach wie flüchtig, ach wie nichtig, BWV 26
(Ah how fleeting, ah how futile).

18 November 2018

25 November 2024

[edit]

Amaury du Closel
founded the Forum Voix Etouffées
to revive music
that was suppressed
by 20th-century totalitarian regimes.

25 November 2024

26 November 2024

[edit]

Director Frank Stähle revived
the choir and orchestra
of Dr. Hoch's Konservatorium
and conducted them in
Mozart's Requiem
for the centenary of
the Lutherkirche in Wiesbaden.

15 January 2016

27 November 2023

[edit]

Jerome Kohl
(November 27, 1946 – August 4, 2020),
a music theorist of the University of Washington,
was recognized internationally
as an authority on the composer
Karlheinz Stockhausen,
publishing a book on his Zeitmaße in 2017.

28 January 2021

In Freundschaft

28 November 2023

[edit]
see 28 November 2023: Luca Salsi

Paul Gerhardt's song
of thanks and praise
"Nun danket all und bringet Ehr"
was first published
along with 17 of his other hymns in 1647,
during the Thirty Years' War.
watch

4 June 2018

In Freundschaft

29 November 2024

[edit]
see 29 November 2023: François Glorieux

Odile Bailleux,
long-time organist of both
Abbaye de Saint-Germain-des-Prés
and Notre-Dame-des-Blancs-Manteaux,
cofounded the first French
Baroque ensemble with early instruments.

listen

29 November 2024

Hevenu shalom aleichem

30 November 2024

[edit]

Contralto
Sonia Prina
(born 30 November 1975)
performed the title role
of Antonio Vivaldi's 1727 opera
Orlando furioso
at the Oper Frankfurt,
staged as a rocker.

13 September 2010

December

[edit]

1 December 2024

[edit]
1 December 2023: Douglas Ahlstedt

The scoring in Bach's cantata
Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland, BWV 62,
based on Luther's chorale for Advent,
is said to be simple
because Advent was a "season of abstinence".

watch

30 November 2011

Macht hoch die Tür

2 December 2024

[edit]
2 December 2023: Maria Callas

Siegfried Thiele,
who taught at the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig
from 1962, serving as rector from 1990,
composed an extended work for soloists, choir and orchestra
for the opening of the new Leipzig Gewandhaus.

listen to Kafka-Gesänge

2 December 2024

3 December 2024

[edit]
3 December 2023: Macht hoch die Tür

Anton Webern's Symphony,
a miniature symphony,
is his first twelve-tone orchestral work,
known for Alpine topics, abstraction,
and intricate musical form.

listen with score

4 December 2024

[edit]

Gabriel Dessauer
(born 4 December 1955)
conducted
Ein deutsches Requiem
by Johannes Brahms
in his last concert with the
Chor von St. Bonifatius
on 3 October 2018.

watch

5 December 2024

[edit]
5 December 2023: Christof Loy

Alois Ickstadt
founded a children's choir and an adult choir
for the public broadcaster
Hessischer Rundfunk,
conducting the latter for 45 years.

listen to BWV 62

5 December 2019

6 December 2024

[edit]
6 December 2023: Kurhaus, Wiesbaden

Karl Amadeus Hartmann
finished his Kammerkonzert,
a concerto for clarinet, string quartet
and string orchestra
dedicated to Zoltán Kodály,
in 1935 during inner emigration.

watch

6 December 2024

7 December 2024

[edit]
7 December 2023: Ignace Michiels

8 December 2024

[edit]
8 December 2023: Unser lieben Frauen Traum

The Advent song
"Kündet allen in der Not",
an appeal to those in need to take courage,
was written by Friedrich Dörr,
based on Isaiah's prophecy,
in preparation of the first Catholic
Gotteslob of 1975.
watch

12 December 2020

9 December 2024

[edit]
9 December 2023: Medea Amiranashvili

Marianne Preger-Simon,
dancer and later psychotherapist,
was Merce Cunningham's first student from 1949
and a founding member of his Dance Company in 1953.

9 December 2024

10 December 2024

[edit]
10 December 2023: Luten Petrowsky

Michael Ruetz
became first known for documentary photos
of the West German student movement,
published by international papers,
but turned to series of photos
taken over years at some locations,
visualizing time and transience.

watch interview to Faving Time

10 December 2024

11 December 2024

[edit]
11 December 2023: Wolfgang Wieland

Uwe Eric Laufenberg,
general manager of the Staatstheater Wiesbaden,
presented his staging of
Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen
at the Internationale Maifestspiele in 2017.
watch trailer

19 July 2017

12 December 2024

[edit]
12 December 2023: O Heiland, reiß die Himmel auf

Perplexities after Escher,
a composition for
heckelphone, string quartet and double bass,
is based on five graphic artworks
by M. C. Escher.

watch premiere

12 December 2024

13 December 2024

[edit]
13 December 2023: Michael Robinson (rabbi)

Bach interpolated music
from his secular cantata BWV 36c
with four stanzas from two Advent hymns in
Schwingt freudig euch empor, BWV 36,
for the first Sunday in Advent, 2 December 1731.

watch

2 December 2012

14 December 2024

[edit]
14 December 2023: Wolfgang Rennert

Christmas Eve
is a fairy-tale opera
by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
that plays
on the night before Christmas
at a Ukrainian village,
in mid-air
and at a royal court.

watch trailer

15 December 2024

[edit]
15 December 2023: Wilhelm Schüchter

The German Advent song
"Tochter Zion, freue dich"
has words by Friedrich Heinrich Ranke
set to music used
for triumphant entrances
in two of Handel's oratorios.

watch

12 January 2020

16 December 2024

[edit]
16 December 2023: Mass in C major (Beethoven)

Beethoven's
Third Cello Sonata,
first performed in 1809,
has been described
as the first sonata for piano and cello
to treat the instruments
as equal partners.

watch Meneses and Pires

16 December 2020

17 December 2023

[edit]
17 December 2023: Lydia Steier

Thomas Hertel
composed and directed musical-scenic projects,
as head of incidental music
at the Staatsschauspiel Dresden from 1974 to 1982,
at the Donaueschinger Musiktage
and the Lucerne Festival,
and finally at the Schauspiel Leipzig.

listen to him

17 December 2024

18 December 2024

[edit]

Martin Luther's hymn
"Mit Fried und Freud ich fahr dahin",
a reflection of the canticle of Simeon,
is the base of funeral music
by Schütz, Buxtehude and Bach.

listen to Buxtehude

18 December 2014

19 December 2024

[edit]
19 December 2023: Mit Ernst, o Menschenkinder

Wolfgang Becker
co-founded a film production company
which produced his first successful feature film,
Das Leben ist eine Baustelle,
in 1997, and his international success,
Good Bye, Lenin!, in 2003.

interview

19 December 2024

20 December 2024

[edit]
20 December 2023: Mit Ernst, o Menschenkinder

Friederike Mayröcker
(20 December 1924 – 4 June 2021)
described her working process:
"I live in pictures.
I see everything in pictures, my complete past,
memories are pictures.
I transform pictures into language
by climbing into the picture.
I walk into it until it becomes language."

look at pictures in portrait

21 December 2024

[edit]
21 December 2023: Nadine Secunde

The Hauptfriedhof,
the main cemetery of Mainz,
was established in 1803
and became the model for the
Cimetière du Père-Lachaise in Paris.

walk (in English)

21 December 2024

22 December 2024

[edit]

The new
Catalogue of Works of Carl Friedrich Abel
(AbelWV)
was introduced in Köthen,
where the viol virtuoso was born
on 22 December 1723.

watch Symphony

22 December 2023

Es kommt ein Schiff, geladen

23 December 2024

[edit]
23 December 2023: Gunther Emmerlich

Sigrid Kehl,
"voice and face" of the Leipzig Opera,
performed as both Fricka and Brünnhilde
in the same legendary
Ring production by Joachim Herz.

listen

23 December 2024

24 December 2024

[edit]
24 December 2023: Nikolauskirche, Oberndorf

Jan Sandström
composed the Motorbike Concerto, and
a setting of "Es ist ein Ros entsprungen"
for two choirs a cappella:
one in four parts, singing Praetorius,
and the other in eight parts.

listen

24 December 2011

25 December 2024

[edit]
25 December 2023: Verbum caro factum est

Merry Christmas!

On Christmas Day 1724,
Bach led the first performance of
Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ, BWV 91,
based on the Christmas hymn
written by Martin Luther
in 1524.

watch

25 December 2024

26 December 2023

[edit]

Bach's cantata for the second day of Christmas,
Darzu ist erschienen der Sohn Gottes
("For this the Son of God appeared"),
BWV 40,
is his first Christmas cantata
composed for Leipzig.

26 December 2026

Joy to the World

27 December 2023

[edit]

Bach has
a choir of trombones double
the choir in his cantata
Sehet, welch eine Liebe hat uns der Vater erzeiget, BWV 64,
for the Third Day of Christmas,
dedicated to John the Evangelist
and first performed on 27 December 1723.

27 December 2010

Verbum caro factum est

28 December 2023

[edit]

Diethard Hellmann
(28 December 1928 – 14 October 1999),
the director of church music at the Christuskirche in Mainz,
reconstructed the music
of the lost Bach cantata for the Third Sunday in Advent,
Ärgre dich, o Seele, nicht, BWV 186a.

3 December 2010

29 December 2023

[edit]

Rebekka Habermas,
a German historian
at the University of Göttingen,
who also taught
in Paris, Montreal and New York,
focused on people
in the social and cultural conditions
of 19th-century Germany.

29 December 2023

30 December 2023

[edit]

Heike Matthiesen
recorded a 2016 album
Guitar Ladies
of compositions for guitar solo by women
including Sidney Pratten (1821–1895),
María Luisa Anido, Ida Presti,
Sofia Gubaidulina, Sylvie Bodorová,
Annette Kruisbrink, and Maria Linnemann
who had dedicated her work to the player.

30 December 2023

31 December 2023

[edit]

Happy New Year 2024

A German theologian wrote
"Vertraut den neuen Wegen"
(Trust the new ways)
to the melody of
Lob Gott getrost mit Singen
(Praise God confidently with singing)
to be sung at a wedding in Eisenach
shortly before the fall of the Wall.
7 April 2021

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