Franz Kneisel

Franz Kneisel

Franz Kneisel (26 January 1865 – 26 March 1926) was an American violinist and teacher of Romanian birth.

Born in Bucharest, the son of a German bandmaster, he learned to play the flute, clarinet and trumpet, as well as the violin. After graduating from the Bucharest Conservatory in 1879, he went to Vienna, where he continued his studies with Jakob Grün and Joseph Hellmesberger until 1882; he made his solo début in Vienna at the end of that year. The next season he became concertmaster at the Hoftheater and in 1884 went to Berlin to fill the same position in the Bilsesche Kapelle. In October 1885, though barely 20 years old, he was engaged by Wilhelm Gericke as concertmaster of the Boston SO. For the next 20 years he was concertmaster and assistant conductor; he appeared as soloist in many violin concertos and gave the first American performances of the concertos by Brahms and Karl Goldmark, as well as the première of the First Violin Concerto of Gustav Strube. As assistant conductor, he led the Boston SO performances at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Shortly after his arrival in Boston, Kneisel formed the Kneisel quartet from among the members of the orchestra.

Kneisel was for many years associated with the Worcester Festival in Massachusetts, first as concertmaster and assistant conductor (1885–96) and then as conductor (1897–1909). In 1905 he moved to New York to become the first head of the violin department of the newly established Institute of Musical Art (Now the Juilliard School of Music), where he remained until his death. He also established a summer school of violin and chamber-music playing at his home in Blue Hill, Maine. He was a demanding teacher, requiring much in both technical ability and expressive insight. At the time of his death, his renown as a teacher was such that he was ranked with Leopold Auer.

Kneisel played a leading role in American music as a soloist and as ensemble performer, both for the range and variety of his programmes and for his dedication to the highest performance standards. Many Boston composers wrote works for him personally or for his quartet, and these formed a substantial part of his repertory. He composed a Grand Concert Etude for violin and also published a number of technical studies. There are collections of Kneisel memorabilia at Blue Hill and at the Chapin Library of Williams College, Williamstown.

Kneisel was the teacher of the great American violinist and pedagogue Joseph Fuchs. He also taught Lillian Fuchs.

His daughter Marianne (b Boston, 10 March 1897; d New York, 04 March 1972) was an American violinist and married Felix P. Kahn (b Mannheim, Germany, 25 January 1873; d New York, 25 July 1950), banker at Kuhn, Loeb & Co., director of the Paramount Pictures Corporation, noted collector of violins and brother of banker and philanthropist Otto H. Kahn.

ources

M.A.De W. Howe: The Boston Symphony Orchestra: an Historical Sketch (Boston, 1914, enlarged 2/1931/R with J.N. Burk as The Boston Symphony Orchestra 1881–1931) M.D.H. Norton: ‘Franz Kneisel’, The Violinist, xxxviii (1926), 154 R. Aldrich: ‘Franz Kneisel’, Musical Discourse (New York, 1928), 226 B. Schwarz: Great Masters of the Violin (New York, 1983) STEVEN LEDBETTER


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Kneisel Hall — is an annual chamber music festival and school located in Blue Hill, Maine. The season runs for seven weeks each summer from mid June until early August. A small faculty works with approximately fifty pre professional musicians, concentrating… …   Wikipedia

  • Kneisel Quartet — The Kneisel Quartet was a string quartet musical ensemble established in Boston, USA in 1885. It existed until 1917, and in its time became recognised as the leading string quartet in the United States. It also performed in Europe. Personnel The… …   Wikipedia

  • Chamber music — For other uses, see Chamber music (disambiguation). Frederick the Great plays a flute concert in his summer palace Sanssouci; painting by Adolph Menzel Chamber music is a form o …   Wikipedia

  • Lillian Fuchs — (November 18, 1901 October 5, 1995), an American violist, teacher and composer, is considered to be among the finest instrumentalists of her time. She hailed from a musically talented family: her brothers, Joseph Fuchs, a violinist, and Harry… …   Wikipedia

  • Musicians Foundation — In 1912, an organization known as The Bohemians (New York Musicians Club) took the first step toward establishing a fund for their fellow musicians by producing a concert featuring several distinguished artists of the day. Contents 1 Mission 2… …   Wikipedia

  • Musical ensemble — This article is about musical groups. For the video game series, see Rock Band (game). For other uses, see Music group (disambiguation). The King Carter Jazzing Orchestra photographed in Houston, Texas, January 1921 …   Wikipedia

  • Elias Breeskin — (1896 May 9, 1969) was a violinist, composer and conductor.Elias was born sometime in 1896 in Yekaterinsolav, a small village in the Ukraine, which has now morphed into the industrial city of Dnepropetrovsk, with over a million inhabitants. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Gustav Dannreuther — (July 21, 1853 December 19, 1923) was a violinist and conductor from Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1871, at the age of 18, he was sent to the Berlin University of the Arts, where he studied violin under Heinrich De Ahna, famed violinist Joseph Joachim… …   Wikipedia

  • Lillie P. Bliss — Paul Cézanne: Der Badende, 1885–1887, Museum of Modern Art, ehemals Sammlung Lillie P. Bliss Lillie P. Bliss (eigentlich Lizzie Plummer Bliss) (* 11. April 1864 in Boston; † 12. März 1931 in New York City) war eine amerikanische Kunstsammlerin… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • FUCHS, LILLIAN — (1901–1995), U.S. violist and one of the first women to perform as a permanent member of a string quartet in America. Her musical family included her father, Philip, an amateur violinist; and brothers JOSEPH (1899–1997), a well known violinist,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”