Tekla Griebel-Wandall
Tekla Griebel-Wandall (26 February 1866 – 28 June 1940) was a Danish composer and music educator.
Biography
Tekla Griebel was born in Randers, Denmark, the daughter of Theodor Johan Heinrich Griebel (1829–1900) and teacher Camilla Joachimine Andresen (1829–91). She began her musical studies at the age of seven, taking piano lessons from her father. Later she took singing lessons, and at the age of fifteen, she was admitted to Draw School for Women where she studied to be a figurative artist. However, she was more interested in music, and in 1886 she wrote her first opera Don Juan de Marana (eventually performed in 1931).
At the age of sixteen, Tekla Griebel-Wandall began teaching piano, and from 1889 to 1891 she studied voice, piano, composition and theory at the Royal Danish Academy of Music with Jørgen Malling and Orla Rosenhoff. In 1896 she studied in Dresden, financed by Nicole Leth. In 1902 she married theologian and author Hans Frederik Wandall and continued to support the family through teaching music. Prominent students included opera composer Peter Cornelius and pianist Ellen Gilberg.
Working reduced the time Griebel-Wandall had for composition, but she wrote a total of 103 works, ranging from songs and small piano pieces to cantatas and operas. She also wrote music theory publications and a novel. Her successful student Alice Shaw became her patron and funded the publication of four books of her compositions in 1928. Griebel-Wandall died in Buddinge, Gladsakse.[1]
Works
Most of Griebel-Wandall's compositions are vocal music, including opera and songs. Notable works include:
- Fem Sange (ca. 1893)
- Skjøn Karen (opera 1894)
- I Rosentiden (ballet 1895)
- Musikalsk Børnehave (1898)
- Fred (1899)
- Musikteori i korte Træk (1900)
- Naar vi døde vaagner (1901)
- Musikteori for Sangere (1905)
- Kantate ved genforeningsfesten for sønderjyske kvinder (1920)
- Gækken og Narren (1925)
- Hrane (opera 1925)
- Klaverkompositioner I (1928)
See also
References
- ^ "Tekla Griebel Wandall (1866 - 1940)". Retrieved 28 September 2010.
- This article was initially translated from the Danish Wikipedia.
- Danish classical composers
- 1866 births
- 1940 deaths
- Danish women classical composers
- Danish music educators
- Danish opera composers
- Danish women music educators
- Women opera composers
- Danish women composers
- 20th-century Danish composers
- 19th-century Danish composers
- People from Randers
- 20th-century women composers
- 19th-century women composers