Carl Martin Reinthaler
Carl Martin Reinthaler (13 October 1822 – 13 February 1896) was a German organist, conductor and composer.
Alternative spellings include Karl Martin Reinthaler and Carl Martin Rheinthaler.
Biography
[edit]Reinthaler was born in Erfurt. He received his first music education from August Gottfried Ritter, an organist at Magdeburg Cathedral.[1] He studied theology, and then music with Adolf Bernhard Marx, studying from 1849 to 1852 in Paris and Rome with a royal scholarship.
He was associated with the Bremen Cathedral, of which he was director, chorus master of the Singakademie Bremen, and cathedral organist since 1857. A friend of Johannes Brahms, with whom he corresponded, he was responsible for the Bremen performance of A German Requiem. Reinthaler also conducted the premiere of the revised version of Max Bruch's first violin concerto in January 1868.
In later years, Reinthaler required a wheel chair, which limited his appearances in public musical scenes. He died in Bremen.
Works
[edit]- Jephtha und seine Tochter. Oratorio in two parts
- Das Käthchen von Heilbronn. Opera in four acts
- Choral works:
- Fünf Sprüche und ein Weihnachtslied op. 50. Bremen, Praeger & Meier
- Eile, Gott, mich zu erretten (Psalm 70)
- Frohlocket mit Händen, alle Völker (Psalm 47) op. 18, 2
- Lobe den Herrn, meine Seele (Psalm 103) op.40
- Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden (Psalm 117)
- Meine Seele verlanget und sehnet sich (Psalm 42)
- Wenn der Herr die Gefangenen Zions (Psalm 126)
- Symphony, in D (opus 12)[2]
Recordings
[edit]- Das Käthchen von Heilbronn. Richard Carlucci, Ilia Papandreou, Peter Schöne, Mate Solyom-Nagy, Marisca Mulder, Erfurt PO, Samuel Bächli cpo 2012
- Jephta und seine Tochter. Sabine Ritterbusch, Konstanze Maxsein, Waltraud Hoffmann-Mucher, Jürgen Sacher, Richard Salter, Oliver Zwarg, Bremer Domchor, Kammer Sinfonie Bremen, Wolfgang Helbich cpo 1997
References
[edit]- ^ Ursula Mielke: In des Busens stillem Reich. In: Thüringer Allgemeine. Erfurt, 21. März 2009
- ^ Sonneck, Oscar George Theodore. Orchestral music (Class M1000-1268) catalogue: Scores at Google Books, page 367. Library of Congress via Government Printing Office, Washington, DC. 1912.
Sources
[edit]- Carl Martin Reinthaler, in particular this version
- Andreas Moser (ed.) Johannes Brahms Briefwechsel, Zweiter Band, vol. vi, Berlin, 1912, p. 49
- Oliver Schwarz-Roosmann: Carl Martin Reinthaler. Lebensweg eines Bremer Musikdirektors. Verlag Lit, Münster, Hamburg, London 2003, ISBN 3-8258-6813-3
External links
[edit]- 1822 births
- 1896 deaths
- German Romantic composers
- German opera composers
- German male opera composers
- German classical organists
- German conductors (music)
- German male conductors (music)
- 19th-century German classical composers
- 19th-century conductors (music)
- German male classical organists
- 19th-century German organists
- German composer stubs
- German conductor (music) stubs
- Organist stubs