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Maria Herz (* 19 August 1878, Cologne – 22 October 1950, New York City), also known as Albert Maria Herz or A. Maria Herz, was a German composer and pianist.

Biograpy[edit]

The youngest of three siblings, Maria (Mariechen) Bing grew up with her older brothers Moritz and Hugo in a prominent Jewish family of textile merchants in Cologne. She gained her musical training from the pianist Max von Pauer and Josef Schwartz, a violin teacher at the then Conservatorium der Musik in Coeln (present-day Cologne University of Music), composer and conductor of the Cologne male choral society. On 21 March 1901 she married Albert Herz in Cologne.[1] The couple then settled in England. Herz had emigrated to the United Kingdom in the late 19th century in the wake of virulent antisemitism.

In the years that followed, and despite the birth of her four children Herbert, Robert, Nora and Marga, Maria Herz organised numerous concerts in Yorkshire and took lessons in harmony and composition at Bradford from Arthur E. Grimshaw, who in 1910 composed a string quartet entitled Variations on a theme by Mrs Herz.[2] She worked as a concert impresario, took to the stage herself as a pianist in numerous concerts, showcased composers and their works, and performed the first of her own compositions.

In 1914, the entire family of six happened to be in Germany to attend the wedding of one of Albert Herz’s younger brothers, Julius Herz, when World War I broke out, forcing the family to remain in Cologne. Albert Herz was enlisted in the German army and required to serve as a chemist for the duration of the war. Maria’s musical endeavours were greatly curtailed as a result, not to say rendered impossible. Albert’s premature death during the Spanish flu epidemic of 1920 posed a tremendous challenge for Maria and her adolescent children. Nonetheless, she resumed her musical studies under August von Othegraven, Hermann Hans Wetzler and, first and foremost, Philipp Jarnach. Thereafter, she signed her compositions with the pseudonym Albert Maria Herz in honour of her late husband, but also no doubt for practical reasons since female composers were barely acknowledged as such at that time.

The period from 1920 to 1935 was her most prolific creatively, giving rise to a sizeable compositional oeuvre. Maria Herz engaged in lively exchanges with many of the leading musicians of her era. Her circle of acquaintances included the Budapest String Quartet, the Quartetto di Roma, the classical contralto Ilona Durigo, the baritone Hermann Schey, the cellists Gregor Piatigorsky, Emanuel Feuermann and Gaspar Cassadó and the conductors Hermann Abendroth, Otto Klemperer, Peter Raabe, Hans Rosbaud and many others.

Her list of works includes numerous Lieder for solo voice and piano (a number of Lieder cycles have been orchestrated), chamber music, solo concertos for piano and cello as well as choral and orchestral works. They are characterised by a distinctive and authentic idiom that ranges stylistically between the late Romantic and early modern periods and are in part rather challenging for performers. After the Nazis seized power in 1933, a ban was imposed on the performance of works by Jewish composers. Due to the Nazi regime, the family was compelled to flee Germany and relocated to England where they lived with the younger son Robert for ten years or so. There Maria Herz authored lectures on composers from different countries and periods. After the war she and her son Robert emigrated to her daughters in the US, where she died in New York in 1950 after a brief but serious illness; she was buried in Springfield (New Jersey).

Only five Lieder (1910, Stainer & Bell) and her arrangement for string quartet of Bach’s chaconne (1927, Simrock No. 774a, b) were published during her lifetime; her other compositions have been preserved in manuscript form.

Since October 2015 the estate of Maria Herz has been in the safekeeping of the estate collections of the Music Department of the Zurich Central Library[3].

Compositions (selection)[4][edit]

  • opus 1 Variations on Chopin’s Prélude op. 28 No. 20 – 11 Variations for piano
  • opus 2 12 (Valses) Ländler für Klavier
  • opus 4 Konzert für Klavier und Orchester
  • opus 5 Fünf kleine Stücke für Streichquartett
  • opus 6 Streichquartett h-Moll
  • opus 7 Sonata in C Minor für Violine – Pianoforte (1909)
  • opus 8 Vier kurze Orchesterstücke für großes Orchester (1929)[5][6]
  • opus 9 Rundfunkmusik für 8 Instrumente[7][8][9]
  • opus 10 Konzert für Violoncello und Orchester
  • opus 11 Chor-Phantasie für gemischten Chor, Sopransolo und Orchester
  • opus 13 Suite for orchestra
  • opus 14 Sieben Erzählungen mit obligater Musik aus „Bilderbuch ohne Bilder“ von Hans Christian Andersen
  • opus 15 Concerto for Harpsichord (or Piano) and String Orchestra (Feb. 1935)
  • Streichquartett-Bearbeitung der Chaconne für Violine solo von J. S. Bach[10]
  • Klaviersonate f-Moll
  • Two Songs. 1. Pippa passes (Pippa's Lied. Words by R. Browning) 2. Spring is coming (Der Lenz ist gekommen); London: Stainer& Bell, (1910)
  • Two Songs. 1. The Fair Maid. (Die schöne Maid.) 2. Shadow March. (Schatten-Marsch. Words by R. L. Stevenson.); London: Stainer& Bell, (1910)
  • La Fileuse. Words by J. Fane; London: Stainer& Bell, (1910)
  • Drei Lieder für Bariton und Orchester[11]

External links[edit]

Life and Music

Sheet music

Estate

Documentaries

YouTube

Quellen[edit]

  1. ^ "Hochzeitsbild von Maria Bing-Herz". Retrieved 2019-05-01.
  2. ^ Robert Demaine – Individual and Institution in the Musical Life of Leeds 1900–1914 (S. 189, 190)
  3. ^ "Estate of Maria Herz at Zurich Central Library". Retrieved 2024-02-22.
  4. ^ Harry Joelson-Strohbach – Werkverzeichnis (Albert) Maria Herz-Bing
  5. ^ Die Musik XXII/3, Dezember 1929; Uraufführung in Köln, Leitung: Hermann Abendroth
  6. ^ Die Musik, XXIII/7, April 1931; 4. Rheinisches Musikfest (Essen), Aufführung 4. April 1931, Leitung: Max Fiedler
  7. ^ Die Musik, XXIII/4, Januar 1931; Uraufführung durch den Südwestdeutschen Rundfunk; Leitung: Hans Rosbaud
  8. ^ Anbruch – Monatsschrift für moderne Musik XII Jahrgang, Heft 1, Januar 1930
  9. ^ Theodor W. Adorno: Band 18: Musikalische Schriften V; IV Konzert-Einleitungen und Rundfunkvorträge mit Musikbeispielen: Zum Rundfunkkonzert vom 7. November 1930
  10. ^ Die Musik, XXI/2, November 1928; Rezension Wilhelm Altmann
  11. ^ Neue Musik-Zeitung 1927, Heft 11/12


Category:1878 births Category:1950 deaths Category:20th-century classical composers Category:German composers Category:20th-century German composers Category:20th-century German women Category:German women composers Category:20th-century German women musicians Category:20th-century women composers Category:German musicians Category:Musicians Category:Women Category:People who emigrated to escape Nazism Category:Emigrants from Nazi Germany Category:Germans