0:00
0:00

Save as Playlist     Clear     Source: YouTube

Share with your Friends
Alexander Von Zemlinsky Free Music

Biography

Alexander Von Zemlinsky Free Music

Alexander Von Zemlinsky

Real name: Alexander von Zemlinsky

Effective period / Period of releases: 1978 - 2017

Austrian composer and conductor (born October 14, 1871 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary – died March 15, 1942 in Larchmont, New York, NY, USA).

Zemlinsky studied piano at a young age and played the organ at synagogue. In 1884, at age 13, he was admitted to the Vienna Conservatory where he studied piano, theory, and composition until 1892 under Anton Door, Robert Fuchs, Johann Nepomuk Fuchs, and Anton Bruckner.

In 1895, Zemlinsky founded the amateur orchestra Polyhymnia, in which Arnold Schoenberg played the cello. Both became life-long friends, and Schoenberg married Zemlinsky's sister.

As a composer, Zemlinsky was influenced by Johannes Brahms, who supported him and recommended his work to music publishers. His first great success came in 1897 with the performance of his "Symphony Nr. 2." In 1900, Gustav Mahler conducted the premiere of his opera "Es war einmal" (Once Upon a Time) at the Viennese Hofoper.

In 1906, Zemlinsky became First Conductor at the Viennese Volksoper; in 1907-1908, he conducted at the Hofoper. This was followed by a longer stint at the Deutsches Landestheater in Prague, where he conducted between 1911 and 1927. In 1924, he premiered Schoenberg's "Erwartung" there. Zemlinsky then moved to Berlin to conduct at the Kroll Opera. The rise of the Nazis forced him to return to Austria in 1933 where he focused on composing and only occasionally worked as a guest conductor. In 1938, he and his wife fled via Prague to New York City. In contrast to his friend Schoenberg, however, Zemlinsky failed to catch on in the United States. After a series of strokes that made it impossible for him to continue composing, he died of pneumonia in 1942.

His performances of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Richard Wagner and Gustav Mahler in Prague and Berlin in the 1920s and early 1930s as well as his friendship to Arnold Schoenberg rendered Zemlinksy during his life-time an important figure of European music in the 20th century. His fame and music, however, were only rediscovered in the 1970s, several decades after his death.

External Pages

zemlinsky.at/

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_von_Zemlinsky

musiklexikon.ac.at/ml/musik_Z/Zemlinsky_Alexander.xml

britannica.com/biography/Alexander-Zemlinsky

orelfoundation.org/composers/article/alexander_zemlinsky

naxos.com/person/Alexander_von_Zemlinsky/26360.htm

adp.library.ucsb.edu/names/359009