Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker
Encyclopedia
Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker (* 8 March 1844 in Munich
Munich
Munich The city's motto is "" . Before 2006, it was "Weltstadt mit Herz" . Its native name, , is derived from the Old High German Munichen, meaning "by the monks' place". The city's name derives from the monks of the Benedictine order who founded the city; hence the monk depicted on the city's coat...

; † 17 July 1906 in Elberfeld
Elberfeld
Elberfeld is a municipal subdivision of the German city of Wuppertal; it was an independent town until 1929.-History:The first official mentioning of the geographic area on the banks of today's Wupper River as "elverfelde" was in a document of 1161...

, today part of Wuppertal
Wuppertal
Wuppertal is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located in and around the Wupper river valley, and is situated east of the city of Düsseldorf and south of the Ruhr area. With a population of approximately 350,000, it is the largest city in the Bergisches Land...

) was a German composer, conductor and violinist.

Childhood and Youth (1844-1860)

Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker was born in Munich on 8 March 1844; he was the first child of Jakob Rauchenecker (1815–1876), an official musician of the city, and Rosina Crescenz Rauchenecker, née Wening (1815–1876) and was baptised a Catholic two days later at St Peter’s in Munich. As a young boy he was sent by his father to his uncle, Georg Wening, who had been pastor of the parish of Thalheim (pop. 260) near Erding since 1855. It is possible that Rauchenecker was expected to follow the same career path as his uncle. After this he attended the King Maximilian Grammar School in Munich and here, at the age of eleven, he played first violin accompanying the church choir. Rauchenecker received comprehensive musical instruction in both piano and organ from Theodor Lachner (1798–1877), in the violin from Joseph Walter
Joseph Walter
-External links:*...

 (1831–1875), in counterpoint from August Baumgartner (1814–1864) and in composition from Franz Lachner
Franz Lachner
Franz Paul Lachner was a German composer and conductor.Lachner was born in Rain am Lech to a musical family . He studied music with Simon Sechter and Maximilian, the Abbé Stadler. He conducted at the Theater am Kärntnertor in Vienna. In 1834, he became Kapellmeister at Mannheim...

 (1803–1890). From 1869 he himself gave violin, piano and organ lessons, as well as teaching harmony, counterpoint, fugue and the theory of musical form, and orchestration. Max Hieber, who later on was the court conductor at Munich, was one of his pupils during this period.

His French Years (1860-1870)

On 1 August 1860 Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker received a passport to travel to France: initially he went and worked as first violin at the Grand Théâtre in Lyon. In 1862 he was appointed conductor in Aix-en-Provence
Aix-en-Provence
Aix , or Aix-en-Provence to distinguish it from other cities built over hot springs, is a city-commune in southern France, some north of Marseille. It is in the region of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, in the département of Bouches-du-Rhône, of which it is a subprefecture. The population of Aix is...

 and then in 1864 he took the post of chief conductor of the theatre orchestra in Carpentras
Carpentras
Carpentras is a commune in the Vaucluse department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region in southeastern France.It stands on the banks of the Auzon...

. Here, in 1866, he married Elisabeth Antoinette Emilie Fournial (1842–1870), a lecturer. Their twins, Alban and Margarethe were born in Carpentras on 8 September 1867. In 1868 Rauchenecker accepted a position in Avignon
Avignon
Avignon is a French commune in southeastern France in the départment of the Vaucluse bordered by the left bank of the Rhône river. Of the 94,787 inhabitants of the city on 1 January 2010, 12 000 live in the ancient town centre surrounded by its medieval ramparts.Often referred to as the...

 as chief conductor of the opera orchestra and director of the conservatoire. After being expelled from France as a German citizen when the Franco-Prussian War
Franco-Prussian War
The Franco-Prussian War or Franco-German War, often referred to in France as the 1870 War was a conflict between the Second French Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia. Prussia was aided by the North German Confederation, of which it was a member, and the South German states of Baden, Württemberg and...

 broke out in 1870, he settled in Switzerland.

His Swiss Years (1870-1884)

Shortly after arriving in Zürich, his wife Elisabeth died: she was only 28 years old. Rauchenecker earned his living as a piano teacher and was also a member of the Tonhalle Orchestra
Tonhalle Orchester Zurich
Tonhalle Orchester Zürich is a symphony orchestra founded in 1868 in Zürich Switzerland, where it established its residence in the neue Tonhalle in 1895....

 in Zürich. He was introduced to Richard Wagner
Richard Wagner
Wilhelm Richard Wagner was a German composer, conductor, theatre director, philosopher, music theorist, poet, essayist and writer primarily known for his operas...

 by his future brother-in-law, Oskar Kahl, the conductor of the Zürich City Orchestra. On 21 December 1870 the first rehearsals for the performance of “Siegfried Idyll” took place in the foyer of the Old Theatre in Zürich; the piece was subsequently given its first performance on the steps of the house at Tribschen near Lucerne on 25 December 1870, conducted by Richard Wagner – the occasion being his wife Cosima’s birthday. Rauchenecker was one of the 15 musicians in the small orchestra. Not long after this, on 31 December 1870, a series of 7 quartet evenings began at the Wagners’ house, with Oskar Kahl (1st violin), Georg Rauchenecker (2nd violin), Hans Richter
Hans Richter (conductor)
Hans Richter was an Austrian orchestral and operatic conductor.-Biography:Richter was born in Raab , Kingdom of Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Empire. His mother was opera-singer Jozsefa Csazenszky. He studied at the Vienna Conservatory...

 (viola) und Hermann Ruhoff (cello) rehearsing string quartets by Beethoven.

In 1871 Rauchenecker was appointed director of music at Lenzburg where he was discovered by Dr. Jacob Heinrich Ziegler-Sulzer (1798–1882), a physician and musical patron from Winterthur.

In the spring of 1873 he converted to Protestantism as his second wife was a Protestant. The marriage to Anna Karolina Ulrica Kempin (1845–1904) took place at the Diaconal Church in Neuminster (Zürich).

On 29 October 1873 Rauchenecker, having been proposed by Ziegler-Sulzer, was elected to the post of head of music in Winterthur
Orchester Musikkollegium Winterthur
The Orchester Musikkollegium Winterthur is a symphony orchestra based in Winterthur, Switzerland. The oldest orchestra in Switzerland, it was founded in 1875 as the Stadtorchester Winterthur. The Musikkollegium itself as an organisation out of religious roots to that time was founded in 1629...

 and, from the beginning of December 1873, he was also director of the School of Music there. In the ten years which followed he had a decisive influence upon the musical life of the city.

From 1873 to 1876 he conducted the men’s choir called “Good Cheer” and in 1875 the Frauenfeld men’s choir.

On 3 April 1876 Rauchenecker’s father Jakob died in Winterthur; then, on 18 February 1877, his daughter Helene was born. In 1878 he took over the post of organist in the Reformed City Church from Julius Buckel. His daughter Elsa was born on 28 January 1880.

In 1880 Rauchenecker, together with U. Ruckstuhl, opened a music shop in Winterthur. When he left the city, his departure was marked by a concert given on 13 March 1884.

His Berlin Years (1884-1885)

The 30th March 1884 was the day Georg Wihelm Rauchenecker moved to Berlin to take up the conductorship of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
Berliner Philharmonie
The Berliner Philharmonie is a concert hall in Berlin, Germany. Home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the building is acclaimed for both its acoustics and its architecture....

, then located in Bernburger Strasse in the district of Kreuzberg. He attained this position thanks to the extraodinarily favourable reception given to his Symphony in F minor which he had performed in Berlin in October 1883. He conducted his first symphony concert as early as 30 April that year. In addition, he worked as a piano teacher at the Stern Conservatoire
Stern conservatory
The Stern Conservatory was a private music school in Berlin with many notable tutors and alumni.-History:It was originally founded in 1850 as the Berliner Musikschule by Julius Stern, Theodor Kullak and Adolf Bernhard Marx. Kullak withdrew from the conservatory in 1855 in order to create a new...

 and also took practices with small ensembles there.

His Elberfeld Years (1885-1906)

After a brief stay in Kassel, Rauchenecker moved to Barmen in the early summer of 1885.
He then took over the Orchestral Society there, remaining until December 1887 when he became conductor of the Elberfeld Band (since 1929 the Wuppertal Band).
In 1889 he founded a music school in Elberfeld. Among its students were the trombonist Joseph Franz Serafin Alschausky (1879–1948) and the composer Gustav Adolf Uthmann (1867–1920).

From 1892 to 1893 he conducted the men’s choral society called "The German Singers’ Circle".
1902 Rauchenecker was appointed "City Conductor".

His second wife, Anna, died in Elberfeld on 2nd January 1904.
In 1905 Rauchenecker was accorded the title of “Royal Prussian Director of Music”.

Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker died of pneumonia in Elberfeld on 17 July 1906.

Orchestral Works

  • Symphony No. 1 in F minor (1875)
  • Symphony No. 2 in B flat major “Triumphal” (1885)
  • Symphony No. 3 in D major “Elegiac” (1903/1904)
  • Ouverture "La graine de coquelicot" (before 1870)
  • Symphonic Composition in the Style of an Ouverture (1880)
  • "Hochzeits-Idyll" (1889)
  • "Alarich auf der Akropolis" (um 1899/1900), symphonic poem
  • "Aus der Jugendzeit" (um 1896), symphonic poem
  • "Friedrich Rotbart" (um 1870), symphonic poem
  • Intermezzo from the opera "Sanna" (ca. 1893)

Concertos

  • Violin Concerto No. 1 A minor (1876/1885)
  • Violin Concerto No. 2 B minor (1900)
  • Piano Concerto No. 1 B minor (1898)
  • Piano Concerto Nr. 2 F minor (1894)
  • Cello Concerto d minor (1905)

Songs

  • "Fünf Lieder der Brautzeit (Bräutigamslieder)" (1894) for baritone and piano
  • "Sieben Lieder" after the novel „Der Liedermacher“ (1894) for soprano and piano
  • "Abendlied" (1896)
  • "Maria Wiegenlied" (1898)
  • "Wirtstöchterlein" (1898)
  • "Schwing dich auf" (1900)
  • "Ave verum corpus" (1903) for contralto, cello, harp and organ
  • "So geht’s" (ca. 1888) for voice and piano
  • "Bergisches Lied" for baritone and piano
  • "Drei Gesänge" for baritone
  • "Fünf Lieder" (ca. 1883/84) for deep voice
  • "Königsmordliche Ballade" (ca. 1874) with flute accompaniment

Choral Works

  • "Sechs Lieder" (1878) for mixed chorus
  • "Zwei Särge" (1900) for mixed chorus and piano
  • "Pharao" (1897) for four-part mixed chorus or three-part women’s chorus and piano
  • "Lied von der Glocke" for four-part mixed chorus with speaker and piano or three part women’s chorus (ca. 1895)
  • "Hymne zur Einweihung des Kaiser-Wilhelm- und des Kaiser-Friedrich-Denkmals in Elberfeld" (1883) for men’s chorus
  • "Deutsches Schwert und deutscher Sang" (1891) for four-part men’s chorus
  • "Gotenzug", op. 137 (1899) for four-part men’s chorus with winds or piano
  • "Gotentreue", op. 138 (1899) for men’s chorus, soloists and orchestra (or piano)
  • "Germania" (ca. 1896) for men’s chorus
  • "Sechs Lieder" for men’s chorus
  • "Schwert und Palme" for men’s chorus
  • "Baracher Wein" (ca. 1889) for four-part men’s chorus
  • "Chorlied der Deutschen in Amerika" (1885) for four-part men’s chorus
  • "Der Lenz ist da" (ca. 1890) for men’s chorus
  • "O du taufrischer Morgen" (1877) for men’s chorus
  • "Wie lieb ich dich" (1877) for men’s chorus
  • "Walther von der Vogelweide" (1899) for four-part men’s chorus a-cappella
  • "Das heutige Vaterland" (1883) for men’s chorus
  • "Gruss der Heimat: Wo immer ich weile" (um 1888) for men’s chorus
  • "Die Schönheit der Natur" (1900) for four-part women’s chorus
  • "Im Abendrot" (1900) for four-part women’s chorus
  • "Geduld" (1900) for three-part women’s chorus
  • "Zur heiligen Nacht" (1900) for mixed and three-part women’s chorus and piano
  • "Vater unser" (1895) for three-part women’s chorus with harmonium and flute
  • "Weihnachtsgruss" (1898) for three-part women’s chorus and piano
  • "Ode an das 19. Jahrhundert" (1899)
  • "An die Freiheit" (1891) for soloists, chorus and orchestra
  • "Niklaus von der Flüe" (1874), Swiss Peace Cantata, for soloists, male chorus and orchestra
  • "Trauerkantate auf den Tod Friedrichs III." (1888) for mixed chorus, baritone and orchestra
  • "Meine Göttin" (1897), cantata for tenor, men’s chorus and orchestra
  • "Huldigung der schönen Künste" (1898) , cantata for soloists, chorus and orchestra
  • "Heil dir Germania" , cantata for four-part mixed chorus, piano and orchestra and speaker
  • "Hinaus auf hohen Bergesgipfel" , (1889) festive cantata
  • "Die Murtenschlacht" , (1876) cantata for soloist, chorus and orchestra
  • "Kaiser Otto I." , Kantate für Solo, dreistimmigen Frauchenchor und Klavier oder für Solo, gemischten Chor und Klavier
  • "Borussia" (1899/1900), cantata for three-part women’s chorus and piano or soloist, mixed chorus and piano
  • "Durch Nacht zum Licht (per tenebras ad lucem)" (ca. 1900) oratorio for chorus, soloists and orchestra
  • "Grosse Vokale Messe" (1863/64) for six-part chorus
  • "Titanenschicksal" (1899)
  • "Festgesang" (1877) for mixed chorus, soloists and orchestra

Stage Works

  • "Le florentin" (1871), opera in 3 acts
  • "Adelheid von Burgund" (1886), opera
  • "Die letzten Tage von Thule" (ca. 1889), opera in 4 acts
  • "Sanna" (1893), opera in 2 acts
  • "Ingo" (1893), opera in 4 acts
  • "Don Quijote" (1895), opera in 3 acts
  • "Der Florentiner" (1901), opera in 3 acts (new version of "Le florentin")
  • "Ovid bei Hof", Incidental music (after 1885)
  • "Theodor Körner", Festival (1891)
  • "Amalasuntha", opera

Chamber Music

  • String Quartet No. 1 in C minor (1874)
  • String Quartet No. 2 in D major (1878)
  • String Quartet in A minor (ca. 1879)
  • String Quartet in E major (ca. 1883)
  • String Quartet in G minor (in the Form of a Suite) (ca. 1890)
  • String Quartet in E flat major
  • Piano Quintet in D major (1897) for piano, flute, 2 violins, viola and cello
  • String Sextet in E flat major
  • Wind Octet in B flat major (1897) for flute, oboe, cor anglais, 2 horns, bass clarinet and bassoon

Works for Solo Instruments

  • "6 Charakteristische Tonbilder", op. 24-29 (1873) for violin and piano
  • "Orientalische Phantasie" (1874) for violin and string quartet or piano
  • "Die vier Temperamente" , 4 short pieces for piano
  • "5 kleine Klavierstücke"
  • "26 kleine Orgelpräludien" (ca. 1902/03)
  • "Jesu, komm zu mir" for organ
  • "Präludium für Harmonium" (after 1885)

Sources and further reading

  • "150 Jahre Instrumental-Verein Wuppertal e.V" (1980), commemorative publication, Wölfer-Druck-Verlag, Haan
  • Baker, Theodore
    Theodore Baker
    Theodore Baker was an American musicologist.Born in New York, Baker studied business but turned to music as a career, becoming an organist in Concord, Massachusetts. In 1874 he moved to Germany and obtained his doctorate at Leipzig in 1882...

     (1900) A Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, G. Schirmer, New York
  • Clifford, John Herbert (1911) "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in The Musiclover's Handbook, University Society, New York
  • Fehr, Max (1939) “Georg Rauchenecker – ein Wagner-Pionier” in Aus Wagners Leben und Schaffen, Verlag der Hofbuchhandlung Georg Nierenheim, Bayreuth
  • Fellerer, Karl Gustav (1966) "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in Beiträge zur Rheinischen Musikgeschichte, Arno Volk-Verlag, Köln
  • Fritsch, E. W. (1883) "Tagesgeschichte. Musikbriefe. Berlin" in Musikalisches Wochenblatt from 18 October 1883, Verlag von E. W. Fritzsch, Leipzig
  • Hughes, Rupert
    Rupert Hughes
    Rupert Hughes was an American historian, novelist, film director and composer based in Hollywood. Hughes was born in Lancaster, Missouri. His parents were Felix Turner Hughes and Jean Amelia Summerlin, who were married in 1865. His brother Howard R. Hughes, Sr., co-founded the Hughes Tool Company....

     (1903) "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in The Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Mc. Clure, Phillips & co., New York
  • Jahres-Bericht über das k. Maximilians-Gynmasium in München für das Schuljahr 1854/55 königl. Central-Schulbücherverlag, München
  • Kempter, Lothar (1959) "Musikdirektor Georg Wilhelm Rauchenecker" in Das Musikkollegium Winterthur Vol. 2, Im Verlag des Musikkollegiums, Winterthur
  • Knopf, Alfred Abraham (1945) The Life of Richard Wagner, The Plimpton Press, Norwood, Mass.
  • Kurmann, Nicole (2004) "Dem Provinziellen widerstehen" in das Musikkollegium Winterthur 1629-2004 im Musikleben der Stadt, Chronos, Zürich. ISBN 9783034006736
  • Mason, Daniel Gregory
    Daniel Gregory Mason
    Daniel Gregory Mason was an American composer and music critic.-Biography:...

     (1915) The Art of Music, The National Society of Music, New York
  • Mémorial d’ Aix (1867) "Nouvelles diverses", edition from 8 September 1867
  • Milliet, Paul
    Paul Milliet
    Paul Milliet was a French dramatist and librettist of the Parisian Belle Époque. His opera librettos include Jules Massenet's Hérodiade and Werther , Alfred Bruneau's Kérim , Spyridon Samaras's La biondinetta , Mademoiselle de Belle Isle and Rhea and Camille...

     (1904) "Musique-Théatre-Beaux-Arts" in Le Monde Artiste illustré from 3 January 1904, Paris
  • Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm (1904) Überblick über meine Lehrtätigkeit, Autograph, Municipal Archive, Wuppertal, Germany
  • Rauchenecker, Herbert (1978) Raucheneck und Rauchenecker . Die Geschichte eines niederbayerischen Namens und der Träger dieses Namens, Ottobrunn
  • Refardt, Edgar (1928) "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in Historisch-Biographisches Musiker-Lexikon der Schweiz, Gebrüder Hug & Co., Leipzig-Zürich
  • Riemann, Hugo
    Hugo Riemann
    Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo Riemann was a German music theorist.-Biography:Riemann was born at Grossmehlra, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. He was educated in theory by Frankenberger, studied the piano with Barthel and Ratzenberger, studied law, and finally philosophy and history at Berlin and Tübingen...

     (1899). "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in Encyclopædic Dictionary of Music, Philadelphia, latest revised edition, to 1897. Schedlock (transl.) J. S. Theo. Presser
  • Schuh, Willi (1939) Schweizer Musikbuch, Atlantis Verlag, Zürich
  • Seitz, Robert (1883) Musikalisches Centralblatt, Verlag von Robert Seitz, Leipzig
  • Thompson, Slonimsky, Sabin (1964, editors) Oscar, Nicolas, Robert. "Rauchenecker, Georg Wilhelm" in The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians Dodd, Mead & Company, New York
  • Vallas, Léon (1903) "Nouvelles Diverses" in Revue Musicale de Lyon from 29 December 1903
  • Weber, Karlheinz (1998) "Das Schallstück" in Journal der internationalen Posaunenvereinigung e.V. , Edition 1.1998 from March 1998 (see: Josef Serafin Alschausky (1879-1948))
  • Zivilstandsamt Zürich (1885) in Bürgeretat der Stadt Zürich, Friedrich Schultheß, Zürich

External links

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