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'''Bernuthsche Konservatorium der Musik''' was a German music conservatory founded October 1, 1873, by [[Julius von Bernuth (composer)|Julius von Bernuth]] [[:de:Julius von Bernuth (Dirigent)|(de)]] (1830–1902). The conservatory was also once located at 15 Wexstrasse on the ground floor.<ref name="Klavierlehrer 1903 Jan" /><ref name="OttoBörs-bio" group=lower-roman /><ref name="IndustryHandbook 1874" /> and also located in the Otto Börs Piano Factory located at große Theaterstraße 44.
'''Bernuthsche Konservatorium der Musik''' was a German music conservatory founded October 1, 1873, by [[Julius von Bernuth (composer)|Julius von Bernuth]] [[:de:Julius von Bernuth (Dirigent)|(de)]] (1830–1902). The conservatory was once located at 15 Wexstrasse on the ground floor.<ref name="Klavierlehrer 1903 Jan" /><ref name="OttoBörs-bio" group=lower-roman /><ref name="IndustryHandbook 1874" /> and also located in the Otto Börs Piano Factory located at große Theaterstraße 44.


The Bernuthsche Konservatorium became known as the Hamburger Konservatorium, but is not connected to the present-day institution, [[Hamburger Konservatorium]], founded in 1908 by R. Klaer as the Klaer'sches Konservatorium für Musik.
The Bernuthsche Konservatorium became known as the Hamburger Konservatorium, but is not connected to the present-day institution, [[Hamburger Konservatorium]], founded in 1908 by R. Klaer as the Klaer'sches Konservatorium für Musik.

Revision as of 19:14, 27 October 2016


Bernuthsche Konservatorium der Musik was a German music conservatory founded October 1, 1873, by Julius von Bernuth (de) (1830–1902). The conservatory was once located at 15 Wexstrasse on the ground floor.[1][i][2] and also located in the Otto Börs Piano Factory located at große Theaterstraße 44.

The Bernuthsche Konservatorium became known as the Hamburger Konservatorium, but is not connected to the present-day institution, Hamburger Konservatorium, founded in 1908 by R. Klaer as the Klaer'sches Konservatorium für Musik.

History

Bernuth was, from 1867 to 1895, director of Philharmoniker Hamburg and also director of the Hamburg Singing Academy.[3]

Selected administrators

Owners
  • 1872–1902: Julius von Bernuth
Heads of conservatory
  • 1872–1895: Julius von Bernuth, founding director
  • 1895–1902: Richard Barth (1850–1923), a composer and scholar of Johannes Brahms
  • 1902–19??: Max Fiedler (1859–1939), renowned orchestra conductor, but taught piano at Bernuthsch
Administrators
  • Paul von Bernuth

Selected notable teachers

  • Alfred Burjam (died around 1907), organ
  • Goby Eberhardt (1852–1926), violin
  • Karl Goltermann, organ, piano
  • Carl Grädener (1812–1883), composer, taught a the conservatory from its inception until his death
  • Otto Hegner (approx. 1877 – 1907), piano — began teaching at the conservatory in 1905
  • Hans Hermanns, piano (replaced Otto Hegner in 1907)
  • Emil Krause (de) (1849–1916), composition
  • Robert Müller-Hartmann (1884–1950), German-born British musicologist, composer
  • Friedrich Warnecke (1856–1931), double bassist, music educator

Notable alumni

Studied with Emil Krause (de) (composition), Goby Eberhardt (violin), and Karl Goltermann (organ and piano)

References

  1. ^ "Julius v. Bernuth" (eulogy), by Emil Kraus (born 1840), Der Klavier-Lehrer, Vol. 26, N° 2, 15 January 1903, pps. 17–19; OCLC 611051641, 224555748
    Archived at the University of Michigan: Musikpädagogische Blatter, Vols. 25–26, edited from January 1878 to July 1899 by Emil Breslaur (de) (1836–1899); edited from January 1990 forward by Anna Morsch (1841– ; OCLC 19333200, 297695050
  2. ^ Handbuch der Leistungsfähigkeit der gesammten Industrie der Kleinstaaten Norddeutschlands, der süddeutschen Länder, Elsass-Lothringens und der Schweiz, Vol. 2, N°s 4–5, by Christoph Sandler (1874), pg. 50 OCLC 162973872)
  3. ^ "Julius von Bernuth," Hamburger Persönlichkeiten, website registrant: Martin Sillem c/o Bankhaus Donner, Hamburg (retrieved October 27, 2016, via www.hamburgerpersoenlichkeiten.de
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