Alfred Reisenauer
Alfred Reisenauer (1 November 1863Template:Snd3 October 1907) was a German pianist, composer, and music educator.
Biography
Reisenauer was born in Königsberg. He was a pupil of Louis Köhler and Franz Liszt. As one of the most important piano teachers and players of his time, Reisenauer became principal professor of piano at the Sondershausen Conservatory in 1885. He was in Liszt's household when Liszt died in 1886 and was a torchbearer at the side of the coffin during the funeral procession. After beginning to teach piano at the Leipzig Conservatory in 1900, he was eventually appointed director of the same institution where his students included Sigfrid Karg-Elert, Sergei Bortkiewicz, Template:Ill, and Anna Schytte.
Reisenauer led a highly successful career as a pianist, especially in Germany and Russia, and was well known for his sensitive playing, especially of Schumann. He also made a speciality of Liszt's virtuosic piano music. Starting in 1886 he toured Central Asia and Russia as far east as Siberia.[1] On 10 April 1905, he recorded ten piano pieces for the Welte-Mignon player piano for M. Welte & Sohn at the Popper Studio in Leipzig.[2] Reisenauer also set numerous lieder to music.
He was known to suffer from stage fright and sometimes appeared to be drunk on stage during a concert.[3] He died suddenly at Liepāja (known in Germany as Libau) in 1907 during a concert tour.
References
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- Josephine Gräfin Schwerin: Erinnerungen an Alfred Reisenauer. Königsberg: Gräfe & Unzer, 1909
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- 1863 births
- 1907 deaths
- 19th-century German male musicians
- 19th-century German musicians
- 19th-century German classical pianists
- 20th-century German male musicians
- German male classical composers
- German male pianists
- German music educators
- German pianists
- German Romantic composers
- German male classical pianists
- Musicians from Königsberg
- Musicians from the Province of Prussia
- Pupils of Franz Liszt