• Source: Carl Martin Reinthaler
    • Carl Martin Reinthaler (13 October 1822 – 13 February 1896) was a German organist, conductor and composer.
      Alternative spellings include Karl Martin Reinthaler and Carl Martin Rheinthaler.


      Biography


      Reinthaler was born in Erfurt. He received his first music education from August Gottfried Ritter, an organist at Magdeburg Cathedral. He studied theology, and then music with Adolf Bernhard Marx, studying from 1849 to 1852 in Paris and Rome with a royal scholarship.
      He was associated with the Bremen Cathedral, of which he was director, chorus master of the Singakademie Bremen, and cathedral organist since 1857. A friend of Johannes Brahms, with whom he corresponded, he was responsible for the Bremen performance of A German Requiem. Reinthaler also conducted the premiere of the revised version of Max Bruch's first violin concerto in January 1868.
      In later years, Reinthaler required a wheel chair, which limited his appearances in public musical scenes. He died in Bremen.


      Works


      Jephtha und seine Tochter. Oratorio in two parts
      Das Käthchen von Heilbronn. Opera in four acts
      Choral works:
      Fünf Sprüche und ein Weihnachtslied op. 50. Bremen, Praeger & Meier
      Eile, Gott, mich zu erretten (Psalm 70)
      Frohlocket mit Händen, alle Völker (Psalm 47) op. 18, 2
      Lobe den Herrn, meine Seele (Psalm 103) op.40
      Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden (Psalm 117)
      Meine Seele verlanget und sehnet sich (Psalm 42)
      Wenn der Herr die Gefangenen Zions (Psalm 126)
      Symphony, in D (opus 12)


      = Recordings

      =
      Das Käthchen von Heilbronn. Richard Carlucci, Ilia Papandreou, Peter Schöne, Mate Solyom-Nagy, Marisca Mulder, Erfurt PO, Samuel Bächli cpo 2012
      Jephta und seine Tochter. Sabine Ritterbusch, Konstanze Maxsein, Waltraud Hoffmann-Mucher, Jürgen Sacher, Richard Salter, Oliver Zwarg, Bremer Domchor, Kammer Sinfonie Bremen, Wolfgang Helbich cpo 1997


      References




      Sources


      Carl Martin Reinthaler, in particular this version
      Andreas Moser (ed.) Johannes Brahms Briefwechsel, Zweiter Band, vol. vi, Berlin, 1912, p. 49
      Oliver Schwarz-Roosmann: Carl Martin Reinthaler. Lebensweg eines Bremer Musikdirektors. Verlag Lit, Münster, Hamburg, London 2003, ISBN 3-8258-6813-3


      External links


      Free scores by Carl Martin Reinthaler at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
      Werke von und über Carl Martin Reinthaler in the German National Library catalogue
      Information about Reinthaler
      About Brahms, see note 16.
      Interesting bit about Ein deutsches Requiem

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: