- Source: Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf
Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf (born Ingeborg Maria Wilhelmina Starck, 24 August 1840 in Saint Petersburg, died 17 June 1913 in Munich) was a Finland-Swedish and German composer.
Life
Ingeborg Starck was the daughter of Finland-Swedish parents Margareta Åkerman and Otto Starck (originally Tarkiain[en]) who were living in Saint Petersburg, Russia, where her father, a court saddle-maker, was involved in commerce. Her native language was Swedish. Having shown musical gifts from a young age, she studied piano with Nicolas von Martinoff and Adolf Henselt, as well as composition with Constantin Decker. She completed her studies in Weimar with Franz Liszt. During a stay in Paris in 1861 her friends included composers such as Auber, Berlioz, Rossini and Wagner. In September of the same year, she married fellow pianist-composer Hans Bronsart von Schellendorff, a member of Liszt's circle whom she had met in Weimar.
Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf toured Europe as a concert pianist until 1867, when she was expected to cease work due to her husband's appointment as general manager of the Royal Theatre in Hanover. She remained musically active as a composer of opera, chamber and instrumental music and a large number of songs. Earlier, she had composed a piano concerto (1863), now lost. During her lifetime her operas were successfully produced in many theatres in Germany. Pieces composed by her which were popular at the time included her Kaiser Wilhelm March (1871), the Singspiel Jery und Bätely (1873) and the opera Hiarne (1891).
Works
= Operas
=Die Göttin von Sais (1867)
Jery und Bätely (1873)
König Hiarne (1891)
Die Sühne (1909)
= Concertos
=Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in F-minor (1863)
= Orchestral works
=Kaiser Wilhelm March (1872)
= Chamber music
=Romanze in A minor for violin and piano (1873)
Notturno in A minor for cello and piano, op. 13 (1879)
Elegie in C major for cello and piano, op. 14 (1879)
Romanze in B-flat major for cello and piano, op. 15 (1879)
Phantasie for violin and piano, op. 21 (1891)
= Piano music
=Trois études (1855)
Nocturne (1855)
Tarantella (1855)
Fuge über die Namen Maria und Martha (von Sabinin) (1859)
Fugues (1859)
Variations on themes by Bach (1859)
Variations (1859)
Toccatas (1859)
Sonata (1859)
Kaiser Wilhelm March (1871)
Vier Clavierstücke (1874)
Drei Phantasie in G-sharp minor, op. 18 (1891)
= Choral music
=Hurrah Germania! for male choir (1871)
Kennst du die rothe Rose? for soloists male choir and mixed choir (1873)
Easter Lied, for choir, op. 27 (1903)
= Songs
=Die Loreley (1865)
(Text: Heinrich Heine)
Und ob der holde Tag vergangen (1870)
Three Lieder (1871)
(Text: A. Dunker, E. Neubauer, H. Zeise)
Three Lieder (1872)
(Text: Heine, O. Roquette)
... 3. Ich hab' im Traum geweinet
Five Lieder (1878)
(Text: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, August von Platen, Friedrich Rückert)
Six Lieder by Mirza Schaffy, op. 8 (1879)
(Text: Friedrich Martin von Bodenstedt after Mirza Shafi Vazeh)
1. Zuléikha; 2. Im Garten klagt die Nachtigall; 3. Wenn der Frühling auf die Berge steigt; 4. Gelb rollt mir zu Füßen; 5. Die helle Sonne leuchtet; 6. Ich fühle deinen Odem
Hafisa: Three Lieder by Mirza Schaffy, op. 9 (1879)
(Text: Bodenstedt after Mirza Shafi)
6 Poems, op. 10 (1879)
(Text: Bodenstedt)
1. Mir träumte einst ein schöner Traum; 2. Abschied vom Kaukasus; 3. Wie lächeln die Augen; 4. Nachtigall, o Nachtigall; 5. Das Vöglein; 6. Sing, mit Sonnenaufgang singe
Five Christmas Lieder, op. 11 (1880)
(Text: Jakobi)
Five Poems, op. 12 (1880)
(Text: Bodenstedt)
Röslein auf Haiden (1880–1885)
(Text: Richard Voss)
Five Poems, op. 16 (1882)
(Text: Ernst von Wildenbruch)
1. Abendlied; 2. Ständchen; 3. Zwei Sträusse; 4. Der Blumenstrauss 5. Letzte Bitte
Twelve Nursery Rhymes, op. 17 (1882)
(Text: Klaus Groth)
Wie dich die warme Luft umscherzt“ (?)
Blumengruss (1888)
(Text: Goethe)
Six Poems, op. 20 (1891)
(Text: Michail Lermontov)
Three Poems, op. 22 (1891)
(Text: Peter Cornelius)
Three Lieder, op. 23 (1892)
(Text: Goethe, Nikolaus Lenau, Platen)
Im Lenz (1898)
(Text: Paul Heyse)
Rappelle-toi! op. 24 (1902)
(Text: Alfred de Musset)
Three Lieder, op. 25 (1902)
(Text: Bodenstedt, Goethe, Heine)
... 3. Ich stand in dunkeln Träumen (Heine)
Abschied, op. 26 (1902)
(Text: Felix Dahn)
Lieder, (c. 1903)
(Text: Bodenstedt)
Verwandlung (1910)
(Text: Paul Heyse)
Lieder (1910)
References
Sources
This article is based on the Swedish Wikipedia entry
The list of songs is drawn from the Lied and Art Song Texts Page and a list of works by MUGi – Musik und Gender im Internet
External links
Free scores by Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
Biographical sketch and list of works (in German) by Katharina Hottmann at MUGi – Musik und Gender im Internet, Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg
Katharina Hottmann, Art. "Bronsart, Ingeborg von", in: Lexikon "Europäische Instrumentalistinnen des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts", hrsg. von Freia Hoffmann, 2011.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf
- Hans Bronsart von Schellendorff
- Ingeborg
- Bronsart von Schellendorff
- 1913 in music
- List of people from Saint Petersburg
- List of women classical pianists
- List of 20th-century classical composers