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AUS DER NEUEN WELT: OTTO DRESEL'S NEW YORK LIEDER.

Authors :
Urrows, David Francis
Source :
Fontes Artis Musicae. Oct-Dec2005, Vol. 52 Issue 4, p204-216. 13p.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The composer-pianist Otto Dresel (1826–90), studied with Liszt, Schumann, and Mendelssohn and emigrated to the United States in 1848. Dresel came to the New World with talent, energy, and influential recommendations. Within a week of his arrival he had performed the Mendelssohn G minor piano concerto in public, his chamber music and songs were later to be played and sung by the city's leading performers, and a selection of his songs was published by his co-émigré, William Scharfenberg. Yet his three years in New York were ultimately a failure, personally and professionally. Disappointed in New York, he eventually moved to Boston, where as an influential pianist and composer he helped to shape American tastes for the canon of European Music. The traces of Dresel's brief New York years lie in the works he composed there: German Lieder, a few fascinating settings of English poetry, and several instrumental works. This paper examines his New York vocal compositions as well as how his presence in the midst of a highly intellectual German-American community—which included William Scharfenberg, the publisher and impresario Hermann Saroni, the writer and linguist Therese Albertine Luise von Jacob Robinson (known as Talvj)—influenced his musical choices. His songs reflect, in both their literary and musical dimensions, the émigré experience as well as Dresel's own personal successes and failures, and they continue to speak to us in an autobiographical manner even today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
00156191
Volume :
52
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Fontes Artis Musicae
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22728913