Jump to content

Pauline Volkstein

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pauline Volkstein(19 January 1849 – 6 May 1925) was a German composer[1]of over 1,000 songs.[2]

Volkstein was born inQuedlinburg.She had little formal music training, but came from a musical family. Her mother had studied counterpoint withFriedrich Schneider,and her uncle was cellist and composerBernhard Cossmann.[3]Volkstein lived in Paris, Dresden, Murano, and Naples before settling in Weimar with her sister in 1905.[4]Her first songs were published around that time.[3]

Volkstein set her own poems to music and also composed music for texts by poetsArndt,Bierbaum,Chamisso,Eichendorff,Falke,Fallersleben,Flaischlen,Fleming,Geibel,Gersdorff,Goethe,Greif,Halm,Groth,Heine,Keller,Kerner,Lenau,Liliencron,Lons,Morike,Muller,Opitz,Roquette,Saar,Schenkendorf,Storm,Uhland,andWolff.[3]She composed some pieces with piano or guitar accompaniment, but wrote many stand-alone melodies that were later arranged with accompaniments by other composers, such asArmin KnabandJustus Hermann Wetzel.

Volkstein self-published some of her music.[5]Several of her songs with guitar accompaniment initially appeared inDer Wächter,a magazine associated with the German youth movement during the 1920s and 1930s.[6]Her music was also published by Fritz Schuberth[7]and Ries & Erler GMBH.

Volkstein's compositions include:

  • 12 Folksongs (see External Links)
  • 12 Lieder[8]
  • 12 Lieder (piano setting by Justus Hermann Wetzel)[9]
  • 20 Songs with Guitar Accompaniment[10]
  • 24 Folksongs with Simple Accompaniment[11][12]
  • Bloom, Dear Violet (arranged by Armin Knab)[13]
  • Jungfrau Zimperlich (text byLudwig Pfau)[14]
  • Melodies (piano setting by Justus Hermann Wetzel)[15]
  • New Folksongs (1922)[16]
  • Piano compositions[17]
  • Spinning Song (arranged by Armin Knab)[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Laurence, Anya (1978).Women of Notes: 1,000 Women Composers Born Before 1900.R. Rosen Press.
  2. ^Hixon, Donald L. (1993).Women in music: an encyclopedic biobibliography.Don A. Hennessee (2nd ed.). Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press.ISBN0-8108-2769-7.OCLC28889156.
  3. ^abc"Pauline Volkstein und ihre Volkslieder. Von Dr. Armin Knab. - Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek".www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de(in German).Retrieved13 February2021.
  4. ^Cohen, Aaron I. (1987).International Encyclopedia of Women Composers(Second, revised and enlarged ed.). New York: R. R. Bowker.ISBN0-9617485-2-4.OCLC16714846.
  5. ^Münchhausen, Börries Freiherr von (1924).Das Balladenbuch(in German). Deutsche Verlags-austalt.
  6. ^Periodica Musica: Newsletter of the Répertoire International de la Presse Musicale Du XIXe Siècle, Centres Internationaux de Recherche Sur la Presse Musicale.Centre for Studies in Nineteenth-Century Music. 1991.
  7. ^Graphik, Leipzig Internationale Ausstellung für Buchgewerbe und (1914).Die Frau im Buchgewerbe und in der Graphik: Sondergruppe der Weltausstellung für Buchgewerbe und Graphik, Leipzig, 1914(in German). Deutscher Buchgewerbeverein.
  8. ^Joachim Braun; Vladimír Karbusický; Heidi Tamar Hoffmann, eds. (1995).Verfemte Musik: Komponisten in den Diktaturen unseres Jahrhunderts: Dokumentation des Kolloquiums vom 9.-12. Januar 1993 in Dresden.Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.ISBN3-631-47618-3.OCLC32994354.
  9. ^Breslaur, Emil; Morsch, Anna (1926).Musikpädagogische Blatter...: Zentralblatt fur das gesamte musikalische Unterrichtswesen(in German). W. Peiser Verlag.
  10. ^Janna MacAuslan; Kristan Aspen, eds. (1997).Guitar music by women composers: an annotated catalog.Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.ISBN0-313-29385-6.OCLC36589202.
  11. ^Die Stimme: Centralblatt für Stimm- und Tonbildung, Gesangunterricht und Stimmhygiene(in German). 1910.
  12. ^Der Merker(in German). A. Schnase. 1970.
  13. ^ab"Deutsches Lied - Composers and Poets".www.deutscheslied.com.Retrieved13 February2021.
  14. ^"Pauline Volkstein (1849 - 1925) - Vocal Texts and Translations at the LiederNet Archive".www.lieder.net.Retrieved13 February2021.
  15. ^Jung, Michael (1989).Liederbücher im Nationalsozialismus(in German). Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-Universität zu Frankfurt am Main.
  16. ^Lothar Bluhm (2018)."Ich wandle unter Blumen/Und blühe selber mit" zur Kultur- und Sozialgeschichte des Gartens.Baden-Baden: Tectum Verlag.ISBN978-3-8288-4086-7.OCLC1037153274.
  17. ^Geschlossene Vorstellung: der Jüdische Kulturbund in Deutschland 1933-1941(1. Aufl ed.). Berlin: Akademie der Künste. 1992.ISBN3-89468-024-5.OCLC26014957.
[edit]