Andreas Weißgerber

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Andreas Weißgerber (10 January 1900 – 26 December 1941), also known as Chanosch Ben Mosche Weißgerber, was an Austrian-Hungarian violinist.

Life

Weissgerber came from a Jewish

Izmir Andreas received his first violin lessons in Athens.[4]

A violin-playing prodigy, he performed in the major cities of the

Odessa, who taught at the Stern Conservatory cf. Frick pp. 31–32; for example, the violinist and chapel director Dajos Béla
also studied with Barmas.

In the 1920s, Weissgerber made concert tours through the Weimar Republic, during which the composer Rudolf Wagner-Régeny accompanied him at the piano. They took him to the smallest provincial towns.[5] He was also a popular guest on German radio stations.[6] Important artists of his time such as Lovis Corinth, Max Liebermann and Max Slevogt made portraits of Weissgerber. Their appearance in the contemporary illustrated press documented his popularity.[7]

With Eugen d'Albert at the piano, he made recordings for Odeon.[8] He also recorded for VOX. There, Karol Szreter[9] was his piano accompanist. He, his brother Joseph on cello and Claudio Arrau at the piano could be heard as the "Andreas Weißgerber-Trio".[10]

After the

Kulturbund Deutscher Juden, he played for the label "Lukraphon", which was exclusively for Jewish artists.[11] The owner was called Moritz Lewin and had his business premises in Berlin at Friedrichstrasse 208 and Grenadierstrasse 28, cf. Lotz. There, Kurt Sanderling sat at the piano. As late as 1935, he gave a concert together with the pianist Richard Goldschmied (1880–1941) at the Jewish Cultural Association in Hamburg, at which works by Igor Stravinsky were performed, among others,[12] whose music was by then considered degenerate music
.

In 1936, he followed his two years younger brother Joseph (1902–1954), who had played as principal cellist with the

symphony orchestra of Palestine, later the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. Weissgerber is considered a co-founder of this orchestra,[14] of which he became concertmaster.[15]

Weißgerber appeared in a short film Paganini in Venice in 1929.

A sound film, Shir Ivri (Hebrew Melody), (1935)[16] which was produced at this time with his participation for the Reichsverband der jüdischen Kulturbünde in Deutschland, had only recently been found among his brother's estate[17] and has since been re-released.[18]

The Riga native composer Marc Lavry wrote a concerto for violin and orchestra (op. 78) for Weissgerber with the movements Allegro Moderato (Marcia), Andante and Allegro Assai, which he performed with the Palestine Radio Symphony Orchestra on 20 June 1939.[19]

Weissgerber died of a heart attack on 26 December 1941 in

Tel-Aviv aged 41.[20]

Recordings

For Odeon

  • 1921: Zigeunerweisen (Pablo de Sarasate)
  • 1923: Andante Sostenuto aus der C-dur Sonate (Mozart) (Odeon)
  • 1923: Scherzo und Rondo aus der Frühlingssonate (Beethoven)
  • 1923: Two movements (the Rondo is heavily cut) from Beethoven's Violin Sonata in F, Op 24
  • unknown year: Ungarische Tänze Nr. 2 and 5
  • unknown year: Csárdás / Hubay.

For Vox

  • Trio, B-Dur, op. 11 : Adagio / Beethoven
  • Trio, B-Dur, op. 11 : Thema mit Variationen / Beethoven.
  • Trio, B-Dur, op. 99 : Scherzo / Schubert.
  • Trio, Es-Dur, op. 99 : Scherzo / Fr. Schubert.

For Lukraphon

  • Hebräische Melodie (Achron)
  • Andantino (Martini)
  • Csárdás (Hubay)
  • Spanish danse from the opera La Vida Breve (Manuel de Falla)

Reissues

Further reading

References

  1. ^ Stengel-Gerigk sp. 312
  2. ^ The writer Gregor von Rezzori (1914–1998), himself born in Czernowitz, immortalised him in his "Memoirs of an Anti-Semite".
  3. ^ Stengel-Gerigk sp. 312 gives 'Volo'; cf. on the other hand picture postcard of 1913, Athens is mentioned as place of birth.
  4. ^ Andreas Weißgerber bei LexM (2009, updated 24 Jan. 2012)
  5. ^ a b cf. Von der Lühe p. 103.
  6. ^ cf. Taschen-Album "Künstler am Rundfunk" vol. 2, p. 134[1] Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine: The well-known violinist Andreas Weissgerber is a pupil of J. Barmas and became known through numerous concert tours and guest appearances at German radio stations.
  7. ^ cf. image at [2] from Der Querschnitt, 5 August 1925, H. 8
  8. ^ Another piano accompanist of Weissgerber on this label was the young Michael Raucheisen, cf. ODEON O-7295 (Matrix number xxB.6604 ) Csárdás (Jenö Hubay, op. 33, no. 5) Andreas Weissgerber, violin, Michael Raucheisen, piano; recorded in 1921 and O-7295 (Matrix number xxB 6608) Legend, by Henri Wieniawski op. 17, March 1921 [3].
  9. ^ cf. biography at [4] : "Szreter recorded prolifically, beginning with acoustic records made for the German Vox label in the early 1920s."
  10. ^ cf. details at on collectorsfrenzy p. 39
  11. ^ cf. Lotz et al
  12. ^ Goldschmied was deported to Łódź/Litzmannstadt in 1941 and has since been considered missing, cf. LexM [5] : "In a concert he gave on 24 Oct. 1935 together with the violinist Andreas Weissgerber, the programme included Igor Stravinsky."
  13. ^ He had come to Palestine in August 1933 and had settled in Haifa, cf. Von der Lühe p. 39.
  14. ^ cf. Von der Lühe p. 102 f.
  15. ^ Andreas Weißgerber im Taschenalbum "Künstler im Rundfunk" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine : Photo (vol. 2, p. 134)
  16. ^ Hebrew Melody on IMDb
  17. ^ Copy in the Filmmuseum, Munich: 243 m / 8' 54" ; 35mm, cf. cine-holocaust HEBREW MELODY / MANGINA IVRIT
  18. ^ siehe DVD bei Bergmeier, Horst J.P. / Eisler, Ejal Jakob / Lotz, Rainer E.: Vorbei. Dokumentation jüdischen Musiklebens in Berlin, 1933 – 1938, Hambergen 2001.
  19. ^ [6] : The Concerto for Violin and Orchestra was composed for violinist Andreas Weissgerber – Lavry’s friend – who premiered it on June 20, 1939 with the Radio Symphony Orchestra of Palestine
  20. ^ vgl. Von der Lühe p. 289.
  21. ^ Die Musik war unsere Rettung! : die deutschsprachigen Gründungsmitglieder des Palestine Orchestra on WorldCat

External links