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Fritz Brun (18 August 1878 – 29 November 1959) was a Swiss pianist, conductor and composer of classical music.


Life


Brun was born in Lucerne. He was a student of Franz Wüllner at the conservatory at Cologne,[1] and studied piano and theory there until 1902. The following year he became a piano teacher at the music school in Bern.[1] From 1909 until 1941, he led the symphony concerts of the Bernischen Musikgesellschaft, and was conductor of the choral society and lieder group there.[1] From 1926 to 1940, additionally, he was the vice-president of the Swiss music society Tonkünstlerverein. In June 1941 Brun retired, except for occasional returns to conducting. He dedicated his first violin sonata to violinist Adele Bloesch-Stöcker.

In 1912 Brun married Hanna Rosenmund; they had three children. Brun died in Grosshöchstetten.[2]


Compositions


Fritz Brun composed many works, his most popular being the 10 symphonies composed between 1901 and 1953, the symphonies have been considered as significant works in his country's musical life.[3] From 2003 to 2015, these symphonies were collectively performed by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra and Bratislava Symphony Orchestra, conducted by the Swiss conductor Adriano and released in May 2019 by Brilliant Classics.[4] The set consists of individual recordings by the Guild Music Label.

Beside the symphonies, Brun also composed 4 string quartets, a piano concerto, a cello concerto, many more including vocal works.

Brun's work has been considered and compared to the style of Brahms[5][6] this might be because Brun specialized and admired the work of Brahms, especially as a conductor.[7][8]


Symphonies



Concertos



String Quartets



Sonatas



Other Works



Selected discography



Sources



References


  1. Palmer, Peter. "JSTOR - Fritz Brun: A Swiss Symphonist". JSTOR 946456. Retrieved 31 August 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. "Fritz Brun - Brilliant Classics" (PDF).
  3. L. Paxton, John (1980). Calender of Creative Man. p. 412.
  4. "Fritz Brun: Complete Orchestral Works".
  5. Hugh Reed, Peter (1993). American Record Guide - Volume 56, Issues 4-6. p. 228.
  6. Bithell, Jethro (2019). Germany: A Companion to German Studies. Routledge. ISBN 9781000008418.
  7. Neue Zeitschrift für Musik - 1969 - Volume 78, Part 1 - Page 148 (translated: "In a perfect performance he offered Brahms' song of fate , whose works Fritz Brun always interprets with complete devotion.")
  8. A. Roth, Lee (2016). Ernst Kurth as Theorist and Analyst - Page 18. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9781512806267.
  9. Lace, Ian (2004). "Review of Sterling Recording of Brun Symphony 3". MusicWeb International. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  10. See Brun Website Worklist (http://www.fritzbrun.ch/e/werkverzeichnis.html )
  11. Guild biography page, subpage with description of symphonies 5 and 10.
  12. Guild biography page, Subpage describing symphony 9/Aus dem Buch Hiob recording



На других языках


- [en] Fritz Brun

[ru] Брун, Фриц

Фриц Брун (нем. Fritz Brun; 18 августа 1878, Люцерн — 29 ноября 1959, Гросхёхштеттен) — швейцарский композитор, дирижёр, пианист и педагог.



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