Herbert Collum (18 July 1914 − 29 April 1982) was a German organist, harpsichordist, composer and conductor.
German organist, harpsichordist and composer
Gravestone of Herbert Collum in the village church of Reinhardtsgrimma
Life
Born in Leipzig, Collum received high school education between 1921 and 1929. He continued from 1930 to 1934 at the Church Music Institute in Leipzig, where he studied organ with Karl Straube and Günther Ramin, piano with Carl Adolf Martienssen, choral conducting with Kurt Thomas, and musical composition with Johann Nepomuk David and Fritz Reuter.[1][2] Already by 1927 he had become deputy organist at the St. Matthäikirche Leipzig. From 1932 to 1935 he served as assistant to Ramin, Thomaskantor at the Thomaskirche. His appointment in 1935 as principal organist, "Kreuzorganist", at the Kreuzkirche in Dresden signalled the beignning of his creative period; he remained in that post until his death in April 1982 at the age of 67. His successor as Kreuzorganiste was Michael-Christfried Winkler.[3]
At the end of World War II, Collum founded his own choir in 1946, with a dedicated set of concerts. To mark the 200th anniversary of J S Bach's death, he organised 24 concerts between September 1949 and August 1950, featuring the Collum Choir and members of the Staatskapelle Dresden. The performances took place at the Martin Luther Church in the Neustadt and the Reformed Church, because the Kreuzkirche had been damaged by fire after bombing in 1945.
The village church of Reinhardtsgrimma in Saxony, where Collum regularly performed on the Silbermann organ and was later buried
Fugue by J S Bach
Fugue in G minor, BWV 542 performed by Herbert Collum on the Silbermann organ, Reinhardtsgrimma
As Kreuzorganist, Collum also took on various teaching roles. From 1942 to 1945 and again between 1954 and 1956, he was a lecturer at the Dresden Conservatory, teaching organ there from 1956 to 1958. He also taught organ at the Spandauer Kirchenmusikschule from 1949 to 1961, with a professorship in 1960. He began reaching harpsichord at the Musikhochschule Dresden in 1964, the same year as his appointment to the jury of the International Johann Sebastian Bach Competition.
In 1942 he married the singer and teacher Herta Maria Böhme-Collum. After one year Christian Collum[de] was born: following in the footsteps of his parents, he became an organist and church musician.
Collum was buried according to his last wishes in Reinhardtsgrimma. He frequently gave concerts on the Silbermann organ in the village church and made a recording in the series "Bach on Silbermann Organs". The concert tradition founded by him has successfully been continued under the direction of the current Kreuzorganist Holger Gehring, resulting in the organ becoming one of the best known in Saxony.
Honours and legacy
In 1973 Collum received the Art Prize of the German Democratic Republic. In Dresden, the Herbert-Collum-Straße was later named after him.[4] The archives of Herbert Collum are kept in the Saxon State and University Library Dresden.[5]
Compositions
Orchestral music
Symphony No. 1, 1939
Symphony No. 2, 1940
Concerto for flute and chamber orchestra, 1944
Concerto in C major for orchestra, first performance on July 1, 1953 by the Dresden Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Franz Jung
Concerto in E for String Orchestra, premiere on 28 May 1955 by the Staatskapelle Dresden, conducted by Franz Konwitschny
Concertante music no. 1, 1961
Concertante music no. 2, 1964
Moritzburg Concerto No. 1, 1965
Moritzburg Concerto No. 2, 1968
5 concertos for harpsichord and chamber orchestra
Sinfonietta for chamber orchestra, 1974
Organ works
Totentanz - Variations on an old folk song: "It is a reaper, is called death", 1944
Organ book of the Dresden Kreuzkirche, 1950
Suite, 1952
Organ Suite, 1962
Toccata, 1964
Leksand Suite, 1966
Fantasia, 1969
Siljan Suite, 1970
Metamorphosis, 1970
Fantasy about Bells of the Cross Church (EGAHD), 1973
Concerto for Organ and Orchestra, 1975 - premiere April 10–12, 1975 by the Dresden Philharmonic, conductor: Hartmut Haenchen
Fantasy - Triptych, 1975
2 concertos for organ and vibraphone, 1978
"Media in vita" for vibraphone and organ - premiere on 11 June 1979 at the Kreuzkirche Dresden
Chamber music
Suite for piano, 1945
Sonata for flute and piano, 1954
New piano pieces (223 movements), 1960–1962
Vocal music
3 Christmas carols, 1943
St. John Passion, 1953
How the city lies so desolate, 1956
For we have no permanent town here, 1959
Te Deum, 1959
Great Psalter, 1961
German Magnificat, 1962
Fantasy about b-a-c-h, 1964
Spiritual motets and chants
Theatre music
The Prince of Homburg (Heinrich von Kleist), incidental music conducted by Fritz Wendel, Staatsschauspiel Dresden, 1955
Recordings
The Silbermann Organ in the village church of Reinhardtsgrimma, used by Collum in his recordings of Bach's works
Walter Clemens, Werner Busch: In memory of Fritz Reuter. In Heinz Wegener (editor's note): Gedenkschrift Fritz Reuter (Scientific journal of the Humboldt University of Berlin. Social and linguistic science series 15 (1966) 3). pp. I-VI, here: p. V.
Gojowy, Detlef: "Suche nach Identität" – Kreuzorganist Herbert Collum.[1] in Die Dresdner Kirchenmusik im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, edited by Matthias Herrmann, Laaber 1998, pp.353–367 (Musik in Dresden 3), ISBN3-89007-331-X
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