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Justus Hermann Wetzel (11 March 1879 – 6 December 1973) was a German composer, writer and music educator.

Justus Hermann Wetzel, lithograph by Emil Orlik, 1919
Justus Hermann Wetzel, lithograph by Emil Orlik, 1919

Life


Wetzel was born in Kyritz, Brandenburg, the son of a postal clerk. After his Abitur, which he passed in Potsdam in 1897, he studied biology in Berlin, Marburg and Munich from 1897 to 1901. In Marburg he also studied philosophy with Hermann Cohen and Paul Natorp. In 1901 he received his doctorate there with a zoological thesis. He then turned to music and deepened his knowledge with private studies in Berlin. The Friedrich-Kiel-Gesellschaft recorded him as a student of Friedrich Kiel. He made his living as a music consultant for various daily newspapers. From 1905 to 1907 he taught at the Riemann Conservatory in Stettin. In 1910 he finally moved to Berlin, where he first taught at the Klindworth-Scharwenka-Konservatorium and in 1926 he moved to the Königliches Musik-Institut Berlin in Berlin-Charlottenburg.

Although Wetzel lived a relatively secluded life and was hardly committed to his work, a large circle of friends and admirers surrounded him. These included not only musicians, but also visual artists such as Emil Orlik and his pupil Gunter Böhmer, the poet Hermann Hesse and Anna Spitteler, the daughter of the Swiss Nobel Prize winner for literature Carl Spitteler, whom Wetzel admired. Wetzel's pupils were the composers Mark Lothar and Friedrich Metzler and the pianist Gerhard Puchelt. On the occasion of Wetzel's 50th birthday, a concert was held on 16 March 1929 in the Sing-Akademie zu Berlin, which was dedicated exclusively to his work.

In 1937 Wetzel was dismissed from his teaching post because he refused to separate from his Jewish wife Rose née Bergmann. In March 1943 she was among those who were imprisoned in Rosenstrasse, but were released again by the famous Rosenstrasse protest. In 1945 Wetzel became a professor at the Berlin University of the Arts; in 1948, he moved with his family to Überlingen at Bodensee where he died at the age of 94.


Family


The only child from Wetzel's marriage to Rose Bergmann is daughter Ruth (b. 14 December 1924 in Berlin). She moved to Paris after the war and was married to the Spanish composer Antonio Ruiz-Pipó. The marriage remained childless.


Estate


Wetzel's estate was handed over to the archive of the Berlin University of the Arts by his daughter Ruth Ruiz-Pipó in 1999. In 2004 and 2005, it was used for Wetzel exhibitions in Berlin and Überlingen. Both exhibitions were curated by the art historian Nancy Tanneberger, who also dealt with the estate. The Hesse-Lieder found in the estate were published in 2006 by Klaus Martin Kopitz at Saier & Hug.


Compositions


Wetzel devoted himself almost exclusively to the solo song with piano accompaniment. More than 600 songs have been handed down by him, of which about 100 have appeared in print. Stylistically they have their roots in the Romantic period and tie in with Johannes Brahms and Hugo Wolf. An important source of inspiration was also the folk song. Numerous interpreters have worked for Wetzel, among the most renowned are Emmi Leisner, Heinrich Schlusnus, Paula Salomon-Lindberg, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Peter Schöne as well as the pianist Sandra Droucker and the song accompanist Franz Rupp. Published in print:


Academic works



Further reading



Recordings



References





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[de] Justus Hermann Wetzel

Justus Hermann Wetzel (* 11. März 1879 in Kyritz; † 6. Dezember 1973 in Überlingen) war ein deutscher Komponist, Schriftsteller und Musikpädagoge.
- [en] Justus Hermann Wetzel



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