August Heinrich Bruinier Explained

August Heinrich Bruinier
Birth Date:7 May 1897
Birth Place:Zweibrücken, "Bavaria this side of the Rhine", Germany
Death Date:24 April 1970
Death Place:Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
Occupation:Violinist and violin teacher
Parents:Jan Berend Hendrik Bruinier (1863–1934)
Sophie Christiane Henriette Wagner/Bruinier (1867-)
Spouse:Hertha Steinborn

August Heinrich Bruinier (7 May 1897 – 24 April 1970) was a German violinist and violin teacher. He was born into a musical family of Dutch provenance.[1] [2]

Life

August Heinrich Bruinier was born in Zweibrücken, close to the French frontier. His father, Jan Berend Hendrik Bruinier (1863–1934) had been born in Amsterdam, but lived in Germany where he worked as the chief executive officer (Geschäftsführer) of a manufacturing company in the heavy industrial sector. His mother, born Sophie Christiane Henriette Wagner, came from a German family.[1] The family was an unusually musical one: of the parents' six recorded children, three grew up to become professional musicians.

Between 1904 and 1907 he attended the "Realgymnasium" (secondary school) in Biebrich, near Wiesbaden before moving to the rapidly expanding Berlin conurbation where from 1907 till 1913 he attended an "Oberrealschule" (senior secondary school) in Steglitz.

Bruinier started his formal musical training as a pupil of the violinist between 1912 and 1914. He studied at the Berlin Music Academy from 1914 till 1917, and was then able to get away from the war playing as a member of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra between 1917 and 1918. Between 1918 and 1920 he progressed his studies at the Berlin Music Academy, now studying with Karl Klingler. He continued to take lessons privately in 1920/1921 with Willy Hess and Gabriele Wietrowetz (1866–1937).

He was Concert Master with the Berlin Academic Orchestra ("Akademische Orchester Berlin") from 1923 till 1925, and was also at this stage already giving violin lessons.[3] In the "Society for Modern Musical presentation in Berlin", which Othmar Steinbauer and Max Deutsch had created (based on the example of Schoenberg's Society for Private Musical Performances in Vienna), Bruinier was the leader of the "House quartet".[3] He was also a member, with, of the "Old German Chamber Quartet" ("Altdeutsche Kammerquartett").

Between 1928 and 1937 Bruinier worked as concert master for the Tobis Film company: from 1937 he was employed in the same position at Berlin's Nollendorf Square Theatre (as it was then known). Between 1943 and 1963 he taught the violin at the Braunschweig District Music Academy. Along with this, between 1951 and 1961 he held summer chamber music courses in the hills south of Würzburg, for JMI at Schloss Weikersheim.

Chamber music ensembles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 24. Nederland's Patriciaat. Centraal Bureau voor Genealogie, den 'Haag. 13. 1923 . 3 May 2016.
  2. Horst Bergmeier, Rainer Lotz: Die Familie Bruinier. In: Fox auf 78, Heft 12, Sommer 1993, ISSN 0948-0412
  3. Karla Höcker: Hauskonzerte in Berlin. Rembrandt, Berlin 1970, P. 71, 98 & 107