Frieder Weissmann Explained

Frieder Weissmann (23 January 1893[1] – 4 January 1984) was a German conductor and composer.

Life and career

Weissmann was born in Langen, Hesse. His civil name was Samuel, which he kept - in the form Semy or Semmy - until 1916. After that, he preferred the first name Friedrich or Frieder in combination with Samuel, which was soon shortened to S. before disappearing altogether. In the 1920s, Peter was added as a third first name. Other surviving stage names are Ping-Pong[2] and Marco Ibanez.[3]

Weissmann grew up in Frankfurt, where his father Ignatz Isidor Weissmann (1863-1939) was Hazzan of the Hauptsynagoge from 1894 to 1937. After graduating from the Goethe Grammar School, he studied law in Heidelberg for one semester in 1911, then philosophy, art history and music history at the Munich University until 1914. In Heidelberg, he received composition lessons from Philipp Wolfrum, in Munich from Walter Braunfels. At the outbreak of the First World War, he took the first step towards a conducting career and became répétiteur under Ludwig Rottenberg at the Frankfurt Opera (1914/16). In 1916/17, he was engaged as second Kapellmeister at the Stadttheater Stettin. From 1917 to 1921, he worked as a freelance concert kapellmeister and répétiteur in Berlin, Frankfurt and Munich. In all three cities he also appeared as a composer.

In 1920, he was awarded a doctorate from the Faculty of Philosophy at Munich University with a dissertation on the composer Georg Abraham Schneider (1770-1839). This was followed in 1921 by an engagement as répétiteur and conductor at the Berlin State Opera, where he worked under Max von Schillings and Erich Kleiber until 1924. At the same time, Weissmann started a years-long close collaboration with the Berlin record company Carl Lindström AG, for whose Parlophon and Odeon brands he musically directed some 2,000 recordings until 1933.[4] In 1924, he moved to the opera house of Münster as first Kapellmeister (1924/25), then in the same capacity to the opera house in Königsberg (1926/27). From 1926 to 1932, he was permanent guest conductor of the Dresden Philharmonic. From 1930 onwards, there was increased collaboration with radio orchestras in Stuttgart and Hamburg. In 1931, alongside Ernst Kunwald, he became conductor of the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, the former Blüthner Orchestra, which had merged with the Berlin Philharmonic in autumn 1932. With the Berlin Philharmonic he was only able to conduct four concerts and record one disc (Overture to Wagner's opera Rienzi) until January 1933.

In 1929, he married his long-time fiancée, the German soprano Meta Seinemeyer, who, seriously ill with leukaemia, died a few hours after the wedding ceremony. Weissmann had accompanied the singer on all her Parlophon recordings and numerous concerts in Dresden and Berlin.[5] [6]

As an artist of Jewish descent, Weissmann also saw his existence directly threatened by the Nazi Machtergreifung in 1933.[7] He left Germany in June 1933 for the Netherlands, where he performed with the Royal Concertgebouw Amsterdam and the Algemene Vereniging Radio Omroep orchestra. This was followed by six-month stays - alternating with the Netherlands - in Argentina from 1934 to 1937, where he gave concerts in Buenos Aires Radio Splendid and at the Teatro Colón. It was also in Buenos Aires that Weissmann, who had acquired Argentinian citizenship in 1935, married his second wife Rosita Chevallier-Boutell in 1937.

After making his U.S. debut in late 1937 with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, he moved his primary residence to New York in 1938, where he caused a stir in the summer of 1939 with a series of open-air concerts with the New York Philharmonic at the Lewisohn Stadium. He now recorded first with Columbia Records (among others Risë Stevens), and from 1945 with RCA Victor - an association that lasted until around 1950. From 1939 to 1947, Weissmann, who became an American citizen in 1944, conducted the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and from 1942 to 1958, the Philharmonic Orchestra of Scranton, Pennsylvania.[8] As successor to Artur Rodziński, he took over the direction of the Orquesta Filarmónica de La Habana in Havana, Cuba, from 1950 to 1953. In parallel to his permanent engagements, Weissmann was very active as a guest conductor in the US, Canada (Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver), Mexico and the Netherlands from 1945 onwards. After 1954, he concentrated on Europe and was celebrated there, especially in Italy, e.g. for a cycle of Mahler's symphonies, which he began as early as the late 1950s and concluded in March 1974 in Florence with a performance of Mahler's Second Symphony.[9]

Weissmann was a central figure in the German recording industry between 1921 and 1933. He was Lindström's trusted house conductor.[10] He usually conducted the orchestra of the Berlin State Opera, the Staatskapelle Berlin, or an ad hoc orchestra consisting of members of this orchestra. Weissmann not only collaborated on numerous vocal and operatic recordings with the leading vocal soloists of the 1920s such as Gitta Alpár, Vera Schwarz and Richard Tauber, but also conducted many recordings of purely orchestral music of both serious and light-hearted character. His repertoire was extremely broad and included operetta and light classical music as well as the major works of symphonic literature. Under his direction, numerous first recordings were made, e.g. the first complete recording of all Beethoven's symphonies in 1924/25. Outstanding are his electric recordings of Respighi's Fountains of Rome[11] and Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture.[12] He accompanied the cellist Emanuel Feuermann on Max Bruch's Kol Nidrei[13] and the pianists Moriz Rosenthal and Karol Szreter[14] on their recordings of Chopin's Piano Concerto No. 1[15] and Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4.[16] Weissmann's American recordings include opera recordings with numerous stars of the Metropolitan Opera such as sopranos Zinka Milanov, Licia Albanese, Helen Traubel, tenor Jan Peerce and baritone Leonard Warren, as well as a concerto for viola by Henri Casadesus,[17] which had originally been attributed to Handel, with William Primrose and what was probably the first recording of Max Bruch's Scottish Fantasy, Op. 46 with violinist Jascha Heifetz as soloist.

Weissmann died on 4 January 1984 in Amsterdam at the age of 90[18] and was buried two days later at Zorgvlied Cemetery alongside Dutch painter Carel Willink, the husband of Weissmann's friend Sylvia Willink, who had died a few months earlier.[19]

Recording

DISMARC.org lists 657 entries on Weissmann.[20]

Die Rückseite mx. 6133 enthält eine Aufnahme von GMD Eduard Mörike.

on Parlophon / Beka [etc.] Hauptverzeichnis 1925/26, .

a) Ouvertures:

b) Symphonic music:

on Parlophon / Beka Electric Hauptverzeichnis 1928/29, .

c) Operas:

d) Operetta and light music:

Reissues

Radio concert recordings

Illustrations

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. according to Bunz 2016. Different dates are given in Kürschners Musikkalender. 1954 (23 January 1895) and Holmes 1982 (* 1898), vgl. musicsack.com
  2. in Stengel-Gerigk sp.313
  3. Bunz 2016, p. 200f.
  4. cf. Parlophone/Beka Electric main catalogue 1928/29,, [vgl. Parlophon/Beka Electric Hauptverzeichnis 1928/29],, Diskographie bei Damians 78s Archivierte Kopie (Memento of 13 March 2012 in the Internet Archive) and choice .
  5. For a detailed discography of the recordings that soprano Meta Seinemeyer (1895-1929) made for Parlophon and on which Weissmann conducted the accompanying orchestra (Grosses Opernorchester [label]), see Vicki Kondelik seinemeyer.com. Copyright 2002.
  6. On the Weissmann-Seinemeyer relationship, see also youtube.com
  7. compare: Stengel-Gerigk, .
  8. Bunz 2016.
  9. Bunz 2016, p. 344f.
  10. Compare: Hauptverzeichnis 1928/29, where he is attested on : The conception and execution of the musical material he works on is masterly, his adaptability to the special task of a recording extraordinary. The recordings conducted by Dr. Weissmann are distinguished by a very special splendour of colour."
  11. http://www.dismarc.org/index.php?form=display&oaiid=MGR%2F000043071447&outputformat=displayonly&db=0 on Parlophon P.8523 (mx. 2-21 358/359) and P.8524 (mx. 2-21 360/361)
  12. acoustic on Parlophone P.1654 (mx. 6652, 6621) and P.1655 (mx. 6622, 6623), cf. Main Catalogue 1925/26,, and electrically on Odeon O-6603 (xxB.8029, xxB.8030) and O-6604 (xxB.8031, xxB.8032)
  13. http://www.dismarc.org/index.php?form=display&oaiid=MGR%2F000043072285&outputformat=displayonly&db=0 on P.9500 (mx. 2-21 649 and 2-21 650), recorded 27 January 1930
  14. born 1899 in Lodz, pupil of Egon Petri, died after an operation in Berlin on 20 March 1933.
  15. Parlophone P.9559 (mx. 2-21 697) Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, op. 11 (Chopin), recorded 1 May 1930 (dismarc.org)
  16. Parlophone P.9061 (mx. 2-8943 and 2-8942), P.1962 (mx. 2-8945 and 2-8946)(dismarc. org)
  17. Henri Casadesus (30 September 1879 in Paris - 31 May 1947 in Paris), violinist and music publisher Henri Casadesus
  18. cf. musicsack.com after Frank/Altmann 1936 and supplement to the 1984 necrology (Music Library Association) 1986, .
  19. Bunz 2016, .
  20. http://www.dismarc.org/index.php?form=search&db=0&start=656 vgl
  21. Peter Sommeregger auf info-netz-musik; 26 May 2016; retrieved 26 May 2016.