Josef Schmid (composer) explained

Josef Schmid (1890, in Germany  - 1969, in New York City) was a conductor, composer, and composition teacher. He was one of the first students of Alban Berg,[1] with whom he studied before World War I.[2] As a conductor Schmid had been an assistant to both Zemlinsky[3] and Erich Kleiber.[4] As a composer Schmid was associated with Berg and Webern but considered himself a musical "godson" of Schoenberg.[5] After World War I Schmid emigrated to New York City and established himself as a teacher of composition, basing his teaching on the writings of Schoenberg. His composition students included Joe Maneri, Gus Pardalis, Harold Seletsky, Robert Di Domenica, and Frieda Schmitt-Lermann.

Notes and References

  1. Theodor W. Adorno, Alban Berg, Henri Lonitz, Adorno-Berg Correspondence, 1925–1935
  2. Joseph Henry Auner, A Schoenberg reader: documents of a life
  3. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article_print.php?id=14714 AllAboutJazz.com
  4. Adorno-Berg-Lonitz, op. cit.
  5. AllAboutJazz.com, op. cit.