Composer
Paul Hindemith (1895-1963); DEU/USA
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A theorist, teacher, violist, conductor, and composer who is regarded by many as the foremost German composer of his generation, Paul Hindemith was one of the most central figures in music between the First and Second World Wars. Born outside of Frankfurt, Hindemith moved with his family to the city in 1902. It was here, in 1904, that Hindemith began taking violin lessons. By 1908, Hindemith became a student of Adolf Rebner, a teacher at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt, who arranged for Hindemith to be awarded a free place at the conservatory the following year. Although he had long been composing, Hindemith, in addition to continuing his study of the violin, began to study composition formally. However, he was forced to leave the conservatory in 1917 when he was called up for military service. He spent most of his service as a member of a regimental band stationed about 3 kilometers from the front line.
After returning from the war, Hindemith again took to the concert stage, having switched to viola in 1919. In 1923 he was invited to join the administrative committee of the Donaueschingen Festival, a group over which he exerted an ever increasing amount of control; programming works of such composers as Schoenberg and Webern. The next year he married Gertrud Rottenberg, the daughter of the conductor of the Frankfurt Opera Orchestra, an ensemble in which Hindemith had been playing. In 1927 he received an appointment as professor of composition at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin. In addition to maintaining an active performing career, Hindemith soon developed a strong interest in teaching, and even took on an evening class at the Volksmusikschule NeuKolln.
Early in 1934, the Nazi party began a campaign to discredit Hindemith, which culminated in a boycott of the composer's works announced by the Kulturgemeinde in November of that year. In January 1935, Hindemith was given a six-month leave from the Hochschule. However, as the boycott of his music was not endorsed by the music division of the Nazi party until 1937, Hindemith was allowed not only to return to teaching, but also to undertake a series of concert tours abroad, to have his music published, and to enter into an agreement with the government of Turkey to build an organized musical life in that country. However, in 1937, Hindemith left Germany for Switzerland, and in 1940 came to the U.S.
After a series of lecture and teaching engagements which had been arranged by friends, Hindemith took a position at Yale, teaching composition and, from 1945 to 1953, conducting the Collegium Musicum. In 1946, Hindemith became an American citizen. In 1951 he accepted a position at the University of Zurich and, after retiring from Yale in 1953, took up permanent residence in Switzerland. After retiring from his post in Zurich, in 1955, he became more active as a conductor. In November 1963, he was taken ill and transferred to a hospital in Frankfurt, where he died of acute pancreatitis.
© Stephen Kingsbury, All Music Guide
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A theorist, teacher, violist, conductor, and composer who is regarded by many as the foremost German composer of his generation,... More
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Stage Works
65 tracks
- Cardillac, opera, Op.39
22 tracks
- Das Nusch-Nuschi, ballet opera for marionettes in 1 act, Op.20
1 track
- Der Dämon (The Demon), dance-pantomime, Op.28
8 tracks
- Hin und zurück, Op.45a (Singspiel)
1 track
- Mathis der Maler (opera)
7 tracks
- Sancta Susanna, opera in 1 act, Op.21
1 track
- The 4 Temperaments, for piano and strings (ballet)
25 tracks
- Cardillac, opera, Op.39
-
Orchestral Works
287 tracks
- Symphonies
83 tracks
- Die Harmonie der Welt (The Music of the Spheres)
12 tracks
- Pittsburgh Symphony
3 tracks
- Symphonia Serena
10 tracks
- Symphony in Bb, for concert band
19 tracks
- Symphony in Eb
8 tracks
- Symphony Mathis der Maler (Mathias the Painter)
28 tracks
- Symphony in Bb
3 tracks
- Die Harmonie der Welt (The Music of the Spheres)
-
Concertos
78 tracks
- Cello Concerto, Op.3
9 tracks
- Clarinet Concerto
4 tracks
- Concerto for Orchestra, Op.38
6 tracks
- Concerto, for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, harp, and orchestra
3 tracks
- Concerto, for trumpet, bassoon, and string orchestra
6 tracks
- Der Schwanendreher, concerto for viola and small orchestra
9 tracks
- Kammermusik No.5, for viola and orchestra, Op.36, No.4
4 tracks
- Piano Concerto for the Left Hand, Op.29
4 tracks
- Piano Concerto
3 tracks
- Trauermusik, for viola and strings
16 tracks
- Tuttifäntchen (suite from the incidental music), for violin and orchestra
11 tracks
- Violin Concerto
3 tracks
- Cello Concerto, Op.3
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Other Orchestral Works
126 tracks
- Amor and Psyche (overture) for chamber orchestra
1 track
- Konzertmusik for brass and strings, Op.50
22 tracks
- Konzertmusik for wind orchestra, Op.41
6 tracks
- Neues vom Tage (overture from the opera; with concert ending)
1 track
- Nobilissima visione (ballet suite)
22 tracks
- Rag Time
2 tracks
- Symphonic Dances
12 tracks
- Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber
55 tracks
- 5 Stücke, for String orchestra, Op.44
5 tracks
- Amor and Psyche (overture) for chamber orchestra
- Symphonies
-
Chamber Works
451 tracks
- Chamber Sonatas
287 tracks
- Bassoon Sonata
2 tracks
- Cello (Solo) Sonata, Op.25, No.3
35 tracks
- Cello Sonata in E
6 tracks
- Cello Sonata, Op.11, No.3
7 tracks
- Clarinet Sonata in Bb
20 tracks
- Flute Sonata
9 tracks
- Harp Sonata
18 tracks
- Horn Sonata (1939)
6 tracks
- Horn Sonata (1943, also for saxophone)
13 tracks
- Oboe Sonata
2 tracks
- Sonata for 4 Horns
3 tracks
- Sonata for Solo Viola
3 tracks
- Trombone Sonata
20 tracks
- Trumpet Sonata
22 tracks
- Tuba Sonata (1943)
3 tracks
- Tuba Sonata (1955)
12 tracks
- Viola (Solo) Sonata, Op.25, No.1
19 tracks
- Viola Sonata in C
8 tracks
- Viola Sonata in F, Op.11, No.4
16 tracks
- Viola Sonata, Op.11, No.5
4 tracks
- Viola Sonata, Op.25, No.4
3 tracks
- Violin Sonata in C
6 tracks
- Violin Sonata in D, Op.11, No.2
3 tracks
- Violin Sonata in E
6 tracks
- Violin Sonata in Eb, Op.11, No.1
5 tracks
- Violin Sonata, Op.31, No.1
10 tracks
- Violin Sonata, Op.31, No.2 ('Es ist so schönes Wetter draussen')
20 tracks
- Violin Sonata, Op.31, No.4
6 tracks
- Bassoon Sonata
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Other Chamber Works
164 tracks
- Acht Stucke ('8 Pieces'), for flute
8 tracks
- Drei Leichte Stücke ('3 Easy Pieces'), for cello and piano
3 tracks
- Duet (Scherzo) for Viola and Cello
1 track
- Duet for Violin and Clarinet
2 tracks
- Kammermusik No.3, for cello and 10 instruments, Op.36, No.2
4 tracks
- Kleine Kammermusik, for wind quintet, Op.24, No.2
30 tracks
- Konzertmusik for piano, 10 brass instruments, and 2 harps, Op.49
18 tracks
- Konzertstück, for 2 alto saxophones
2 tracks
- Meditation, for violin (or viola or cello) and piano (from 'Nobilissma visione')
1 track
- Morgenmusik, for brass ensemble (from 'Plöner Musiktag')
21 tracks
- Octet, for clarinet, bassoon, horn, violin, 2 violas, cello, and bass
5 tracks
- 3 Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op.8
3 tracks
- Quartet for Clarinet, Violin, Cello, and Piano
12 tracks
- Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet, Op.30
15 tracks
- Septet, for flute, oboe, clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon, horn, and trumpet
5 tracks
- Sing und Spielmusic für Liebhaber und Musikfreunde ('Music for Use') for voices and instruments, Op.45
1 track
- String Quartet No.4, Op.22
10 tracks
- Trio for Heckelphone (or Tenor Saxophone), Viola, and Piano, Op.47
14 tracks
- Trio for Recorders
6 tracks
- Sonata for Horn and Piano
3 tracks
- Acht Stucke ('8 Pieces'), for flute
- Chamber Sonatas
-
Keyboard Works
189 tracks
- Keyboard Sonatas
80 tracks
- Organ Sonata No.1
11 tracks
- Organ Sonata No.2
12 tracks
- Organ Sonata No.3 ('On Old Folksongs')
7 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.1 in A ('Der Main')
15 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.2 in G
12 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.3 in Bb
13 tracks
- Piano Sonata, 4 hands
3 tracks
- Piano Sonata, Op.17 (2 movements. Lost, except: Stretta of the final movement, preserved in a reconstruction by Bernhard Billeter)
2 tracks
- Sonata for 2 Pianos
5 tracks
- Organ Sonata No.1
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Other Piano Works
109 tracks
- Berceuse
1 track
- 5 Dance Pieces, Op.19
5 tracks
- In einer Nacht (Dreams and Experiences), 14 short pieces, Op.15
14 tracks
- Klaviermusik, Op.37
18 tracks
- Lied
1 track
- 2 Little Pieces
2 tracks
- Ludus tonalis, cycle of 25 pieces for piano
50 tracks
- Suite '1922', Op.26
17 tracks
- Variations for Piano
1 track
- Berceuse
- Keyboard Sonatas
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Vocal Works
50 tracks
- Choral Works
14 tracks
- 6 Chansons on Poems by Rilke
7 tracks
- Der Tod: Er erschreckte uns, unser Retter
1 track
- Mass, for male and female chorus
6 tracks
- 6 Chansons on Poems by Rilke
- Das Marienleben, song cycle for soprano and piano, Op.27
16 tracks
- Der Gutzgauch auf dem Zaune saá
1 track
- Die Junge Magd, song cycle for alto, flute, clarinet, and string quartet, Op.23b
6 tracks
- 3 Hymns of Walt Whitman, for baritone and piano, Op.14
3 tracks
- 3 Songs for soprano and orchestra, Op.9
3 tracks
- 2 Songs on Texts of Brentano, for voice and piano
1 track
- 2 Songs on Texts of Nietzsche, for voice and piano
1 track
- 4 Songs on Texts of Novalis, for voice and piano
4 tracks
- 4 Songs on Texts of Rückert, for voice and piano (3 lost)
1 track
- Choral Works
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Stage Works
1 track
-
Chamber Works
20 tracks
- Chamber Sonatas
17 tracks
- Cello (Solo) Sonata, Op.25, No.3
10 tracks
- Cello Sonata in E
3 tracks
- Viola (Solo) Sonata, Op.25, No.1
4 tracks
- Cello (Solo) Sonata, Op.25, No.3
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Other Chamber Works
3 tracks
- Chamber Sonatas
-
Keyboard Works
1 track
-
Other Piano Works
1 track
- Suite '1922', Op.26
1 track
- Suite '1922', Op.26
-
Other Piano Works
Below are works by P.Hindemith that every music lover should explore:
- Orchestral Works
- Symphonic Dances
12 tracks
- Notable Movement: 3.Sehr langsam
- Symphonic Dances



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