Jacques van Lear ( French Jacques Dutch van Lier ; April 24, 1875 , The Hague - February 25, 1951 , Angmering , Aran , UK) - Dutch cellist.
| Jacques van Lear Jacques van lier | |
|---|---|
| basic information | |
| Date of Birth | April 24, 1875 |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | February 25, 1951 (aged 75) |
| Place of death | |
| A country | Netherlands |
| Professions | cellist , music teacher |
| Instruments | cello |
He studied under Oscar Eberle (Sr.) and Jacques Hartog . He lived and worked in Berlin, taught a chamber ensemble class at the Klindworth-Scharwenki Conservatory , and performed as part of a string quartet led by Hugo Heerman . Among van Lyre's companions was young Otto Klemperer [1] .
He was interested in music of the 18th century and earlier: he wrote the Minuet for cello and clavier by Christophe Willibald Gluck ( 1921 , the recording is included in the well-known anthology of cello recordings “The Recorded Cello”, 1993), other van Lear notes approved by Gramophone magazine include completely forgotten composers Mazzano and Florembassi [2] . Prepared for the Milanese publishing house Ricordi the collection “Twelve Ancient Arias” ( Italian: 12 arie antiche ; 1929 ) in his own arrangements for cello and piano, edited one of the Vienna editions of Six Sonatas for Johann Sebastian Bach's solo cello.
Lyre is dedicated to the string quartet Op. 120 Philipp Scharvenka .
In 1939 he fled from Germany to Great Britain.
Notes
- ↑ Peter Heyworth. Otto Klemperer, his life and times - Cambridge University Press, 1983. - Vol. 1, p. 15. (English)
- ↑ Chamber music (unavailable link) // The Gramophone, October 1928, p. 15. (English)
Links
- Lear, Jacques van: sheet music at International Music Score Library Project