Bogenhauser artists' band

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The Bogenhauser Künstlerkapelle was a German recorder ensemble . It was founded in Munich around 1890 and existed until the outbreak of World War II.

Members included the sculptors Georg Pezold and Professor Heinrich Düll , the architect Sedlmaier, Drs. Rentsch and Aichinger. The “chamber virtuoso” Heinrich Scherrer , who is also known as the editor of a guitar edition of the Zupfgeigenhansl , later joined as artistic director . After his retirement, the orchestral musician and timpanist Josef Wagener took over the management. The ensemble played historical recorders from the Denner musical instrument factory, among others . The band took part in numerous festivals in Munich. The venues were the old town hall, the German Museum and the Residenztheater . The music of the ensemble was documented by radio recordings. The Bogenhauser Künstlerkapelle was probably the first German recorder ensemble of recent times before the general renaissance of the instrument around 1930.

Audio documents

  • ensemble arcimboldo: Bogenhauser artists' band: Forgotten avant-garde of early music . CD recording of the cross-section of the repertoire of the Bogenhauser artists' band preserved in the original part books. 2017, audite music production CD 97730

literature

  • Hermann Moeck : On the "post-history" and renaissance of the recorder . In: Tibia. Magazine for woodwinds , Vol. 3 (1978), pp. 13-20 ( online ; PDF; 12 MB) and Pp. 79–88 ( online ; PDF; 13 MB), here p. 18 f. Also special print: Edition Moeck, Celle 1980.
  • Martin Kirnbauer: That was pioneering work. The Bogenhauser artist band, an early ensemble of early music . In: Early Music, Concert and Reception (= Basler Jahrbuch für Historische Musikpraxis, special volume for the 50th anniversary of the Friends of Ancient Music in Basel ). Winterthur 1992, pp. 37-67
  • Martin Kirnbauer: The woodwind instruments of the Bogenhauser artist band. In: Michaelsteiner Conference Reports 1994 , pp. 21–30.
  • Peter Harlan in the mirror of history . In: Wind tunnel 2006 No. 3.
  • Tobias Grill: The reception of early music in Munich between approx. 1880 and 1930 (= LMU publications, history and art studies No. 26, edited by Günter Heischmann, Hubertus Kohlen and Winfried Schulze). Munich 2007 ( online ; PDF; 12 MB).
  • Fritz Buek: The guitar and its masters .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Werner Ebnet: You lived in Munich: Biographies from eight centuries. Allitera, Munich 2016, ISBN 978-3-86906-744-5 , p. 520 ( limited preview in Google book search).