Carl Henze

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Carl Henze or Karl Henze (born December 14, 1872 in Berlin ; † January 7, 1946 in Potsdam ) was a German guitarist , mandolinist , composer , conductor and music teacher in Berlin.

Life

Henze was the son of a master painter. Until 1890 he learned guitar , zither and harmonics with Wilhelm Conrad in Berlin. From 1890 to 1892 he attended courses with the Neapolitan mandolinist Michele Fasano . From 1892 to 1894 he learned from Auguste Zurfluh (1870–1930) in Paris.

From 1894 to 1896 he toured Europe with the Fasanos Sextet . From 1896 he conducted the Berlin mandolins and lute orchestra . In 1900 he became a member of the International Guitarist Association in Munich . Henze gave private lessons in the local teaching institute for mandolin and guitar .

Like Heinrich Scherrer , Heinrich Albert and other professional musicians, he worked in the International Guitarists' Association founded in 1899 .

From 1912 to 1915 he also taught his son Bruno Karl Ludwig Henze . Hans-Lutz Niessen was one of his best-known students .

In 1926 he published the elementary school of artistic guitar playing and the harmony theory required for it in the music publisher Johann André . He also composed 100 works, such as the folk dance Die Verliebten , which originated in Russia .

Works and sound recordings

  • Pocci Catalog (PDF) Catalog
  • DISMARC , March 2013 & cqlMode% 3Dtrue & method = enhancedSearch DNB
  • Münchner Kindl, Wiener Praterleben . Berlin Mandolin and Lute Orchestra, headed by Carl Henze
    Odeon (blue); O-2150
  • Firmly in the saddle, Con grazia . Berlin Mandolin and Lute Orchestra EV 1896 - Conductor: Carl Henze
    Matrix No. Be 5745 - Be 5749 / Odeon O-2220a - O-2220b
  • Flattering kitten (R. Eilenberg); Pizzicato from the ballet "Sylvia" . Berlin Mandolin and Lute Orchestra (EV 1896) under the direction of Carl Henze / Matrix No. Be 6613² - Be 6614 / Odeon (blue) O-2551a + O 2551b - recording from 1928 (from lotz-verlag.de ).

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Józef Powroźniak: Guitar Lexicon .
  2. Wölki 1940, p. 16.
  3. Fritz Buek: The guitar and its masters. Robert Lienau (Schlesinger'sche Buch- und Musikhandlung) , Berlin-Lichterfelde 1926, p. 117 f.