Emil Baré

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Emil Baré

Emil Baré , actually Emil Barach (born September 8, 1870 in Vienna ; † approx. 1940 ) was a Hungarian violinist .

Life

Emil Baré was born in Vienna to Hungarian-Jewish parents . His father was Dr. med. Sigmund Barach (* 1842), and his mother was Rosa Barach (née Gottlob; 1841–1913), writer and educator. In 1886, at the age of 16, he resigned from the Jewish faith and changed his surname Barach to Baré. He studied at the Vienna Conservatory with Josef Hellmesberger and then at the Conservatoire de Paris with Lambert Massart . From 1892 to 1895 he played second violin in the professors' quartet founded by Gustav Hollaender in Cologne in 1888 (later the Gürzenich quartet ). In Paris he then worked as the concertmaster of the opera orchestra in the late 1890s . 1897–1902 he was second concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in the USA . He also played in the Orchester Lamoureux and worked at the opera houses in Mainz and Cologne. In spring 1903 he became concertmaster of the Hungarian Royal Opera in Budapest and in 1910 teacher of violin and later professor at the Royal Hungarian Music Academy .

On April 20, 1916 Baré played the part of solo violin in the first part (Une idéale) of Bartók's Two Portraits Op. With the orchestra of the Budapest Opera under the direction of István Strasser . 5, the two sentences being performed together for the first time.

literature

  • Aladár Schöpflin (Ed.): Baré, Emil . In: Magyar Színművészeti Lexikon (Hungarian Lexicon of Performing Arts) . Országos Színészegyesület Nyugdíjintézete, Budapest 1929–1931, 1st volume, p. 126 ( digitized version ) ( Hungarian ).
  • Péter Újvári (Ed.): Baré, Emil . In: Magyar zsidó lexikon (Hungarian Jewish Lexicon) . Budapest 1929, 3rd vol., P. 88 ( digitized version ) ( Hungarian ).

Individual evidence

  1. register books of the Israeli Kulusgemeinde; Birth book 1868–1892, p. 28.
  2. ^ Helga Hofmann-Weinberger: Biography of Rosa Barach // Women in Motion: 1848–1938
  3. Anna Staudacher: "... reports the exit from the Mosaic faith": 18,000 exits from Judaism in Vienna, 1868–1914: names - sources - dates . Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main 2009, ISBN 978-3-631-55832-4 , p. 687 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  4. Karlheinz Weber: From minstrel to urban chamber musician: on the history of the Gürzenich Orchestra, Volume 2 (=  contributions to the history of music on the Rhine ). Merseburger, Kassel 2009, ISBN 978-3-87537-318-9 , pp. 812 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  5. A Listing of All the Musicians of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra ( English )
  6. Tully Potter: About this Recording (PROKOFIEV / BLOCH: Violin Concertos - Szigeti) at Naxos.com ( English )