Friedrich Sander (musician)

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Friedrich Sander (born July 30, 1856 in Kaiserslautern , † June 9, 1899 in Munich ) was a German musician , composer and music teacher .

Life

Friedrich Sander came from the Sander family of instrument makers . His father was Jakob Sander (* 1833 in Ulmet , † 1897 in Kaiserslautern), who ran an instrument workshop in Kaiserslautern. His grandfather was the instrument maker Friedrich Jakob Sander (* 1809 in Wolfstein , † 1876 in Kaiserslautern), who founded the "First Palatinate Violin Making Institute" in Kaiserslautern in 1834. Four of his nine siblings also became instrument makers.

Friedrich Sander played the violin, trumpet and other instruments and took part in his father's "Capelle Sander". He expanded their repertoire with his own compositions in the style of the West Palatinate traveling musicians . From 1877 he attended the Royal Music School in Munich (today: University of Music and Theater Munich ) and on August 1, 1878, he was already employed as a violinist in the Royal Bavarian Court Orchestra. In this position, too, he continued his music studies at the music school and graduated in 1882.

With a ministerial resolution of May 11, 1890, he was appointed violin teacher and choir conductor at the k. Maximiliansgymnasium employed in Munich and thus took over the position of the late music teacher Karl Ramftler (December 18, 1843– April 10, 1890).

Friedrich Sander died on July 9, 1899 in Munich. The municipal library (Gasteig) - music library in Munich keeps his estate.

Works

Friedrich Sander was already active as a composer when he was a student at the Royal Music School in Munich. Two pieces for violin and orchestra, Legende und Capriccio , were performed in 1885, and a larger tone painting Heroide in 1892 at the Musikalische Akademie in Munich. He composed 12 chamber music and orchestral works and one symphonic poem .

literature

  • Obituary by Nikolaus Wecklein in: Annual report on the k. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1898/99 . Munich 1899.
  • Marliese Fuhrmann: Cuckoo Call and Nightingale. The Palatinate hiking musicians . Gollenstein, Blieskastel 2000, ISBN 3-933389-27-5

Web links