Gustav Adolf Papendick

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Gustav Adolf Papendick (born April 26, 1839 in Naußeden, Ragnit district as Adolph Julius August Papendick , † May 24, 1908 in Schöneberg near Berlin ) was a German pianist , music teacher and composer .

Life

Papendick was the son of the auscultator Julius Papendick, who was employed at the Berlin Superior Court, and his wife Maria, née von Groß. He received his first musical training from his father, who gave him piano lessons and who recognized his high musical talent early on. The father took him on an educational trip to Russia, where Papendick received piano lessons from Adolf Henselt . In 1846 he came to Berlin, where he also appeared in public concerts. Because of his extraordinary talent, he was recommended to the Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm IV , who approved 450 thalers for his further training . Papendick then took piano lessons from Charles Voss and later from Theodor Kullak . His younger sister Ida , a harpist , appeared with him at a public concert in 1854 at the age of twelve. Even later the siblings performed together in concerts, e.g. B. 1857 in the City Theater of Riga .

Papendick later worked for many years as a music teacher with the rank of professor at the Mohr Conservatory in Berlin. He gave lectures on the pedagogy of piano playing, and he also composed. In 1869 he became a member of the General German Music Association . He died at the age of 69.

Papendick was married to Anna Bertha Heidel (1860–1941) since 1881.

literature

  • Carl von Ledebur: Tonkünstler-Lexicon Berlin's from the oldest times to the present . Rauh, Berlin 1861, p. 409 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb10931847-2 ( full text in the Google book search).
  • Biographical yearbook and German necrology . Volume 13-14, 1910, p. 433.

Individual evidence

  1. Information on the place of birth according to the marriage register and death register; Which of the places in question (Bäuerlich Naußeden, Köllmisch Naußeden, Erbfrei Naußeden, Schäferei Naußeden) is meant is unclear.
  2. Ledeburs Tonkünstler-Lexicon Berlin erroneously states that his birth was around 1840 in Tilsit .
  3. ^ Death register StA Schöneberg I, No. 874/1908
  4. ^ German stage almanac (edited by A. Heinrich). Volume 22, Berlin, January 1, 1858, p. 333.
  5. ^ New magazine for music: the magazine for new tones, founded in 1834 . Volume 65, 1869, p. 267.
  6. Marriage register StA Berlin IV a, No. 779/1881