Hans Ailbout

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Hans Ailbout (1907)

Hans Ailbout (born July 2, 1879 in Krefeld , † September 1, 1957 in Berlin ) was a German musician , music director and composer .

Life

After studying music, Ailbout first taught at the Krefeld Conservatory and from 1901 at the Stern Conservatory in Berlin. Around 1907 he founded the Mozart Conservatory in Berlin-Wilmersdorf and was its director from then on. His wife, concert singer Hilda Ailbout (1884–?) Also taught there.

Ailbout published his works under his own name and under numerous pseudonyms, including E. Beker , Bell , E. Born , Jean Boutail , E. Brandt , F. Eilenburg , Hans Ernesti , H. Faneau , Jose Ferrin , FK Huber , Konrad Kösen , H. Lange and Torelli .

Hans Ailbout died on September 1, 1957 at the age of 78 in Berlin. He was buried in the state-owned Wilmersdorf cemetery . The grave has not been preserved.

plant

Ailbout's best-known series of melodies for wind orchestra is the Fantasy Im Rosengarten von Sanssouci , the sheet music of which can be found in the holdings of the German National Library in Leipzig. Ailbout has also composed film scores for silent films such as The Ban on Kissing , Miss Venus , The Blonde Geisha , The Girl from Pontecuculi , lm Devil's Moor , Heidehochzeit , Beim Offenburg in der Heide , Harvest in the Forest , The Land of 1000 Wonders and others. Film music for later sound films, such as Behavior insufficiently (1933) or Die Gang von Hohenschönhausen (1934), was also part of his compositional oeuvre.

With his military march We present he won first prize in the composition competition organized by Verlag Scherl, Berlin, in 1912. In the arrangement of music inspector Oskar Hackenberger , the march was included in the Prussian army march collection in the same year under the number I, 93 . During the largest equestrian procession in Europe, the annual blood kick in the Upper Swabian vineyard, the march is played by numerous music bands. It is known as the “hymn of the blood kick ” and is also affectionately called the Rossbollen March .

At the beginning of the 1920s, as conductor of the Potsdamer Tonkünstler Orchestra, he recorded a few records with marching music.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. List of teachers at the Stern Conservatory (1850–1936)
  2. hebu-music.com
  3. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende : Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 . P. 505.
  4. The history of the Rossbollen March , Schwäbische Zeitung , May 28, 2014