Ludwig Bussler

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Ludwig Bussler (born November 26, 1838 , † January 28, 1900 ) was a German music theorist and musicologist .

Bussler received his musical training from Eduard Grell , Siegfried Dehn (theory) and Wilhelm Wieprecht ( instrumentation ). From 1879 to 1900 Bussler taught music theory at the Stern Conservatory in Berlin , thus continuing his teaching activity for almost fifteen years; one of his students was u. a. Bruno Walter . He wrote several music pedagogical and theoretical writings, which up to the middle of the twentieth century a. a. experienced numerous reprints through Hugo Leichtentritt . Thanks to translations into English ( John Henry Cornell , Theory and Practice of Musical Form ) and Russian ( Sergei Iwanowitsch Tanejew , Ucheniye o kanone , Moscow 1929), Bussler's theoretical works were also spread beyond Germany.

Fonts

  • Musical elementary teaching with fifty-eight tasks for teaching in public educational institutions and self-teaching. Berlin 1867
  • Practical harmony. Berlin 1876
  • The strict sentence. Berlin 1877
  • Musical theory of forms. Berlin 1878
  • Contrapunct and fugue in free (modern) composition. Berlin 1878
  • Instrumentation and orchestral setting. Berlin 1879
  • Practical musical composition teaching in exercises. Vol. I-III, Berlin 1878-1880
  • Score study (modulation theory). Berlin 1882

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Charles J. Hall: Chronology of Western Classical Music. Routledge, 2002, ISBN 9780415942164 , p. 329. Restricted preview in the Google book search
  2. Obituary: Carl Drechsler Hamilton - The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular Vol. 41, No. 685 (Mar. 1, 1900), pp. 194-195. In: jstor.org. Retrieved December 30, 2014 .
  3. List of teachers at the Stern Conservatory (1850–1936)