Minna Ebel-Wilde

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Minna Ebel-Wilde , née Minna Wilde (born September 27, 1890 in Wilster , † July 31, 1975 in Uttingen near Bern ) was a German oratorio, concert and lieder singer ( soprano ).

Live and act

Ebel-Wilde completed a vocal training with Hugo Rasch at the Berlin Music Academy .

In 1911 she married the composer Arnold Ebel and had their only daughter Maren in 1913. In 1916 Ebel-Wilde made her debut in the concert hall and then worked as a concert, lieder and oratorio singer.

During her career as a concert singer she performed in Berlin, Hamburg, Dresden, Leipzig, Munich, Rome, Florence and Warsaw.

Her repertoire included u. a. the St. Matthew Passion , the St. John Passion , the Christmas Oratorio and cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach , the 9th Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven , A German Requiem by Johannes Brahms , the Requiem by Arnold Ebel , Frithjof and other works by Max Bruch .

Since 1940 she worked as a teacher at the Berlin Music Academy, but continued her singing career until 1946. After the death of her husband, she lived with her daughter and her family in Uttingen, Switzerland, from 1963 until her death.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. freely based on Esaias Tegnér's Frithjofssage .

Web links