Rheinsberg Music Academy

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The Kavalierhaus is the seat of the Rheinsberg Music Academy

As a federal and state institution, the Rheinsberg Music Academy is a work, training and meeting place for professional and amateur musicians, recognized in accordance with the Brandenburg Continuing Education Act, a member of the Association of Federal and State Music Academies in Germany and recognized as a provider of free youth welfare in accordance with Section 75 of Book VIII of the Social Code.

history

Rheinsberg Castle Theater,
Rheinsberg Palace Theater

The Rheinsberg Music Academy was founded in 1991 as a house for young artists on the grounds of Rheinsberg Castle . It has been a federal academy since 2001. Since 2014, in the legal form of Musikkultur Rheinsberg gGmbH, it has received institutional funding from the Ministry of Science, Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg, the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district and the city of Rheinsberg. Thomas Falk has been the managing director since 2016. In autumn 2018, Professor Georg Quander took over the artistic direction of the Federal Music Academy and the Rheinsberg Castle Chamber Opera. Felix Görg has been the new head of the academy since 2019.

As a training center for musicians, it organizes music workshops and master classes as well as scientific colloquia on music-related topics. The music academy gives priority to works by young composers, including works by artists who were not given appropriate attention during the GDR era. In addition, compositions were commissioned and performed in Rheinsberg.

The castle theater, which had fallen into ruins, was reopened at the end of 1999. It was designed with a simple modern hall in the old walls. This is where the events of the Music Academy and the opera festival Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg take place, whose office is also located in the Kavaliershaus.

Publications

in alphabetical order by authors / editors

  • Ulrike Liedke (Ed.): Ms. Musica today: Concepts for compositions. Rheinsberg Whitsun Workshop New Music, publication by the Rheinsberg Music Academy, Hofmeister, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-031-0
  • Ulrike Liedke (Ed.): "Everyone according to their own style": new musical approaches today. Publication by the Music Academy Rheinsberg, Pfau, Saarbrücken 1997, ISBN 978-3-930735-70-9
  • Ulrike Liedke (Hrsg.): The Rheinsberger Hofkapelle of Friedrich II .: Musicians on the way to the Berlin "Capell servant". Publication by the Rheinsberg Music Academy, Rheinsberg 1995, ISBN 3-00-000732-8 ; 2. revised Ed., Hofmeister, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-019-8
  • Christoph Schaffrath : Overture ex A major: due violini, viola et basso; N. 4. Score and set of parts, first dr., Urtext. Edited by the Rheinsberg Music Academy, Werner Feja, Berlin 1996
  • Claudia Schurz: The theater of Prince Heinrich: a reading book on the Rheinsberg Castle Theater. Publication of the Rheinsberg Music Academy, ed. by Ulrike Liedtke , Hofmeister Musikverlag, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-016-7
  • Frank Wendler: Ten years of the Rheinsberg Music Academy. Music Academy Rheinsberg, Rheinsberg 2001
  • Helmut Zapf , Klaus Feldmann , Raphael Heinrich, Gerd Domhardt , Matthias Jann: New Music in Rheinsberg: Commissioned works by the Rheinsberg Music Academy. NCA - New Classical Adventure, What a Beautiful Noise, Stansstad 1998

Individual evidence

  1. Music Academy Rheinsberg on the website of the Association of Federal and State Music Academies in Germany
  2. ^ Joachim Nölte: Ruppin Lake District. A companion. Edition Terra, Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-942917-31-5 , pp. 135 f.
  3. ^ Claudia Schurz: The theater of Prince Heinrich: a reading book on the Rheinsberg Castle Theater. Publication of the Rheinsberg Music Academy, ed. by Ulrike Liedtke , Hofmeister Musikverlag, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-016-7 , p. 131
  4. Francis Hüsers: Three Heroes of Jörn Arnecke - A Workshop Report of the librettist. In: Albert Gier (ed.): Divine, human and diabolical comedies: European world theater designs in the 19th and 20th centuries. Univ. of Bamberg Press, Bamberg 2011, ISBN 978-3-86309-011-1 , pp. 283-294

Web links

Coordinates: 53 ° 5 ′ 58.1 ″  N , 12 ° 53 ′ 16 ″  E