Salome Reiser

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Salome Reiser (born September 26, 1965 in Dossenheim , † December 16, 2014 in Oberaudorf ) was a German musicologist .

Salome Reiser studied musicology, philosophy and Latin philology of the Middle Ages and modern times at the Universities of Heidelberg (with Ludwig Finscher ) and Vienna . She received her doctorate in Heidelberg with a thesis on Franz Schubert's string quartets .

She began her professional career at the Johannes Brahms Complete Edition at the University of Kiel . Then she switched to the Leipzig Mendelssohn edition . In March 2011 she became editor-in-chief of the complete edition by Richard Strauss and began working at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich .

Salome Reiser worked closely with the publishing houses Bärenreiter , Breitkopf & Härtel , Carus , Henle .

The edition of the opera Salome prepared by Reiser - also in the almost unknown French version - was to appear as the first volume of the new complete edition.

Publications (selection)

  • Franz Schubert's early string quartets. A classical genre at the beginning of a post-classical period . Kassel Bärenreiter, 1999.

Editions (selection)

  • String quartets: C minor opus 51, No. 1, A minor opus 51, No. 2, B major opus 67 by Johannes Brahms. Edited by Salome Reiser. Munich: Henle, c 2004. New edition of all works / Johannes Brahms: Series 2, chamber music; 3
  • Soldier love. Funny one-act Singspiel by Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. Edited by Salome Reiser. Leipzig edition of the works of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy ed. from the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig. Ser. 5, stage works, music for drama; 2. Wiesbaden, Breitkopf & Härtel, 2006. Foreword and introduction in German and English. Language, critical report in German language.

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