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For more information on Moritz Hauptmann, visit Britannica.com.
| Music Encyclopedia: Moritz Hauptmann |
(b Dresden, 13 Oct 1792; d Leipzig, 3 Jan 1868). German composer, theorist and teacher. At Kassel he was a violinist under Spohr for 20 years, then Kantor of the Thomasschule, Leipzig, and theory teacher in the newly founded conservatory there. He edited the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung (1843) and, with Otto Jahn and Schumann, founded the Bach Gesellschaft (1850). His output consists chiefly of sacred vocal music; his theoretical system stresses the dualism of major and minor.
| Wikipedia: Moritz Hauptmann |
Moritz Hauptmann (October 13, 1792 – January 3, 1868), was a German music theorist, teacher and composer.
Hauptmann was born at Dresden, and studied violin under Scholz, piano under Franz Lanska, composition under Grosse and Francesco Morlacchi, the rival of Carl Maria von Weber. Afterwards, he completed his education as a violinist and composer under Louis Spohr, and till 1821 held various appointments in private families, varying his musical occupations with mathematical and other studies bearing chiefly on acoustics and kindred subjects.
For a time also Hauptmann was employed as an architect, but all other pursuits gave place to music, and a grand tragic opera, Mathilde belongs to the period just referred to. In 1822 he entered the orchestra of Kassel, again under Spohr's direction, and it was there that he first taught composition and musical theory to such men as Ferdinand David, Friedrich Burgmüller, Kid and others.
In 1842 Hauptmann obtained the position of Kantor at the Thomas School in Leipzig (long previously occupied by Johann Sebastian Bach) together with that of professor of music theory at the conservatoire fouded by Felix Mendelssohn, and it was in this capacity that his unique gift as a teacher developed itself and was acknowledged by a crowd of enthusiastic and more or less distinguished pupils.
Hauptmann's compositions are marked by symmetry and workmanship rather than by spontaneous invention. Among his vocal compositions may he mentioned two masses, choral songs for mixed voices (Op. 32, 47), and numerous part songs.
The results of his scientific research were embodied in his book Die Natur der Harmonik und Metrik (1853), in which a philosophic explanation of the forms of music is attempted.
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