Hugo Heermann
Hugo Heermann (3 March 1844, in Heilbronn – 6 November 1935, in Meran, Italy) was a German violinist. He studied the violin with Lambert Joseph Meerts at the Koninklijk Conservatorium in Brussels, and later with Joseph Joachim. From 1864 he lived in Frankfurt am Main, where he taught violin from 1878 to 1904 at the Hoch Conservatory. He played 1st violin with Hugo Becker, Fritz Bassermann and Adolf Rebner in the "Museums-Quartett" (also called the "Heermann-Quartett" and "Frankfurter Quartett"). Between 1906 and 1909 he taught at the Chicago Musical College, in 1911 at the Stern Conservatory in Berlin and 1912 at the Conservatoire de musique in Geneva. In 1909 and 1910 he briefly was a member of The Dutch Trio, which transposed into the Heermann-van Lier String Quartet. He served as concertmaster of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra for a period beginning in 1909; he was succeeded in that post by his son Emil.[1] He has the distinction of having been the first to have played Brahms' Violin Concerto in Paris, New York City and Australia. After his retirement in 1922 he lived mostly in Meran, Italy.
References
[edit]- ^ Madison Symphony Orchestra – Historical Pages Archived 2010-07-05 at the Wayback Machine, "Second Movement: A Tale of Two Maestros, 1947–1961" by Michael Allsen.
Publications
[edit]- Charles Auguste de Bériots École transcendentale du violon. Hugo Heermann, Ed., 1896.
- Heermann, Hugo: Meine Lebenserinnerungen. Leipzig: 1935
Literature
[edit]- Cahn, Peter. Das Hoch'sche Konservatorium in Frankfurt am Main (1878–1978), Frankfurt am Main: Kramer, 1979.
- Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, (Nicolas Slonimsky, Ed.) New York: G. Schirmer, 1958.
- Academic staff of the Conservatoire de Musique de Genève
- German male classical violinists
- German music educators
- Concertmasters
- 1844 births
- 1935 deaths
- 19th-century classical violinists
- 19th-century German musicians
- 20th-century German classical violinists
- 20th-century German male musicians
- 19th-century German male musicians
- 20th-century German musicians
- Violinist stubs