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Jan Müller Wieland

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Name
  
Jan Muller-Wieland

Role
  
Composer


Born
  
30 March 1966 (age 58) (
1966-03-30
)
Hamburg, Germany

Occupation
  
Composer Conductor Academic teacher

Organization
  
Hochschule fur Musik und Theater Munchen A*Devantgarde

Awards
  
Villa Massimo Paul Hindemith Prize of the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival Ernst von Siemens Music Prize

Website
  
www.janmueller-wieland.de/s0_english.htm

Education
  
Lubeck Academy of Music

Jan m ller wieland spielt sein klavierst ck


Jan Müller-Wieland (born 30 March 1966 in Hamburg) is a German composer and conductor of classical music and an academic teacher. He is known for his operas.

Contents

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Career

Müller-Wieland studied at the Musikhochschule Lübeck, composition with Friedhelm Döhl, double bass with Willi Beyer and conducting with Günther Behrens. He studied composition with Hans Werner Henze in Cologne and Rome, and Oliver Knussen in the Tanglewood Music Center.

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Müller-Wieland was a Stipendiat of the Villa Massimo in 1992/93. He was awarded the Paul Hindemith Prize of the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival in 1993 and the Ernst von Siemens Music Composers' Prize in 2002. From 2003 he has been a member of the Freie Akademie der Künste in Hamburg.

Müller-Wieland has been a Professor for composition at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München since 2007.

Müller-Wieland is a member of the festival A*Devantgarde.

He is married to the Austrian author Birgit Müller-Wieland.

Opera

As of 2011, Müller-Wieland composed 14 operas. His first opera Das Gastspiel, subtitled "Cabaret Farce for singers, pianists and percussionists", a chamber opera after Frank Wedekind's Posse (farce) Der Kammersänger, was premiered at the Munich Biennale in 1992. The libretto of his opera Das Märchen der 672. Nacht (The Fairy tale of the 672nd Night) was written by his wife Birgit Müller-Wieland after a novella by Hugo von Hofmannsthal; the opera was first performed in 2000 at the Wiener Kammeroper conducted by Alexander Drcar. In 2008 his opera Aventure Faust, related to Goethe's Faust, was premiered in the Reaktorhalle in Munich München, combined with György Ligeti's "Nouvelles Aventures" for three singers and seven instrumentalist.

Chamber music premieres

His third piano trio Se solen sjunker on a Swedish song which Schubert also used was premiered on 29 June 2008 as part of the Piano Festival Ruhr at the Zeche Nordstern in Gelsenkirchen, performed by Siegfried Mauser (piano), Gottfried Schneider (violin) and Sebastian Hess (violoncello). His composition for chamber ensemble Traumbilder was commissioned by RUHR.2010, the project of the European Culture Capital, and first performed on 19 May 2010 in the Reinoldikirche Dortmund.

Orchestra

  • Poem des Morgens (1991) for large orchestra
  • Ballad of Ariel (2002) for violin and large orchestra
  • Chamber music

  • Ecstatic and Instinctive (1989) for two pianos and two percussionists
  • Schlaflied (2004) for piano trio
  • Se solen sjunker (2008) for piano trio
  • Instrumental music

  • Himmelfahrt for viola solo (2003)
  • References

    Jan Müller-Wieland Wikipedia