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Max Kalbeck

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Name
  
Max Kalbeck

Role
  
Writer

Libretti
  
Jabuka


Max Kalbeck httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
May 4, 1921, Vienna, Austria

Books
  
Suzanne's Secret = Il Segreto Di Suzanna: Interlude in One Act - Scholar's Choice Edition

Brahms Symphony no 5. (String Quintet opus 111 orchestrated by Peter Klatzow)


Max Kalbeck (January 4, 1850 – May 4, 1921) was a German writer, critic and translator. He became one of the most influential critics in Austria and was bitterly opposed to the music of Richard Wagner, Anton Bruckner and Hugo Wolf.

Contents

Early life

Kalbeck was born in Breslau and studied music in Munich. In 1875, he became the music-critic for the Schlesische Zeitung and assistant director of the Breslau Museum. He came to Vienna in 1880 on the invitation of Eduard Hanslick, first as critic of the Allgemeine Zeitung and then, from 1886 till his death, of the Neue Wiener Tagblatt.

Career

Kalbeck was a close friend and partisan of Johannes Brahms. Kalbeck's principal achievement was his eight-volume biography of that composer, published from 1904 to 1914, which has never been translated into English. Kalbeck also edited several volumes of Brahms's correspondence and in 1918, the letters of the poets Gottfried Keller and Paul Heyse, as well as publishing two collections of his own music reviews.

Kalbeck wrote new libretti for Mozart's Bastien und Bastienne and La finta giardiniera; and he revised those of Don Giovanni and The Marriage of Figaro for Gustav Mahler's productions at the Vienna Hofoper. In addition, he supplied lyrics for the songs in the operetta Jabuka by Johann Strauss II, the dialogue and plot being the work of Gustav Davis.

Kalbeck also wrote poetry and Brahms set a few of his verses to music as songs.

He died in Vienna in 1921, aged 71,

References

Max Kalbeck Wikipedia