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Philipp Spitta

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Name
  
Philipp Spitta


Role
  
Music Historian

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Died
  
April 13, 1894, Berlin, Germany

Books
  
Johann Sebastian Bach: His Work and Influence on the Music of Germany, 1685-1750

Julius August Philipp Spitta (27 December 1841 – 13 April 1894) was a German music historian and musicologist best known for his 1873 biography of Johann Sebastian Bach.

Contents

Philipp Spitta Philipp Spitta Music Historian Composer Short Biography

Biography

He was born in Wechold, near Hoya, and his father, also called Philipp Spitta, was a theologian and wrote the Protestant collection of hymns entitled Psalter und Harfe. As a child, the younger Spitta learnt the piano, organ, and composition. He studied theology and classical philology at the University of Göttingen from 1860, graduating in 1864 with a Ph.D. for a dissertation on Tacitus (Der Satzbau bei Tacitus, 1866). While at university, he composed, wrote a biography of Robert Schumann, and became friends with Johannes Brahms. He became a teacher of Greek and Latin in, successively, Reval, Sondershausen, and Leipzig, while pursuing his interest in and lecturing on music history in general and Johann Sebastian Bach in particular.

Philipp Spitta Karl Johann Philipp Spitta Vandenhoeck Ruprecht

His Bach study began to be published in 1873, and was followed by an appointment as professor of music history at the University of Berlin in 1875, and a further appointment as administrative director of the Berlin Hochschule für Musik, at which posts he remained for the rest of his life. The students he taught include Oskar Fleischer, Max Friedlaender, Carl Krebs, Max Seiffert, Emil Vogel, Peter Wagner, and Johannes Wolf. He founded one of the first scholarly music periodicals, the Vierteljahrsschrift für Musikwissenschaft, with Friedrich Chrysander and Guido Adler in 1885, and also had an important role in the publication of the Denkmäler deutscher Tonkunst.

Work

He left a strong influence on the new fields of historical criticism and musicology; his work spanned periods of music history from the early Middle Ages to his own time, and embraced research, teaching, writing, and editing of musical editions to a very rigorous degree, including the use of source-critical studies. He was influenced by neo-Kantian philosophy. In his Bach biography, he wrote the first major study of German choral and keyboard music of the 17th century (early baroque).

Books

Most of his papers are divided between the library of the Berlin Hochschule für Musik, the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, and the library of the University of Łódz. He contributed many scholarly articles to periodicals, and wrote articles on Schumann, Spontini, and Weber for Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians in 1886.

  • Ein Lebensbild Robert Schumanns (Leipzig, 1862)
  • Johann Sebastian Bach (Leipzig, 1873–1880, 1962; English translation: 1884–1885, 1899)
  • Zur Musik (Berlin, 1892) - 16 essays
  • Musikgeschichtliche Aufsätze (Berlin, 1894) - collected essays
  • Editions

  • Dietrich Buxtehude: Orgelwerke (Leipzig, 1876–1877)
  • Heinrich Schütz: Sämtliche Werke (Leipzig, 1885–1894)
  • Friedrichs des Grossen: Musikalische Werke (Leipzig, 1889)
  • References

    Philipp Spitta Wikipedia