
Wydawnictwo: Chandos
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 20374
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: październik 2025
EAN: 95115237427
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 20374
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: październik 2025
EAN: 95115237427
Nasze kategorie wyszukiwania
Epoka muzyczna: 20 wiek do 1960
Obszar (język): niemiecki
Rodzaj: sonata, kwartet
Epoka muzyczna: 20 wiek do 1960
Obszar (język): niemiecki
Rodzaj: sonata, kwartet
Kanitz: Chamber Works
Chandos - CHAN 20374
Kompozytor
Ernest Kanitz (1894-1978)
Ernest Kanitz (1894-1978)
Wykonawcy
ARC Ensemble:
Anna Stube, violin
Wallace Halladay, saxophone
Joel Quarrington, double-bass
ARC Ensemble:
Anna Stube, violin
Wallace Halladay, saxophone
Joel Quarrington, double-bass
Sonata for Violin and Piano, Op. 10
String Quartet in D major
Sonata for Solo Cello
Concertino for Five Players
Sonata Californiana
String Quartet in D major
Sonata for Solo Cello
Concertino for Five Players
Sonata Californiana
The ARC Ensemble’s Music in Exile series continues with this exploration of chamber works by Ernest Kanitz. Born into a wealthy Viennese family in 1894, he was encouraged in music by his mother, started piano lessons aged seven, and was composing within a year. Persuaded by his parents to study for a degree in Law, Kanitz also studied piano, music theory, and composition (with Franz Schreker, who also served as a mentor). His reputation grew steadily, his works promoted by conductors such as George Szell and Clemens Krauss. In 1922 he gained a position as a teacher at the New Vienna Conservatory, and in 1930 established the Vienna Women’s Chamber Choir, which quickly gained a reputation across Europe for its performances of Kodály, Honegger, and Stravinsky (as well as Kanitz!). Although he had converted to Christianity in 1914, his Jewish ancestry necessitated emigration from Austria in 1938, following the annexation of Austria by National Socialist Germany. After a short spell in New York, Kanitz and his wife, Gertrude, moved to Rock Hill, South Carolina, where he had secured a teaching position. Following Gertrude’s early death from cancer, Kanitz moved to California, where he established a successful teaching career at the University of Southern California. Retirement from USC in 1960 gave him much more time for composition (although he was still teaching and lecturing), with successful premieres given by the Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and San Francisco Symphony, among many others. Following his death in 1978, his music, like that of so many émigré composers, has been forgotten.












