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Karl Amadeus Hartmann
Karl Amadeus | Hartmann |
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Composition list
Chamber music
Vocal music
Instrumental music
Symphonic music
Opera and lyrical music
Concertante music
Compositions sorted on opus (if available)
Sheet music for Karl Amadeus Hartmann
3 Pieces for Orchestra — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
orchestra — Study Score — Classical
Based on a piano music by Karl Amadeus Hartmann. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963) and Hans Werner Henze (1926-). Arranged by Hans Werner Henze. This edition: Paperback/Soft Cover. Sheet music. Edition Schott. Classical. Study Score. Composed 1995. 79 pages. Duration 20'. Schott Music #ED 8954. Published by Schott Music (HL.49008239).
Price: $46.00
Scherzo — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
percussion ensemble and piano four hands — playing score — Classical
Nach Skizzen Karl Amadeus Hartmanns vervollstandigt von Wilfried Hiller (1991). Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). Arranged by Wilfried Hiller. This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Edition Schott. Classical. Playing score. Composed 1956. 17 pages. Duration 4'. Schott Music #ED 7785. Published by Schott Music (HL.49007519).
Price: $29.00
Simplicius Simplicissimus — Netherlands Radio Choir; Banse; Marsch; Hartmann
— Hybrid SACDs (2 discs) — Classical
By Netherlands Radio Choir; Banse; Marsch; Hartmann. By Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). Classical. Hybrid SACDs (2 discs). Published by Challenge Records (NX.CC72637).
Price: $29.00
Lamento — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
soprano voice and piano — — Classical
Kantate. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Edition Schott. Classical. Composed 1936-1937/1955. 28 pages. Duration 20'. Schott Music #ED 4906. Published by Schott Music (HL.49005253).
Price: $33.00
Concerto funebre — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
violin and string orchestra — Piano Reduction with Solo Part —
Violin & String Orchestra, Piano Reduction & Solo Part. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Schott. Piano Reduction with Solo Part. Composed 1939/1959. 40 pages. Duration 20'. Schott Music #ED 5167. Published by Schott Music (HL.49005479).
Price: $31.00
Concerto funebre — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
solo-violin and string orchestra — Study Score —
Study Score. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Schott. Study Score. Composed 1939/1959. 32 pages. Duration 20'. Schott Music #ED 5002. Published by Schott Music (HL.49005331).
Price: $20.00
Chamber Concerto — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
clarinet, string quartet and string orchestra — Piano Reduction with Solo Part — Classical
Piano Reduction with Solo Part. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Klarinetten-Bibliothek (Clarinet Library). Classical. Piano Reduction with Solo Part. Composed 1930/1935. 80 pages. Duration 26'. Schott Music #KLB 53. Published by Schott Music (HL.49013124).
Price: $48.00
Adagio - 2. Symphony — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
Large Orchestra — Study Score —
Study Score. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Schott. Study Score. Composed 1946. 60 pages. Duration 17'. Schott Music #ED 4405. Published by Schott Music (HL.49004863).
Price: $34.00
1. String quartet — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
string quartet — Set of Parts —
Carillon. Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Schott. Set of Parts. Composed 1933. 44 pages. Duration 20'. Schott Music #ED 4626. Published by Schott Music (HL.49005053).
Price: $38.00
First Sonata for Piano — Karl Amadeus Hartmann
piano — — Classical
Composed by Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963). This edition: Saddle stitching. Sheet music. Edition Schott. Classical. Composed 1932. 19 pages. Duration 12'. Schott Music #ED 7885. Published by Schott Music (HL.49007604).
Price: $28.00
Hartmann is the next significant symphonist in the Austro-German tradition
after Mahler, and the last 30 years of his career can be viewed as primarily a
dialogue with symphonic form, an attempt to establish whether it can have
continuing relevance in the terrible times the composer was living through. The
elements of Hartmann’s language, ranging from jazz to post-Bergian
expressionism and post-Hindemithian motoric toccata writing, often — perhaps
predominantly — may seem to fail to cohere into an expressive
unity. The symphonies are monumental constructions with fractured, facetted
surfaces and a deep vein of existential Angst. (In this sense there is a
kinship of expression with Allan Pettersson.) After his death the eight
numbered symphonies were discovered to have been preceeded by an equal number
of unnumbered symphonic works, some of which were partly re-composed in the
post-war scores, making his catalogue quite complex.
Operas
- Waschfigurenkabinett (1929-30), five little operas to libretti by Erich
Bornemann, as follows (only Nos.1 & 5 complete in Hartmann’s manuscript):- ’Leben und Sterben des heiligen Teufels’
- ’Der Mann, der vom Tode auferstand’ (reconstructed from sketches by Gunter Bialas and Hans Werner Henze)
- ’Chaplin-Ford-Trott’ (reconstructed from sketches by Hans Werner Henze)
- ’Fürwahr ...?!' (reconstructed from sketches by Winfried Hiller)
- ’Die Witwe von Ephesus’
- ’Simplicius Simplicissimus’, 3 scenes from his Youth, opera after Grimmelhausen with libretto by Hartmann, Scherchen and Wolfgang Petzet (1934-35; rev. 1956)
Symphonic Works
- Symphonie-Divertissement for bassoon, trombone, double bass and chamber orchestra (1932-33; partly lost)
- ’Miserae’, Symphonic Poem (1934)
- Symphony ‘L’Oeuvre’ after Zola (1937-38: partly revised into Symphony No.6)
- Symphony for string orchestra and voice (1938; later revised into Symphony No.4
- without the vocal movement - a setting of Klabund - which is lost)
- Sinfonia Tragica (1940-43: partly re-used in Symphony No.3)
- Symphonische Ouverture (1942)
- Symphonisches Hymnen (1942)
- Symphonic Suite ‘La Vita Nuova’ for speaker and orchestra (1943, lost)
- Symphony ‘Klagegesang’ (1944: partly re-used in Symphony No.3)
- Symphony No.1 ‘Versuch eines Requiem’ for alto and orchestra to texts by
- Whitman (1950 revision of 1936 Kantate, previously (1948) called Symphonisches Fragment)
- Symphony No.2 ‘Adagio’ (1945 rev. 1946)
- Symphony No.3 (1948-49; incorporates revisions of parts of Sinfonia Tragica and Klagegesang)
- Symphony No.4 for string orchestra (1946-47; new version of 1938 Symphony for strings and voice)
- Symphony No.5 ‘Symphonie Concertante’(1950; revised version of 1932 Trumpet
- Concerto via Concerto for wind, basses and 2 solo trumpets)
- Symphony No.6 (1951-53; partly derived fom Symphony ‘L’Oevre’)
- Fugue-Scherzo for percussion orchestra (1956-57)
- Symphony No.7 (1957-58)
- Symphony No.8 (1960-62)
Concertos
- Kammerkonzert for clarinet. string quartet and string orchestra (1930/35)
- Kleines Konzert for string quartet and percussion (1932)
- Concerto for Trumpet and wind chamber orchestra (1932; only second movement, ‘Lied’, survives)
- Cello Concerto (1932-33; lost)
- Concerto Funebre for violin and string orchestra (1939 rev. 1959)
- Concerto for wind ensemble, double-basses and two solo trumpets (1948-49; recomposed from 1932 Trumpet Concerto, further recomposed into Symphony No.5)
- Concerto for piano, wind and percussion (1953)
- Concerto for viola and piano accompanied by wind and percussion (1955)
Chamber Music
- 4 Sonatas for solo violin (1927)
- Tanzsuite for wind quintet (1931)
- Burleske Musik for wind, percussion and piano (1931)
- Toccata Variata for 10 wind instruments, percussion and piano
(1932) - String Quartet No.1 ‘Carillon’ (1922)
- String Quartet No.2 (1945-46)
Vocal Music
- Kantate for a cappella chorus on texts by Marx and Becher (1929)
- Profane Messe (1929)
- Kantate for voice and orchestra on words of Whitman (1936; revised as Symphony No.1)
- Friede Anno ‘48 for chorus and piano (1936-37; rev. 1955 as Lamento)
- Ghetto Cantata (1960-61)
- Gesangsszene aus Sodom und Gomorra for baritone and orchestra, text by Giradoux (1962-3; unfinished)
Piano Music
- Jazz Toccata and Fugue (1928)
- Sonatine (1931)
- Piano Sonata No.1 (1932)
- Piano Sonata No.2 ‘27. April 1945’ (1945)
(contribution by Malcolm MacDonald <macval@compuserve.com>)
Hartmann was the son of one painter and the brother of another. He studied with
Joseph Haas at the Akademie der Tonkunst in Munich (1924-27) and afterwards was
encouraged by Hermann Scherchen. After the Nazis came to power he refused to
allow his music to be performed in Germany (instead several important premieres
took place abroad) and he remained an “internal exile” during the War, refusing
to co-operate with the regime. In 1941-2 he studied privately with Anton
Webern. After the War, partly because he was politically untainted,
Hartmann was appointed Musikdramaturg at the Bavarian
State Opera and founded the “Musica Viva” Festival Concerts in Munich to
present music that had been banned during the Nazi era and to encourage the
production of new music by German composers. He thus became a key figure in the
revival of music in Germany and wielded considerable powers of patronage. He
gave encouragement to Hans Werner Henze and befriended Dallapiccola. He
received many honours and was invited to become professor of Music at the Hochschule in Cologne and
in the Berlin Conservatory, but declined and preferred to stay in Munich.
Despite his position of influence, his personal popularity and his unquestioned
rectitude of principle, Hartmann’s own music — especially his devotion to
symphonic form — was probably viewed by many of the younger generation as
old-fashioned, and even now is probably not rated at its proper worth.
(contribution by Malcolm MacDonald <macval@compuserve.com>)
Comments
Anonymous (not verified)
Tue, 2010-05-04 04:06
Permalink
typos in Hartmann article
Wachs - not Wasch! - in the opera title
under Symphony 6, L'Oeuvre not L'Oevre
think Sym 1 might feature sop not alto solo
must be Symphonische Hymnen not Symphonisches
Schott website lists a 3-movement Concertino for trumpet as for hire - so maybe the comment re Lied 2nd movement is wrong?