Online Encyclopedia

KARL GOLDMARK (1832- )

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 213 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KARL

GOLDMARK (1832- )  , Hungarian composer, was born at Keszthely-am-Plattensee, in Hungary, on the 18th of May 1832 . His
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father, a poor cantor in the
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local Jewish synagogue, was unable to assist to any extent financially in the development of his son's talents . Yet in the household much
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music was made, and on a cheap
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violin and home-made
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flute, constructed by Goldmark himself from reeds cut from the
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river-
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bank, the future composer gave
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rein to his musical ideas . His talent was fostered by the
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village schoolmaster, by whose aid he was able to enter the music-school of the Oedenburger Verein . Here he remained but a short time, his success at a school concert finally determining his parents to allow him to devote himself entirely to music . In 1844, then, he went to Vienna, where Jansa took up his cause and eventually obtained for him
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admission to the conservatorium . For two years Goldmark worked under Jansa at the violin, and on the outbreak of the revolution, after studying all the orchestral
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instruments he obtained an engagement in the orchestra at Raab . There, on the capitulation of Raab, he was to have been shot for a spy, and was only saved at the
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eleventh
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hour by the happy arrival of a former colleague . In 185o Goldmark
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left Raab for Vienna, where from his friend Mittrich he obtained his first real knowledge of the
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classics . There, too, he devoted himself to composition . In 1857 Goldmark, who was then engaged in the Karl-theater
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band, gave a concert of his own
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works with such success that his first quartet attracted very general attention . Then followed the " Sakuntala " and " Penthesilea " overtures, which show how Wagner's influence had supervened upon his previous domination by Mendelssohn, and the delightful " Landliche Hochzeit "
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symphony, which carried his fame abroad .

Goldmark's reputation was now made, and very largely increased by the

production at Vienna in 1875 of his first and best opera, Die Konigin von Saba . Over this opera he spent seven years . Its popularity is still almost as
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great as ever . It was followed in November 1886. also at Vienna, by Merlin, much of which has been re-written since then . A third opera, a version of Dickens's Cricket on the Hearth, was given by the Royal Carl Rosa
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Company in
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London in 19oo . Goldmark's chamber music has not made much lasting impression, but the overtures " Im Friihling," "
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Prometheus Bound," and " Sapho " are fairly well known . A " programme " seems essential to him . In opera he is most certainly at his best, and as an orchestral colourist he ranks among the very highest .

End of Article: KARL GOLDMARK (1832- )
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