Engelbert HumperdinckBirth Place: Madras, India Date of Birth: May 2, 1936 Heritage: Indian Contact Engelbert Humperdinck |
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Humperdinck is remembered for his first opera, the much-loved Hänsel and Gretel; his later, more ambitious operas never quite succeeded in gaining a firm place in repertory. He began his musical education with piano lessons at the age of seven. His first experience of opera was in 1868 when he heard Lortzing's Undine. The consequences were immediate: in the same year he began working on two Singspiels, Perla and Claudine von Villa Bella, and on the music drama Harziperes. In later life Humperdinck continued to refer to Lortzing as one of his models. His father was alarmed by these distractions from serious study, but on the enthusiastic advice of the composer Ferdinand Hiller, he agreed to let his son enter the Cologne Conservatory in 1872. Humperdinck was most successful as a music student, winning the Mozart Prize of Frankfurt in 1876, the Mendelssohn Prize of Berlin in 1879 and the Meyerbeer Prize of Berlin in 1881. When he moved to the Munich Konigliche Musikschule in 1877 new influences began to disturb his adherence to the Schumannesque traditions of his teachers. He heard Wagner's Ring in 1878 and joined the Munich Wagnerian society ‘Orden vom Gral.’ A visit to Wagner in 1880 during Humperdinck's scholarship tour of Italy proved even more decisive; Wagner invited him to come to Bayreuth in 1881 to help with the first production of Parsifal. Though friends feared such contact would inhibit Humperdinck's creativity, the composer said he would willingly give up originality if it meant he could write choruses like those in Parsifal. He also pointed out that there were lighter sides to Wagner's writing not incompatible with his own more Mendelssohnian inclinations. |
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