Piano Quartets

Menu

Quartets


First name: Julius
Last name: Zellner
Dates: 1832-1900
Category: Quartet
Nationality: Austrian
Opus name: Opus 28 in Bes
Publisher:
Peculiarities:
Information: The winner of the prestigious Vienna Composers Society Prize of 1887 and of the coveted Beethoven Prize of 1889? The answer is Julius Zellner. And among the judges who found his works worthy of these prizes were none other than Johannes Brahms and Robert Fuchs. It is no exaggeration to say that Zellner and his music were held in the highest esteem during the last two decades of the 19th century and up to the First World War. Yet today, his name and his music have all but disappeared, like those of so many other fine composers whose music was unfairly shoved in oblivion in the reaction against all things from the Romantic era after World War One. Julius Zellner (1832-1900) was born in Vienna and lived most of his life in that city. His family steered him towards a business career but he changed courses early on and by the mid 1850s was working as a teacher piano teacher and composer in Vienna. There are at least 50 published works including symphonies, a piano concerto and a considerable amount of chamber music. (from: Edition Silvertrust)