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Quintets


First name: Julius
Last name: Röntgen
Dates: 1855-1932
Category: Quintet
Nationality: German
Opus name: Piano Quintet no. 3 in G Major (1932; his last work)
Publisher:
Peculiarities: http://www.nederlandsmuziekinstituut.nl/nl/archieven/archievenoverzicht?task=listhandschriften&tmpl=lexicon&id=107&start=240
Information: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Julius Engelbert Roentgen (9 May 1855 - 13 September 1932) was a German-Dutch composer of classical music. Julius Roentgen was born in Leipzig, Germany, to a family of musicians. His father, Engelbert Roentgen, was first violinist in the Gewandhaus orchestra in Leipzig; his mother, Pauline Klengel, was a pianist, the aunt of renowned Julius Klengel. Julius was a gifted child. Neither he nor his sisters attended school; he was taught music by his parents and grandparents, and other subjects by private tutors. His first piano teacher was Carl Reinecke, the director of the Gewandhaus orchestra, while his early compositions were influenced by Reinecke, but also by Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt and Johannes Brahms. In Leipzig, he and his parents were part of the musical circle around Heinrich von Herzogenberg, and it was at their house that he first met Brahms. Later Roentgen moved to Munich, where he studied piano under Franz Lachner, a friend of Franz Schubert. At the age of 18 he became a professional pianist. During a concert tour through southern Germany he became acquainted with the singer Julius Stockhausen; at this time he also met a Swedish music student Amanda Maier, whom he would marry in 1880. In 1877 Roentgen had to make a decision whether to go to Vienna or Amsterdam. He chose Amsterdam, and became a piano teacher in the music school there. Prof. Lohmann, who was professor of theology at the University of Amsterdam and an important figure in the cultural life of that city, was a friend of Roentgen\'s father, and he promised to take young Julius under his wing. Between 1878 and 1885 Brahms was a frequent visitor in Amsterdam. In 1887 Roentgen performed Brahms\'s second piano concerto, conducted by the composer himself. In 1883, in association with composers Frans Coenen and Daniel de Lange, Roentgen was instrumental in the foundation of the Amsterdam Conservatory. In 1884 Roentgen was heavily involved in the foundation of the Concertgebouw. He applied for the position of the director; however, to his great disappointment, the choice fell instead on the German Hans von Buelow, as the committee seemed to doubt Roentgen\'s abilities as a conductor. Nevertheless Buelow was not able to accept the appointment, and the position went in the end to the violinist Willem Kes. Roentgen turned with greater energy to composing chamber music and to his work for the Conservatory. He became a renowned accompanying pianist.. Travelling with Messchaert he came to Vienna at least once a year, where he would always look up Brahms. During the quiet summer periods in Amsterdam Roentgen and his family often went to Denmark. On one of such visits he met Bodil de Neergaard, with whom he struck up a close friendship. As a result of his close contacts with Denmark, Roentgen\'s children became fluent speakers of Danish. For some years, Roentgen and his sons performed together as a piano trio. After the death of his wife Amanda in 1894, Roentgen married the gifted piano teacher Abrahamina des Amorie van der Hoeven. The children of the second marriage also became professional musicians. At the end of the First World War, in 1919, Roentgen became a naturalized Dutch citizen. One of his sons was taken prisoner by the Germans during the war, while another son emigrated to the USA where he became a soldier in the US army. As a result, Roentgen was for many years unable to visit his native Germany. In 1924 Roentgen retired from public life. He moved to Bilthoven, a small village near Utrecht. His son Frans, one of the few children who did not follow a musical career, built for him the country house Gaudeamus. The unusual round music room in that house was constructed in such a way that its floor did not touch the ground. During the last eight years of his life Roentgen wrote about 100 compositions (some accounts put this nearer 200), mostly chamber music and songs. Gaudeamus became a meeting place for many important composers and musicians; among the visitors in that house were Edvard Grieg, Pablo Casals and Percy Grainger. At that time Roentgen studied musical analysis, and was interested in the work of Hindemith, Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Willem Pijper. After Second World War the villa Gaudeamus became the seat of the Gaudeamus society, whose aim is to promote contemporary Dutch music. In the last years of his life Roentgen experimented with atonal music; he wrote a bi-tonal symphony in 1930 which, however, was never published. Roentgen died in Utrecht, Netherlands in 1932.