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First name: Willem
Last name: Pijper
Dates: 1894-1947
Category: Quintet
Nationality: Dutch
Opus name: Six Adagio's, (1940/1992), not completed, arr. Opus 839a
Publisher: Donemus
Peculiarities: https://webshop.donemus.com/action/front/composer/Pijper%2C+Willem
Information: Willem Pijper was born in Zeist on September 8, 1894. He died on March 18, 1947 in Leidschendam. From 1912 to 1916 he studied theory, composition and piano at the Utrecht College of Music with Johan Wagenaar and Helena van Lunteren-Hansen. Willem Pijper was a music critic for the Utrechts Dagblad (1919-1922), teacher of harmonics at the Amsterdam College of Music (1920-1922), principal teacher at the Amsterdam Conservatory (1925-1930) and editor of the periodical De Muziek (1925-1932). In 1930 Pijper was appointed head master at the Rotterdam Conservatory. A considerable number of young Dutch composers owe their education, either entirely or in part to him: Kees van Baaren, Henk Badings, Henriëtte Bosmans, Rudolf Escher, Johan Franco, Hans Henkemans, Piet Ketting, Guillaume Landré, Bertus van Lier, Karel Mengelberg, Iet Stants and Wolfgang Wijdeveld. In recognition of his remarkable pedagogical merits he was invited to be a member of many government committees. As a composer he was known and appreciated in many countries and belonged to the prominent members of the ISCM, which jury he presided for the last time in the summer of 1946. The most fruitful period of his work was the decade after 1920, when his most important works were created. He was the epoch-making pioneer in the Dutch world of music at a time when the new striving became evident in the whole civilized world. In the last few years of his life Pijper worked on an important opera, entitled Merlijn, and in 1946 started the fifth String Quartet. Both compositions, however, were to remain unfinished. Pijper's papers on music appearing in various periodicals, are well worth reading, as are his collected essays: Quintencirkel and De Stemvork, which were published by Querido, Amsterdam.