Quintett
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Until recently, the wind quintet from 1957 published here for the first time seemed to be the only work in this formation in Hans Winterberg's (1901-1991) extensive catalog of chamber music gems. In the meantime, another piece in the traditional scoring for flute, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon has been rediscovered in his estate, a suite from 1946, written in Prague one year after the composer's liberation from the Theresienstadt concentration camp and one year before his emigration to Munich. Winterberg, a pianist by training, – studied, like Hans Krása, with the respected Prague piano teacher Therese Wallerstein – composed just as passionately for string instruments as for woodwind and brass and experimented with the most diverse and sometimes most surprising formations. What is surprising about the Quintet from 1957 is the vehemence with which the composer lived out his Czech-Austrian-German multiple identities in his compositions, as if the work was a commentary on his complex and dramatic life story: When in all three movements the German children's song „Es klappert die Mühle am rauschenden Bach“ is heard in a decidedly Bohemian-Moravian, post-Janáček environment, then this can certainly also be interpreted as an ironic nod of the composer, who in the precarious post-war years had to consider whether he was spending his money on bread and butter or on music paper.
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Turning Points - Episode 2: Hans Winterberg
Turning Points - Episode 2: Hans Winterberg
Turning Points - Episode 2: Hans Winterberg
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Hans Winterberg, born in 1901 into a Jewish family that had lived in Prague for centuries, studied with Alexander von Zemlinsky and Alois Hába. Until the annexation of Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany in 1939, he worked as a conductor, pianist, and composer. Unlike his friends and colleagues Viktor Ullmann, Hans Krása, and Gideon Klein, he survived the Shoah through a series of miracles. In 1945, he moved to Munich, where he began a promising second career. As a representative of a moderate avant-garde, he found himself increasingly marginalized from the late 1960s onwards. After his death in 1991, his artistic estate was locked away in a German music archive and, since none of his works had been published during his lifetime, he was forgotten. Since 2023, Boosey & Hawkes has been publishing Winterberg's chamber music in an extraordinary edition project as first editions in cooperation with the Exilarte Research Center at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna. They reveal music of unique charm, in which influences from Janáček, the Second Viennese School, and French Impressionism are amalgamated into an original and exciting personal style.
Following the chamber music, the edition project will focus on the first editions of Winterberg's piano works and songs.