dilluns, 8 de juny del 2026

NICOLAI, Carl Otto (1810-1849) - Weihnachts-Ouverture (1833)

August von Kreling (1819-1876) - The First Harvest After the Thirty Years’ War (1849)


Carl Otto Nicolai (1810-1849) - Weihnachts-Ouverture (D-Dur) | (über den Choral "Vom Himmel hoch") (1833)
Performers: Bamberger Symphoniker; Karl Anton Rickenbacher (1940-2014, conductor)

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German composer and conductor. He was the first child of the composer Carl Ernst Daniel Nicolai (1785-1854) and his wife Christiane Lauber. Because of his mother’s physical and mental illness, the marriage was dissolved a few months after Nicolai’s birth. He grew up in the care of foster-parents until 1820, when his father took on responsibility for his education. He studied piano at home, and in 1827 went to Berlin, where he took lessons in theory with Carl Friedrich Zelter. He also took courses with Bernhard Klein at the Royal Institute for Church Music. On 13 April 1833, he made his concert debut in Berlin as a pianist, singer, and composer. He then was engaged as organist to the embassy chapel in Rome by the Prussian ambassador, Christian Charles Josias von Bunsen. While in Italy, he also studied counterpoint with Giuseppe Baini. In 1837 he proceeded to Vienna, where he became a singing teacher and Kapellmeister at the Karnthnertortheater. In 1838 he returned to Italy where he presented in Trieste his first opera, 'Rosmonda d'Inghilterra'. In late summer 1841 he was appointed principal conductor of the Hofoper at the Kärntnertor, and was able to concentrate on the operas of Mozart and Beethoven, which he particularly admired. Required by contract to compose German operas, he provided his first original German opera, 'Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor'. In summer 1844 he undertook a long journey via Prague, Dresden, Leipzig and Berlin to Königsberg, where he performed the 'Kirchliche Fest-Ouvertüre' which he had dedicated to his native town, as part of the festival to celebrate the 300th anniversary of the university. King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia was so impressed that he tried to tempt him to Berlin; Nicolai, however, did not at first respond to the offer. October 1847 saw him installed as Kapellmeister at the Königliches Opernhaus in Berlin and, as Mendelssohn’s successor, artistic director of the cathedral choir. Wishing to reform Prussian church services, he immediately began to compose a series of large-scale religious works. Soon afterwards he joined the Tonkünstlerverband, a society concerned with the reorganization of Prussian musical life; 'Die lustigen Weiber' eventually received its première, without huge success, on 9 March 1849. Two months later, Nicolai died. On the same day he was elected a member of the Akademie der Künste, but too late to receive the news.

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