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Bernuthsche Konservatorium der Musik was a German music conservatory founded October 1, 1873, by Julius von Bernuth (de) (1830–1902). The conservatory was once located at 15 Wexstrasse on the ground floor.[1][i][2] and also located in the Otto Börs Piano Factory located at große Theaterstraße 44.

The Bernuthsche Konservatorium became known as the Hamburger Konservatorium, but is not connected to the present-day institution, Hamburger Konservatorium, founded in 1908 by R. Klaer as the Klaer'sches Konservatorium für Musik.

History

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Bernuth was, from 1867 to 1895, director of Philharmoniker Hamburg and also director of the Hamburg Singing Academy.[3]

Selected administrators

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Owners
  • 1872–1902: Julius von Bernuth
Heads of conservatory
  • 1872–1895: Julius von Bernuth, founding director
  • 1895–1902: Richard Barth (1850–1923), a composer and scholar of Johannes Brahms
  • 1902–19??: Max Fiedler (1859–1939), renowned orchestra conductor, but taught piano at Bernuthsch
Administrators
  • Paul von Bernuth

Selected teachers

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  • Alfred Burjam (de) (1847–1907), organ, piano, taught full-time at the conservatory from 1890 to 1905
  • Goby Eberhardt (1852–1926), violin
  • Karl Goltermann, organ, piano
  • Carl Grädener (1812–1883), composer, taught at the conservatory from its inception until his death
  • Otto Hegner (approx. 1877 – 1907), piano — began teaching at the conservatory in 1905
  • Hans Hermanns, piano (replaced Otto Hegner in 1907)
  • Emil Krause (de) (1840–1916), pianist
  • Robert Müller-Hartmann (1884–1950), German-born British musicologist, composer
  • Friedrich Warnecke (1856–1931), double bassist, music educator

Notable alumni

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Studied with Emil Krause (de) (composition), Goby Eberhardt (violin), and Karl Goltermann (organ and piano)

References

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  1. ^ "Julius v. Bernuth" (eulogy), by Emil Kraus (born 1840), Der Klavier-Lehrer, Vol. 26, N° 2, 15 January 1903, pps. 17–19; OCLC 611051641, 224555748
    Archived at the University of Michigan: Musikpädagogische Blatter, Vols. 25–26, edited from January 1878 to July 1899 by Emil Breslaur (de) (1836–1899); edited from January 1990 forward by Anna Morsch (1841– ; OCLC 19333200, 297695050
  2. ^ Handbuch der Leistungsfähigkeit der gesammten Industrie der Kleinstaaten Norddeutschlands, der süddeutschen Länder, Elsass-Lothringens und der Schweiz, Vol. 2, N°s 4–5, by Christoph Sandler (1874), pg. 50 OCLC 162973872)
  3. ^ "Julius von Bernuth," Hamburger Persönlichkeiten, website registrant: Martin Sillem c/o Bankhaus Donner, Hamburg (retrieved October 27, 2016, via www.hamburgerpersoenlichkeiten.de
  4. ^ Deutsches Theater-Lexikon: Biographisches und Bibliographisches Handbuch, (Vol. 7 of 7), "Wolff, C.A. Hermann" (biographical entry), Walter de Gruyter (2012); pg. 3553; OCLC 837062669, 775658723, 4007012
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