Mathilde Kralik von Meyrswalden
Herbstgefühl
nach einem Gedicht von Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Mathilde Kralik von Meyrswalden
Herbstgefühl
nach einem Gedicht von Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Instrumentation Mixed Choir (SATB) and Piano
- Composer Mathilde Kralik von Meyrswalden
- Edition Score
- Publisher Furore Verlag
- Order no. FUR15145
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Description:
The manuscript was written on October 18, 1892 and is now kept in the Austrian National Library. It comprises 20 pages. Kralik titled it as follows: Herbstgefühl von Goethe
Musik für Mezzosopran, Alt, Tenor-Baryton und Bass (Soli) mit Klavierbegleitung.
As the daughter of the glass industrialist Wilhelm Kralik von Meyrswalden (noble status from 1877) and his second wife Louise Lobmeyr, Mathilde was born in Linz an der Donau on December 3, 1857. Her father played the violin and her mother the piano, so her musical interest and talent was discovered and encouraged at an early age through chamber music at home. Her parents' financial circumstances allowed her to devote herself entirely to music. In 1870, the family moved to Vienna. There Mathilde became a pupil of Carl Hertlein, the flutist at the court opera, and received private piano lessons from Julius Epstein and counterpoint lessons from Anton Bruckner. In 1876, she was accepted into the second year at the conservatory of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and received composition lessons from Franz Krenn.
Her catalog of works comprises over 250 pieces, including 3 operas, over 100 songs, masses, melodramas and chamber music works. The Christian faith was a strong pillar in her life and many of her compositions have a religious reference. The texts of her operas and many of her vocal works were written by her brother, the poet Richard Kralik von Meyrswalden. Kralik considered Bach to be her main teacher and she was primarily interested in Liszt's modern forms.
Musik für Mezzosopran, Alt, Tenor-Baryton und Bass (Soli) mit Klavierbegleitung.
As the daughter of the glass industrialist Wilhelm Kralik von Meyrswalden (noble status from 1877) and his second wife Louise Lobmeyr, Mathilde was born in Linz an der Donau on December 3, 1857. Her father played the violin and her mother the piano, so her musical interest and talent was discovered and encouraged at an early age through chamber music at home. Her parents' financial circumstances allowed her to devote herself entirely to music. In 1870, the family moved to Vienna. There Mathilde became a pupil of Carl Hertlein, the flutist at the court opera, and received private piano lessons from Julius Epstein and counterpoint lessons from Anton Bruckner. In 1876, she was accepted into the second year at the conservatory of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and received composition lessons from Franz Krenn.
Her catalog of works comprises over 250 pieces, including 3 operas, over 100 songs, masses, melodramas and chamber music works. The Christian faith was a strong pillar in her life and many of her compositions have a religious reference. The texts of her operas and many of her vocal works were written by her brother, the poet Richard Kralik von Meyrswalden. Kralik considered Bach to be her main teacher and she was primarily interested in Liszt's modern forms.