Alfred Grünfeld

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alfred Grünfeld (born at Prague July 4, 1852 - January 4, 1924 in Vienna) was an Austrian pianist and composer.

He studied under Höger, under Josef Krejčí at the Prague Conservatorium, and under Theodor Kullak at the Neue Akademie der Tonkunst, Berlin. In 1873 he settled at Vienna, where he received the title of "Kammervirtuose". He made tours through Europe and the United States.

During a visit to Germany Grünfeld was appointed court pianist to Emperor Wilhelm I of Germany. From 1897 he was a professor at the Vienna Conservatorium.

His brother was musician Heinrich Grünfeld.

[edit] Works

Of his compositions may be mentioned the following works for the pianoforte:

  • Octave-study, op. 15;
  • Minuet, op. 31;
  • Spanish Serenade, op. 37.
  • Johann Strauss II: Transcriptions & Paraphrases for Solo Piano - Die Fledermaus, op. 56.

[edit] External links

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.
Persondata
NAME Grünfeld, Alfred
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Austrian pianist and composer
DATE OF BIRTH July 4, 1852
PLACE OF BIRTH Prague
DATE OF DEATH January 4, 1924
PLACE OF DEATH Vienna


Languages