Fritz Simrock
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Friedrich August Simrock, better known as Fritz Simrock (born January 2, 1837 in Bonn, died August 20, 1901 in Ouchy) was a German music publisher who inherited the publishing firm from his father Nicolaus Simrock. Fritz Simrock is most remembered today for publishing most of the music of Johannes Brahms.
Simrock published almost all of Brahms' pieces from Opus 16 to Opus 120[1] and was very good friends with Brahms, even going on vacations to Italy with him.[2] Because of Brahms, Simrock took a chance with the young Antonín Dvořák.[3] Simrock generally paid Brahms well for his music.[4] Simrock was so involved in the lives of prominent musicians that Joseph Joachim came to believe that his wife was cheating on him with Simrock, and Brahms wrote a famous "lengthy letter" which "was cited in evidence at the [Joachims'] divorce proceedings."[5]
[edit] References
- ^ Simrock (firm) entry at New Grove Dictionary of Music & Musicians
- ^ Johannes Brahms & Elisabeth Herzogenberg, Johannes Brahms: The Herzogenberg Correspondence Ed. Max Kalbeck, transl. Hannah Bryant. New York: Da Capo Press (1987): 310, * footnote
- ^ Grove, ibid.
- ^ David Brodbeck, Brahms: Symphony No. 1 New York: Cambridge University Press (1997): 28. "In his next letter, dated 25 April [1877], Simrock readily agreed to Brahms's request for the princely sum of 5000 Talers (15,000 [Deutsche] Marks)."
- ^ Robert Anderson, "Brahms in Brief" The Musical Times Summer (1998): 69