1897 in music
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List of years in music (table) |
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Events
- January 13 – At a memorial concert in Paris for composer Emmanuel Chabrier (died 1894), the first act of his uncompleted work, Briséïs, is performed for the first time.
- March 27 – The première of Sergei Rachmaninoff's First Symphony is a complete disaster, leaving many wondering whether Alexander Glazunov, the conductor for the event, was drunk or just disliked the music so much that he did not care about a good performance. It would be years before Rachmaninoff would compose a major piece of music again.
- September 8 or October 8 - Gustav Mahler becomes director of the Vienna Court Opera, and is obliged to convert from Judaism to Roman Catholicism.[1]
- The Cakewalk matures into Ragtime music.
- John Philip Sousa's band makes phonograph recordings of Cakewalks and early Ragtime.
- Early publications by Scott Joplin.
- André Messager becomes musical director of the Opéra-Comique.
- Ralph Vaughan Williams studies with Max Bruch in Berlin.
- Teatro Nuovo in Bergamo changes its name to Teatro Donizetti.
- The Tanzanian national anthem, "Mungu Ibariki Africa" (God Bless Africa), is composed by South African composer Enock Sontonga.
- Composer Alexander Scriabin marries pianist Vera Ivanovna.
Publications
- Ben Harney – Ben Harney's Rag Time Instructor
Published popular music
- "Asleep In The Deep" w. Arthur J. Lamb m. Henry W. Petrie
- "At A Georgia Camp Meeting" w.m. Kerry Mills
- "Badinage" m. Victor Herbert
- "Beautiful Isle Of Somewhere" w. Mrs Jessie Brown Pounds m. John S. Fearis
- "Break The News To Mother" w.m. Charles K. Harris
- "Danny Deever" w. Rudyard Kipling m. Walter Damrosch
- "Harlem Rag" m. Tom Turpin
- "Let 'em All Come" w.m. T. W. Connor
- "Louisiana Rag" m. Theodore H. Northrup
- "On The Banks Of The Wabash Far Away" w.m. Paul Dresser
- "Our Lodger's Such A Nice Young Man" w.m. Fred Murray & Laurence Barclay
- "Roustabout Rag" m. Paul Sarebresole
- "The Shuffling Coon" by J. R. Todd
- "Song Of India" m. Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov
- "The Stars and Stripes Forever" m. John Philip Sousa (Recorded on Berliner Records)
- "Syncopated Sandy" by Wayburn & Whiting
- "Take Back Your Gold" w.m. Monroe H. Rosenfeld
- "There's A Little Star Shining For You" w.m. James Thornton
- "Ye Boston Tea Party" by Arthur Pryor
Recorded popular music
- "A Hot Time in the Old Town"
– Dan W. Quinn on Berliner Records - "Little Kinkies" (w.m. M. Tobias)
– Edison Concert Band on Edison Records brown wax cylinder № 155 - "My Mother Was a Lady"
– Dan W. Quinn - "There's a Little Star Shining for You"
– Dan W. Quinn on Edison Records
Classical music
- Hugo Alfvén – Symphony No. 1
- Ferruccio Busoni – Violin Concerto
- Ernest Chausson – String Quartet
- Felix Draeseke – String Quintet in A "Stelzner-Quintett"
- Paul Dukas – The Sorcerer's Apprentice
- George Enescu –
- Poème roumain, op. 1
- Sonata no. 1 for violin and piano in D major, op. 2
- August Enna – Concerto for violin and orchestra in D major
- Asger Hamerik – Symphony no. 6 (Spirituelle) for string orchestra
- Alexander Mackenzie – Piano Concerto
- Carl Nielsen – Hymnus amoris
- Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov – Symphony No. 2 "Antar" (final version)
- Arnold Schoenberg – String Quartet in D major
- Alexander Scriabin - Piano Sonata No. 2
- Richard Strauss – Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche
- Alexander von Zemlinsky – Symphony No. 2
Opera
- Frederick Delius – Koanga
- August Enna – The Little Match Girl
- Zdeněk Fibich – Sarka
- Eduard Holst – Our Flats, premiered in New York
- Wilhelm Kienzl – Don Quixote
- Luigi Mancinelli – Ero e Leandro
- Jules Massenet – Sapho
Musical theater
- The Belle of New York Broadway production
- The Charlatan Broadway production
- The Circus Girl Broadway production
- The Glad Hand Broadway production
- Pousse Café Broadway production
- The Yashmak - Adaptation of an Armenian operetta, Leblébidji Horhor, with music by Napoleon Lambelet and libretto by Cecil Raleigh and Seymour Hicks, runs from 31 March 1897 to 31 July 1897 (121 performances) at the Shaftesbury Theatre, London.
Births
- January 2 – Jane Green, US singer (died 1931)
- January 10 – Sam Chatmon, blues musician (died 1983)
- January 22
- Rosa Ponselle, soprano (died 1981)
- Leslie Sarony, English singer, comedian and songwriter (died 1985)
- February 27 – Marian Anderson, contralto (died 1993)
- March 9 – Pedro Flores, composer (died 1979)
- March 11 – Henry Cowell, composer (died 1965)
- March 13 - Maria Nemeth, Hungarian operatic soprano (died 1967)
- March 26 – David McCallum, Sr., violinist and father of David McCallum (died 1972)
- April 1 – Lucille Bogan, blues singer (died 1979)
- April 8 – John Frederick Coots, US composer (died 1985)
- April 17 – Harald Sæverud, composer (died 1992)
- April 19 – Vivienne Segal, US actress and singer (died 1992)
- May 14 – Sidney Bechet, jazz saxophonist, clarinetist, and composer (died 1959)
- May 29 – Erich Wolfgang Korngold, composer (died 1957)
- June 3 – "Memphis Minnie", blues singer (died 1973)
- June 12 – Alexandre Tansman, pianist and composer (died 1986)
- June 22 – Bulbul, opera and folk singer (died 1961)
- July 11 – Blind Lemon Jefferson, blues musician (died 1929)
- June 27 – Maceo Pinkard, composer, lyricist and music publisher (died 1962)
- August 4 – Abe Lyman, US bandleader, composer and drummer (died 1957)
- August 29 – Helge Rosvaenge, operatic tenor (died 1972)
- September 3 – Francisco Mignone, composer (died 1986)
- September 8 – Jimmie Rodgers, country singer (died 1933)
- September 18
- Pablo Sorozábal, composer (died 1988)
- Sam H. Stept, Russian-born US composer, pianist and conductor (died 1964)
- October 11 – Leo Reisman, violinist and bandleader (died 1961)
- October 26 – Tiana Lemnitz, operatic soprano (died 1994)
- November 2 – Dennis King, British singer and actor (died 1971)
- November 12 – Karl Marx, conductor and composer (died 1985))
- November 20 – Margaret Sutherland, composer (died 1984)
- November 25 – Willie 'The Lion' Smith, US jazz pianist (died 1973)
- December 9 – Hermione Gingold, actress and singer (died 1987)
- December 18 – Fletcher Henderson, jazz musician (died 1952)
- December 30 – Alfredo Bracchi, Italian lyricist (died 1976)
- date unknown - Aileen Stanley, singer (died 1982)
Deaths
- January 24 - Sarah Edith Wynne, operatic soprano and concert singer, 54
- February 10 – Antonio Bazzini, violinist, composer and music, 78
- February 23 – Woldemar Bargiel, composer and teacher, 68
- February 25 – Cornélie Falcon, opera singer, 83
- March 7 – Leonard Labatt, operatic tenor, 58
- April 3 – Johannes Brahms, composer, 63
- April 8 – George Garrett, composer, 62
- April 23 - Clement Harris, pianist and composer, 25 (killed in the Greco-Turkish war)
- May 21 - Carl Mikuli, pianist and composer, 77
- June 9
- Ignace Gibsone, pianist and composer, 70
- Pavel Pabst, pianist and composer, 43
- June 18 – Franz Krenn, composer and music teacher, 81
- August 1 – Gaetano Antoniazzi, violin-maker, 71
- September 16 – Edward Edwards, choirmaster and composer, 81
- September 20
- Karel Bendl, composer, 59
- Grenville Dean Wilson, pianist and composer, 64
- October 11 – Léon Boëllmann, organist and composer, 35
- October 27 – Alphons Czibulka, pianist, conductor and composer, 52
- November 6 – Edouard Deldevez, conductor, composer and violinist, 80
- November 14 – Giuseppina Strepponi, operatic soprano, 82
- December 4 – Adolf Neuendorff, German-American composer, conductor, pianist and violinist, 54
- December - Slavka Atanasijević, Serbian pianist and composer, 47[2]
References
- ↑ La Grange, Henry-Louis de (1995). Gustav Mahler Volume 2: Vienna: The Years of Challenge (1897–1904). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-315159-6. p. 54
- ↑ Ma. St. [Marijanović, Stanislav]. 1983. "Atanasijević, Slavka (Aloysia)". In Croatian biographical lexicon (Hrvatski biografski leksikon), Vol. 1, ed. Nikica Kolumbić. Zagreb: Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, p. 261
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