Alfred Uhl

Alfred Uhl (June 5, 1909 in Vienna June 8, 1992 in Vienna) was an Austrian composer, violist,[1] music teacher and conductor.

Biography

Uhl studied with Franz Schmidt at the Vienna Music Academy, receiving a diploma in composition with honours in 1932. He subsequently worked as Kapellmeister of the Swiss Festspielmusik in Zürich. While there he composed scores for a variety of cultural and industrial films. He returned to Vienna in 1938 and in 1940 was drafted into the Austrian Army. From 1940 to 1942 he commanded a French prison camp in Neumarkt. He joined the faculty of the Vienna Music Academy in 1945, where he taught theory, orchestration and composition until his retirement in 1980. One of his notable students was Alfred Prinz. He was the recipient of the Vienna Schubert Prize (1943), the Austrian State Prize (1960), the Vienna Music Prize (1961), the Viennese Gold Medal of Honour (1969) and the Austrian Badge of Honour for Service and Arts (1980). He also served as the president of the Austrian Gesellschaft der Autoren, Komponisten und Musikverleger (1970) and the Künstler-Union (1976).

As a composer, Uhl synthesized elements from neo-classicism, atonality, serialism and traditional tonal and contrapuntal idioms. His vibrant style combined technical sophistication and musical charm with wit and humour, rhythmic inventiveness, thematic development and advanced harmonic language. He wrote eight film scores, one opera, several choral works, and multiple symphonic and chamber music pieces. He wrote extensively for the clarinet, including educational material and works that are still common repertoire. His most famous educational pieces are the two volumes which comprise the 48 Studies (see below). His Divertimento for Three Clarinets and Bass Clarinet is one of the most performed works for the medium. Written in 1942 for clarinettists from the Vienna Philharmonic, it is a very demanding 3-movement work structured similarly to a conventional concerto.

48 Studies for clarinet

Two volumes of 24 studies each, first published in 1940 by Schott Music, were designed to familiarise the advancing clarinettist with some of the more difficult possibilities being written in modern instrumental music. This is stated by Uhl himself in a foreword to some, but not all editions. As such, they occasionally include intervals which require sliding over keys on the French system of clarinet, a technique that is generally frowned upon unless, as in these cases, it cannot be avoided.

The studies are characterized by their extensive use of neo-romantic chromaticism and rhythmic complexity. Occasionally viewed as less musical and more technical than most studies, some clarinetists consider it a second goal to bring out the musicality of each piece, which may be hidden behind technical complexities.

Uhl was assisted by Leopold Wlach of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, who made suggestions and revisions throughout the writing process.

Selected works

Stage

Orchestra

Concertante

Chamber and instrumental music

Piano

Vocal

Choral

Film scores

Year Original title English title Notes
1932 Gebändigte Zeit (Schweizer Uhrenindustrie)
1932 Der Weg nach dem Süden
1933 Abessinienflug (Mittelholzer)
1933 Alpenflug (Mittelholzer)
1933 Appenzellerland
1933 Im Dienste des Alltags
1933 Mensch im Schnee
1933 Toggenburg
1935 Seldwyla
1935 Symphonie des Wassers
1935 Tessiner Bergbauern
1935 Tessiner Seen
1936 Frauennot - Frauenglück
1936 So lebt China
1939 Aus Rüstkammern deutscher Vergangenheit
1939 Fristlos entlassen
1950 Das gestohlene Jahr
1951 Schwindel im 3/4-Takt
1952 Frühlingsstimmen Voices of Spring directed by Hans Thimig
1953 Der Verschwender
1957 Hochstätten des Geistes
1957 Wien, du Stadt meiner Träume Vienna, City of My Dreams directed by Willi Forst
1959 Panoptikum 59

Honours and awards

Sources

References

  1. Riley, Maurice W. (1991), "Brief Biographies of Violists", The History of the Viola, Volume II, Ann Arbor, Michigan: Braun-Brumfield, p. 439
  2. "outstanding artist award - Musik" (in German). Retrieved 24 November 2012.

External links

(1953)