Max Spicker

Max Spicker (August 16, 1858 October 15, 1912) was a German American organist, conductor and composer.[1]

Biography

Spicker was born in Königsberg, Prussia. He studied piano with Louis Köhler for five years, and then attended Leipzig Conservatory from 1877-1879.[1]

In 1882 he moved to New York city,[1] where he began conducting the "Beethoven Männerchor" and worked as a reader for the music publisher G. Schirmer.[1] He was Director of Groschel's Brooklyn Conservatory from 1888 to 1895,[2] after which he was a teacher of harmony and counterpoint at the National Conservatory in New York. He also served for 12 years as choir director of Temple Emmanuel on Fifth Avenue.

He was a member of the New York Musician's Club and an honorary member of the Society of American Cantors.[3]

He died October 15, 1912, in New York City, survived by a wife and son.[3]

Composer and editor

Spicker eventually became an editor for G. Schirmer, editing such collections as the four-volume Anthology of Sacred Song and the five-volume Operatic Anthology. In their day, both publications became standard anthologies for young singers. He also revised the T. Tertius Noble edition of Handel's Messiah for Schirmer, which remains in wide use.

As a composer, most of his works were for solo voice or chorus, although he did complete several larger works.

He was also an arranger of works for voice and orchestra. His orchestral version of Ethelbert Nevin's duet O That We Two Were Maying was recorded by Victor Records in May 1914 by two important singers of the time, Alma Gluck and Louise Homer. Victor also recorded his arrangement of the Jacopo Peri aria Funeste piaggie with baritone Reinald Werrenrath in January 1915.[4] The Victor Catalog also includes an arrangement of Mattei's Non é ver in English for tenor and orchestra, recorded by tenor Lambert Murphy in 1912,[5] and Die Heimat for vocal quartet, recorded by "The Manhattan Quartet" in 1911.[6]

His work in Jewish liturgical music was also noteworty. Strimple named him as one of "the most prominent Jewish liturgical musicians at the beginning of the century".[7] In 1901 Spicker and William Sparger jointly published a Sabbath Evening and Morning Service. It included works by non-Jewish composers, such as a setting of "S'u Sheorim" based on a melody in Gounod's Faust.[7]

Large musical works

Other vocal compositions

Published by G. Schirmer unless noted

  1. Frühlingstraum (text by W. Müller)
  2. In dieser Stunde (text by R. Prutz)
  1. Nur vor dem Abschiednehmen ist mir bang (text by F. X. Seidl)
  2. Abendfriede (text by Eichrodt)
  1. Leise zieht durch mein Gemüth
  2. Die Wasserlilie
  1. unknown
  2. Es blickt so still der Mond mich an

Editions

Published by G. Schirmer unless noted

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Baker's Biographical Dictionary, Seventh Edition, p. 2177
  2. It is unclear whether this refers to the Brooklyn Academy of Music or the currently named Brooklyn-Queens Conservatory of Music, esp. since the latter institution claims its founding as 1897.
  3. 1 2 New York Times obituary
  4. http://www.loc.gov/jukebox/artists/detail/id/4094/
  5. http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/matrix/detail/200012324/C-12146-Tis_not_true
  6. http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/matrix/detail/200010710/B-10590-Die_Heimath
  7. 1 2 Strimple, p. 271
  8. Page 1 of the song indicates that it is based on a theme by Carl Goldmark
  9. Publication says they are "for use in schools, seminaries and singing classes"

References

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