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1879 in music

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This article is about music-related events in 1879.

Specific locations

Events

  • January 1 – The Violin Concerto of Johannes Brahms is premiered in Leipzig. Joseph Joachim was the soloist with Brahms conducting.
  • December 31 – Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera The Pirates of Penzance opens at the Fifth Avenue Theatre in New York City (following a token performance the day before for U.K. copyright reasons in Paignton, Devon).
  • Engelbert Humperdinck becomes the first winner of the Mendelssohn Award awarded by the Mendelssohn Stiftung (foundation) of Berlin.
  • The Monte Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra gains a permanent home at the Garnier Palace.

Classical music

  • Henri Duparc – Le Manoir de Rosemonde
  • Gabriel Fauré – Berceuse, for violin and piano
  • César Franck – Piano Quintet
  • Carl Goldmark
    • Penthesilea, Op.31
    • Piano Trio No.2, Op.33
  • Asger Hamerik – Concert Romance for Cello and Piano
  • Stephen Heller
    • 4 Mazurkas, Op.148
    • 20 Preludes, Op.150
  • Hans Huber
    • 10 Ländler vom Luzerner See, Op.47
    • Eine Lustspiel-Ouverture, Op.50
  • Franz Lachner – Elegie for Flute and Organ
  • Max Meyer-Olbersleben – Ballade, Op.9
  • Pablo de Sarasate – Spanish Dances for violin and piano, Book II
  • Bedřich Smetana – Ten Czech Dances, for piano
  • Peter Tchaikovsky - Orchestral Suite No. 1
  • Charles-Marie Widor – Symphony for Organ No. 5

Opera

  • Giovanni Bottesini – Ero e Leandro
  • Emmanuel Chabrier – Une éducation manquée, premiered May 1 in Paris
  • Miguel Marqués – Camoens
  • Viktor Nessler – Der Rattenfänger von Hameln
  • Camille Saint-Saëns – Étienne Marcel
  • Peter Tchaikovsky – Eugene Onegin

Musical theater

  • The Mulligan Guards' Ball Broadway production opens at the Comique Theatre on January 13 and runs for 153 performances
  • The Mulligan Guards' Chowder Broadway production opens at the Comique Theatre on August 11 and runs for 112 performances
  • The Mulligan Guards' Christmas Broadway production opens at the Comique Theatre on November 17 and runs for 104 performances

Births

  • January 3 – Lina Abarbanell, German-American soprano (d. 1963)

  • January 10 – Armanda Degli Abbati, Italian opera singer (d. 1946)

  • January 26 – Hugo Riesenfeld, film music composer (died 1939)

  • February 9 – Natanael Berg, Swedish composer (d. 1957)

  • February 26 – Frank Bridge, composer (d. 1941)

  • April 1 – Louise Gunning, Broadway and vaudeville singer (d. 1960)

  • May 22

    • Jean Cras, French composer (d. 1932)
    • Eastwood Lane, composer (d. 1951)
  • June 13 – Maria Gay, opera singer (d. 1943)

  • June 21 – Henry Creamer, US songwriter (d. 1930)

  • July 5

    • Philippe Gaubert, composer (d. 1941)
    • Wanda Landowska, harpsichordist (d. 1959)
  • July 9 – Ottorino Respighi, composer (d. 1936)

  • August 1 – Eva Tanguay, singer, vaudeville star (d. 1947)

  • August 18 – Gus Edwards, Prussian-born US songwriter and entertainer (d. 1945)

  • August 31 – Alma Mahler, born Alma Schindler, Viennese-born composer and wife of Gustav Mahler (d. 1964)

  • September 29 – Willem Willeke, Dutch cellist and music editor (died 1950)

  • September 30 – Henri Casadesus, violist and music publisher (d. 1947)

  • October 12 – Chris Smith, composer (d. 1949)

  • October 13 – Leopold Weninger, composer (died 1940)

  • October 18 – Grzegorz Fitelberg, Polish conductor, violinist and composer (d. 1953)

  • October 21 – Joseph Canteloube, composer (d. 1957)

  • November 2 – Ramón Montoya, Spanish flamenco guitarist (d. 1949)

  • December 1 – Beth Slater Whitson, US lyric writer (d. 1930)

  • December 4 – Hamilton Harty, composer (d. 1941)

  • December 7 – Rudolf Friml, pianist and composer of operettas and musicals (d. 1972)

  • December 19 – Otto Olsson, Swedish composer (d. 1964)

  • December 26 – Julius Weismann, German conductor and composer (d. 1950)

Deaths

  • January 8 – Ferdo Livadić, composer (born 1799)
  • February 20 – John Orlando Parry, pianist, singer and comedian (born 1810)
  • April 9 – Ernst Friedrich Eduard Richter, music theorist
  • May 27 – E. S. Engelsberg, composer
  • June 3 – Frances Ridley Havergal, hymn-writer
  • July 6 – Henry Smart, organist and composer (born 1813)
  • August 4 – Adelaide Kemble, opera singer
  • September 12 – Peter Arnold Heise, composer
  • October 14 – Karl Anton Eckert, conductor and composer (born 1820)
  • November 30 – August Bournonville, Danish ballet-master and choreographer (born 1805)
  • December 24 – Anna Bochkoltz, German operatic soprano, voice teacher and composer (born 1815)

References

References

  1. (2006). "Penguin Pocket On This Day". Penguin Reference Library.
  2. Huntley, William A.. (1879). "I'll Wander Back Again". F. A. North & Co.
  3. Huntley, William A.. (1879). "digicoll.lib.berkeley.edu". F. A. North & Co.
  4. Frederic Barclay Emery. (1928). "The Violin Concerto Through a Period of Nearly 300 Years". Violin Literature Publishing Company.
  5. Astrand, Hans. "Olsson, Otto (Emanuel)".
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