Elly Ney

Elly Ney (27 September 1882 – 31 March 1968) was a German romantic pianist who specialized in Beethoven, and was especially popular in Germany.

Elly Ney
Elly Ney, from a 1922 publication.
Background information
Born(1882-09-27)27 September 1882
OriginGerman
Died31 March 1968(1968-03-31) (aged 85)
GenresRomantic, Classical
InstrumentsPiano

Career

She was born in Düsseldorf, where her mother was a music instructor and her father was a registrar.[1] Her grandmother introduced her to the works of Beethoven, and supported her piano playing. She studied at Cologne with Isidor Seiss and Karl Bötcher.[1] After winning the Mendelssohn Scholarship in 1901, she studied in Vienna with Theodor Leschetizky, with whom she only had two lessons, and Emil von Sauer.[2] She taught at the Cologne Conservatory for three years, then became a touring virtuoso. In 1927 she was given the honorary freedom of Beethoven's birthplace Bonn. In 1932 she founded the Elly Ney Trio with Wilhelm Stross (violin) and Ludwig Hoelscher (cello): in quintets the group recorded with Florizel von Reuter (violin) and Walter Trampler (viola). She traveled to many parts of the world, including the USA, playing in Carnegie Hall in New York City.

During the Third Reich she joined the Nazi Party in 1937,[3] participated in "cultural education" camps, and became an honorary member of the League of German Girls.[4] She held antisemitic views, although she did record at least one Mendelssohn Song without Words in 1960 or shortly afterward.[3] Ney was awarded the War Merit Cross, 2nd Class for care for troops. After the war, the city of Bonn imposed a stage ban on her. In 1952 a request for lifting the ban was rejected, stating that Ney was a "pronounced National Socialist".[5] Nevertheless, she was named Honorary Citizen of Tutzing in 1952. She continued touring until her death, increasingly concentrating on Beethoven's piano works, which she interpreted with power and vitality. But for interesting contrast, three exquisitely sensitive Mozart recordings are her Piano Concerto No. 15, in B-flat, K. 450 (1935), Piano Sonata No. 11, in A, K. 331 (1930s) and Rondo in A minor, K. 511 (the last giving Schnabel's great 1946 rendition lively competition).

Personal

Bust of Elly Ney

Elly Ney was married twice; first, in 1911, to the Dutch conductor Willem van Hoogstraten. They had one daughter, Eleonore (1918–2007). They divorced in 1927 and she married Paul Allais, an American coal dealer from Chicago. This marriage didn't last long, and later on Ney reconciled with van Hoogstraten.

Ney died in Tutzing in 1968 aged 85.

gollark: You wouldn't need to know it to change strings, so I think you're deliberately being pythonocontrarian.
gollark: PRs welcome, unless I dislike them!
gollark: I wouldn't accept a PR for that. You would have to improve the logic too.
gollark: Suuuuuuure you do.
gollark: I would also be amenable to a guildwide non-user-scoped thing.

References

  1. Finscher, Ludwig; Blume, Friedrich (1994). Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart. ISBN 978-3-476-41022-1.
  2. Elly Ney entry at Deutsche Biographie (in German)
  3. Vor 125 wurde die große Beethoven-Interpretin Elly Ney geboren. In: Leipziger Volkszeitung. 9/28/2007. p. 10
  4. Romantikerin am Klavier. Deutschlandfunk 09/27/2007
  5. Internationales Biographisches Archiv. No. 21 (5/13/1986). ISSN 0020-9457.
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