Friedrich Wilhelm Grund

Friedrich Wilhelm Grund (7 October 1791, Hamburg, Germany 24 November 1874, Hamburg, Germany) was a German composer, conductor and teacher.

He studied with his father (piano, violin, cello and contrabass) and with the Hamburg cantor Christian Friedrich Gottlieb Schwencke. In 1819, he abandoned his career as a concert virtuoso because of the nerve disease of his right hand and he started to compose and teach. In the same year, he co-founded and led the Gesellschaft der Freunde des religiösen Gesangs (later the Hamburger Singakademie). He also co-founded the Hamburger Tonkünstlervereins.

List of selected works

  • Op. 5 Piano quartet
  • Op. 8 Quintet for piano and winds
  • Op. 9 Violin sonata
  • Op. 11 Sonata for piano and cello or violin
  • Op. 13 Grande sonate
  • Op. 13 Piano quartet
  • Op. 14 Grande polonaise
  • Op. 22 Songs
  • Op. 23 Grand divertissement
  • Op. 25 Introduction et rondeau
  • Op. 27 Trio de salon
  • Op. 31 Songs for two voices
  • Die Burg Falkenstein (romantic opera in 5 acts, Hamburg, 1825)
  • Mathilde (heroic opera in 3 acts)
  • Caroline Pichler (opera, not performed)
  • Die Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu (oratorio)
  • 6 songs after Goethe
gollark: Also also, things involving just scrambling the alphabet and using that fixed "scrambling" for each letter of the input are vulnerable to stuff like frequency analysis.
gollark: Also, the fact that it mixes up the alphabet a lot isn't exactly very relevant, since the vulnerable bit is probably how it, well, generates the "scrambling" in the first place.
gollark: * not practical to decrypt unless you have some extra information i.e. the key
gollark: When you talk about the "key" here, do you mean that you just need to know *how it works* to ~~use~~ decrypt it, or need to have some specific extra bit of information?
gollark: What do you mean "alphabet scrambles"?

References

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