Gerhard Müller-Hornbach
Gerhard Müller-Hornbach (born 26 February 1951 as Gerhard Müller) is a German composer, conductor and music teacher.[1]
Life
Müller-Hornbach was born in Hornbach. From 1981 to 2016, as professor for composition and music theory, he taught at the Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts where he headed the composition department and co-founded the Institute for Contemporary Music (IzM) in 2005 of which he was director.[2]
Awards
Müller-Hornbach was awarded the Villa Massimo prize in 1983/84. In 2006 he received the Johann Vaillant Composition Prize endowed with 2500 Euro at the 6th Bergische Biennale. In 2009 he was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany by the Federal President.
Compositions
- Wandlungen in D, 1976 (for orchestra)
- Piano trio, 1978 (violin, cello and piano)
- Bewegte Stille, 1985 (flute, oboe, violin, viola and cello)
- Drei Nachtstücke based on poems by Eduard Mörike, 1985 (for mezzo-soprano, baritone, Horn in F, cello and piano)
- 5 Gesänge der Schirin,[3] 1983 (for soprano, viola d'amore and 21 strings)
- Wir sind ein Teil der Erde - Composition of sound, light and movement, 1987 (soli, choir and large orchestra)
- Passacaglia, 1980 (for orchestra)
- Gesänge der Liebe, 1985/1986 (soprano, baritone, choir and orchestra)
- Der Gesang des Danijar, 1995 (orchestra)
- Fünf zu Acht – 5:8, 1994 (vocals, dance, percussions)
- String quartet, 1985
- In Sound, 1998 (solo-cello, mezzo-soprano, 2 celli, double-bass, percussions)
- ...bis die Schatten der Nacht verdämmern..., 2003 (recorder and drums (2 bongos, 2 congas, big drum)
- Fünf Miniaturen based on poems by Robert Gernhardt, 2004 (voice, trumpet, double bass, drums)
- Sisyphos, 2006 (recorder solo)
- Vom wissenden Vergessen,[4] 2011 (flute and percussions)
- numerous chamber music works and compositions for school ensembles (among others Wassermusik and Klangräume)
- Nur eins sei mir gewähret, 2017 (composition based on poems and diary entries by Holocaust victim Margarete Steiner, née Henschel, for soprano, flute, viola, cello, percussion), premiered on 23 January 2018 in Offenbach am Main
- Im Spiegel der Angst – auf der Suche nach Entängstigung,[5] 2017 (Oratorio for 3 vocal soloists (soprano, tenor, baritone), 8-part mixed choir and 3 instrumental ensembles after texts by Martin Luther, Ingeborg Bachmann, Martin Luther King, Khalil Gibran, Hannah Arendt, Henrik Ibsen, Gotthold Ephrahim Lessing, Erich Fried, Epikur, Fernando Pessoa and from the Bible), premiered 20 October 2018 in Mainz.[6][7]
gollark: The deltas thing would mean I would have to, on any lookup of an old revision, pull every single old diff out of storage, un-diff them, and send that back.
gollark: Well, compressing all old revisions would be pretty trivial.
gollark: (yes I am sure I have offended someone by saying I didn't care about CPU time)
gollark: I'm not concerned about CPU time, that's basically insignificant, but code complexity.
gollark: The deltas thing would introduce quite a lot of complexity in processing, you see.
References
- Gerhard Müller-Hornbach on Mutare.de
- Prof. Gerhard Müller-Hornbach on Kronberg Academy
- Trio / Passacaglia I / 5 Gesänge der Schirin / Zyklus / Streichquartett on Schott
- Vom wissenden Vergessen on Amazon
- Im Spiegel der Angst on Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland
- "Im Spiegel der Angst – Uraufführung von Müller-Hornbachs Luther-Oratorium in Mainz, nmz - neue musikzeitung" (in German). Retrieved 5 March 2019.
- Gerhard Müller-Hornbach on JPc
External links
- Werke von und über Gerhard Müller-Hornbach in the German National Library catalogue
- Müller-Hornbach im Komponistenlexikon
- Gerhard Müller-Hornbach discography at Discogs
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