Peter Feuchtwanger

Peter Bernhard Feuchtwanger (26 June 1930 – 18 June 2016)[1][2] was a German pianist, composer, and teacher. He lived for many years in London.

Feuchtwanger, 2012
Feuchtwanger, 2014

Life and work

Feuchtwanger was born in Munich as the son of a local bank director, Theodore Feuchtwanger (1858–1956). During World War II, the family fled to Haifa. Peter Feuchtwanger was a self-taught pianist who later developed exercises to help pianists learn a natural effortless technique. They also help pianists who have physical problems due to their approach to playing.

Feuchtwanger's piano teachers included Edwin Fischer and Walter Gieseking, but especially inspiring were the pianist Clara Haskil, who practiced on their concert tours in England with him, and the contralto Kathleen Ferrier. He studied composition with Hans Heimler, Lennox Berkeley and Paul Müller-Zürich. He broke early from a career as a pianist to devote himself to composition and music education. He was a follower of Zen and dealt with music and philosophy from India and the Arab world. His Variation on an Eastern Folk Tune (Books 1 and 2) won first prize at the Viotti International Music Competition in 1959.

He worked extensively with the Argentine pianist Martha Argerich before her breakthrough in the Chopin Competition in 1965. In the same year, he helped Youra Guller's late comeback in London. He was one of pianist Issak Tavior's instructors. He also helped Shura Cherkassky to overcome his nerves; and coached David Helfgott.[1] Yehudi Menuhin invited him in 1966 to write a work for Violin, Sitar, Tabla and Tanpura for the Bath International Music Festival. It was first performed by Menuhin and Ravi Shankar. In 2003, with Professor Günter Reinhold,[3] he founded the International Academy of Music Education in Karlsruhe. He was Visiting Professor at the Yehudi Menuhin School in Surrey and at the Mozarteum University of Salzburg. He held part-time professorships at conservatoriums in Karlsruhe and Basel. From 1967, he gave Master Classes[4] throughout the world. He developed a novel technique of piano playing, which led to the publication of special piano exercises.[5] He was the vice president of the European Piano Teachers Association (London West).

Feuchtwanger died in his apartment in London, aged 85, survived by his partner, the artist Michael Garady. He was buried at the Brompton Cemetery.[1]

gollark: I should probably move the big-incompressible-file backups to rsync.
gollark: Anyway, how do I "use" "rsync"?
gollark: You'd expect the tar format designers would have thought of the idea of an "index" or something.
gollark: Oh, this entire CPU core is busy doing "iowait".
gollark: It's running suspiciously slowly.

References

  1. Peter Feuchtwanger, piano teacher – obituary", The Daily Telegraph (London), 28 June 2016
  2. "Ein Mensch, ein Charakter" by Eva-Elisabeth Fischer, Süddeutsche Zeitung, 21 August 2016 (in German) which mentions that Feuchtwanger used to give 1939 as his year of birth. This notice from 27 June 2016 in the same newspaper and Feuchtwangers entry at VIAF must be seen in that light.
  3. Professor Günter Reinhold
  4. Piano Master Classes
  5. Peter Feuchtwanger, Manfred Seewan, Stefan Blido (2014). Piano Exercises for Curing Playing Disorders and for Acquiring a Functional and Natural Approach to Piano Playing. Wertheim am Main, Germany: Stefan Blido.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.