Toni Leutwiler

Toni Leutwiler (October 31, 1923 March 8, 2009), also known as Tom Wyler, was a Swiss composer and violinist from Zürich, Switzerland who specialized in light music.

Life

Leutwiler attended the conservatory in Zurich from 1936 to 1944 and received his teaching diploma in violin and piano at the age of 19.[1]

He had great international success as a composer and as an arranger for soloists and orchestras. He was at the peak of his professional career in the 1960s. Between 1945 and 1975 he composed and arranged around 2,000 compositions and arrangements, especially for symphonic light music, inspired also by jazz, which had brought the American occupation troops to Europe at that time.[2]

Music

His music carries the distinctive style of music that was typical of other mid-century composers like Leroy Anderson. Much of it is also marked by virtuosity in the violin parts. These instances of virtuoso passages are very apparent in his compositions Bristol Cream, Happy Time, and Galop on Strings. A typical piece by him follows the ABA format, with two fast sections at the outer parts of the piece that are almost identical to each other and a slow, lyrical theme in the middle. The slow themes contrast very much with its passionate lyricism to the light and frivolous faster sections. The Water Skiing movement from his Summer Suite displays this very clearly.

His background as a violinist is extremely noticeable in his works. The violin parts take the melody almost all of the time while the rest of the orchestra simply just accompanies that section.

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gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_quotient#Social_correlations
gollark: Presumably just "what the test outputs" or something, but with sensible tests it's correlated with stuff.
gollark: You can't really measure "intelligence", which is loosely defined, but you can measure *IQ* and it is somewhat useful.

References

  1. "Friends Toni Leutwiler Music". Verein "Freunde Toni Leutwiler-Musik" (in German). Retrieved 2019-04-06.
  2. "Friends Toni Leutwiler Music". Verein "Freunde Toni Leutwiler-Musik" (in German). Retrieved 2019-04-06.


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