Bronsart (von Schellendorf), Hans

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Bronsart (von Schellendorf), Hans

Bronsart (von Schellendorf), Hans, German pianist and composer; b. Berlin, Feb. 11, 1830; d. Munich, Nov. 3, 1913. He studied piano with Kullak in Berlin and took lessons with Liszt in Weimar. In 1857 he undertook a concert tour through Germany, France, and Russia; from 1860 to 1867 he was active as a conductor in Leipzig, Dresden, and Berlin. He was the dedicatee and first performer of Liszt’s Second Piano Concerto. In his compositions he followed the Romantic trend in Schumann’s tradition. His most successful was his youthful Piano Trio, his first opus number (1856); some of his piano pieces retained their popularity for a brief while. He also wrote a dramatic tone poem, Manfred, for Chorus and Orch., to his own text (Weimar, Dec. 1, 1901); 2 programmatic syms.; and choruses. In 1861 he married Ingeborg Bronsart (von Schellendorf) (née Starck) .

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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Bronsart (von Schellendorf), Hans

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