Schaub, Hans (actually, Siegmund Ferdinand)

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Schaub, Hans (actually, Siegmund Ferdinand)

Schaub, Hans (actually, Siegmund Ferdinand ), German music critic, teacher, and composer; b. Frankfurt am Main, Sept. 22, 1880; d. Hanstedt, near Marburg, Nov. 12, 1965. He studied at the Frankfurt am Main Hoch Cons. with Iwan Knorr (theory) and Carl Friedberg (piano), with Arnold Mendelssohn in Darmstadt, and with Humperdinck in Berlin; also took lessons with Richard Strauss. He taught at the Breslau Cons. (1903–06); was on the faculty of Benda’s Cons. and served as ed. of the Deutsche Musikerzeitung in Berlin (1906–16). After working as a music critic and pedagogue in Hamburg (1916–51), he settled in Hanstedt. Among his compositions were Passacaglia for Orch. (1928); 3 Intermezzi for Small Orch.; Capriccio for Violin and Piano; Den Gefallenen, cantata (1940); Deutsches Te Deum, oratorio (1942).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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Schaub, Hans (actually, Siegmund Ferdinand)

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