Composers

Friedrich Klose

Orchestra
Voice
Soprano
Alto
Tenor
Bass
Mixed chorus
Violin
Viola
Cello
Symphonic poem
Mass
Religious music
Quartet
Lied
Song
by popularity
LoreleyMass, Op.6String Quartet in E-flat majorVerbunden, Op.8
Wikipedia
Friedrich Klose (born November 29, 1862, in Karlsruhe, Germany – died December 24, 1942 in Ruvigliana, Switzerland) was a German composer. He studied with Vinzenz Lachner in Karlsruhe, and then with Anton Bruckner in Vienna, and recorded his impressions of his time with Bruckner in a book. His Mass in d-minor was written in response to Franz Liszt's death. His opera Ilsebill (1903) is inspired by the music of Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss, and the plot is based on the Brothers Grimm tale of a fisherman who catches a huge fish which grants ever increasingly more greedy wishes and this is reflected in the increasing complexity of orchestration during the opera. It was premiered in 1903 in Karlsruhe under the direction of Felix Mottl. He ended his career as a composer and a teacher in 1919 and retired to Switzerland.
Ilsebill, an opera; Libretto: Hugo Hoffmann (1902, UA Karlsruhe 7. Juni 1903)
Asklepiadische Strophen for men's chorus (text by Heinrich Leuthold, 1888)
Mass in d-minor for Solo voices, chorus, orchestra and organ, op. 6 (1889) for which the following works were written later:
Four Songs for men's chorus (1905)
Die Wallfahrt nach Kevlaar, a ballade for narrator, three choirs, orchestra and organ (text by Heinrich Heine, 1911)
Ein Festgesang Neros for tenor, chorus , orchestra and organ (text by Victor Hugo, 1912)
Der Sonne-Geist, Oratorio for solo voices, chorus, orchestra and organ (text by Alfred Mombert, 1917)
14 Songs for voice and piano opus numbers 1-5 (1886-87)
Verbunden, Song cycle for Mezzo-soprano and piano, op. 8 (text by Friedrich Rückert, 1888)
Fünf Gesänge nach Giordano Bruno for voice and piano (1918)
Jeanne d'Arc, tone poem (before 1881)
Loreley, tone poem (before 1881)
Elfenreigen (1892)
Festzug (1892)
Das Leben ein Traum, tone poem for narrator and a final chorus for women's choir (1896)
Elegie for Violin or Viola and Piano, op. 7 (1889)
Prelude and Double-fugue in c-minor using a theme by Anton Bruckner with a final chorale for brass (1907)
String quartet in E-flat major: "Ein Tribut in vier Raten entrichtet an Seine Gestrengen den deutschen Schulmeister" (1911) Sound bites and work description
Meine Lehrjahre bei Bruckner. 1927.
Bayreuth. Eindrücke und Erlebnisse. 1929.