Diary for my daughter 06.03.2025 - Alfred Jaëll


Hello, my beautiful daughter!
Tata here!
Hope you're well!
Tata is fine today! I am getting ready for another online course day, and later on, I will go to do some shopping and after straight to Italian classes. I will make some cleaning now in the morning and tidying as I will not have a lot of time to do everything later on as I finish the courses at 16:30 ans after I will have a shower and go to the Italian classes. So I try to make everything now in the morning! So.. let's go to your today story...



Alfred Jaëll



Alfred Jaëll (5 March 1832 – 27 February 1882) was an Austrian pianist. His students included Benjamin Johnson Lang and Samuel Sanford (the eponym of the Sanford Medal).

Life

He was born in Trieste, then in the Austrian Empire. He studied under Carl Czerny and began his public career at the age of 11, appearing at the Teatro San Benedetto, Venice, in 1843. The following year he studied with Ignaz Moscheles in Vienna. In 1845 and 1846 he lived in Brussels, then Paris. According to one source, he was a student of Chopin, and according to another, he was a student of Liszt; however, most sources make no mention of these associations.

Jaëll made a tour of the United States, which was so successful that he stayed for three years, from 1851 to 1854. He made his New York City debut on 15 November 1851, to ecstatic reviews. At his second concert on 22 November, he introduced Adelina Patti to the American public. He also gave recitals with Ole Bull. He was generally acknowledged to be the finest pianist ever to have visited North America up to that time. He took some of Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s works into his repertoire and helped to popularise them. He returned to Europe in 1854. He was made court pianist to the King of Hanover in 1855. He performed in London in 1862 and 1866.

In 1866 he married Marie Trautmann, a French pianist, composer and writer of pedagogical works. They toured together, performing their own works as well as the standard repertoire. He was one of Henryk Wieniawski’s accompanists for his famous performances of Beethoven’s Kreutzer Sonata. He was the soloist in the London premiere of Joachim Raff’s Piano Concerto in 1875.

Alfred Jaëll died suddenly in Paris in 1882, aged only 49, leaving Marie a 35-year-old widow. He left a number of "extremely effective" transcriptions from Wagner, Schumann and Mendelssohn, as well as original compositions, all now forgotten.



And that was your today story. Tomorrow, we will learn about Marie Jaëll.

Until tomorrow...

Be nice!
I'm so sorry that another day passed and I didn't hug you! Please forgive me!
I miss you the most!
I love you infinite!


 

Comentarii

Postări populare de pe acest blog

Diary for my daughter 03.08.2024 - Twelve Olympians

Diary for my daughter 13.06.2024 - John Wayne

Diary for my daughter 26.07.2024 - Alexandre Dumas fils