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Friedrich Kiel

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Friedrich Kiel (Bad Laasphe, Puderbach, October 8 1821September 13 1885, Berlin) was a German composer and music teacher.

Writing of the chamber music of Friedrich Kiel, Wilhelm Altmann notes that it was Kiel’s extreme modesty which kept him and his exceptional works from receiving the consideration they deserved. After mentioning Brahms and others, Altmann writes, “He produced a number of chamber works, which . . . need fear no comparison.”

Kiel was taught the rudiments of music and received his first piano lessons from his father, but was in large part self-taught. Something of a prodigy, he played the piano almost without instruction at the age of six, and by his thirteenth year he had composed much music. Kiel eventually came to the attention of Prince Wittgenstein, a great music lover. Through the Prince's efforts, Kiel was allowed to study violin with the concertmaster of the Prince’s fine orchestra with which he later performed as a soloist. Kiel was also given theory lessons from the renowned flautist Kaspar Kummer. By 1840, the eighteen year old Kiel was court conductor and the music teacher to the prince’s children. Two years later, Louis Spohr heard him and arranged for a scholarship which allowed Kiel to study in Berlin with the renowned theorist and teacher Siefried Dehn. In Berlin, Kiel eventually became sought after as an instructor. In 1866, he received a teaching position at the prestigious Stern Conservatory, where he taught composition and was elevated to a professorship three years later. In 1870 he joined the faculty of the newly founded Hochschule für Musik which was shortly thereafter considered one of the finest music schools in Germany. Among his many students were Noskowski, Arthur Somervell, Charles Villiers Stanford, Frederic Hymen Cowen, and Emil Sjögren. Kiel's hobby was mountaineering and at age 60—two years before his tragic death as the result of a traffic accident—he climbed Europe's second highest peak, the Monte Rosa on the Swiss-Italian border.

His compositions include a piano concerto, two piano quintets, three piano quartets (in A minor, E major and G major), at least two string quartets, several piano trios, sonatas for violin (at least four), viola and for cello, motets, oratorios (including the Star of Bethlehem) as well as a Missa Solemnis and a Requiem, among more than seventy works in all with opus number.

Several of his chamber works (recently including one of the string quartets), along with the piano concerto and some choral works, have been recorded. ([1])

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