Josef Pembaur

{{short description|Austrian classical pianist and composer}}

Josef Pembaur (20 April 1875 – 12 October 1950) was an Austrian pianist and composer.

Life

Born in Innsbruck, Pembaur was the son of the composer and music director {{Ill|Josef Pembaur the Elder|de}} (1848–1923). He got his first musical education by his father. From 1893 until 1896, he studied piano at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München with Ludwig Thuille, conducting with Ludwig Abel and composition and organ with Josef Gabriel Rheinberger.{{cite encyclopedia |last=Einstein |first=Alfred |title=Pembaur, Joseph jr. |encyclopedia=Hugo Riemanns Musik-Lexikon |date=1929}} He was awarded a gold medal at the final examination in 1896. From 1896 to 1901, he worked as a piano teacher at the same school.[https://schenkerdocumentsonline.org/profiles/person/entity-000666.html Josef Pembaur (jnr)] on Schenker Documents Online

In 1901/02, he continued his studies with Alfred Reisenauer at the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig, where he was employed as a teacher for higher piano playing. In 1912, he was appointed professor of music in Saxony. In 1921, he was appointed professor in Bavaria, but he returned to the Academy of Music in Munich and taught a master class for piano.[http://musikgeschichten.musikland-tirol.at/content/musikintirol/info/muenchens-magier-am-fluegel.html Bericht und Bild] His students included Anna Renfer.{{Cite book|last=Cohen|first=Aaron I.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5VsYAAAAIAAJ&q=strantz+louise|title=International Encyclopedia of Women Composers|date=1987|publisher=Books & Music (USA)|isbn=978-0-9617485-1-7|language=en}}

Pembaur also completed numerous concert tours. In Berlin he was one of the judges in the competition for the Ibach Prize.[https://imslp.org/wiki/Category:Pembaur,_Josef Josef Permbaur] on IMSLP

In Spring 1919, Pembaur submitted eight piano pieces for the {{Ill|Reproduktionsklavier|de}} Welte-Mignon, including two compositions by his father, probably his earliest recordings.[http://stadtmuseum.bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de/pnd/10393278X Josef Pembaur in the portrait collection of the Munich Stadtmuseum]

On 29 October 1918, Thomas Mann heard him in an event with Joachim von Delbrück, who was reading from his novel Der sterbende Chopin that evening. Mann commented on this in his diary as follows: "I listened to the music, especially the sonata with the Funeral march, which P. played excellently, with intimate pleasure. In between, this donkey from Delbrück was beating his straw. We left before the last section."[http://www.bmlo.uni-muenchen.de/p0192 Pembaur, Josef] on BMLO

In 1906, he married the pianist Maria Elterich, and the two of them also performed together on two pianos.

Pembaur's brother Karl was a composer and choirmaster in Dresden.

Pembaur died in Munich at the age of 75.[https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp163820/josef-pembaur Josef Pembaur] on National Portrait Gallery

Compositions

  • Chamber music
  • Piano pieces
  • Choirs
  • Lieder

Publications

  • Von der Poesie des Klavierspiels.[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/174394826 Von der Poesie des Klavierspiels] on WorldCat Munich: Wunderhorn-Verlag 1911 (in 1998, a reprint of the 5th edition from 1919 was reissued. {{ISBN|3-929379-03-1}})
  • Ludwig van Beethovens Sonaten: op. 31 No 2 und op. 57. Munich: Wunderhorn-Verlag 1915

Recordings

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • Eintrag Pembaur, Josef, in Deutsches Musiker-Lexikon. Dresden 1929 "Einträge beruhen auf Selbstauskünften der Musiker"
  • Eintrag Pembaur, Josef jr, in Frank / Altmann: Kurzgefasstes Tonkünstler-Lexikon. 1936, Neudruck Wilhelmshaven 1971.
  • Eintrag Pembaur, Joseph (jun.), in Riemann Musik-Lexikon. Mainz 1961
  • {{ÖBL|7|403|403|Pembaur, Josef d. J.|W. Senn}}
  • Christian Fastl: [https://www.musiklexikon.ac.at/ml/musik_P/Pembauer_Familie.xml Pembaur, Familie]. In Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon. Online-Edition, Vienna 2002 ff., {{ISBN|3-7001-3077-5}}; Print Edition: VO. 4, Publishing House of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna 2005, {{ISBN|3-7001-3046-5}}.