Ella Adayevskaya

Ella Adaïewsky ( born January 29, 1846 in Saint Petersburg, † July 26, 1926 in Bonn, also known by her birth name Elizabeth (from) Schultz and Elisabeth (from) Schultz- Adaïewsky and the pseudonym Bert Ramin ) was a Russian pianist and composer.

Life

Schultz's father was the Baltic German physician and writer Georg Julius Schultz (pseudonym Dr. Bertram ). Adaïewsky studied in Saint Petersburg in Adolf Henselt, Nicolas of Martinoff, 1857 to 1859 she was in Eisenach and Weimar, including also with Franz Liszt, and from 1864 at the St. Petersburg Conservatory with Alexander Dreyschock, Alexander Famintzin, Nicholas Zaremba, Ignaz Vojáček and Anton Rubinstein. She toured as a pianist and settled down in 1882 in Venice. In 1909 she moved at the invitation of Dame Frances of Loë to Neuwied in the house blessing of the castle Monrepos.

Adaïewsky wrote piano concertos, vocal music ( choirs for the Russian Orthodox church ), and two operas, which she published under the pseudonym Adaïewsky. They also published a collection of Italian dance songs and has published over folk music and music in ancient Greece. Your opera dawn of freedom was 1877, the tsarist censorship victim and was not listed.

Her grave is located at the old cemetery in Bonn, the grave figure of Antonio Dal Zotto continued her nephew, the Austrian writer Benno Geiger.

Works

  • The daughter of the boyars, opera, 1873
  • The dawn of freedom, the Opera, 1877
  • Greek Sonata for Clarinet and Piano, 1880
  • 24 Preludes for Voice and Piano, 1903-07
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