Ludwig von Brenner

Ludwig Ritter von Brenner ( born September 19, 1833 in Leipzig, † February 9, 1902 in Berlin) was a German conductor and composer.

Brenner studied at the Leipzig Conservatory and went to Saint Petersburg later. In 1872 he returned to Germany to head the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, before 1876, the New Berlin Symphony chapel founded. The Berlin Philharmonic appointed him in March 1882 for their first permanent conductor, which he remained until 1887. Later he worked as an orchestral conductor in Wroclaw.

Burner is also known as a composer of church music. His work includes four masses, two Te Deum, symphonic poems, overtures and other orchestral works.

Swell

  • Theodore Baker, Alfred Remy (1919). Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, third edition, revised and enlarged, New York: G. Schirmer. OCLC. Article " Brenner, Ludwig von "

Ludwig von Brenner | Hans von Bülow | Richard Strauss | Nikisch | Wilhelm Furtwängler | Leo Borchard | Sergiu Celibidache | Herbert von Karajan | Claudio Abbado | Sir Simon Rattle

  • Conductor
  • German composer
  • Berliner Philharmoniker
  • Born in 1833
  • Died in 1902
  • Man
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