Emil Kreuz

Emil Anton Joseph Friedrich Kreuz, also known as Emil Frederick Thornfield, (25 May 1867 in Elberfeld – 3 December 1932 in London) was a German violinist, violist, teacher, conductor and composer.

Biography

Emil Kreuz began playing violin at an early age and studied under Georg Joseph Japha (1835–1892) in Cologne from the age of ten. At sixteen he won a scholarship at the Royal College of Music in London, where he studied violin with Henry Holmes and composition with Charles Villiers Stanford until 1888.[1] For two years he concentrated his studies on the viola, making his debut as soloist with Hector Berlioz's Harold en Italie in December 1888[2] at one of the London Symphony Concerts established by George Henschel. He became well known in England. He was violin soloist at the Leeds Festival in 1889, violist of the Gompertz Quartet along with violinists Richard Gompertz, Haydn Inwards and cellist Charles Ould from 1888 to 1903, and a member of the Covent Garden Opera Orchestra[3] from 1900 to 1903.

Kreuz became assistant musical director of the Covent Garden Opera in 1903, and joined The Hallé to study conducting with its principal conductor Hans Richter. He then turned his attentions toward operatic work, especially the training of singers and conducting.[1]

Kreuz composed many works including pedagogical works for violin and viola, a viola concerto, songs, and chamber music, notably the "Prize Quintet" for horn (or viola) and string quartet, Op. 49.

Selected works

  1. Am fernen Horizonte
  2. Jung sterben: Soll ich denn sterben
  3. Mädchen mit dem rothen Mündchen
  4. Vorsatz: Ich will dir's nimmer sagen
  1. O süß' Vielliebchen
  2. O wär' mein Lieb' der Fliederbusch
  3. Schlaf, du liebes Kind
  4. Daß du mich liebst, das wußt' ich
No. 1 – 12 Very Easy Pieces
No. 2 – Progressive and Easy Pieces
Nos. 3 & 4 – 20 Progressive Melodies
No. 5 – 3 Easy Sketches
No. 6 – Sonata in A minor
  1. Elegy
  2. Scherzo
  3. Romance
  4. Tarantella
  1. Prelude
  2. Allemande
  3. Gigue
  4. Intermezzo
  5. Scherzo
  6. Finale
  1. Prélude
  2. Nocturne
  3. Le rêve
  4. Danse rustique
Literary works

References

  1. 1 2 Green, Janet M.; William Lines Hubbard (1910). The American History and Encyclopedia of Music, Volume 5: Musical Biographies. New York: Irving Squire. p. 450.
  2. "Music. The Week.". The Athenæum, No. 3190. December 15, 1888.
  3. Bachmann, Alberto (1966). An Encyclopedia of the Violin. New York: Da Capo Press. p. 370.

External links

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