Henrik Hennings: Difference between revisions

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Danish composer, lawyer and music publisher (b. 16 October 1848 {{NS}} in Elsinore (Helsingør); d. 18 February 1923), born '''''Henrik Jacob Christian Amalius Otto Hennings'''''.
Danish composer, lawyer and music publisher (b. 16 October 1848 {{NS}} in Gurre, near Helsingør; d. 18 February 1923 at Charlottenlund), born '''''Henrik Jacob Christian Amalius Otto Hennings'''''.


After studying at the newly-established Danish Academy of Music from 1867, he went on to study politics in 1870, and embarked on a legal career five yeas later. However, he continued to compose, writing many songs on German and Scandinavian texts <ref name="note1"/>. In 1880 he was appointed director of the ''Royal Hofmusikboghandel'', and eight years later became its proprietor, and was a very active figure in Scandinavian music publishing and arranging concerts throughout Denmark.
After studying at the newly-established Danish Academy of Music from 1867, he went on to study politics in 1870, and embarked on a legal career five years later. However, he continued to compose, writing many songs on German and Scandinavian texts <ref name="note1"/>. In 1880, he was appointed director of the ''Royal Hofmusikboghandel'', and eight years later became its proprietor, and was a very active figure in Scandinavian music publishing and arranging concerts throughout Denmark.


==Correspondence with Tchaikovsky==
==Correspondence with Tchaikovsky==
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* '''[[Letter 4607]]''' – 29 January/10 February 1892, from [[Maydanovo]]  
* '''[[Letter 4607]]''' – 29 January/10 February 1892, from [[Maydanovo]]  


One letter from Hennings to Tchaikovsky, dating from 1892, is preserved in the [[Klin]] House-Museum Archive.
One letter from Hennings to Tchaikovsky, dating from 4/16 January 1892, is preserved in the {{RUS-KLč}} at [[Klin]] (a{{sup|4}}, No. 542).
 
==External Links==
* [[wikipedia:da:Henrik_Hennings|Wikipedia]] (Danish)
* {{IMSLP|Hennings,_Henrik}}
* {{viaf|14724251}}


==Notes and References==
==Notes and References==

Latest revision as of 15:45, 13 August 2023

Danish composer, lawyer and music publisher (b. 16 October 1848 [N.S.] in Gurre, near Helsingør; d. 18 February 1923 at Charlottenlund), born Henrik Jacob Christian Amalius Otto Hennings.

After studying at the newly-established Danish Academy of Music from 1867, he went on to study politics in 1870, and embarked on a legal career five years later. However, he continued to compose, writing many songs on German and Scandinavian texts [1]. In 1880, he was appointed director of the Royal Hofmusikboghandel, and eight years later became its proprietor, and was a very active figure in Scandinavian music publishing and arranging concerts throughout Denmark.

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

One letter from Tchaikovsky to Henrik Hennings has survived, dating from 1892, and has been translated into English on this website:

One letter from Hennings to Tchaikovsky, dating from 4/16 January 1892, is preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin (a4, No. 542).

External Links

Notes and References

  1. One of his song cycles, Sechs Lieder von H. Heine, includes a setting of Heine's poem Warum sind denn die Rosen so blaß?, which Tchaikovsky also set to music (in a Russian translation by Lev Mey) as Why? (Отчего?), No. 5 of the Six Romances, Op. 6.