Unsung Composers

The Music => Composers & Music => Topic started by: eschiss1 on Thursday 26 September 2013, 02:10

Title: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: eschiss1 on Thursday 26 September 2013, 02:10
Well, (reminded by the Bittner thread) there's Bittner, there's Mittner, there's, erm... Mikorey. Wrote at the least a piano concerto in A (published 1905), piano trio in B (natural) (published 1913), piano quintet in E minor (published 1914, premiered by 1910).  (These three works can be seen- probably not in the EU until 2018 - at IMSLP.  Haven't heard any of his works, but did skim his music awhile back and more recently (some), curious if anyone's familiar with it. (bio e.g. here at German Wikipedia (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Mikorey_%28Komponist%29).)

(Identified in "Gustav Mahler--Richard Strauss: Correspondence 1888-1911" as "A German composer and conductor from Munich. Strauss seems to have advised Mahler against engaging Mikorey. (footnote to "Wasn't I right about Mikorey?" in a letter of 11 July (1901) from Strauss to Mahler.)
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Thursday 25 January 2018, 10:37
jimsemadeni writes:

Found performance of Mikorey's piano concerto on YouTube, on search in Google a mention of him was made on here back in 2013.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDxZDAkWl-_ubMg2Ww5tovg?spfreload=10

Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Thursday 25 January 2018, 10:37
Gareth Vaughan replies:

Link doesn't work for me.
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Thursday 25 January 2018, 10:38
Nor for me!
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: eschiss1 on Thursday 25 January 2018, 14:06
I find several video results under his name but none of his music or performances. Odd.
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: jerfilm on Thursday 25 January 2018, 15:24
Try this link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrPRvjTUgJ0 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrPRvjTUgJ0)

But it only seems to be one movement.   Is there more??

Jerry
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: jimsemadeni on Thursday 25 January 2018, 15:37
Movements II and III.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRO_H-DF7nc (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRO_H-DF7nc)
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Thursday 25 January 2018, 16:02
Neither video is apparently available to us here in the UK. Perhaps some kind person who can access the whole work could download it from YouTube and upload it to UC...
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: pianoconcerto on Thursday 25 January 2018, 16:10
This is a commercial release (8 euros CD; also will be available for download), so I don't know if the moderators would approve of posting even if it's on youtube in USA:

http://anhaltisches-theater.de/anhaltische_philharmonie
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: eschiss1 on Thursday 25 January 2018, 16:23
Well, at least in the USA it's "Provided to YouTube by AAA Media Solutions GmbH & CO Kg" rather than a pirate upload, fwiw.

And I see too that "25 minutes", the composer's predicted duration (from the reduction available @ IMSLP), is the actual duration of the one recording of the work. Well-guessed, sir...

(And now that it's 2018, his music published before 1923 is in the public domain everywhere, and the rest of it is in the public domain in the EU and Canada. I know I shouldn't mind hearing eg the piano quintet or piano trio :) )
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: eschiss1 on Thursday 25 January 2018, 16:41
His major published work, it -seems-, besides the quintet, trio, and concerto (and lots of lieder) and his opera the King of Samarkand..., was "Nordische Sommernacht : für Männerschor, Tenor- u. Baritonsolo u. grosses Orchester" published in 1902...? (Though SBB I think has sketches for a symphony with chorus.)
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Thursday 25 January 2018, 16:57
Of course it can't be uploaded if it's a commercial release. Here's a link to the download in question:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Von-F%C3%BCrstlichen-Hofkapelle-Anhaltischen-Philharmonie/dp/B0796WJPZ3/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1516900281&sr=8-7&keywords=anhaltische+philharmonie (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Von-F%C3%BCrstlichen-Hofkapelle-Anhaltischen-Philharmonie/dp/B0796WJPZ3/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1516900281&sr=8-7&keywords=anhaltische+philharmonie)

The link to the orchestra doesn't work, by the way. Only an educated guess at where the download might be produced the above result!
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: semloh on Monday 29 January 2018, 07:46
Those two movements of the Klavierkonzert on YT are a delight. The download from Amazon should be worth every penny/cent!
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: eschiss1 on Monday 29 January 2018, 12:29
I think that may be all 3 movements, with the 2nd and 3rd movements connected to be one "2nd" movement, but comparison with the reduced score @ IMSLP should clarify; I'll check later?...
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Monday 29 January 2018, 13:50
You're right, Eric.
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: JimL on Monday 29 January 2018, 18:06
Any chance you can get the movement tempos yet, Eric?
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Gareth Vaughan on Monday 29 January 2018, 18:14
A quick look at the IMSLP score (which, by the way, takes less than 10 seconds to download) shows:
1. Allegro
2. Largo
3. Allegro - Presto - Allegro energico, con fuoco
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: JimL on Monday 29 January 2018, 18:32
Sorry. I was not at liberty to look it up myself.
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: Alan Howe on Monday 29 January 2018, 18:56
Were you incarcerated, then?  >:(
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: JimL on Monday 29 January 2018, 19:41
Even worse...at work!
Title: Re: Franz Mikorey (1873-1947)
Post by: JimL on Monday 29 January 2018, 23:41
Having perused the score it appears that there is no finale per se but the second movement is split into two parts similar to Saint-Saëns' 4th Piano Concerto. Or perhaps Glazunov's 1st, although the material doesn't seem to be a variation of the Largo's.