Rheinsberg Music Academy

Coordinates: 53°05′58″N 12°53′23″E / 53.09944°N 12.88972°E / 53.09944; 12.88972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rheinsberg Music Academy
Musikakademie Rheinsberg
Kavalierhaus of Schloss Rheinsberg, seat of the academy
Location
Map

Germany
Coordinates53°05′58″N 12°53′23″E / 53.09944°N 12.88972°E / 53.09944; 12.88972
Information
TypeMusic academy
Established1991 (1991)
FounderUlrike Liedtke
WebsiteOfficial website

The Rheinsberg Music Academy (German: Musikakademie Rheinsberg) is an academy for music in Rheinsberg, Brandenburg, Germany. It was co-founded by Ulrike Liedtke and is now a national and state institution, educating both lay people and professionals. It is based at Schloss Rheinsberg and uses the theatre there for performances.

History[edit]

Schlosstheater Rheinsberg

Rheinsberg Music Academy is a facility for young performers on the grounds of Schloss Rheinsberg,[1] co-founded by the musicologist Ulrike Liedtke in 1991. In 2001, it became a national academy (Bundesakademie), which has been run from 2014 by Musikkultur Rheinsberg, supported by the Ministry of Culture of Brandenburg (Ministerium für Bildung, Jugend und Sport (Brandenburg) [de]), the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district and the town of Rheinsberg.[2] As of 2020, the artistic director is Georg Quander and the director is Felix Görg; the CEO of Musikkultur Rheinsberg is Thomas Falk.[3]

As an educational institution, the academy conducts workshops, master classes, and scientific seminars (Kolloquien) related to music.[2][4] In 2019/20, master classes were given by singer Waltraud Meier, stage director Harry Kupfer and conductor René Jacobs, among others.[3] A focus is the performance of works by young composers and composers who were neglected during the GDR regime.[5] Some compositions were commissioned by the academy to be premiered in Rheinsberg.[6] Annually, around 40 courses[3] and 130 events are held, attracting 17,000 visitors.[1]

The Kavalierhaus, which had deteriorated, was restored after the Wende and reopened in 1999 as the seat of the institution. The main hall is a simple modern room within the historic walls.[1] Events of the academy and the opera festival Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg are held there and at the Schlosstheater. Both institutions reside in the Kavalierhaus.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Musikakademie Rheinsberg". Kulturort Brandenburg (in German). Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Musikakademie Rheinsberg". Verband der Bundes- und Landesmusikakademien in Deutschland (in German). Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Piergande, Franziska (2019). "Neue Schwerpunkte in Rheinsberg 2019/20 / Exzellenzkurse und Fortbildungen mit Waltraud Meier, Harry Kupfer und René Jacobs". Neue Musikzeitung (in German). Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  4. ^ Nölte, Joachim (2016). Seenland Ruppin. Ein Wegbegleiter (in German). Berlin: Edition Terra. pp. 135ff. ISBN 978-3-94-291731-5.
  5. ^ Schurz, Claudia (2005). Liedtke, Ulrike (ed.). Das Theater des Prinzen Heinrich: ein Lesebuch zum Schloßtheater Rheinsberg (in German). Leipzig: Hofmeister. p. 131. ISBN 978-3-87-350016-7.
  6. ^ Hüsers, Francis (2016). Gier, Albert (ed.). Drei Helden von Jörn Arnecke - Ein Werkstattbericht des Librettisten (in German). Bamberg: University of Bamberg Press. pp. 283–294. ISBN 978-3-86-309011-1. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

Further reading[edit]

  • Ulrike Liedtke (ed.): Frau Musica heute: Konzepte für Kompositionen. Rheinsberger Pfingstwerkstatt Neue Musik, Musikakademie Rheinsberg, Hofmeister, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-031-0
  • Ulrike Liedtke (ed.): "Jeder nach seiner Fasson": musikalische Neuansätze heute. Musikakademie Rheinsberg, Pfau, Saarbrücken 1997, ISBN 978-3-930735-70-9
  • Ulrike Liedtke (ed.): Die Rheinsberger Hofkapelle von Friedrich II.: Musiker auf dem Weg zum Berliner "Capell-Bedienten". Veröffentlichung der Musikakademie Rheinsberg, Rheinsberg 1995, 2nd revised edition, Hofmeister, Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-87350-019-8
  • Christoph Schaffrath: Ouverture ex A-Dur: due violini, viola et basso; N. 4. (first publication) Musikakademie Rheinsberg, Werner Feja, Berlin 1996
  • Frank Wendler: Zehn Jahre Musikakademie Rheinsberg. Musikakademie Rheinsberg, Rheinsberg 2001
  • Helmut Zapf, Klaus Feldmann [de], Raphael Heinrich, Gerd Domhardt, Matthias Jann: Neue Musik in Rheinsberg: Auftragswerke der Musikakademie Rheinsberg. NCA – New Classical Adventure, What a Beautiful Noise, Stansstad 1998

External links[edit]