Gustav Cords (German: [ˈɡʊstaf ˈkɔʁts]; 12 October 1870 in Hamburg[1] – 18 February 1951 in Berlin[2]) was a German composer.
Biography
editCords studied composition in Hamburg, Sondershausen, and Wiesbaden from 1887 to 1891, under the tutelage of Hugo Riemann.[1] He was one of Riemann's top students during Max Reger's time as well,[2] as both Cords and Reger were students of Riemann. From 1911 to 1919, he served as the president of the General German Musicians' Union, which later merged with the Central Union of Civilian Musicians in Germany to form the German Musicians' Union. Following this, he became a chamber musician for the Berlin State Opera. Cords is known for his opera, Sonnwendnacht (Solstice Night).
References
edit- ^ a b Hugo Riemann. Musiklexikon (in German) (11 ed.). pp. 343–344.
- ^ a b "Erinnerungen an Max Reger. 1890–1893 (ca. 1953)". Max-Reger-Institute (in German) (6): 3–12. 2020-10-30.