Nikolaus Schaack (7 July 1892 â 9 September 1981) was a LuxembourgishâÂÂBrazilian zither player, arranger, composer, and cultural figure. Recognized in Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart (MGG) as a pioneer of modern zither technique, he expanded the instrumentâÂÂs classical repertoire through original compositions and transcriptions of works by Bach, Debussy, Schumann, Chopin, VillaâÂÂLobos, and others. His transcription of BachâÂÂs Chaconne is regarded as a landmark of the concertâÂÂzither repertoire.
Schaack pursued a parallel career as a business executive and served as Consul of Luxembourg in Rio de Janeiro. After settling in Brazil, he became active in the countryâÂÂs cultural life, including as one of the founders of São PauloâÂÂs Sociedade de Cultura ArtÃÂstica. His recordings, notably the album Zither at 80 (1973), continue to circulate internationally.
Schaack was born on 7 July 1892 in Hamm, Luxembourg City to Mathias Schaack and Magdalena Jeanpierre. He began studying the zither at the age of eight and later enrolled at the Luxembourg Conservatory, where he studied violin, piano with Victor Vreuls (a pupil of César Franck), and composition, counterpoint, and fugue with Egon Kornauth, who later became a professor at the Mozarteum in Salzburg.
While pursuing his musical studies, Schaack worked partâÂÂtime in commerce, a dual path he maintained throughout his early adulthood. A formative moment occurred in 1912 when he met the Austrian zither virtuoso Richard Grünwald, whose innovative approach to the instrument profoundly influenced him. Under GrünwaldâÂÂs guidance, Schaack decided to devote himself primarily to the concert zither. From 1913 to 1914 he lived in Dortmund, working fullâÂÂtime in commerce while continuing evening studies in theory and piano.
After emigrating to Brazil, Schaack became an influential figure in the countryâÂÂs classical zither community. He contributed to the magazine Muse des Saitenspiels and maintained extensive correspondence with leading zither players and composers from 1912 onward. His letters, preserved by his family, document major developments in twentiethâÂÂcentury zither technique and repertoire.
Schaack composed primarily in a polyphonic, BaroqueâÂÂinspired idiom, writing toccatas, inventions, and fugues for the concert zither. He also produced numerous transcriptions and arrangements of classical works, including BachâÂÂs Chaconne, keyboard preludes, and movements from the violin partitas and cello suites; Debussy piano pieces; Schumann character works; and Brazilian compositions by Francisco Mignone and Waldemar Henrique. Many of his works were published by Musikverlag Jellinghaus in Dortmund.
The 1924 edition of Handbuch der musikalischen Literatur for compositions created between 1919 and 1923 mentions Schaack's two first compositions: Siegesjubelmarsch (opus 1) and Gruss ans Müllertal Marsch (opus 2).
His technical innovationsâÂÂparticularly his approach to timbre and polyphonic articulationâÂÂwere noted in BrandlmeierâÂÂs Handbuch der Zither and in the MGG article on the instrument. At the request of the Brazilian Quartet of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, he arranged several of his zither works for string quartet, which were subsequently performed.
Schaack also had zither students, such as , who mentioned Nikolaus Schaack as "the 2nd highest world authority in zither", after Richard Grünwald, in his interview to Correio da Manhã in 1950.
Alongside his musical activities, Schaack pursued a professional career in business. He served as Consul of Luxembourg in Rio de Janeiro and was a director of , BrazilâÂÂs largest steel producer at the time, with Jornal do Comércio naming him in a 1946 report. He was also one of the founders of São PauloâÂÂs Sociedade de Cultura ArtÃÂstica.
From 1947 to 1954, he was a member of the board of Companhia Territorial de Osasco, as well as in 1950 of CIMAF.
From 1957 to 1959, Schaack served as a full member of the Fiscal Council of the Companhia Administradora Caraúna, a realâÂÂestate and investment firm based in Rio de Janeiro.
Schaack started his career as consul on 10 September 1948. He was still Luxembourg's consul in Rio as of 1955. He is also noted as such in the 1958 Luxembourg Day festivities.
In the 1959 visit of Luxembourg's Prince Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and his wife Princess Joséphine-Charlotte of Belgium, Shaack also parcipated as honorary consul.
On 25 September 1965, Jornal do Comércio registered Consul Nikolaus Schaack and his wife Mathilde Schaack's presence at the reception hosted by Affonso de Toledo Bandeira de Mello in honor of Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and his wife Princess Joséphine-Charlotte of Belgium, as of their visit to Rio de Janeiro.
SchaackâÂÂs bestâÂÂknown recording is the album Zither at 80 (1973), released when he was eighty years old. The album features classical transcriptions and original works and remains available on streaming platforms such as Spotify and YouTube. Earlier in his career, his performances circulated through radio broadcasts and private recordings.
SchaackâÂÂs output includes original compositions and a substantial body of transcriptions for the concert zither. His works include:
Many of his published works appeared through Musikverlag Jellinghaus (later absorbed by Verlag Richard Grünwald). Additional manuscripts remain in family archives and are intended for donation to the International Zither Archive in Trossingen. SchaackâÂÂs Invention is cited in BrandlmeierâÂÂs analysis of zither polyphony and is presented alongside works by Grünwald, Blomqvist, and others as exemplary literature for advanced players.
SchaackâÂÂs playing was noted for its clarity, expressive nuance, and technical precision. Pamela Hickman described his style as âÂÂelegant, lyrical, and technically assured.âÂÂ
He developed a distinctive approach to timbre, famously noting that on the zither he could âÂÂplay the same chord with more than 30 different timbres.â His correspondence with major zither figures is considered an important source for understanding the instrumentâÂÂs twentiethâÂÂcentury evolution.
Nikolaus Schaack is cited extensively in Josef BrandlmeierâÂÂs Handbuch der Zither (1949âÂÂ1950) as a leading figure in the development of modern zither technique. His work is referenced in discussions of polyphonic fingering, transmission between playing zones, and the expressive use of timbre. SchaackâÂÂs compositions are used to illustrate advanced three-voice writing and contrapuntal texture, and his theoretical insights are quoted in chapters on instrumental style and notation.
Nikolaus Schaack is cited in multiple chapters of Josef BrandlmeierâÂÂs Handbuch der Zither (1949âÂÂ1950), a foundational reference work in zither pedagogy. His compositions are used to illustrate contrapuntal writing, voice distribution, and expressive fingering techniques. SchaackâÂÂs theoretical remarks are quoted in discussions of instrumental style, notation, and the acoustic properties of the zither. His work is presented alongside that of Richard Grünwald, Ott, and Swoboda, confirming his place in the canon of twentieth-century zither literature.
Schaack married Mathilde Schaack, with whom he had one daughter, Yvonne. Yvonne later married the industrialist Leon Herzog and became the mother of the musician and musicologist Myrna Herzog.
In 1924, before moving to Rio, Schaack lived in São Paulo with his family, as registered in Rio Cosmopolita, on a list of "visitors staying at Rio de Janeiro's principal hotels".
As of 1944, and at least through 1952, Schaack resided at Rua Carvalho Azevedo, 72, as shown at Guia Vermelho do Automobilista.
He lived for many years in Rio de Janeiro, where he remained active as a musician. Schaack was multilingual, reading in French, English, Portuguese, Spanish, German, and Luxembourgish, and maintained wide intellectual interests, including literature, philosophy, science, medicine, mathematics, psychology, cybernetics, and apiculture. He was an early advocate for ecological awareness and kept bees for personal honey production.
Schaack died on 9 September 1981 in Rio de Janeiro at the age of 89. His death certificate lists his occupation as âÂÂaposentadoâ (retired) and his nationality as Luxembourgish. He was buried at the Cemitério São João Batista in Rio de Janeiro.
Schaack is regarded as a pioneer of modern zither technique and a key figure in the instrumentâÂÂs twentiethâÂÂcentury classical revival. His compositions and transcriptions remain part of the concertâÂÂzither repertoire, and his recordings continue to circulate among performers and collectors. His extensive correspondence, preserved by his family, is considered an important documentary source for zither history and is intended for donation to the International Zither Archive in Trossingen. The inclusion of SchaackâÂÂs works and technical commentary throughout BrandlmeierâÂÂs Handbuch der Zither confirms his status as a foundational figure in twentieth-century zither pedagogy. His compositions are used to demonstrate stylistic principles, and his theoretical remarks are quoted in chapters on instrumental style, notation, and expressive technique. This sustained presence in a major reference work underscores the lasting influence of his musical and pedagogical contributions.