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Robert Eitner

Robert Eitner (22 October 1832 – 22 January 1905) was a German musicologist and bibliographer.

Life

Eitner was born and grew up in Breslau, the rapidly industrialising administrative capital of Silesia. He attended the St. Elisabeth Gymnasium (secondary school) in the city before moving on to study at the university where for five years he was taught by the organist-composer Moritz Brosig. Sources nevertheless stress that in many respects Eitner was self-taught.

In 1853 he moved to Berlin, becoming a music teacher. A succession of piano compositions and songs followed. In 1863 he opened his own music school, but by now he was increasingly diverting his attention away from teaching and towards music research and writing. In 1867 he produced a "Lexicon of Dutch Composers" which won a prize from the Amsterdam , although in the end it was never published.

In 1868 Eitner headed up the establishment in Berlin of the "Society of Music Research" (Gesellschaft für Musikforschung), becoming secretary to the association and editor of its monthly magazine, Monatshefte für Musik-Geschichte, launched in 1869. Another series of publications from the association was the 29-volume set entitled , although it appears that this was never published in its entirety. There was also a succession of bibliographical works, which reflected Eitner's own enthusiasm for compositions from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In addition, there was a ten-volume reference compendium entitled Biographisch-Bibliographisches Quellen-Lexikon der Musiker und Musikgelehrten der christlichen Zeitrechnung bis zur Mitte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, published between 1900 and 1904 in Leipzig, which set out the locations of both printed and manuscript works by early composers and musicologists, and which in the end was sufficiently valued as a research tool to be available in more than 200 major libraries in Europe.

He also contributed 399 biographical articles to the , almost all of them on musicians.

In 1882 he moved to Templin, a country town between Berlin and the Baltic coast. It was here that he died in 1905.

Publications

Among his published works are the following:

Books

As author
  • . Berlin: T. Trautwein, 1871
  • . Berlin: T. Trautwein, 1874
  • (i.e., with Franz Xaver Haberl, Anders Lagerberg and Carl Ferdinand Pohl). Berlin: Leo Liepmannssohn, 1877
  • , 3 volumes. Berlin: T. Trautwein, 1881–1885
  • . Berlin: T. Trautwein, 1885
  • . Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1891
  • . Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1900–1904
  • . Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1904
As editor
  • , 29 volumes, 1873–1905:
  1. (Johann Ott, 1544), 1873
  2. (Erfurt, 1524), 1874
  3. (Caccini, Peri, Monteverdi), 1875
  4. (Heinrich Finck), 1876
  5. (Heinrich Glarean), 1876
  6. , 1877
  7. (Hermann Finck), 1878
  8. (supplement, libretti), 1879
  9. (Peter Schöffer, 1513), 1880
  10. (Cavalli, Il Giasone), 1881
  11. (Sebastian Ochsenkun), 1882
  12. (score of Il Giasone), 1883
  13. (Cesti, La Dori), 1884
  14. (score of La Dori), 1885
  15. (Lechner and Eccard), 1886
  16. (Michael Praetorius), 1887
  17. (Alessandro Scarlatti), 1888
  18. (Steffani, Alarico), 1889
  19. (Keiser, Prinz Jodelet), 1890
  20. (Georg Rhau, 1538), 1891
  21. (Arnt von Aich, about 1519), 1892
  22. (Josquin des Prez), 1893
  23. (Lully, Armide), 1894
  24. (Gluck, Orfeo), 1895
  25. (Hans Leo Hassler), 1896
  26. Orazio Vecchi: L'Amfiparnaso, 1897
  27. (Claudio Monteverdi, Orfeo), 1898
  28. (French and Dutch masters, sixteenth century), 1899
  29. (Sweelinck), 1905

Periodicals

  • (1869–1905)

Notes

References