Julius Rietz: Fantaisie for Cello and Orchestra in A minor, Op. 2

It is my express wish that any and all actual or potential remuneration that might be my due be instead directed towards any and all holders of copyright. Julius Rietz (1812-1877) Fantaisie in A minor for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 2 I. Lento a capriccio - Allegro vivace 0:00 II. Adagio 6:58 III. Allegro molto e agitato 13:06 Klaus Dieter-Brandt, cello Baroque Orchestra L’arpa Festante Riccardo Masahide Minasi, conductor August Wilhelm Julius Rietz (1812 – 1877) was a German composer, conductor and cellist. He was also a teacher, among whose students were Woldemar Bargiel, Salomon Jadassohn, Arthur O’Leary, and (by far the most celebrated) Sir Arthur Sullivan. He also edited many works by Felix Mendelssohn for publication. Rietz studied the cello under Bernhard Romberg. At 16, he joined the orchestra of Berlin’s Königstädter Theater, for which he wrote the music to Karl Eduard von Holtei’s play Lorbeerbaum und Bettelstab. In 1834, he was appointed assistant conductor at the Düsseldorf Opera under Mendelssohn, whom he succeeded the following year. He moved in 1847 to Leipzig, where he served as kapellmeister and conductor of the Singakademie. During 1848, a year after Mendelssohn’s death, Rietz took over Mendelssohn’s former role as conductor of the Gewandhaus concerts in the same city, and as teacher of composition at the conservatoire there. He was called to Dresden in 1860 to succeed Carl Gottlieb Reissiger as court kapellmeister. Here he spent the rest of his life, frequently appearing as an opera conductor, and also undertaking the direction of the royal conservatoire.
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