Sunday, February 24, 2019

Hans Gierster

LouisAlain:


'''Hans Gierster''' (12 January 1925 – 20 September 1995) was a German [[Conducting|conductor]].<ref>[https://ift.tt/2UcY9Zq Hans Gierster] on AllMusic</ref>

== Life ==
=== Training and debut ===
Born in Munich, Gierster was a pupil of [[Clemens Krauss]] and worked from 1942 as [[répétiteur]] in Munich. He was engaged at the [[Deutsche Oper am Rhein|Düsseldorfer Opernhaus]] from 1945 to 1952. From 1952 to 1956 he was [[Kapellmeister]] at the [[Bayerische Staatsoper]] and conducted operas by Mozart, Verdi and Richard Strauss in the former temporary quarters of the [[Prinzregententheater]]. In 1956 he became [[Music director|Generalmusikdirektor]] at the [[Theater Freiburg]].<ref name="Seeger">Horst Seeger: ''Musiklexikon Personen A-Z'' / [[Breitkopf & Härtel|Deutscher Verlag für Musik]] [[Leipzig]] (1981) </ref> There he conducted Wagner's ''[[Der Ring des Nibelungen]]'' as well as Hindemith's operas ''[[Cardillac]]'' and ''[[Mathis der Maler (opera)|Mathis der Maler]]'', through which he became nationally known.

=== GMD at the Opernhaus Nürnberg ===
From autumn 1965 to summer 1988 he was General Music Director at the [[Staatstheater Nürnberg]].<ref name="Seeger">Horst Seeger: ''Musiklexikon Personen A-Z'' / [[Deutscher Verlag für Musik]] [[Leipzig]] (1981) </ref> He made his debut as Nuremberg GMD at the opening of the 1965/66 season with ''[[Fidelio]]''. In the interim season of 1964/65 he had already been guest conductor of two productions before, ''[[Boris Godunov (opera)|Boris Godunov]]'' and ''[[Aida]]''. After the death of the general director [[Karl Pschigode]], Gierster also took over the opera direction at the Nuremberg Opera House from 1971 (until 1976) and received a lifetime contract as GMD.

In concert and opera, Gierster focused on composers such as [[Gustav Mahler]] (1977, [[Symphony No. 8 (Mahler)|Symphony No. 8]]), [[Anton Bruckner]], [[Arnold Schönberg]], (1981, [[Gurrelieder]] together with the [[Nürnberger Symphoniker]]), [[Hans Werner Henze]] and [[Krzysztof Penderecki]] and conducted numerous premieres and first performances, including works by [[Boris Blacher]], [[Werner Egk]], [[Wilhelm Killmayer]], [[György Ligeti]], [[Aribert Reimann]] and [[Hans Zender]]. He enlarged the Philharmonic Orchestra to 87 musicians, increased rehearsal times, reduced the number of [[operette]]s in the repertoire, and for reasons of space moved the Philharmonic Concerts to the newly built [[Meistersingerhalle]].

As an opera conductor he was especially committed to musical [[avant-garde]]. He conducted widely acclaimed performances such as ''[[Moses und Aron]]'' (Premiere: December 1970, director: [[Hans-Peter Lehmann]]), Zimmermann's ''[[Die Soldaten]]'' (Premiere: June 1974, director: Hans-Peter Lehmann), the double opera ''Träume'' by [[Isang Yun]] (Premiere: February 1969, director: /Bild: Peter Heyduck) and [[Luigi Nono]]'s ''Intolleranza 70'' (Premiere: May 1970).

With the ''Träume'' production, Gierster gave guest performances at the [[Wiener Festwochen]], as well as in Berlin, Munich and Frankfurt; with ''Intollerenza 70'' at the [[Maggio Musicale Fiorentino]].

As opera director he engaged numerous acting directors to the Nuremberg opera house, among others [[Hans Neuenfels]] (1974 for ''[[Il trovatore]]''), [[Hansgünther Heyme]] (season 1974/75 for ''[[Wozzeck]]'', with [[Dunja Vejzovic]] as Marie), [[Hans Hollmann (director)|Hans Hollmann]], , [[Luca Ronconi]], [[Alfred Kirchner]] and .

=== Retirement and death ===
His last Nuremberg opera premiere as GMD was ''[[Elektra (opera)|Elektra]]'' in the 1986/87 season (premiere: May 1987). After this, Gierster withdrew from the GMD office for health reasons after he had prematurely terminated his contract in August 1988. He conducted his last concert in February 1989 in the Nuremberg Meistersingerhalle, Mahler's [[Symphony No. 1 (Mahler)|Symphony No. 1]] with the Nuremberg Philharmony.

Gierster died at the age of 70 in a [[Straubing]] hospital to the consequences of a stroke. He is buried at the .

== Bibliography ==
* Hans Bertram Bock: ''Ein Pionier der Avantgarde''. Nachruf. In ''[[Nürnberger Nachrichten]]'' 21 September 1995. page 21.
* Staatstheater Nürnberg (publisher): ''Die Generalmusikdirektoren''. In: ''1905 Opernhaus – 2005 Staatstheater''. Nürnberg 2005. . .

== References ==


== External links ==
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[[Category:1925 births]]
[[Category:1995 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Munich]]
[[Category:German conductors (music)]]
[[Category:20th-century German musicians]]


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