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Teresa Carreño

María Teresa Gertrudis de Jesús Carreño García (December 22, 1853 – June 12, 1917) was a Venezuelan pianist, soprano, composer, and conductor.[1] Over the course of her 54-year concert career, she became an internationally renowned virtuoso pianist and was often referred to as the "Valkyrie of the Piano".[2] Carreño was an early adopter of the works of one of her students, American composer and pianist Edward MacDowell (1860–1908) and premiered several of his compositions across the globe. She also frequently performed the works of Norwegian composer and pianist Edvard Grieg (1843–1907).[3] Carreño composed approximately 75 works for solo piano, voice and piano, choir and orchestra, and instrumental ensemble. Several composers dedicated their compositions to Carreño, including Amy Beach (Piano Concerto in C-sharp minor) and Edward MacDowell (Piano Concerto No. 2).

Teresa Carreño
Carreño, c. 1903
Born
María Teresa Gertrudis de Jesús Carreño García

(1853-12-22)December 22, 1853
Caracas, Venezuela
DiedJune 12, 1917(1917-06-12) (aged 63)
New York City, US
Occupations
  • Pianist
  • soprano
  • composer
  • conductor
Spouses
  • (m. 1873⁠–⁠1877)
  • Giovanni Tagliapietra (dom. part. 1877–1889)
  • (m. 1892⁠–⁠1895)
  • Arturo Tagliapietra
    (m. 1902)
Children
  • Emilita (1874–1978)
  • Luisa (1878–1881)
  • Teresita (1882–1951)
  • Giovanni (1885–1965)
  • Eugenia (1892–1950)
  • Hertha (1894–1974)

Early life and education edit

María Teresa Carreño García de Sena was born in Caracas, Venezuela, on December 22, 1853, to Manuel Antonio Carreño (1812–1874) and Clorinda García de Sena y Rodríguez del Toro (1816–1866).[4] Her father was the son of José Cayetano Carreño (1773–1836) and came from a musical family. He gave her music lessons from an early age and oversaw her career until his death in 1874. Her mother was a cousin of Maria Teresa Rodriguez del Toro y Alayza, wife of South America's founding father Simón Bolívar, on whose honor she was named. Before leaving Caracas she also studied with a German musician, Julio Hohene.[5] In America, she studied with Regina Watson[6] and served as Hermine Küchenmeister-Rudersdorf’s studio accompanist in return for voice lessons.[7]

Career edit

 
Manuel Antonio Carreño

In 1862 her family emigrated to New York City and Carreño entered the musical world with a series of private and public concerts.[8] During the first few weeks in New York City, she met American pianist and composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk, who heard her perform and promoted her as an artist.[9] At the age of eight on November 25 she made her debut at Irving Hall performing a Rondo Brillant, Op. 98 (Johann Nepomuk Hummel), accompanied by a quintet (Mosenthal, Matzka, Bergner, C. Preusser); Grande Fantaisie sur Moise, Op. 33 (Sigismond Thalberg); Nocturne (Theodor Döhler), Jerusalem (Louis Moreau Gottschalk); and Variations on "Home! Sweet Home!" Op. 72 (Thalberg) for an encore.[10] This debut was followed by concerts (1863–1865) across the northeastern and mid-Atlantic United States, including stops in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.[11] During the fall of 1863 Carreño performed for Abraham Lincoln at the White House.[12] Interspersed with her North American concerts were concert performances in Cuba during the spring of 1863 and fall of 1865.[13]

In the spring of 1866, Carreño and her family left the United States for Paris, France, where she made her debut on May 14 at the Salle Érard.[14] During her time in Paris, she met many prominent musicians, including Gioachino Rossini, Georges Mathias (a pupil of Frédéric Chopin who may have given her a few lessons), Charles Gounod, and Franz Liszt.[15][16] Between 1866 and 1872, Carreño performed regularly in concerts across cities in the United Kingdom, France, and Spain. While in Paris, she studied voice with Rossini and later, during the 1870s, with Signor Fontana and Russian soprano Herminia Rudersdorff (1822–1882). Her preparation enabled her to step into the role of and appeared as the Queen in Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots during a performance with the Colonel Henry Mapleson troupe in Edinburgh, Scotland, after the leading lady, Thérèse Tiejens (1831–1877), became ill.[17] In New York, on February 25, 1876, she again performed in an operatic role, this time as Zerlina in Mozart's Don Giovanni.[18]

In 1872, she returned to the United States with an artist troupe (led by Max Strakosch (1835–1892)) consisting of well-known musicians, including American singer Annie Louise Cary, operatic soprano Carlotta Patti, French violinist and composer Émile Sauret, baritone Signor Del Puente, and Italian tenor Giovanni Matteo de Candia, who went by the stage name of Mario. During 1873/1874 she appeared in performances in England with the Philharmonic Society,[19] and in M. Riviere's promenade concerts,[20] London Ballad Concerts,[21][22] Hanover Square Rooms,[23] and the Monday Popular Concerts.[24] While touring with the Max Strakosch troupe, Carreño and Sauret became romantically involved and on July 13, 1873, they were married in London, England. They had one child, Emilita (b. March 23, 1874), who was left in the care of a family friend, Mrs. James Bischoff, while Carreño and Sauret pursued musical opportunities in the United States. Emilita was eventually adopted by the Bischoff family.

 
Emile Sauret

Between 1876 and 1889, Carreño resided and toured primarily in the United States, sharing concert bills with famous operatic singers, including Adelina Patti, Emma Abbott, Clara Louise Kellogg, Emma C. Thursby, and Ilma De Murska, and musicians, including violinist August Wilhelmj[25] and Giovanni Tagliapietra.[26] After Carreño's marriage to Sauret dissolved, she became involved with Tagliapetra, subsequently marrying him. They had three children: Louisa (March 1, 1878 – May 16, 1881), Teresita (December 24, 1882 – 1951), and Giovanni (January 8, 1885 – 1965). Following in their mother's footsteps, Teresita pursued a career as a concert pianist, and Giovanni as an opera singer. During these years she appeared with the Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Damrosch Orchestra, performing solo piano concerti, including Mendelssohn's Piano Concerto no. 1,[27] and Grieg's Piano Concerto, Op. 16.[28] By 1883 Carreño began promoting and performing the works of Edward MacDowell in the United States and later abroad. Some of the most frequently performed works include his First Modern Suite, Op. 10, Serenade, Op. 16, Second Modern Suite, Op. 14,[29] "Erzählung" and "Hexentanz" from 2 Fantasiestücke, Op. 17; Étude de concert, Op. 36; Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 15; Piano Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. 23 (dedicated to her).[30]

At the invitation of General Joaquín Crespo, the president of Venezuela, Carreño and Tagliapietra traveled to Caracas, Venezuela, arriving in October 1885, with the intention of establishing an opera company and plans for a music conservatory. Carreño gave several performances, including one on October 27 at Teatro Guzmán Blanco in Caracas, which included the performance of her composition, Himno a Bolívar, dedicated to Venezuela's founding father.[31][32] Carreño and Tagliapietra returned to Venezuela again in 1887 in order to open the season at Teatro Guzmán Blanco with their new opera company. Their efforts did not pay off largely due to the political unrest, dissatisfied audiences, and abandoned musical posts.[33] They returned to New York in August 1887 and continued performing in the United States.

 
Villa Teresa, Coswig, home of Carreño and d'Albert from 1891 to 1895, now a museum

For several years, Carreño had planned to return to Europe and establish herself as a virtuoso pianist. On November 18, 1889, she debuted with the Berlin Philharmonic, conducted by Gustav F. Kogel at the Singakademie. On this occasion she performed Edvard Grieg's Piano Concerto, Schumann's Symphonic Studies, Op. 13, and Weber's Polonaise brillante (arr. Franz Liszt).[34] During the early years in the United States, Carreño's concerts were managed by several different individuals, however, as she established herself in Germany and abroad, she chose to work primarily through the Hermann Wolff Concert Bureau and became close friends with Hermann Wolff and his wife, Louise. Around 1890, Carreño became acquainted with Scottish-born German pianist and composer Eugen d'Albert, also managed by Wolff. Their musical friendship turned romantic and by late 1891 they moved into a home, which they named Villa Teresa in Coswig. They were married on July 27, 1892.[35] On September 27, 1892, their first child, Eugenia was born, followed by Hertha on September 26, 1894. During their marriage, the couple often appeared on the same concert bill and Carreño began performing works by d'Albert, including his Piano Concerto no. 2, Op. 12. D'Albert was a controlling individual in matters related to child rearing, household management, and even Carreño's repertoire choices, which resulted in the exclusion of MacDowell's music from her performances during their marriage.[36] Their marriage ended in divorce in 1895.[37][38] She would remarry again in June 1902 to Arturo Tagliapietra, the brother of her second husband. He had joined her in Berlin around 1897 and assisted her with her concert plans and accounts.

 
Carreño at piano in 1917
 
Eugen d'Albert

Following her success in Germany and other European states, Carreño returned to the United States in 1897 to an eager audience. Performing in Hartford, Connecticut, a critic for the Hartford Courant wrote: "Teresa Carreno the piano virtuoso, made her first appearance to-day at the Philharmonic Concert, Carnegie Hall, under the baton of Anton Seidl. Her magnificent technique displayed to the highest degree the marvelous sonority of the Knabe piano, upon which she played, and she received one of the greatest ovations of the season."[39] From this point forward in her career, Carreño appeared in concerts as a featured artist, solo or with orchestra. She performed under the baton of many prominent conductors, including Edvard Grieg, Gustav Mahler, Theodore Thomas, Wilhelm Gericke, Hans von Bülow, and Henry Wood. In his memoir, Henry Wood wrote that "It is difficult to express adequately what all musicians felt about this great woman who looked like a queen among pianists – and played like a goddess. The instant she walked onto the platform her steady dignity held her audience who watched with riveted attention while she arranged the long train she habitually wore. Her masculine vigour of tone and touch and her marvellous precision on executing octave passages carried everyone completely away."[40]

Among the most frequently performed composers in her repertoire were Chopin, Liszt, Tchaikovsky, Grieg, MacDowell, Schumann, Rubinstein, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Weber, and occasionally her own. Carreño recorded over forty compositions for the reproducing piano between 1905 and 1908. These were released primarily by Welte-Mignon and reissued by other piano roll manufacturers. Her daughter Teresita also recorded for player piano in 1906 for Welte-Mignon. In addition to her performances, Carreño gave lessons to students in many of the cities she visited. In the early 1900s, her students traveled to her summer residence during the summer months to study with her for weeks at a time. Amongst her students were her early biographer Marta Milinowski, as well as Fanny Nicodé née Kinnel, Helen Wright,[41] and Julia Gibansky-Kasanoff.[42] For the remainder of her career, Carreño performed in cities across Europe (including Russia) with only a few concert seasons in North America during 1907–08, 1909–10, and 1916, as well as two visits to Australia and New Zealand in 1907/1908[43] and 1910/1911,[44] the latter which also included stops in South Africa.[45] Carreño and A. Tagliapietra returned to New York City in September 1916 for a 1916–1917 concert season with performances planned across the United States and Cuba. In 1916 she performed for President Woodrow Wilson at the White House. During her trip to Havana, Cuba in March 1917, however, she became ill and returned to New York where she was diagnosed with diplopia. Her health declined rapidly and she became paralysed before she died on June 12, 1917, in her apartment in New York City at the age of 63.[46]

 
Plaque commemorating Teresa Carreño at the place of her death, 740 West End Avenue 96th Street, New York City

Compositions edit

Teresa Carreño composed approximately 75 works for piano, voice and piano, choir and orchestra, chamber music, and several merengues, incorporating the form as an interlude in some of her pieces (for example, in her piece entitled Un Bal en Rêve). Her earliest compositions (in manuscript) date back to ca. 1860.[47] One of her first pieces published the year after her debut in New York City was the "Gottschalk Waltz" (1863),[48] dedicated to Louis Moreau Gottschalk. The majority of her works were composed before 1875 and were published by various publishers in locations including Paris (Heugel, Brandus & S. Dufour), London (Duff & Stewart), Madrid (Antonio Romero), New York (G. Schirmer, Edward Schuberth), Boston (Oliver Ditson & Co.), Philadelphia (Theodore Presser), Cincinnati (The John Church Company), Leipzig (Fr. Kistner & C. F. W. Siegel) Sydney and Melbourne (Allan & Co.).

Only a handful of works were composed post-1880, including two works for chorus, Himno a Bolívar (ca. 1883) and Himno al ilustre americano (ca. 1886). The first piece was dedicated to General Joaquín Crespo and premiered during her visit to Caracas in 1885. The second piece was written in honor of Antonio Guzmán Blanco, president of Venezuela (1879–1884, 1886–1887). Her composition Kleiner Walzer (Mi Teresita) (ca. 1885) composed for her daughter Teresita was one of her most popular pieces during her lifetime and she often performed it as an encore at her own concerts. During her Berlin residency in the 1890s, Carreño composed two chamber works, Serenade for String Orchestra (ca. 1895) and String Quartet in B-minor (1896). The latter which was performed by the Klinger Quartet in the Leipzig Gewandhaus in 1896.[49]

Legacy edit

In 1938 Carreño's ashes were repatriated to Caracas, Venezuela. They were later exhumed and interred at the Panteón Nacional in 1977.

Vassar College acquired Teresa Carreño's papers in the early 1930s and officially purchased them in 1941. In 1957 a portion of the (un-inventoried) collection was dispersed between Vassar and the National Library in Caracas, Venezuela.[50] These materials are now housed in the Centro Documental Teatro Teresa Carreño. A finding aid is available for the extant Teresa Carreño Papers at Vassar College in the Archives & Special Collections Library.

The Teresa Carreño Cultural Complex in Caracas is named in honor of Carreño.[51] The center serves as the residence for the Venezuela Symphony Orchestra. The complex also houses the Centro Documental Teatro Teresa Carreño and the Sala de Exposición Teresa Carreño. The Centro Documental serves as the main archive for Carreño in Venezuela. It houses primary source materials, including correspondence, legal documents, concert programs, scores, reviews, photographs, and other personal items. The Sala de Exposición exhibits materials once owned by Carreño, including her concert dresses, Weber piano (recovered through the efforts of Venezuelan pianist Rosario Marciano), and other personal items.[52] There is also a crater on Venus named after Carreño.

As of June 1, 2015 Andreina Gómez began directing a feature film, Teresita y El Piano, about the life of Teresa Carreño.[53]

In 2018, a Google Doodle was created to celebrate her 165th Birthday.[54]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Mme. Teresa Carreno, Famous Pianist, Dies. Artist, Who Also Had a Career in Opera, a Victim of Paralysis at 63" (PDF). The New York Times. June 13, 1917. Retrieved January 27, 2015. Teresa Carreno most famous of women pianists, died last night at 7 o'clock in her home, 740 West End Avenue, after an illness of several months, which finally developed into paralysis. She was 63 years old, and was once the teacher of Edward MacDowell. ...
  2. ^ "Teresa Carreno's Death Ends a Notable Career". Musical America: 13–14. June 23, 1917.
  3. ^ Kijas, Anna (2013). ""A suitable soloist for my piano concerto": Teresa Carreño as a promoter of Edvard Grieg's music". Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association. 70 (1): 37–58. doi:10.1353/not.2013.0121. S2CID 187606895.
  4. ^ Kijas, Anna. The Life and Music of Teresa Carreño (1853-1917): A Guide to Research. A-R Editions, Inc. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-89579-876-3.
  5. ^ "n/a". La crónica. March 12, 1863.
  6. ^ Kijas, Anna (September 2019). ""The Life of Teresa Carreno (1853–1917) A Venezuela Prodigy and Acclaimed Artist"". Music Library Association Notes Philadelphia. 76 (1).
  7. ^ Page, Edson Ward (1946). "Semiramis in Boston". Chicago Review. 1 (2): 86–94. doi:10.2307/25292724. ISSN 0009-3696. JSTOR 25292724.
  8. ^ "Musical Phenomenon". New York Herald. October 27, 1862.
  9. ^ "Teresa Carreno". La Musica Ilustrada Hispano-Americana. 1901. Retrieved July 12, 2015.; accessed via RIPM(subscription required).
  10. ^ "Debut at Irving Hall (November 25, 1862)". Documenting Carreño. November 25, 1862.
  11. ^ Kijas, Anna (2016). "Teresa Carreño: 'Such gifts are of God and should not be prostituted for mere gain'". In McPherson, Gary (ed.). Musical Prodigies: Interpretations from Psychology, Music Education, Musicology and Ethnomusicology. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199685851.
  12. ^ Music in Lincoln's White House White House Historical Association, www.whitehousehistory.org
  13. ^ Kijas, Anna. "Concerts in Cuba". Documenting Carreño. Retrieved June 28, 2021.
  14. ^ "n/a". L'Art Musical: 190. May 17, 1866.
  15. ^ Acteon (June 20, 1866). "unknown". La época. {{cite journal}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  16. ^ "A New Pianist". Orchestra: 203. June 23, 1866.
  17. ^ "n/a". Orchestra: 392. March 22, 1872.
  18. ^ "n/a". Dwight's Journal of Music: 199. March 18, 1876.
  19. ^ "n/a". The Athenaeum: 831. June 28, 1873.
  20. ^ "n/a". The Orchestra: 297. August 8, 1873.
  21. ^ Ballad Concerts (1867–1933) admin.concertprogrammes.org.uk, accessed June 28, 2021
  22. ^ "n/a". The Athenaeum: 705. November 29, 1873.
  23. ^ "n/a". The Athenaeum: 836. June 20, 1874.
  24. ^ "n/a". The Musical Standard: 145. March 7, 1874.
  25. ^ "n/a". The New York Times. October 10, 1878.
  26. ^ "n/a". New York Times. February 25, 1876.
  27. ^ "n/a". New York Herald. November 24, 1877.
  28. ^ "n/a". Hartford Daily Courant. March 17, 1883.
  29. ^ Note: First performance of this work in Chicago. (March 9, 1884). "n/a". Chicago Daily Tribune.
  30. ^ Jeremy Nicholas. Booklet notes to Hyperion CDA67165.
  31. ^ Milanca Guzmán, Mario (1987). "Dislates en la obra Teresa Carreño, de Marta Milinowski". Revista de Música Latinoamericana. 8 (2): 198–99.
  32. ^ "n/a". El siglo. October 29, 1885.
  33. ^ "Nouvelles diverses-Etranger-Débacle artistique a Caracas". Le Ménestrel: 214. June 5, 1887.
  34. ^ "n/a". Neue Berliner Musikzeitung. Vol. 43, no. 48. November 28, 1889.
  35. ^ "n/a". San Francisco Call. Vol. 71, no. 145. April 24, 1892.
  36. ^ Letter from Frances MacDowell to Carreño, May 24, 1896. Series 3: Correspondence, folder 8.11. Teresa Carreño Papers, Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College Libraries.
  37. ^ "n/a". New York Times. October 6, 1895.
  38. ^ Divorce papers, Series 6: Legal Documents, folder 14.1. Teresa Carreño Papers, Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College Libraries.
  39. ^ "n/a". Hartford Courant. January 9, 1897.
  40. ^ Wood, Sir Henry Joseph (1938). My life of music. London: V. Gollancz. pp. 147–148.
  41. ^ The Helen Wright Papers, MSS 2 10079/fa/music.mss.0002
  42. ^ Julia Gibansky Kasanoff papers relating to Teresa Carreño, 1902–1937 dla.library.upenn.edu
  43. ^ "TERESA CARRENO. 'Australia...'". The Examiner. April 22, 1907 – via Trove.
  44. ^ "MADAME CARRENO First Pianoforte Recital". Otago Daily Times. June 16, 1910.
  45. ^ "Echoes of Music Abroad". Musical America: 11. January 21, 1911.
  46. ^ "Mme. Teresa Carreno, Famous Pianist, Dies. Artist, Who Also Had a Career in Opera, a Victim of Paralysis at 63" (PDF). The New York Times. June 13, 1917. Retrieved January 27, 2015. Teresa Carreno most famous of women pianists, died last night at 7 o'clock in her home, 740 West End Avenue, after an illness of several months, which finally developed into paralysis. She was 63 years old, and was once the teacher of Edward MacDowell.
  47. ^ "Teresa Carreño Papers". Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College Libraries.
  48. ^ 104.044 – Gottschalk Waltz. Levy Music Collection levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu
  49. ^ "n/a". The Musical Times: 335. May 1, 1896.
  50. ^ Patkus, Ronald D. (2005). "Musical Migrations: A Case Study of the Teresa Carreño Papers". RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage. 6: 26–33. doi:10.5860/rbm.6.1.239.
  51. ^ Jean-Pierre Thiollet, 88 notes pour piano solo, "Solo nec plus ultra", Neva Editions, 2015, p.51. ISBN 978 2 3505 5192 0.
  52. ^ Marciano, Rosario (1975). Protocolo y resurrección de un piano. Caracas, Venezuela: Ministerio de Educación, Dirección de Apoyo Docente, Departamento de Publicaciones.
  53. ^ "TERESITA & THE PIANO". Cinando. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  54. ^ "Teresa Carreño's 165th Birthday". www.google.com. Retrieved December 22, 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Albuquerque, Anne E. (1988). Teresa Carreño: Pianist, Teacher, and Composer. DMA thesis, University of Cincinnati.
  • Bomberger, E. Douglas (2013). MacDowell. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Clemente Travieso, Carmen (1953). Teresa Carreño (1853–1917): Ensayo biográfico. [Caracas]: Agrupación Cultural Femenina.
  • Eloy Gutiérrez, Jesús (2013; 2017). Para conocer a Teresa Carreño. Caracas: Centro Documental del TTC.
  • ______ (2019). Teresa Carreño: Cartas y documentos: Compilación documental (1863–1917). La Campana Sumergida.
  • Kijas, Anna E. (2013). ""A suitable soloist for my piano concerto": Teresa Carreño as a promoter of Edvard Grieg's music". Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association. 70 (1). Music Library Association: 37–58. doi:10.1353/not.2013.0121. S2CID 187606895.
  • ______ (2016). "Teresa Carreño: 'Such Gifts Are of God, and Ought Not to Be Prostituted for Mere Gain.'" In Musical Prodigies: Interpretations from Psychology, Music Education, Musicology and Ethnomusicology, edited by Gary McPherson, 621–37. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • ______ (2019). The Life and Music of Teresa Carreño (1853–1917): A Guide to Research. Middleton: A-R Editions.
  • Brodsky Lawrence, Vera and Strong, George Templeton (1999). Repercussions, 1857–1862. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Mann, Brian (1991). "The Carreño Collection at Vassar College." Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association. Music Library Association. 47 (4):1064–83. doi:10.2307/941613.
  • Marciano, Rosario (1966). "Teresa Carreño, o un ensayo sobre su personalidad: A los 50 años de su muerte". Coleccion musica, 2. Caracas: Instituto Nacional de Cultura y Bellas Artes.
  • ______ (1971). "Teresa Carreño: Compositora y pedagoga". Colección Donaire. Caracas: Monte Avila Editores.
  • ______ (1975). "Protocolo y resurrección de un piano". Caracas: Ministerio de Educación, Dirección de Apoyo Docente, Departamento de Publicaciones.
  • Milanca Guzmán, Mario (1987). "Dislates en la obra Teresa Carreño, de Marta Milinowski." Revista de Música Latinoamericana 8 (2):185–215.
  • ______(1996). "Teresa Carreño: Manuscritos inéditos y un proyecto para la creación de un Conservatorio de Música y Declamación." Revista musical chilena 50, (186): 13–39.
  • Milinowski, Marta (1940). Teresa Carreño: 'By the Grace of God.' New Haven: Yale University Press; London: H. Milford, Oxford University Press.
  • Pangels, Charlotte (1981). Eugen d'Albert: Wunderpianist und Komponist; Eine Biographie. Zürich: Atlantis Musikbuch-Verlag.
  • Peña, Israel (1953). Teresa Carreño (1853–1917). Biblioteca Escolar, Colección de Biografias, no. 11. Caracas: Fundaciâon Eugenio Mendoza.
  • Peñín, José (1993). "21 cartas de Teresa Carreño a Guzmán Blanco." Revista musical de Venezuela 14, (32–33): 25–57.
  • Pita, Laura (2015). Carreño, (María) Teresa. Grove Music Online. (2015-05-28).
  • Pita Parra, Laura Marina (1999). Presencia de la obra de Edward MacDowell en el repertorio de Teresa Carreño: Revisión de programas de concierto, correspondencia, reseñas de prensa y otros documentos pertenecientes al Archivo Histórico de Teresa Carreño en Caracas. Licentiate thesis, Universidad Central de Venezuela.
  • Stevenson, Robert Murrell (1983). "Carreño's 1875 California Appearances." Inter-American Music Review 5, (2): 9–15.
  • Thompson, Barbara Tilden (2001). The Twentieth-Century United States Concert Tours of Teresa Carreño. Master's thesis, Temple University.

External links edit

teresa, carreño, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, carreño, second, maternal, family, name, garcía, sena, maría, teresa, gertrudis, jesús, carreño, garcía, december, 1853, june, 1917, venezuelan, pianist, soprano, composer, conductor, over, course. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Carreno and the second or maternal family name is Garcia de Sena Maria Teresa Gertrudis de Jesus Carreno Garcia December 22 1853 June 12 1917 was a Venezuelan pianist soprano composer and conductor 1 Over the course of her 54 year concert career she became an internationally renowned virtuoso pianist and was often referred to as the Valkyrie of the Piano 2 Carreno was an early adopter of the works of one of her students American composer and pianist Edward MacDowell 1860 1908 and premiered several of his compositions across the globe She also frequently performed the works of Norwegian composer and pianist Edvard Grieg 1843 1907 3 Carreno composed approximately 75 works for solo piano voice and piano choir and orchestra and instrumental ensemble Several composers dedicated their compositions to Carreno including Amy Beach Piano Concerto in C sharp minor and Edward MacDowell Piano Concerto No 2 Teresa CarrenoCarreno c 1903BornMaria Teresa Gertrudis de Jesus Carreno Garcia 1853 12 22 December 22 1853Caracas VenezuelaDiedJune 12 1917 1917 06 12 aged 63 New York City USOccupationsPianistsopranocomposerconductorSpousesEmile Sauret m 1873 1877 wbr Giovanni Tagliapietra dom part 1877 1889 Eugen d Albert m 1892 1895 wbr Arturo Tagliapietra m 1902 wbr ChildrenEmilita 1874 1978 Luisa 1878 1881 Teresita 1882 1951 Giovanni 1885 1965 Eugenia 1892 1950 Hertha 1894 1974 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Compositions 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life and education editMaria Teresa Carreno Garcia de Sena was born in Caracas Venezuela on December 22 1853 to Manuel Antonio Carreno 1812 1874 and Clorinda Garcia de Sena y Rodriguez del Toro 1816 1866 4 Her father was the son of Jose Cayetano Carreno 1773 1836 and came from a musical family He gave her music lessons from an early age and oversaw her career until his death in 1874 Her mother was a cousin of Maria Teresa Rodriguez del Toro y Alayza wife of South America s founding father Simon Bolivar on whose honor she was named Before leaving Caracas she also studied with a German musician Julio Hohene 5 In America she studied with Regina Watson 6 and served as Hermine Kuchenmeister Rudersdorf s studio accompanist in return for voice lessons 7 Career edit nbsp Manuel Antonio Carreno In 1862 her family emigrated to New York City and Carreno entered the musical world with a series of private and public concerts 8 During the first few weeks in New York City she met American pianist and composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk who heard her perform and promoted her as an artist 9 At the age of eight on November 25 she made her debut at Irving Hall performing a Rondo Brillant Op 98 Johann Nepomuk Hummel accompanied by a quintet Mosenthal Matzka Bergner C Preusser Grande Fantaisie sur Moise Op 33 Sigismond Thalberg Nocturne Theodor Dohler Jerusalem Louis Moreau Gottschalk and Variations on Home Sweet Home Op 72 Thalberg for an encore 10 This debut was followed by concerts 1863 1865 across the northeastern and mid Atlantic United States including stops in Connecticut Massachusetts New York Rhode Island Pennsylvania Maryland and Washington D C 11 During the fall of 1863 Carreno performed for Abraham Lincoln at the White House 12 Interspersed with her North American concerts were concert performances in Cuba during the spring of 1863 and fall of 1865 13 In the spring of 1866 Carreno and her family left the United States for Paris France where she made her debut on May 14 at the Salle Erard 14 During her time in Paris she met many prominent musicians including Gioachino Rossini Georges Mathias a pupil of Frederic Chopin who may have given her a few lessons Charles Gounod and Franz Liszt 15 16 Between 1866 and 1872 Carreno performed regularly in concerts across cities in the United Kingdom France and Spain While in Paris she studied voice with Rossini and later during the 1870s with Signor Fontana and Russian soprano Herminia Rudersdorff 1822 1882 Her preparation enabled her to step into the role of and appeared as the Queen in Meyerbeer s Les Huguenots during a performance with the Colonel Henry Mapleson troupe in Edinburgh Scotland after the leading lady Therese Tiejens 1831 1877 became ill 17 In New York on February 25 1876 she again performed in an operatic role this time as Zerlina in Mozart s Don Giovanni 18 In 1872 she returned to the United States with an artist troupe led by Max Strakosch 1835 1892 consisting of well known musicians including American singer Annie Louise Cary operatic soprano Carlotta Patti French violinist and composer Emile Sauret baritone Signor Del Puente and Italian tenor Giovanni Matteo de Candia who went by the stage name of Mario During 1873 1874 she appeared in performances in England with the Philharmonic Society 19 and in M Riviere s promenade concerts 20 London Ballad Concerts 21 22 Hanover Square Rooms 23 and the Monday Popular Concerts 24 While touring with the Max Strakosch troupe Carreno and Sauret became romantically involved and on July 13 1873 they were married in London England They had one child Emilita b March 23 1874 who was left in the care of a family friend Mrs James Bischoff while Carreno and Sauret pursued musical opportunities in the United States Emilita was eventually adopted by the Bischoff family nbsp Emile Sauret Between 1876 and 1889 Carreno resided and toured primarily in the United States sharing concert bills with famous operatic singers including Adelina Patti Emma Abbott Clara Louise Kellogg Emma C Thursby and Ilma De Murska and musicians including violinist August Wilhelmj 25 and Giovanni Tagliapietra 26 After Carreno s marriage to Sauret dissolved she became involved with Tagliapetra subsequently marrying him They had three children Louisa March 1 1878 May 16 1881 Teresita December 24 1882 1951 and Giovanni January 8 1885 1965 Following in their mother s footsteps Teresita pursued a career as a concert pianist and Giovanni as an opera singer During these years she appeared with the Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Damrosch Orchestra performing solo piano concerti including Mendelssohn s Piano Concerto no 1 27 and Grieg s Piano Concerto Op 16 28 By 1883 Carreno began promoting and performing the works of Edward MacDowell in the United States and later abroad Some of the most frequently performed works include his First Modern Suite Op 10 Serenade Op 16 Second Modern Suite Op 14 29 Erzahlung and Hexentanz from 2 Fantasiestucke Op 17 Etude de concert Op 36 Piano Concerto No 1 Op 15 Piano Concerto No 2 in D minor Op 23 dedicated to her 30 At the invitation of General Joaquin Crespo the president of Venezuela Carreno and Tagliapietra traveled to Caracas Venezuela arriving in October 1885 with the intention of establishing an opera company and plans for a music conservatory Carreno gave several performances including one on October 27 at Teatro Guzman Blanco in Caracas which included the performance of her composition Himno a Bolivar dedicated to Venezuela s founding father 31 32 Carreno and Tagliapietra returned to Venezuela again in 1887 in order to open the season at Teatro Guzman Blanco with their new opera company Their efforts did not pay off largely due to the political unrest dissatisfied audiences and abandoned musical posts 33 They returned to New York in August 1887 and continued performing in the United States nbsp Villa Teresa Coswig home of Carreno and d Albert from 1891 to 1895 now a museum For several years Carreno had planned to return to Europe and establish herself as a virtuoso pianist On November 18 1889 she debuted with the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Gustav F Kogel at the Singakademie On this occasion she performed Edvard Grieg s Piano Concerto Schumann s Symphonic Studies Op 13 and Weber s Polonaise brillante arr Franz Liszt 34 During the early years in the United States Carreno s concerts were managed by several different individuals however as she established herself in Germany and abroad she chose to work primarily through the Hermann Wolff Concert Bureau and became close friends with Hermann Wolff and his wife Louise Around 1890 Carreno became acquainted with Scottish born German pianist and composer Eugen d Albert also managed by Wolff Their musical friendship turned romantic and by late 1891 they moved into a home which they named Villa Teresa in Coswig They were married on July 27 1892 35 On September 27 1892 their first child Eugenia was born followed by Hertha on September 26 1894 During their marriage the couple often appeared on the same concert bill and Carreno began performing works by d Albert including his Piano Concerto no 2 Op 12 D Albert was a controlling individual in matters related to child rearing household management and even Carreno s repertoire choices which resulted in the exclusion of MacDowell s music from her performances during their marriage 36 Their marriage ended in divorce in 1895 37 38 She would remarry again in June 1902 to Arturo Tagliapietra the brother of her second husband He had joined her in Berlin around 1897 and assisted her with her concert plans and accounts nbsp Carreno at piano in 1917 nbsp Eugen d Albert Following her success in Germany and other European states Carreno returned to the United States in 1897 to an eager audience Performing in Hartford Connecticut a critic for the Hartford Courant wrote Teresa Carreno the piano virtuoso made her first appearance to day at the Philharmonic Concert Carnegie Hall under the baton of Anton Seidl Her magnificent technique displayed to the highest degree the marvelous sonority of the Knabe piano upon which she played and she received one of the greatest ovations of the season 39 From this point forward in her career Carreno appeared in concerts as a featured artist solo or with orchestra She performed under the baton of many prominent conductors including Edvard Grieg Gustav Mahler Theodore Thomas Wilhelm Gericke Hans von Bulow and Henry Wood In his memoir Henry Wood wrote that It is difficult to express adequately what all musicians felt about this great woman who looked like a queen among pianists and played like a goddess The instant she walked onto the platform her steady dignity held her audience who watched with riveted attention while she arranged the long train she habitually wore Her masculine vigour of tone and touch and her marvellous precision on executing octave passages carried everyone completely away 40 Among the most frequently performed composers in her repertoire were Chopin Liszt Tchaikovsky Grieg MacDowell Schumann Rubinstein Beethoven Schubert Mendelssohn Weber and occasionally her own Carreno recorded over forty compositions for the reproducing piano between 1905 and 1908 These were released primarily by Welte Mignon and reissued by other piano roll manufacturers Her daughter Teresita also recorded for player piano in 1906 for Welte Mignon In addition to her performances Carreno gave lessons to students in many of the cities she visited In the early 1900s her students traveled to her summer residence during the summer months to study with her for weeks at a time Amongst her students were her early biographer Marta Milinowski as well as Fanny Nicode nee Kinnel Helen Wright 41 and Julia Gibansky Kasanoff 42 For the remainder of her career Carreno performed in cities across Europe including Russia with only a few concert seasons in North America during 1907 08 1909 10 and 1916 as well as two visits to Australia and New Zealand in 1907 1908 43 and 1910 1911 44 the latter which also included stops in South Africa 45 Carreno and A Tagliapietra returned to New York City in September 1916 for a 1916 1917 concert season with performances planned across the United States and Cuba In 1916 she performed for President Woodrow Wilson at the White House During her trip to Havana Cuba in March 1917 however she became ill and returned to New York where she was diagnosed with diplopia Her health declined rapidly and she became paralysed before she died on June 12 1917 in her apartment in New York City at the age of 63 46 nbsp Plaque commemorating Teresa Carreno at the place of her death 740 West End Avenue 96th Street New York CityCompositions editSee also List of compositions by Teresa Carreno Teresa Carreno composed approximately 75 works for piano voice and piano choir and orchestra chamber music and several merengues incorporating the form as an interlude in some of her pieces for example in her piece entitled Un Bal en Reve Her earliest compositions in manuscript date back to ca 1860 47 One of her first pieces published the year after her debut in New York City was the Gottschalk Waltz 1863 48 dedicated to Louis Moreau Gottschalk The majority of her works were composed before 1875 and were published by various publishers in locations including Paris Heugel Brandus amp S Dufour London Duff amp Stewart Madrid Antonio Romero New York G Schirmer Edward Schuberth Boston Oliver Ditson amp Co Philadelphia Theodore Presser Cincinnati The John Church Company Leipzig Fr Kistner amp C F W Siegel Sydney and Melbourne Allan amp Co Only a handful of works were composed post 1880 including two works for chorus Himno a Bolivar ca 1883 and Himno al ilustre americano ca 1886 The first piece was dedicated to General Joaquin Crespo and premiered during her visit to Caracas in 1885 The second piece was written in honor of Antonio Guzman Blanco president of Venezuela 1879 1884 1886 1887 Her composition Kleiner Walzer Mi Teresita ca 1885 composed for her daughter Teresita was one of her most popular pieces during her lifetime and she often performed it as an encore at her own concerts During her Berlin residency in the 1890s Carreno composed two chamber works Serenade for String Orchestra ca 1895 and String Quartet in B minor 1896 The latter which was performed by the Klinger Quartet in the Leipzig Gewandhaus in 1896 49 Legacy editIn 1938 Carreno s ashes were repatriated to Caracas Venezuela They were later exhumed and interred at the Panteon Nacional in 1977 Vassar College acquired Teresa Carreno s papers in the early 1930s and officially purchased them in 1941 In 1957 a portion of the un inventoried collection was dispersed between Vassar and the National Library in Caracas Venezuela 50 These materials are now housed in the Centro Documental Teatro Teresa Carreno A finding aid is available for the extant Teresa Carreno Papers at Vassar College in the Archives amp Special Collections Library The Teresa Carreno Cultural Complex in Caracas is named in honor of Carreno 51 The center serves as the residence for the Venezuela Symphony Orchestra The complex also houses the Centro Documental Teatro Teresa Carreno and the Sala de Exposicion Teresa Carreno The Centro Documental serves as the main archive for Carreno in Venezuela It houses primary source materials including correspondence legal documents concert programs scores reviews photographs and other personal items The Sala de Exposicion exhibits materials once owned by Carreno including her concert dresses Weber piano recovered through the efforts of Venezuelan pianist Rosario Marciano and other personal items 52 There is also a crater on Venus named after Carreno As of June 1 2015 Andreina Gomez began directing a feature film Teresita y El Piano about the life of Teresa Carreno 53 In 2018 a Google Doodle was created to celebrate her 165th Birthday 54 Notes edit Mme Teresa Carreno Famous Pianist Dies Artist Who Also Had a Career in Opera a Victim of Paralysis at 63 PDF The New York Times June 13 1917 Retrieved January 27 2015 Teresa Carreno most famous of women pianists died last night at 7 o clock in her home 740 West End Avenue after an illness of several months which finally developed into paralysis She was 63 years old and was once the teacher of Edward MacDowell Teresa Carreno s Death Ends a Notable Career Musical America 13 14 June 23 1917 Kijas Anna 2013 A suitable soloist for my piano concerto Teresa Carreno as a promoter of Edvard Grieg s music Notes Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association 70 1 37 58 doi 10 1353 not 2013 0121 S2CID 187606895 Kijas Anna The Life and Music of Teresa Carreno 1853 1917 A Guide to Research A R Editions Inc p 3 ISBN 978 0 89579 876 3 n a La cronica March 12 1863 Kijas Anna September 2019 The Life of Teresa Carreno 1853 1917 A Venezuela Prodigy and Acclaimed Artist Music Library Association Notes Philadelphia 76 1 Page Edson Ward 1946 Semiramis in Boston Chicago Review 1 2 86 94 doi 10 2307 25292724 ISSN 0009 3696 JSTOR 25292724 Musical Phenomenon New York Herald October 27 1862 Teresa Carreno La Musica Ilustrada Hispano Americana 1901 Retrieved July 12 2015 accessed via RIPM subscription required Debut at Irving Hall November 25 1862 Documenting Carreno November 25 1862 Kijas Anna 2016 Teresa Carreno Such gifts are of God and should not be prostituted for mere gain In McPherson Gary ed Musical Prodigies Interpretations from Psychology Music Education Musicology and Ethnomusicology Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199685851 Music in Lincoln s White House White House Historical Association www whitehousehistory org Kijas Anna Concerts in Cuba Documenting Carreno Retrieved June 28 2021 n a L Art Musical 190 May 17 1866 Acteon June 20 1866 unknown La epoca a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite uses generic title help A New Pianist Orchestra 203 June 23 1866 n a Orchestra 392 March 22 1872 n a Dwight s Journal of Music 199 March 18 1876 n a The Athenaeum 831 June 28 1873 n a The Orchestra 297 August 8 1873 Ballad Concerts 1867 1933 admin concertprogrammes org uk accessed June 28 2021 n a The Athenaeum 705 November 29 1873 n a The Athenaeum 836 June 20 1874 n a The Musical Standard 145 March 7 1874 n a The New York Times October 10 1878 n a New York Times February 25 1876 n a New York Herald November 24 1877 n a Hartford Daily Courant March 17 1883 Note First performance of this work in Chicago March 9 1884 n a Chicago Daily Tribune Jeremy Nicholas Booklet notes to Hyperion CDA67165 Milanca Guzman Mario 1987 Dislates en la obra Teresa Carreno de Marta Milinowski Revista de Musica Latinoamericana 8 2 198 99 n a El siglo October 29 1885 Nouvelles diverses Etranger Debacle artistique a Caracas Le Menestrel 214 June 5 1887 n a Neue Berliner Musikzeitung Vol 43 no 48 November 28 1889 n a San Francisco Call Vol 71 no 145 April 24 1892 Letter from Frances MacDowell to Carreno May 24 1896 Series 3 Correspondence folder 8 11 Teresa Carreno Papers Archives and Special Collections Library Vassar College Libraries n a New York Times October 6 1895 Divorce papers Series 6 Legal Documents folder 14 1 Teresa Carreno Papers Archives and Special Collections Library Vassar College Libraries n a Hartford Courant January 9 1897 Wood Sir Henry Joseph 1938 My life of music London V Gollancz pp 147 148 The Helen Wright Papers MSS 2 10079 fa music mss 0002 Julia Gibansky Kasanoff papers relating to Teresa Carreno 1902 1937 dla library upenn edu TERESA CARRENO Australia The Examiner April 22 1907 via Trove MADAME CARRENO First Pianoforte Recital Otago Daily Times June 16 1910 Echoes of Music Abroad Musical America 11 January 21 1911 Mme Teresa Carreno Famous Pianist Dies Artist Who Also Had a Career in Opera a Victim of Paralysis at 63 PDF The New York Times June 13 1917 Retrieved January 27 2015 Teresa Carreno most famous of women pianists died last night at 7 o clock in her home 740 West End Avenue after an illness of several months which finally developed into paralysis She was 63 years old and was once the teacher of Edward MacDowell Teresa Carreno Papers Archives and Special Collections Library Vassar College Libraries 104 044 Gottschalk Waltz Levy Music Collection levysheetmusic mse jhu edu n a The Musical Times 335 May 1 1896 Patkus Ronald D 2005 Musical Migrations A Case Study of the Teresa Carreno Papers RBM A Journal of Rare Books Manuscripts and Cultural Heritage 6 26 33 doi 10 5860 rbm 6 1 239 Jean Pierre Thiollet 88 notes pour piano solo Solo nec plus ultra Neva Editions 2015 p 51 ISBN 978 2 3505 5192 0 Marciano Rosario 1975 Protocolo y resurreccion de un piano Caracas Venezuela Ministerio de Educacion Direccion de Apoyo Docente Departamento de Publicaciones TERESITA amp THE PIANO Cinando Retrieved February 28 2019 Teresa Carreno s 165th Birthday www google com Retrieved December 22 2018 Bibliography editAlbuquerque Anne E 1988 Teresa Carreno Pianist Teacher and Composer DMA thesis University of Cincinnati Bomberger E Douglas 2013 MacDowell New York Oxford University Press Clemente Travieso Carmen 1953 Teresa Carreno 1853 1917 Ensayo biografico Caracas Agrupacion Cultural Femenina Eloy Gutierrez Jesus 2013 2017 Para conocer a Teresa Carreno Caracas Centro Documental del TTC 2019 Teresa Carreno Cartas y documentos Compilacion documental 1863 1917 La Campana Sumergida Kijas Anna E 2013 A suitable soloist for my piano concerto Teresa Carreno as a promoter of Edvard Grieg s music Notes Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association 70 1 Music Library Association 37 58 doi 10 1353 not 2013 0121 S2CID 187606895 2016 Teresa Carreno Such Gifts Are of God and Ought Not to Be Prostituted for Mere Gain In Musical Prodigies Interpretations from Psychology Music Education Musicology and Ethnomusicology edited by Gary McPherson 621 37 New York Oxford University Press 2019 The Life and Music of Teresa Carreno 1853 1917 A Guide to Research Middleton A R Editions Brodsky Lawrence Vera and Strong George Templeton 1999 Repercussions 1857 1862 Chicago University of Chicago Press Mann Brian 1991 The Carreno Collection at Vassar College Notes Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association Music Library Association 47 4 1064 83 doi 10 2307 941613 Marciano Rosario 1966 Teresa Carreno o un ensayo sobre su personalidad A los 50 anos de su muerte Coleccion musica 2 Caracas Instituto Nacional de Cultura y Bellas Artes 1971 Teresa Carreno Compositora y pedagoga Coleccion Donaire Caracas Monte Avila Editores 1975 Protocolo y resurreccion de un piano Caracas Ministerio de Educacion Direccion de Apoyo Docente Departamento de Publicaciones Milanca Guzman Mario 1987 Dislates en la obra Teresa Carreno de Marta Milinowski Revista de Musica Latinoamericana 8 2 185 215 1996 Teresa Carreno Manuscritos ineditos y un proyecto para la creacion de un Conservatorio de Musica y Declamacion Revista musical chilena 50 186 13 39 Milinowski Marta 1940 Teresa Carreno By the Grace of God New Haven Yale University Press London H Milford Oxford University Press Pangels Charlotte 1981 Eugen d Albert Wunderpianist und Komponist Eine Biographie Zurich Atlantis Musikbuch Verlag Pena Israel 1953 Teresa Carreno 1853 1917 Biblioteca Escolar Coleccion de Biografias no 11 Caracas Fundaciaon Eugenio Mendoza Penin Jose 1993 21 cartas de Teresa Carreno a Guzman Blanco Revista musical de Venezuela 14 32 33 25 57 Pita Laura 2015 Carreno Maria Teresa Grove Music Online 2015 05 28 Pita Parra Laura Marina 1999 Presencia de la obra de Edward MacDowell en el repertorio de Teresa Carreno Revision de programas de concierto correspondencia resenas de prensa y otros documentos pertenecientes al Archivo Historico de Teresa Carreno en Caracas Licentiate thesis Universidad Central de Venezuela Stevenson Robert Murrell 1983 Carreno s 1875 California Appearances Inter American Music Review 5 2 9 15 Thompson Barbara Tilden 2001 The Twentieth Century United States Concert Tours of Teresa Carreno Master s thesis Temple University External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Teresa Carreno Free scores by Maria Teresa Carreno at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Documenting Teresa Carreno Teresa Carreno Papers Archives and Special Collections Library Vassar College Libraries Villa Teresa die Teresa Carreno amp Eugen d Albert Gesellschaft Coswig e V Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Teresa Carreno amp oldid 1191298579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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