Fritz Simrock, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Fritz Simrock

Classical music publisher

Date of Birth: 02-Jan-1837

Place of Birth: Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Date of Death: 20-Aug-1901

Profession: music publisher

Nationality: Germany

Zodiac Sign: Capricorn


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About Fritz Simrock

  • Friedrich August Simrock, better known as Fritz Simrock (January 2, 1837 in Bonn – August 20, 1901 in Ouchy) was a German music publisher who inherited a publishing firm from his grandfather Nikolaus Simrock.
  • Simrock is most noted for publishing most of the music of Johannes Brahms and AntonĂ­n Dvorák. Simrock published almost all of Brahms's pieces from Opus 16 to Opus 120 and was very good friends with Brahms, even going on holidays to Italy with him.
  • Simrock generally paid Brahms well for his music, but with Dvorák he was often unwilling to publish orchestral pieces, for example, his Eighth Symphony.
  • Simrock was so involved in the lives of prominent musicians that Joseph Joachim came to believe that his wife Amalie was cheating on him with Simrock, and Brahms wrote a famous "lengthy letter" in support of Amalie's innocence, which "was cited in evidence at the [Joachims'] divorce proceedings." The divorce was not granted. Per Brahms' advice, Simrock took a chance with the young AntonĂ­n Dvorák.
  • After publishing only a few of Dvorák's works, his risk paid off—Dvorák quickly became one of the most popular composers in Europe.
  • Simrock thus came to be the primary publisher of Dvorák's music for much of the composer's career, but their relationship was at times strained for a number of reasons.
  • Among these were Simrock's stubborn insistence that Dvorák produce more light-hearted, miniature works (such as his wildly popular and extremely commercially successful Slavonic Dances, Op.
  • 46) when the composer expressed desires to compose more large-scale orchestral works, which Simrock claimed didn't sell.
  • Also, Simrock often confounded Dvorák with his blatantly anti-Czech sentiments, which were popular with ethnic Germans in the Habsburg Empire at the time.
  • Dvorák, for his part, maintained his musical and moral integrity, responding calmly to Simrock's nationalistically tinged letters and admonishing him for trying to force his musical process, stating in a letter to the publisher regarding a second set of Slavonic Dances: "as long as I am not in the mood for it, I can do nothing." However, as Dvorák's popularity grew, he began to receive commissions for large-scale works from other publishers, notably Novello & Co.
  • in England, which looked increasingly tempting to the composer despite his long-term oral contract with Simrock specifying that Simrock would be his sole publisher.
  • Despite this contract, Dvorák began to accept the commissions from Novello & Co, for which Simrock threatened, but did not follow through on, legal action.

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