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Wilhelm Fitzenhagen (1848-1890)Wilhelm Fitzenhagen

Вильгельм Фитцеигаген

German cellist and composer, born Karl Friedrich WIlhelm Fitzenhagen at Seesen, Germany, on 15 September 1848.

The son of a local music director, Fitzenhagen commenced piano lessons at the age of five, the cello at eight, and the violin at eleven; he was also proficient in several wind instruments. He studied under August Theodor Müller (1802-1875) and Friedrich Grützmacher (1832-1903), becoming a soloist at the Dreden Hofkapelle in 1868. Two years later he was invited to become cello professor at the Moscow Conservatory - a position he retained until the end of his days. Here he met Tchaikovsky, and Fitzenhagen performed many of the composer's concert pieces and chamber works. He performed at the premieres of all three of Tchaikovksky's numbered string quartets (1871-76), and of the Piano Trio, Op. 50 (1882)

Tchaikovsky's Variations on a Rococo Theme, Op. 33 (1876) were written for Fitzenhagen, and the dedicatee took it upon himself to make drastic "'improvements" to the original score (which was not revived until the 1940s), even to the extent of excising an entire variation.

At the conservatory Fitzenhagen also taught Anatolii Brandukov, who was to become another great exponent of Tchaikovsky's cello works.

Wilhelm Fitzenhagen died on 2/14 February 1890 in Moscow, aged 51.