Franz Joseph Glæser

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Franz Glaeser by Emil Bærentzen

Franz Joseph Glæser (19 April 1798 - 29 August 1861), also spelt as Glaeser and Gläser, was an Austrian-Danish composer.

Born in Obergeorgenthal, Bohemia, then part of the Austrian Empire, Glaeser’s work as a composer was mostly done before he migrated to Denmark, to spend much of his later life in Copenhagen. He gained his first position as a Kapellmeister at the Leopoldstadt Theater in 1817 and his last at Copenhagen in 1842, retaining the position until his death in 1861.[1]

Work

  • Die vier Haimonskinder (1809)
  • Bärnburgs Sturz (1817)
  • Das Mädchen ohne Zunge (1819)
  • Das Felsenmädchen (1820)
  • Der geraubte Schleier (1820)
  • Der Tambour (1820)
  • Sküs, Mond und Pagat (1820)
  • Wenn's was ist, so ist's nichts und ist's nichts, so sind's 36 Kreuzer (1820)
  • Arsenius der Weiberfeind (1823)
  • Dank und Undank (1823)
  • Der rasende Roland (1823)
  • Stumme Liebe (1823)
  • Der Brief an sich selbst (1824)
  • Der Erlenkönig (1824)
  • Die kurzen Mäntel (1824)
  • Die Rettung durch die Sparkassa (1824)
  • Liebe und Haß (1824)
  • Sauertöpfchen (1824)
  • Sieben Mädchen in Uniform (1825)
  • Der Bär und das Kind (1825)
  • Die sonderbare Laune (1825)
  • Die Weiber in Uniform (1825)
  • Die Zauberin Armida (1825)
  • Heliodor, Beherrscher der Elemente (1825)
  • Menagerie und optische Zimmerreise in Krähwinkel (1825)
  • Die steinerne Jungfrau (1826)
  • Oberon, König der Elfen (1827)
  • Peterl und Paulerl (1827)
  • Abu, der schwarze Wundermann (1828)
  • Armida, die Zauberin im Orient (1825)
  • Elsbeth (1828)
  • Meister Pilgram, Erbauer des Stephansturmes in Wien (1828)
  • Peter Stiglitz
  • Staberl
  • Die steinerne Jungfrau
  • Der Rattenfänger von Hameln
  • Aurora (c.1830 Berlin)
  • Die Brautschau auf Kronstein (1830, Berlín)
  • Andrea (1830 Berlín)
  • Des Adlers Horst (29.12.1832, Berlín)
  • Die Augen des Teufels
  • Bryllupet vet Como-søen (29.1.1849, Kodaň)
  • Nøkken (12.2.1853, Kodaň)
  • Den forgyldte svane (17.3.1854, Kodaň)

See also

References

  1. ^ Carl Henrik Holten, Peter Frederik Rist, Julius Clausen, Af en gammel hofmands mindeblade (1909), p. 221
  • This article was initially translated from the Danish Wikipedia.
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