Danish composer and pianist of Jewish origin
Herman David Koppel, known in Denmark as Herman D. Koppel, (Copenhagen, 1 October – Copenhagen, 14 July ) was a composer and pianist of Jewish origin.[1] Born in Copenhagen, he fled the Nazis with his family to Sweden in He wrote 7 symphonies, numerous concertos, 6 string quartets and other chamber music, piano works, operas and film music.
He was the father of Anders Koppel and Thomas Koppel, both composers, Lone Koppel, an opera singer, and Therese Koppel, pianist,[2] and the brother of the violinist Julius Koppel.
Born on 1 October in Copenhagen, Herman David Koppel was the son of Isak Meyer Koppel (–) and Maria Hendeles (–).[3] He was born shortly after his Jewish parents had emigrated to Denmark from Poland.[4]
Like his younger brother Julius (–), a violinist and concertmaster, he studied piano from the age of 17 at the Royal Danish Conservatory under Rudolph Simonsen and Emilius Bangert. In addition, he studied privately under the Norwegian-Danish pianist Anders Rachlew (–) and undertook study trips to Germany, England and France.[4][5]
As a pianist, Koppel premiered in at a concert where he included Carl Nielsen's Opus 40, "Theme with Variations", which was enthusiastically acclaimed as "never having been played so beautifully as this evening". Shortly before Nielsen's death in , Koppel performed a concert dedicated to his music, first playing the pieces for Nielsen himself. Thereafter, throughout his life, Koppel continued to perform Nielsen's compositions.[4]
In addition to Nielsen's music, Koppel's repertoire included romantic pieces, especially those by Mozart and Brahms. He also frequently played more modern music from a variety of composers, including the concertos of Bartok, Hans Werner Henze and Darius Milhaud and pieces by Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg. Koppel played chamber music in the Koppel Quartet and accompanied singers including Aksel Schiøtz and his daughter Lone Koppel.[4]
As a composer he was self-taught. His début composition was a string quartet (–29) which, like his other early works, was inspired by Nielsen and Stravinsky. The first work in his own style was his Piano Concerto No. 1 in March , with its primitive Russian dance rhythms and Afro-American jazz. Koppel himself preferred his Piano Concerto No. 2 () while No. 3 () is Denmark's most popular piano concerto and one of the few to be published as a recording.[4]
Only a few of the works he wrote in the s have survived. The most important is the jazz-inspired music he wrote together with Bernhard Christensen for Kjeld Abell's musical comedy Melodien der blev væk (The Melody That Got Lost) premiered in During the German occupation of Denmark in the Second World War, Koppel, together with his wife and two small children, had to move to Sweden.[6] It was there he wrote his Symphony No. 3. His Tre Davidssalmer () was inspired by an episode he witnessed during the war when a group of Jews locked inside a German truck began to sing slowly and softly.[4]
Koppel wrote seven symphonies, his fifth winning the Tivoli competition in [7] His most successful works are his oratorios: Moses (), Requiem () and Lovsange (). His only opera Macbeth, performed at the Royal Danish Theatre in , was less successful, receiving mixed reviews. As for his chamber music, the most often performed are his Sekstet for klaver og blæsere () and Ternio for cello and piano (). Koppel also wrote music for 29 films and several stage and radio plays. He continued to compose and perform until the mid[4][6]
Koppel died in Copenhagen on 14 July and is buried in Vestre Cemetery.[4]
Musiques régénérées