Willem Andriessen
Willem Andriessen (Haarlem, October 25, 1887 – Amsterdam, March 29, 1964) was a Dutch pianist and composer. His compositional output was small due to the demands of performance and teaching, but he was nonetheless awarded a number of compositional prizes in Belgium and the Netherlands.
Biography[]
Andriessen studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory, completing his studies in 1906, and was awarded the school's Outstanding Achievement Prize for piano. He appeared frequently in concert performances in the Netherlands, and was noted for his interpretations of J.S. Bach, Mozart, Beethoven and Robert Schumann, though he also played piano pieces from contemporaries such as Debussy, Ravel, Bartók and Pijper.
Andriessen taught at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague (1910–18) and following this at the Muziekschool in Rotterdam after 1924. He was appointed director of the Amsterdam Conservatory from 1937 to 1953. He also gave radio broadcasts of performances which included analyses of compositions. In 1942, following the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, Andriessen and his brother Hendrik were imprisoned for a year, during which time Willem gave lecture-concerts for the prisoners.
Works[]
Orchestral[]
- Overture (1905)
- Piano Concerto in Db (1908)
- Scherzo, Hei, t'was in de Mei (1912, R/1956)
Choral[]
- Mass (1914–16)
- Sub tuum praesidium (1943, for male chorus)
- Salve coeli digna (1944)
- Ave Maria (1954, for female chorus)
- Exsultate deo (1954)
- Missa brevis (1963)
Solo vocal[]
- 4 liederen (1906)
- Bruidsliederen (1909)
- 3 liederen (1909)
- 3 liederen (1911)
- 2 liederen (1913)
Solo piano[]
- Sonata (1934)
- Praeludia (1942–50)
- Sonatine (1945)
- Praeludium (1960, for the left hand)
Sources[]
- Jos Wouters, Ronald Vermeulen. "Willem Andriessen". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians online.
- 1887 births
- 1964 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- 20th-century Dutch composers
- Codarts University for the Arts alumni
- Academics of the Conservatorium van Amsterdam
- Dutch male classical composers
- Dutch classical composers
- Dutch music educators
- Dutch pianists
- People from Haarlem
- Male pianists
- 20th-century Dutch pianists
- 20th-century male musicians