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・ Franz Seitz, Jr.
・ Franz Seitz, Sr.
・ Franz Seldte
・ Franz Peter Knoodt
・ Franz Peter Wirth
・ Franz Petrak
・ Franz Petrasch
・ Franz Pfanner
・ Franz Pfeffer von Salomon
・ Franz Pfeiffer
・ Franz Pfeiffer (officer)
・ Franz Pfemfert
・ Franz Pfnür
・ Franz Pforr
・ Franz Philip Kaulen
Franz Philipp
・ Franz Piechulek
・ Franz Pieper
・ Franz Pitschmann
・ Franz Planer
・ Franz Plangger
・ Franz Pleyer
・ Franz Podezin
・ Franz Pohl
・ Franz Polgar
・ Franz Pomassl
・ Franz Porten
・ Franz Portmann
・ Franz Pumaren
・ Franz Pöschl


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Franz Philipp : ウィキペディア英語版
Franz Philipp
Franz Joseph Philipp (August 24, 1890 – June 2, 1972) was a German church musician and composer. He studied and later taught various instruments including organ, worked as a composer, directed a conservatory, and founded a school for organ, a chamber orchestra, an institute for church music, and a choir. In the 1930s he was highly valued by the Nazi regime as a composer, gaining a reputation he tried to undo after the war. Philipp was born and died in Freiburg im Breisgau, and worked in Basel and Karlsruhe as well.
==Biography==
Philipp was born in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. His musical education began in 1908 at the Hochschule für Musik Freiburg, where he studied violin, composition, and musical theory.
He took up a position as organist while he was still in school, at the in Freiburg, the same church where his first composition for mass was to be performed. From 1911 to 1912 he studied philosophy and literature at the University of Freiburg, and from 1912 to 1913 he studied organ, counterpoint, and improvisation with Adolf Hamm (a former student of Max Reger and Karl Straube) at the Music Academy in Basel. In 1914 he recorded 23 piano rolls for the Welte Philharmonie Organ.
During World War I, Philipp was sent to the Vosges Mountains, where he suffered irreversible damage to his hearing. In 1916, his ''Deutschlands Stunde'' ("Germany's Hour"), a cantata full of enthusiasm for the war effort, was performed by the Berlin Philharmonic.
From 1919 to 1924 Philipp was active as a church musician in the in Freiburg, and from 1923 he taught organ, song, theory, and music history at the teacher's college. He was married to Sophie Hummel in 1924 and received an appointment as director of what was then the Baden Conservatory of Music in Karlsruhe, which was raised to become the Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe under his direction. He led the school until 1942.
His son Johannes, who died in 1944 in Operation Neptune, during the Normandy Landings, was born in 1925. In the next few years, Franz Philipp was extraordinarily active and founded, in 1925 and 1926, the Badische Orgelschule, the Institute for Catholic Church Music, the Badischer Kammerchor, and the Baden Chamber Orchestra. From 1925 to 1927 he also led the .
After the Nazis came to power, Philipp joined the NSDAP, on 1 May 1933,〔Fred K. Prieberg: ''Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945'', CD-Rom-Lexikon, Kiel 2004, S. 5.249, Parteinummer 3.463.967.〕 and began composing pieces for performances at Thingspiele for Nazi feasts and other occasions.〔Examples in Fred K. Prieberg: ''Handbuch'', pp. 5.249–256.〕 Philipp was highly rated by those in power, and his orchestral work ''Heldische Feier'', Opus 35, was celebrated in the ''Völkischer Beobachter'' as an "exemplary national-socialist composition, while the spirit of our struggle and the expressive power of the music stand before us as two valid testimonials of the inner truth of this new world view".〔Theodor Ritte, "Franz Philipp. Ein alemannischer Tonkünstler voll Herzblut", in ''Mein Heimatland'', published by Landesverein Badische Heimat, Freiburg i. Br., Band 23, 1936, pp. 141–42.〕
Despite his closeness to the Nazi regime, his strong roots in Catholic church music apparently caused him personal difficulty and professional conflicts, and in 1942 he stepped down as director of the Musikhochschule Karlsruhe. After that he was active in Freiburg as a free-lance composer. Herbert Haag states in his biography that health reasons may have been behind his resignation from Karlsruhe, and dates it in 1941.〔Herbert Haag: ''Oberrheinisches Orgelbuch''. Willy Müller, Süddeutscher Musikverlag, Heidelberg, 1943. S. 7.〕 After the war, Philipp seems to have been able to underplay his important role in Nazi music; he replaced the opus numbers of Nazi compositions, when such compositions hurt his career, with religious compositions under the same numbers.〔Fred K. Prieberg: ''Handbuch'', p. 5.256.〕 In the ''festschrift'' published for his 70th birthday, the Third Reich is not mentioned. In 1960, he was given the inaugural Reinhold-Schneider-Preis, and received the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, Merit cross first class.〔 He died in 1972 in his native city and was buried in the .

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