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・ Hans Homberger
・ Hans Hoogervorst
・ Hans Hoogveld
・ Hans Hopf
・ Hans Hopfen
・ Hans Horrevoets
・ Hans Horst Meyer
・ Hans Hotter
・ Hans Houtzager
・ Hans Howaldt
・ Hans Howes
・ Hans Hoyer
・ Hans Hoßfeld
・ Hans Huber
・ Hans Huber (boxer)
Hans Huber (composer)
・ Hans Hugo Klein
・ Hans Huisinga
・ Hans Huitfeldt Riddervold
・ Hans Hulbækmo
・ Hans Hulsbosch
・ Hans Humann
・ Hans Humes
・ Hans Hummel
・ Hans Hunt
・ Hans Hunziker
・ Hans Hunziker (canoeist)
・ Hans Hut
・ Hans Hutmacher
・ Hans Hyldbakk


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Hans Huber (composer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Hans Huber (composer)


Hans Huber (28 June 185225 December 1921) was a composer from Switzerland who, between 1894 and 1918, composed five operas.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://opera.stanford.edu/composers/H.html )〕 His piano concertos are slightly unusual for the form in that they have, like Brahms' second pianoconcerto in B-flat major, four movements (scherzos are included in addition to the usual fast, slow, and fast tempo movements).〔See the forum thread linked to below, however; so far as is known only concertos 1 and 3 have come down to us intact of the piano concertos. There are also two violin concertos, one published during Huber's lifetime – his opus 40 in G minor, published 1879; another in manuscript, in D minor, based in part on one of his late violin sonatas (Appassionata)- indeed, one of its movements is an orchestration, with key changed, of the first movement of the first movement of that sonata (information on this is in the RISM database at RISM.info.)〕 He also wrote a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 100, for piano four-hands in all the keys.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://gateway-bayern.bib-bvb.de/ )
==Biography==
He was born in Eppenberg-Wöschnau (Canton of Solothurn). The son of an amateur musician, Huber became a chorister and showed an early talent for the piano. In 1870 he entered Leipzig Conservatory, where his teachers included Oscar Paul. In 1877 he returned to Basel to teach, but did not obtain a post in the Conservatory there until 1889; seven years later he became director. Among his notable students were Hans Münch and Hermann Suter.
In 1889 Huber wrote an A major symphony, which was conducted in December 1889 by Friedrich Hegar, and whose full score survives.〔See the manuscript full score at Basel Library, together with information taken from ''Repertorium Schweizer Komponisten des 19. Jahrhunderts (ed. Arbeitsstelle Schweiz des RISM)'' (a source in preparation) and from Edgar Refardt's 1944 work ''Hans Huber. Leben und Werk eines Schweizer Musikers''. There are four movements, Pastorale- Serenade- Idylle- Winzerfest, of this work, in A major, E major, C and A respectively (several RISM entries for this work, each representing a different source- full score, partial short score, etc.- have incipits for the four movements, not all of them the same ones- allowing some notion of what it would sound like if the score is performable and is taken up. From the incipits one does see that the 1889 symphony is not an early draft of his published symphony in A major (op.134) as one might have thought a possibility.〕 He wrote in all nine symphonies, eight acknowledged, and several concertos, two each for violin and cello, four for piano, two of them effectively lost. During his last years he lived in Minusio in Villa Ginia. He died at Locarno.

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