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Siegfried Matthus
Siegfried Matthus
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Siegfried Matthus (13 April 1934 – 27 August 2021) was a German composer, conductor, and festival founder and manager. Some of his operas, such as Judith, were premiered at the Komische Oper Berlin in East Berlin. In 1991, he founded the chamber opera festival Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg and directed it until 2018. In 2005, he composed a Te Deum for the reopening of the Dresden Frauenkirche. Matthus is considered one of Germany's most often performed contemporary composers.[1]

Key Information

Biography

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Matthus was born in Mallenuppen [de] (now in Ozyorsky District), East Prussia.[2][3] His father was a farmer and played for entertainment and dancing.[4][5] His father made sure that the son received piano lessons.[4] In 1944, his parents fled with him to Läsikow [de] in the Ruppin district.[6] Matthus attended secondary school in Rheinsberg, followed by studies at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler in Berlin.[7] After graduating, he continued his studies in composition with Rudolf Wagner-Régeny and Hanns Eisler, and was shortly thereafter made the youngest composer in residence in the history of the Komische Oper Berlin by Walter Felsenstein.[8]

Stage works

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Matthus composed more than a dozen stage works.[9] The opera Die Weise von Liebe und Tod des Cornets Christoph Rilke (Cornet Christoph Rilke's song of love and death ) after Rainer Maria Rilke was completed in 1983, first performed in Dresden in 1985, and performed also by the Glyndebourne Touring Opera in 1993.[10] The opera Graf Mirabeau (1987–88) is set during the French Revolution.[11] It was commissioned for the 200th anniversary of Bastille Day and enjoyed simultaneous productions in both East and West Germany as well as Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union and France.[11] The opera was recorded by the Berlin State Opera.[11] Other opera recordings include his Old Testament-based "opera vision" Judith (1984) by Komische Oper Berlin and Der letzte Schuss with the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. In 2003 he composed music for both a ballet and an opera adaptation of Michael Ende's The Neverending Story.[1]

Orchestral music

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Matthus was a prolific composer of works for orchestra as well as chamber and recital compositions. In 1979, Responso, a four-movement symphony was played by the Dresdner Staatskapelle in front of the UN in New York City with a worldwide broadcast.[4][12] He enjoyed a close working relationship with conductor Kurt Masur who presented many world premieres of his music. Masur also conducted what Matthus called "the commission of my life", a Te Deum for the reopening of the Dresden Frauenkirche after restoration, broadcast live on 11 November 2005.[13] His works are featured on more than twenty recordings by several of Germany's leading symphony orchestras and chamber music ensembles. His 1975 Cello Concerto and his Second Symphony were recorded in 1978 by cellist Josef Schwab and the orchestra of the Komische Oper, conducted by the composer. A reviewer described the works as "deeply honest, uncompromising though highly communicative".[14] For the occasion of his 70th birthday in 2004, a recording combined three concertos with orchestra recorded earlier with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Saarbrücken: the 1982 Concerto for Trumpet and Percussion, the 1994 Manhattan Concerto, and Der Wald (The forest), a 1984 percussion concerto.[15] On 25 January 2009, Leon Botstein conducted Responso at the Avery Fisher Hall, New York City, with the American Symphony Orchestra.[16]

Festival

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In 1991, Matthus founded the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg festival. He was its artistic director until 2018.[17] He was an honorary citizen of Rheinsberg.[1]

Personal life

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Since 1957, Matthus was married to the singer Helga Matthus. They had a son, Frank Matthus [de] (born 1964), and lived in Stolzenhagen [de], part of Wandlitz, near Berlin.[18][19] Matthus died in his home on 27 August 2021 at the age of 87 after a protracted illness.[17]

Compositions

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Source:[3][20]

Matthus composed more than 600 works.[12][4] His oeuvre includes 14 operas, over 60 large orchestral works, numerous chamber music, ballet scenes and film music.[12]

Opera

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  • 1960–63 Lazarillo von Tormes
  • 1966/67 Der letzte Schuss (The Last Shot)
  • 1971 Noch einen Löffel Gift, Liebling? (Another Spoonful of Poison, Darling?) (Comic crime opera by Peter Hacks after the comedy Risky Marriage by Saul O'Hara)
  • 1972–74 Omphale (text by Hacks)
  • 1974 Mario the Magician
  • 1983/84 Die Weise von Liebe und Tod des Cornets Christoph Rilke (Cornet Christoph Rilke's song of love and death ) (text after Rainer Maria Rilke)
  • 1982–84 Judith (after the play by Friedrich Hebbel)
  • 1987/88 Graf Mirabeau
  • 1990 "Judith" American Premiere at the Santa Fe Opera
  • 1990/91 Desdemona und ihre Schwestern (Desdemona and her Sisters) (text after Christine Brückner)
  • 1998 Farinelli oder die Macht des Gesanges (Farinelli or The Power of Singing)
  • 1998/99 Kronprinz Friedrich [de] (libretto by Thomas Höft)
  • 2003 Die unendliche Geschichte (after Michael Ende's The Neverending Story commissioned by the Department for Culture of Rhineland-Palatinate, libretto by Anton Perrey)
  • 2007: Cosima, reconstruction of an opera fragment by Friedrich Nietzsche
  • 2019: Effi Briest, after the novel by Theodor Fontane commissioned by Staatstheater Cottbus, to a libretto by Frank Matthus [de][21]

Awards

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References

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from Grokipedia
Siegfried Matthus (13 April 1934 – 27 August 2021) was a German composer, conductor, and festival founder known for his operas and orchestral compositions, widely regarded as one of the most successful and prominent opera composers in the former East Germany. Born in 1934, he studied under Hanns Eisler and developed a distinctive style that combined dramatic musical theater with orchestral ingenuity, leading to works that gained performance throughout Eastern Europe and increasingly in West Germany during the late 20th century. He served as composer in residence at the Komische Oper in East Berlin for many years, where several of his operas were premiered, establishing him as a key figure in the musical life of the German Democratic Republic. Matthus's oeuvre includes numerous stage works that explore themes of war, history, and human conflict, often drawing from literary sources, and his contributions helped shape contemporary German opera in the post-war era. His music received international attention through performances and recordings, reflecting both his adherence to certain socialist aesthetic principles and his innovative approach to musical storytelling.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Family Background

Siegfried Matthus was born on 13 April 1934 in the village of Mallenuppen, located in East Prussia (now part of Ozyorsky District in Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast). He grew up in a rural farming family, where his father worked as a farmer and played the piano informally for entertainment. This amateur music-making by his father provided Matthus with an early, informal exposure to music within the family home. In 1944, amid the closing months of World War II, the family was forced to flee their East Prussian homeland due to the advancing Soviet forces. They resettled in Läsikow, a small village in Brandenburg between Kyritz and Neuruppin, following the displacement that accompanied the region's postwar incorporation into Soviet territory. This upheaval marked a profound shift in Matthus's early childhood environment, from the agrarian landscape of East Prussia to a new life in Brandenburg.

Musical Training

Siegfried Matthus received his first musical instruction from his father, who played music for entertainment in the family's inn and ensured that his son learned piano, violin, and trumpet. This early family exposure to music laid the foundation for his later formal training after the family resettled in Brandenburg following their flight from East Prussia in 1944. Matthus pursued his higher musical education from 1952 to 1958 at the Deutsche Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, initially studying choral conducting before shifting focus to composition under Rudolf Wagner-Régeny starting in 1956. He completed his training as a master student (Meisterschüler) of Hanns Eisler at the Deutsche Akademie der Künste in East Berlin from 1958 to 1960, where he deepened his compositional skills. These studies with prominent figures in East German music shaped his development as a composer and conductor during his formative years.

Career in the GDR

Early Compositions and Premieres

Siegfried Matthus's early compositions emerged in the late 1950s and early 1960s following his studies at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler in Berlin and further training with Rudolf Wagner-Régeny and Hanns Eisler. In 1964, he became the youngest composer-in-residence in the history of the Komische Oper Berlin, a position that supported his focus on dramatic works. His first opera, Lazarillo vom Tormes (also titled Spanische Tugenden), composed between 1960 and 1963 with a libretto by Horst Seeger after the picaresque novel Das Leben des Lazarillo vom Tormes, received its world premiere on 23 May 1964 at the Opernhaus of the Städtische Theater Karl-Marx-Stadt. This marked Matthus's entry into professional opera staging in the GDR. His second opera, Der letzte Schuss, composed from 1966 to 1967, premiered on 5 November 1967 at the Komische Oper Berlin, representing the theater's first world premiere in its 20-year history. These premieres at prominent GDR venues, including the Komische Oper where Matthus held his residency, established him as one of East Germany's leading opera composers during the 1960s and into the 1970s, with his stage works gaining attention for their dramatic intensity and integration of contemporary techniques.

Role as Conductor

Siegfried Matthus initially pursued choral and ensemble conducting as his major at the Deutsche Hochschule für Musik in Berlin before transitioning to composition studies with Rudolf Wagner-Régeny and Hanns Eisler. While his professional career centered primarily on composition and artistic administration, he occasionally served as a guest conductor, particularly for performances of his own music. One documented example occurred in 1990, when Matthus guest-conducted the North German Radio Orchestra in Hamburg, leading performances of his own works. Such appearances highlight his direct involvement in realizing his compositions on the podium, though no evidence indicates regular or permanent conducting posts in the GDR or post-reunification period.

Major Operas and Stage Works

Breakthrough Operas

Siegfried Matthus achieved wider recognition with his operas from the 1970s and especially the 1980s, which blended contemporary musical techniques with theatrical expressiveness, earning acclaim in the GDR and eventual international attention. His early chamber operas laid groundwork for this success, including Noch ein Löffel Gift, Liebling? (1971), a comic crime opera with a libretto by Peter Hacks based on Saul O’Hara’s Risky Marriage, premiered at the Komische Oper Berlin under Götz Friedrich. Omphale (1972–1974), also to a libretto by Hacks, followed as another significant early stage work. A major breakthrough arrived with Die Weise von Liebe und Tod des Cornets Christoph Rilke (composed 1983–1984), adapted from Rainer Maria Rilke’s novella, which premiered in 1985 at the Semperoper Dresden directed by Ruth Berghaus and was hailed as marking his international emergence. It later received performances by Glyndebourne Touring Opera in 1993 and its American premiere by the Manhattan School of Music in 1990. Judith (composed 1982–1984), an “opera vision” after Friedrich Hebbel’s play on the biblical story, premiered on 28 September 1985 at the Komische Oper Berlin directed by Harry Kupfer and enjoyed notable success in East Berlin, including a studio recording shortly afterward. Its American premiere followed in 1990 at the Santa Fe Opera, contributing to his growing visibility outside the GDR. Graf Mirabeau (composed 1987–1988), with a libretto by Matthus himself, was commissioned for the bicentennial of the French Revolution and featured simultaneous productions in 1989 across East Germany, West Germany, Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union, and France, underscoring his cross-border appeal during the late GDR period. The work was also recorded by the Berlin State Opera. These operas collectively established Matthus as East Germany’s most prominent opera composer of his generation, with support from leading directors and conductors facilitating their reach beyond national borders.

Later Stage Compositions

In the later phase of his career, Siegfried Matthus continued to compose stage works, though with less frequency than during the 1970s and 1980s. Following the premiere of Graf Mirabeau in 1989, he produced additional operas in the post-reunification period, including Desdemona und ihre Schwestern (1990–1991), Die unendliche Geschichte (premiered 10 April 2004, after Michael Ende), and Effi Briest (premiered 21 October 2019, after Theodor Fontane). Matthus channeled his energies into institutional leadership and the promotion of chamber opera. He founded the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg in 1991 and served as its director until 2018, overseeing productions that often revived his earlier stage works alongside pieces by other composers. This festival became a key platform for intimate operatic performances in a historic setting, sustaining his engagement with the genre.

Orchestral, Chamber, and Other Works

Symphonic and Orchestral Output

Siegfried Matthus produced a substantial body of symphonic and orchestral music, with over 60 large-scale works for orchestra forming a major component of his creative output. These compositions encompass symphonies, instrumental concertos, and other orchestral forms, demonstrating his engagement with large ensemble writing throughout his career. Among his notable orchestral achievements is Responso, a four-movement work for orchestra (entitled Konzert für Orchester) that received its premiere in 1977 by the Dresdner Staatskapelle conducted by Herbert Blomstedt. The piece gained international attention when it was performed before the United Nations in New York City in 1979, followed by a worldwide broadcast. Matthus's Cello Concerto of 1975 stands out as another significant contribution to the genre, with performances and recordings including those by cellist Josef Schwab and the Orchestra of the Komischen Oper Berlin, conducted by the composer himself. His Symphony No. 2 has also been documented in recordings alongside the Cello Concerto, underscoring the prominence of his symphonic writing during that period. These examples reflect the breadth of Matthus's orchestral output, which has been preserved through commercial recordings and performances by prominent ensembles.

Chamber Music and Film Scores

Matthus produced a substantial body of chamber music throughout his career, contributing numerous works for small ensembles that display his characteristic blend of lyrical expressiveness and structural clarity. Notable examples include Windspiele (1986) for wind quintet, which explores playful sonic interactions and timbral contrasts among the flute, oboe, clarinet, horn, and bassoon, and Lichte Spiele, a piece highlighting delicate instrumental dialogues and subtle dynamic shifts. These works reflect his ongoing interest in intimate settings that allow for detailed motivic development and coloristic nuance. His chamber output forms part of a broader oeuvre encompassing over 600 compositions across various genres. Matthus also composed for film during his time in the GDR, most notably providing the score for Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (1976), where his music supported the film's adaptation of Goethe's novel with atmospheric and dramatic underscoring. This contribution demonstrates his versatility in applying compositional techniques to cinematic contexts, though such work remained secondary to his primary focus on concert and stage music.

Festival Leadership

Founding and Direction of Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg

Siegfried Matthus founded the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg in 1991, establishing a summer festival dedicated to chamber opera and the promotion of young opera singers. The initiative followed the formation of the supporting Kunst- und Kulturverein Rheinsberg on September 8, 1990, with the first festival season occurring in 1991. He served as artistic director throughout its early development and remained in the position until 2014. The festival quickly gained recognition as a springboard for emerging international talents, often characterized as a platform for "stars of tomorrow" from around the world. Central to its mission is the annual International Singing Competition, which attracts hundreds of participants from numerous countries, with winners cast in leading roles in staged productions. Programming under Matthus's direction encompassed chamber operas, rare and Baroque works, Mozart operas presented roughly every two years, operettas, contemporary operas, and world premieres or first German performances. The inaugural 1991 season opened with a production of Matthus's own opera Die Weise von Liebe und Tod des Cornets Christoph Rilke staged in the historic Heckentheater. Among notable achievements during his tenure was the reconstruction and reopening of the Schlosstheater in 1999/2000, marked by the world premiere of his opera Kronprinz Friedrich on December 31, 1999, and January 1, 2000. In 2004, Matthus initiated the Rheinsberger Opernwerkstatt to foster young composers and librettists. He handed over artistic leadership to his son Frank Matthus effective September 1, 2014, following the final performance of Die Zauberflöte that summer. Through these efforts, the festival established itself at the historic venues of Schloss Rheinsberg, including the Schlosstheater, Heckentheater, and palace grounds, combining intimate chamber opera presentations with opportunities for young performers.

Later Years, Death, and Legacy

Post-Reunification Career

After German reunification in 1990, Siegfried Matthus continued his prolific career as a composer, benefiting from expanded opportunities and commissions from institutions in both eastern and western Germany as well as internationally. His musical style showed continuity with his earlier work, remaining freely atonal and often employing tone rows of 7–11 tones without significant shifts. He produced a substantial body of work in the decades that followed, including several operas and orchestral compositions. Notable post-reunification operas include Desdemona und ihre Schwestern (premiered 1991), Farinelli oder die Macht des Gesanges (1998), Die unendliche Geschichte after Michael Ende (2004), Cosima (2007, a reconstruction of a Nietzsche fragment), Luthers Träume (2016), and Effi Briest after Theodor Fontane (premiered 2019 at Staatstheater Cottbus with libretto by his son Frank Matthus). Among his orchestral and occasional works are a symphony for the Gewandhausorchester (1993), the Manhattan Concerto (1994), a horn concerto for Staatskapelle Dresden (1994), and a Te Deum composed for the solemn reopening of the rebuilt Dresden Frauenkirche in 2005. Matthus maintained occasional involvement in conducting his own works, though composition remained his primary activity. The artistic direction of the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg festival became a central aspect of his later career.

Awards, Recognition, and Death

Siegfried Matthus was widely regarded as one of Germany's most frequently performed contemporary composers, a status bolstered by his prolific output of over 600 works spanning operas, orchestral pieces, chamber music, and other genres. He was elected a member of the Akademie der Künste in East Berlin in 1969 and in West Berlin in 1976, and became a member of the Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste in Munich in 1978. In 1985 he received the honorary title of Professor. Matthus received numerous awards and honors reflecting his contributions to music and culture. During the German Democratic Republic era, he was awarded the Hanns-Eisler-Preis des Rundfunks der DDR in 1969 and the Kunstpreis der DDR in 1970. He was named an honorary citizen of Rheinsberg in 1984 for his efforts in establishing and leading the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg. Post-reunification honors included the Preis des Internationalen Theaterinstituts Berlin in 1996, the Deutscher Kritikerpreis in 1998, the Verdienstkreuz 1. Klasse des Verdienstordens der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in 2000, and the Großes Verdienstkreuz der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in 2015, the latter presented by Brandenburg's Minister for Science, Research and Culture in recognition of his artistic oeuvre and role in promoting Rheinsberg as a cultural center. Siegfried Matthus died on August 27, 2021, in Stolzenhagen, Brandenburg, at the age of 87 after a long and serious illness.

Influence and Reception

Siegfried Matthus was regarded as East Germany's most successful opera composer, with his works achieving performances throughout Eastern Europe and increasingly in West Germany even before reunification. Described as one of the most performed and internationally visible composers of the former GDR, he also succeeded comparatively well in unified Germany, maintaining a prominent presence in contemporary music. His cheerful polystylistic approach, in which no tonal language was foreign to him and he moved fluidly between free atonality, serial techniques, and imitations of historical styles from Bach to Strauss, contributed to his reputation as a versatile and representative figure in German music. Matthus occupied a central position in East German musical life through his long-term role as dramaturg at the Komische Oper Berlin, his involvement in the Academy of Arts, and his founding of influential concert series for new music in the GDR. He was recognized internationally before 1989 through memberships in Western academies and commissions from major orchestras, including performances at the United Nations and the Berlin Philharmonic. He is considered one of Germany's most often performed composers overall. After the fall of the Wall, his activity increasingly centered on the Kammeroper Schloss Rheinsberg, which he founded and directed for over two decades as the culmination of his artistic life and a key part of his legacy. Following his death in 2021, tributes emphasized his prolific output of more than 600 works and his status as a bridge between GDR-era music theater and post-reunification German culture, where he remained productive and influential until nearly the end.

References

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