Zikmund Schul

Zikmund Schul (11 January 1916 2 June 1944) was a German Jewish composer.

Life

Schul was born in Chemnitz, Germany, into an Eastern European Jewish family, and grew up in Kassel. Only little is known about his life. He moved to Prague in 1933. In 1937 he started to study composition in Prague, where he was a pupil of Alois Haba. During his time in Prague he became a friend of Victor Ullmann. In Prague he started also to archive a collection of synagogal-songs from the synagogue of Prague (under direction of Salomon Lieben). Schul married 1941 Olga Stern, and both were deported to Terezin the 30th Nov 1941. Schul died in Theresienstadt concentration camp[1] from tubercolosis.

Worklist

OpusDateEnglish TitleRemarks
op 9b Nr.11937Die Nischt – GewesenenSong for Alto and Piano
-1941Mogen OvosOrgan and Choir
-1941Fuge in EPiano
-1941-422 Chassidic DancesViola and Cello
-1942ZaddikString Quartet
-1942Cantata Judaïca Op. 13 (finale)Tenor and Choir
-1942Ki Tavo al Ha'aretzChildren's Choir
-1942Uv’tzeil K’nofechoString Quartet
-1942V'l'YerushalayimVoice and String Quartet arrangiert nach Vilem Zrzavy
-1943SchiksalSong for Alt, Flute, Viola and Violoncello from the cycle "Dunkle Klänge"
-1943DuoViolin and Viola
--3rd phrase from a piano sonata

Literature

Recordings

The whole music written in Concentration Camps are contained in the CD-Encyclopedia KZ MUSIK created by Francesco Lotoro

References

  1. Rothkirchen, Livia (2005). The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: Facing the Holocaust. University of Nebraska Press. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-8032-3952-4.

External links


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