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Edmund Kötscher
Edmund Kötscher
German composer and conductor
1
Wolfgang Fortner
Wolfgang Fortner
German composer and conductor
2
Wolf-Dieter Hauschild
Wolf-Dieter Hauschild
German conductor
3
Gustav Schmahl
Gustav Schmahl
German musician
4
Rolf Riehm
Rolf Riehm
German composer and oboist
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Christian Kluttig
Christian Kluttig
German conductor
6
Herbert Eimert
Herbert Eimert
German composer and journalist
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Emil von Reznicek
Emil von Reznicek
Austrian late Romantic composer
8
Karl Marx
Karl Marx
German composer
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Rolf Reuter
Rolf Reuter
German conductor
Max Strub
German concertmaster

Max Strub

Intro
German concertmaster
Music
Signatur of Max Strub, 1965

Karl Johannes Max Strub (28 September 1900 – 23 March 1966) was a German violin virtuoso and eminent violin pedagogue. He gained a Europe-wide reputation during his 36 years of activity as primarius of the Strub Quartet. Stations as concertmaster led him from the 1920s to the operas of Stuttgart, Dresden and Berlin. Appointed Germany's youngest music professor at the Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt, Weimar in 1926, he followed calls to the Berlin University of the Arts and, after the Second World War to the Hochschule für Musik Detmold. Strub was a connoisseur of the classical-romantic repertoire, but also devoted himself to modern music, among others he gave the world premiere of Hindemith's Violin Sonata No. 2 in D major. He promoted the music of Hans Pfitzner. Strub played on a Stradivari violin until 1945; numerous recordings from the 1930s/40s document his work.