1922 Encyclopædia Britannica/Damrosch, Walter Johannes

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12038681922 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 30 — Damrosch, Walter Johannes

DAMROSCH, WALTER JOHANNES (1862–), American musician and conductor, was born at Breslau, Germany, Jan. 30 1862. He came to America in 1871 and ten years later began his career as conductor in Newark, N.J. In 1894 he founded the Damrosch Opera Co. for producing Wagner. In 1896 he produced, as director of the Oratorio Symphony Societies, Wagner's Parsifal in concert form for the first time in the United States. Since 1903 he has been director of the New York Symphony Orchestra. He is the composer of The Scarlet Letter (1894); Cyrano (1913); and music for Euripides's Medea, Iphigenia in Tauris (Berkeley, 1915) and Sophocles's Electro (New York, 1917). At the request of Gen. Pershing he reorganized the bands of the A.E.F. in 1918.

His brother, Frank Heino Damrosch, was born at Breslau June 22 1859. He was conductor in Denver, Newark, Bridgeport. and New York (the Oratorio Society 1898–1912). From 1905 he was director of the Institute of Musical Art.