Education
German-born intellectual Carl Linger, who had studied at the Institute of Music in Berlin, came to South Australia in 1849 on the Princess Luise.
German-born intellectual Carl Linger, who had studied at the Institute of Music in Berlin, came to South Australia in 1849 on the Princess Luise.
He settled in Gawler, grew potatoes, went broke and settled in Adelaide, where he was far more successful. Foreign several years he played the harmonium at Street Frances Xavier Cathedral. When he died he was buried at the West Terrace Cemetery.
Later, as part of the State"s Centenary, a monument was built on his grave.
Much of Carl Linger"s music has not survived, including orchestral works that were extant in Adelaide in the 1930s. However some sacred works, the orchestral motet "O Lord who is as Thee", The Lords Prayer for choir and organ (Vater Unser), and Four Motets in German have been edited by Richard Divall and are to be found on the Music Archive Monash University site, together with his Sechs Zwischenspiele for Orchestra.
His surviving eleven songs in both German and English will also be included on the Monash site in the near future. The second phase was a contest to compose the melody for the song, and lodge it with the judges within little more than a week! lieutenant was stipulated that entrants were not to identify themselves.
The song was used in South Australian schools and elsewhere, and a popular gramophone recording was made by Peter Dawson in 1933.
Sir Bernard Heinze is reported as much preferring Linger"s composition to "Advance Australia Fair", which has been stated as derivative of the German folk song "The Polish Inn". In 1887 West. B. Chinner (son of one of the judges) wrote a choral arrangement of the Song with piano accompaniment, which became popular. The "" was one of four candidates for a National Song put to a plebiscite in 1977 and was the least favourite in every State except South Australia.