Ferdinand Hummel, German harp player, pianist, conductor and composer.
Background
Hummel started as a child prodigy, and his father, who was a flute player in the Royal Orchestra in Berlin, took care of his son"s first musical training instructing him in both the piano and the harp from the age of four (some say seven) gaining a King Wilhelm von Preussen Stipendium, so he could study with Antonio Zamara at the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna. In the years 1864 to 1867, the boy toured with his father to South and North Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Russia, where he was hailed as a great harp virtuoso.
Career
After his education, he functioned as harp player in B. Bilse"s Orchestra, which was later to become the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1892, Hummel was appointed leader of the stage music at the Royal Theatre in Berlin, becoming director from 1897 to 1917. As a composer, Hummel was very productive writing operas, chamber music, piano pieces and choral works.
Today his music is mostly forgotten, but his operas are at least of some interest since they form a German equivalent to the Italian Verismo-style of Puccini, Mascagni and Leoncavallo.
A list of his operas include: Mara operation 61 (1893), Angla operation 60 (1894), Ein treuer Schelm operation
64 (A faithful rogue) (1894), Assarpai operation 65 (1898), Sophie von Brabant (Sophie from Brabant) (1899).
Die Beichte operation 69 (The Confession) (1900), Die Gefilde der Seligen (The Field of the Holy Ones) (1917) and Jenseits des Stroms (On the Other Side of the Stream) (1922).
Besides the previously mentioned musical compositions, Hummel composed music for the plays Das heilige Lachen (The Holy Laughing) and Sakuntala — both in 1903. Further he composed a symphony in Doctorate major operation 105, a piano concerto in B flat major operation
35, a piano quintet, a violin sonata, a horn sonata and other minor works.
He is not related to Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778–1837).