Max Abraham (left) with Nina & Edvard Grieg

Max Abraham (June 3, 1831 – December 8, 1900) was a German music publisher.

Biography

Born in Danzig, Abraham became a partner in the C.F. Peters publishing house in 1863, taking over as its sole proprietor in 1880. He founded its Edition Peters, and was succeeded as head of the firm by his nephew, Henri Hinrichsen.

In 1873, Abraham acquired an undeveloped property on Leipziger Talstrasse and had the architect Otto Brückwald build a residential and commercial building on it. In 1874, this became the headquarters of the music publisher CF Peters. In this house there is now an Edvard Grieg memorial. In 1893, Max Abraham donated the Peters Music Library in Leipzig, which opened on January 2, 1894. It is considered the first of its kind in Germany and was an inspiration for Wilhelm Altmann to create an even more comprehensive collection

He died in Leipzig by committing suicide.

Max Abraham Memorial Plaque

Literature

  • The letters of Max Abraham to Edvard Grieg (Edvard Grieg: Correspondence, Vol. 1). Hänsel-Hohenhausen, Frankfurt am Main, 2nd, revised, newly annotated edition 2005, ISBN 3-937909-55-9 .
  • Irene Lawford-Hinrichsen: Music Publishing and Patronage - CF Peters: 1800 to the Holocaust. Edition Press, London 2000, ISBN 0-9536112-0-5 .
  • Irene Lawford-Hinrichsen, Norbert Molkenbur: "CF Peters – a German music publisher in Leipzig's cultural life. On the work of Max Abraham and Henri Hinrichsen." In: Ephraim Carlebach Foundation (ed.): Judaica Lipsiensia. On the History of the Jews in Leipzig. Edition Leipzig, Leipzig 1994. P. 92–109.
  • Wilhelm Altmann: "The future "German Music Collection" at the Royal Library." Central Journal for Libraries, Vol. 23 (1906), H. 2, p. 67.
  • Georg von Dadelsen: "Abraham, Max." In New German Biography (NDB). Volume 1, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1953, ISBN 3-428-00182-6 , p. 22 f. ( digital copy ).
  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Encyclopedia of the German Fraternity. Volume II: Artists. Winter, Heidelberg 2018, ISBN 978-3-8253-6813-5 , pp. 2–3.

References

  • Nicolas Slonimsky, ed. (1958). "Abraham, Max". Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (5th ed.). p. 4.


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