Luise Greger
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Luise Sumpf Greger (27 December 1862 – 25 January 1944) was a German composer and pianist.


Life

Greger took lessons at five and at nine she played for the Tsar. She began composing at 11. While still in Berlin in the 1890s, Richard Strauss proclaimed her to be a composer. She continued composing into her seventies and in 1933-34 her musical Christmas fairytale "Goose Girl" was performed 13 times to much acclaim. At the old age she was a resident of a nursing home. On December 2, 1943, she was taken to the Merxhausen State Institution because of “gradually increasing senile mental disorder”. There she died on January 25, 1944 from hunger as a victim of National Socialist euthanasia. Decades later her family found some of her songs in a trunk and she has since been honored in many forums in Germany and the US. Some of her descendants are American and it was through her music they connected with their German family and the "Luise Greger International Women in Music Festival" started in Langley, on Whidbey Island, WA, celebrating her works and those other talented local and international female composers from
Washington state Washington (), officially the State of Washington, is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the Western United States. Named for George Washington—the first U.S. president—the state was formed from the western part of the Washington ...
. The “father of Langley” Jacob Anthes was from Hesse, the state where Grefer lived and performed in the “Garden City” of Kassel, now a UNESCO heritage site.


Compositions

In her lifetime, Luise Greger received great recognition as a chamber singer and songwriter in her home country of Germany and throughout Europe, but her work and life are barely recognised toda


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Greger, Luise German women composers Aktion T4 victims 1862 births 1944 deaths 19th-century German composers 20th-century German composers