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The Kurt Leimer Foundation





The Kurt Leimer Foundation is a non-profit organization whose main goal is the promotion of talented young pianists as a living commemoration of the concert pianist, composer and piano professor Kurt Leimer (Wiesbaden, September 7th, 1920 - Vaduz, November 20th, 1974). The main focus of the foundation's work is a regularly scheduled piano contest.


Kurt Leimer's Life and Works

Musical experts early on recognized the extraordinary piano talent of Kurt Leimer, whose playing combined technical skill with a fully developed intellectual keenness for musical interpretation. The pianist and composer continued a family tradition started by his great uncle Karl Leimer - teacher of Walter Gieseking, the pioneer educator. Together, Karl Leimer and Walter Gieseking wrote the well-known educational books Modernes Klavierspiel (1931) and Rhythmik, Dynamik und andere Probleme des Klavierspiels (1938), works which laid the foundation for piano teaching in the 20th century.
Kurt Leimer's talent was discovered in his youth when Carl Schuricht, Wilhelm Furtwängler and Walter Gieseking, among others, highly praised his piano playing during a prelude. They deemed him »worthy of any possible support« to become a concert stage pianist. Kurt Leimer's first public appearance was in 1938 in Berlin, when he was eighteen years old, after he received a scholarship and joined the class of the Rachmaninoff student, Wladimir Horbowsky, at the Berlin conservatory. A further scholarship enabled him to continue his studies with Edwin Fischer in 1939. The emerging glamorous career of the young pianist was interrupted by his being forced into military service and being imprisoned in Livorno. With war injuries as a backdrop, Kurt Leimer created his Konzert für die linke Hand in einem Satz in 1944. In 1953 he performed it with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Herbert von Karajan. His career as a concert pianist and composer began after WWII and, today, it is impressively documented in numerous sound and film recordings.
Kurt Leimer's piano talent was notably championed by Richard Strauss, who dedicated his concert for piano and orchestra (left hand) Panathenäenzug op. 74 (1926-27) - originally composed for Paul Wittgenstein - to him. Kurt Leimer had performed this piece with his own cadenza (sanctioned by Strauss) and Strauss' Burleske for piano and orchestra conducted by Ernest Ansermet during the Salzburg Festival in 1947. Richard Strauss' enthusiasm for the young pianist was captured in his letter of April 21, 1947 in which he said, » Leimer is a first class virtuoso, outstanding musician, his techniques sensational ...«.
In 1953 Kurt Leimer was appointed to the Akademie für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Mozarteum in Salzburg, where he held a professorship until the end of his life.
In 1955, Kurt Leimer composed his Klavierkonzert Nr. 4, which was first performed under the baton of Leopold Stokowski at Carnegie Hall in New York.


Maintenance and Promotion of Kurt Leimer's Artistic Legacy

The Kurt Leimer Foundation takes as its guiding purpose the encouragement and support of excellence in young pianists through a periodically scheduled competition, thereby furthering the legacy of Kurt Leimer.

Furthermore, the Kurt Leimer Foundation
  • supports concerts featuring Kurt Leimer's compositions
  • works to create the editing of Kurt Leimer's compositions
  • promotes research projects focusing on Kurt Leimer's works as a pianist, composer and piano teacher
  • encourages practical and scientific projects focusing on other pianists and composers of the 20th century to present day




Donation Account

Kurt Leimer Foundation

UBS AG
Via Maistra 14
P.O. Box
CH-7500 St. Moritz

Account No.: 230-290694.01G
IBAN: CH33 0023 0230 2906 9401 G
BIC: UBSWCHZH80A

 




Kurt Leimer, 1937

 


Kurt Leimer and Richard Strauss, 1948

 


Kurt Leimer and Leopold Stokowski, 1968

 


Kurt Leimer, 1968


  Pagetop

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