Gerda Herrmann
Gerda Herrmann was a German composer and poet. She had been living in Botnang since the 1960s and wrote more than 400 songs, setting to music both her own and other authors' lyrics. Many of her songs have been performed at 12 benefit concerts.
Life and work
Gerda Herrmann received piano lessons for almost three years from 1941-1943, until her school was Evacuations of children in Germany during [World War II|evacuated] to Metzingen due to aerial bombings. From then on, she played the piano without receiving further lessons. Her father was an association auditor. After he was denounced to authorities, he was drafted into the German army and fell in 1944 as a soldier. In July 1944, Herrmann was in Stuttgart and at 13 years old witnessed the heavy bombings of the city and their aftermath.In 1972, Herrmann wrote her first poem, when she was asked to write one for a service held at Friendenskirche Stuttgart in support of Amnesty International. In 1984, Gerda Herrmann wrote her first composition titled "Elegie". Since then, she set texts by many authors to music, among them Annette von Droste-Hülshoff, Joachim Ringelnatz, Arthur Schnitzler and Walther von der Vogelweide. In 2013, Herrmann set to music a love poem that her father had written into his diary in 1923. She remained active until the end, and in her last press interview published one week before her death in April 2021, Herrmann talked about the most recent song she was working on.
Herrmann herself described her style as "not modern", but "most likely to be classified as belonging to the romantic period". Additionally, her style became more simple in her old age, which she attributed to Angelus Silesius' quote "Human, focus on the essence". Herrmann regarded her song that sets Rilke's poem "Der Panther" to music as her favorite of her own songs.
So far, many of Herrmann's songs have been performed at 12 benefit concerts in favor of various societies and organisations. The first concert took place in 1991 at Schloss Solitude.
In 2019, a documentary film The Songwriter of Botnang was made on Herrmann's life and oeuvre. It was shown in Germany and the U.S. and was additionally screened in competition at Berlin Independent Film Festival.