Klaus Martin Kopitz


Klaus Martin Kopitz is a German composer and musicologist. He became known in particular with his album Mia Brentano's Hidden Sea. 20 songs for 2 pianos. In the US, it was 2018 on the annual "Want List" of the music magazine Fanfare.

Life

Kopitz studied at the Hochschule für Musik "Hanns Eisler" and at the Academy of Arts, Berlin, where he was a pupil of Georg Katzer. Later he worked at the theatre in Neustrelitz, at the Berlin University of the Arts and at the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig.

Music

His compositions are inspired from Classical music, Jazz, Pop and Minimal music, but can not be assigned to any specific style. In particular, his CD Mia Brentano's Hidden Sea was highly praised by the critics. For Dave Saemann it is "the most titillating CD I've come across in a long time". Huntley Dent calls it "unique among current and past releases". Oliver Buslau stated: "An ever-surprising panorama from classical to free tonal, from jazzy to minimalist".

Awards

Selected discography

Selected bibliography

Der Düsseldorfer Komponist Norbert Burgmüller. Ein Leben zwischen BeethovenSpohrMendelssohn, Köln: Dohr 1998, Antonie Brentano in Wien. Neue Quellen zur Problematik „Unsterbliche Geliebte, in: Bonner Beethoven-Studien, vol. 2,, Beethoven as a Composer for the Orphica: A New Source for WoO 51, in: The Beethoven Journal, vol. 22, no. 1,, Beethoven aus der Sicht seiner Zeitgenossen, ed. by Klaus Martin Kopitz and Rainer Cadenbach, 2 vols., Munich: Henle 2009, Beethoven, Elisabeth Röckel und das Albumblatt „Für Elise, Cologne: Dohr 2010, Beethovens „Elise“ Elisabeth Röckel. Neue Aspekte zur Entstehung und Überlieferung des Klavierstücks WoO 59, in: Die Tonkunst, vol. 9, No. 1,, Briefwechsel Robert und Clara Schumanns mit Joseph Joachim und seiner Familie, 2 vols., Köln: Dohr 2019,
  • Justus Hermann Wetzel, Briefe und Schriften, edited by Klaus Martin Kopitz and Nancy Tanneberger, Würzburg 2019.; Beethoven’s ‘EliseElisabeth Röckel: a forgotten love story and a famous piano piece, in: The Musical Times, vol. 161, no. 1953, pp. 9–26,
  • Jacqueline Kharouf, Beautiful Things Repeat Themselves: An Interview with Klaus Martin Kopitz, in: Fanfare, vol. 46, no. 3, p. 94–101