Nina Stollewerk
Nina Stollewerk Rosthorn was an Austrian composer, conductor, and singer who was one of the most widely-reviewed female composers of her time, and one of the few 19th-century women to conduct an orchestra.
Stollewerk was born in Vienna, where she studied music with Simon Sechter. She married Hugo von Rosthorn, the head of the Emperor Ferdinand's Northern Railway, but published most of her music under the name Nina Stollewerk.
Stollewerk composed her first lieder in 1841, when she was 16 years old. Her music was performed by the well-known singer Jenny Lind. In 1849, she announced her plans to create a music school for girls in Vienna.
Stollewerk was mentioned in at least 14 articles or reviews in the Allgemeine Wiener, frequently by critic Ferdinand Peter Graf von Laurencin d’Armond. Unusually for a woman at that time, Stollewerk conducted a performance of her orchestral works at the Odeon concert hall in Munich in 1851. Her works were also performed in Vienna’s Musikverein.
Stollewerk’s music was published by Anton Diabelli, Glöggl, and Witzendorf.
Compositions
Chamber
- ''Romanesca''
Orchestra
- Mary Stuart Overture
- Mass
- Offertory
- Two symphonies
Vocal
- “Elisa’s Erstes Begegnen”
- “Grablied”
- Gute Nacht
- “Liebchen wo Bist Du?”
- “Linde Durch die Linde”
- “Matrosenlied,” opus 6 no. 1
- Psalm
- “Uberall mit Dir”
- “Wunsch und Gruss,” opus 6
- “Zwei Gedichte,” opus 5