Theodor Kroyer


Theodor Kroyer was a German musicologist.

Life

Kroyer was born in Munich. After his Abitur in 1893 at the Wilhelmsgymnasium (Munich) he studied at the University of Munich and the Akademie der Tonkunst in Munich. He received his doctorate in 1897 and habilitated in 1902 at the University of Munich, where he taught from 1907 as a non-permanent associate professor.
From 1920 to 1923 he was a professor of musicology at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, where he devoted himself particularly to the study of early music. He was then a full professor of music at the University of Leipzig, where he was instrumental in establishing the Museum of Musical Instruments. In 1932 he became a professor of musicology at the University of Cologne, where he worked until his retirement in 1938. He founded the musicological series ' and was editor of the first three volumes. In the second series of Denkmäler deutscher Tonkunst, ', he was responsible for the volume about Ludwig Senfl. His edition of the study score of Mozart's Haffner-Sinfonie is still in use today. He wrote biographies of Josef Rheinberger and Walter Courvoisier. Among his students were Karl Laux, Eugen Schmitz, Hans von Benda, Heinrich Strobel and Wolfgang Fortner.
Kroyer died in Wiesbaden at age 71.

Publications

Publikationen älterer Musik.Walter Courvoisier. Mit einem Bildnis und vielen Notenbeispielen.Die Anfänge der Chromatik im italienischen Madrigal des XVI. Jahrhunderts, dissertationTheodor Kroyer-Festschrift zum sechzigsten Geburtstag am 9. September 1933Ludwig Senfls Werke, introduction and edited by Theodor Kroyer