Heinrich Strecker


Heinrich Strecker was an Austrian composer of operettas and popular Viennese music.

Biography

As a young child, Strecker was sent to Theux in Belgium, where he was educated on a boarding school run by Lazarists. His talent for music was noticed here, and his interest nurtured. At the completion of his schooling, he could play 12 instruments. He professed a preference for the violin, in which he completed a masterclass. In 1907, Strecker made his public performance debut with his own composition, Violin Concerto in A Major, and in the same year, he was asked to play it for the Belgian king Leopold II, and was honoured for doing so.
He returned to Vienna in 1910, at the age of 17, to study law at the University of Vienna. His studies were interrupted by the First World War, in which he was an army officer. After the war he devoted himself solely to his music, studying with Prof. Camillo Horn and beginning to compose classical pieces.
Between commissioned pieces, such as dance and film music, he discovered Viennese songs. He became famous for this type of popular music, as well as for his Singspiel. He often collaborated with F. Gerold, Joe Grebitz and, who wrote the song texts and libretti.
On 21 December 1931, his operetta "Mädel aus Wien" premiered at the Vienna Bürgertheater, and immediately following the Anschluss of Austria by the Third Reich, his operetta "Der ewige Walzer" premiered on 18 May 1938 at the Volksoper. His Singspiel Ännchen von Tharau, which he wrote with Hardt-Warden, premiered at the Raimund Theater on 8 February 1940.
Strecker became a member of the Nazi Party in 1933, and was the regional representative of the cultural community of Vienna. In addition to the "Excelsior" and "Stage" publishers, which he founded in Vienna in 1926, he took over the "Bristol, Sirius and Europaton" music publishers under the guise of Aryanisation.
Strecker was married to Erika Strecker, and died at the age of 88 in Baden on 28 June 1981.
During his career he composed many popular songs, walzes, marches, operettas, and film scores. His music is still popular in Austria, and concerts are sometimes given in his old home in the Viennese suburb of Baden bei Wien.

Selected works

The complete catalogue of Heinrich Strecker's works comprises more than 350 individual pieces.

Stage works