Baermann, Carl (actually, Karl Bärmann)
Baermann, Carl (actually, Karl Bärmann)
Baermann, Carl (actually, Karl Bärmann), German-American pianist, pedagogue, and composer, son of Karl Bärmann; b. Munich, July 9, 1839; d. Newton, Mass., Jan. 17, 1913. He studied piano with Wanner and Wahlmuth, and composition with F. Lachner and Cornelius in Munich. He completed his training with Liszt, who befriended him. He taught at the Munich Kònigliche Musikschule, and was made a prof. there in 1876. On Dec. 22, 1881, he made his U.S. debut as a pianist in Boston, where he remained active as a pianist and teacher. Among his students of note were Frederick Converse and Amy Beach. He composed a Festival March for Orch. and various piano pieces; among the latter, 12 Étuden (1877) and the Polonaise pathétique (1914) were publ.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire