Code: JP1061
ISMN: 979-0-3019-0268-4
Charles Martin Loeffler (1861-1935) was raised in Europe
and came to the United States in 1881 and immediately found
employment with the New York Symphony Orchestra. He moved
to Boston during the fall of 1882, where he assumed the
position of assistant concertmaster with the Boston
Symphony Orchestra, a position he held for over twenty
years. Having become established as an accomplished
musician, Loeffler began devoting more and more time to
his composition. He resigned from the orchestra in 1903
to devote himself to creative work. He later settled on
a farm in Medfield, Massachusetts, where he bred horses,
read classic and contemporary literature, enjoyed
epicurean cooking and continued to teach and compose.
Perhaps the best-known and most often performed work of
Loeffler is the Two Rhapsodies for Oboe, Viola and
Piano (1905), which are revisions of two songs from
a set of three that Loeffler composed in 1898 for bass
voice, clarinet and piano. They are settings of poems by
the French poet Maurice Rollinat, which Loeffler
attached to the Rhapsodies as a preface. This
work holds a major position in the oboe repertoire.
The viola part has been bowed by Korey Konkol, Professor
of Viola, University of Minnesota; and the oboe part has
been edited by Valarie Anderson, Jeanne, Inc.