Peter Raabe
German conductor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biography
Raabe graduated from three schools: the Higher Musical School in Berlin, the universities of Munich, and Jena University. In 1894–98 Raabe worked in Königsberg and Zwickau. In 1899–1903 he worked in the Dutch Opera-House (Amsterdam). In 1907–1920, Raabe was the 1st Court Conductor in Weimar. Raabe performed in the United Kingdom, Belgium, and the Netherlands, among other locations. On 19 July 1935 Raabe superseded Richard Strauss as the president of Reichsmusikkammer, the Nazi State Music Institute. For almost ten years, Raabe directed the music activity of the Third Reich.

Raabe wrote the first complete chronology of the works of Franz Liszt.[1]
General references
- Who Was Who in the Third Reich. Biographic encyclopedical dictionary, Moscow, 2003 (in Russian)