Tilly Koenen

Dutch soprano singer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tilly Koenen (25 December 1873 – 4 January 1941), born Mathilde Karoline Koenen, was a Dutch concert singer.

Born
Mathilde Karoline Koenen

(1873-12-25)25 December 1873
Salatiga, Java
Died4 January 1941(1941-01-04) (aged 67)
The Hague
OccupationConcert singer
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Tilly Koenen
A white woman in profile, facing viewer's left; her dark hair is in an updo, and she is wearing a beaded and embroidered gown, a string of pearls, and an earring.
Tilly Koenen, from a 1910 photograph.
Born
Mathilde Karoline Koenen

(1873-12-25)25 December 1873
Salatiga, Java
Died4 January 1941(1941-01-04) (aged 67)
The Hague
OccupationConcert singer
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Early life

Koenen was born to Dutch parents in Salatiga, Java. She studied voice and piano at the Conservatorium in Amsterdam, with Cornélie van Zanten.[1]

Career

Koenen made her concert debut in Berlin. She worked with Constant van de Wall, performing his Maleische liederen (Malay songs).[2] In 1908 in she sang a concert of compositions by American composer Louis von Heinrich (Luella Totten) in London,[3] and a concert of songs by Max Meyer-Olbersleben in Berlin.[4] She sang at the premiere of Gustav Mahler's 8th Symphony in Munich in 1910, and in one opera, Gluck's Orfeo ed Eurydice, conducted by van Zanten.[1]

Koenen toured in the United States and Canada in 1909[5] and 1910,[6][7] and again in 1917.[8][9] She appeared at Aeolian Hall in 1917, prompting a New York Times reviewer to comment "Her voice is of the true contralto type, and as such is dark in color, rather ponderous, not easily yielding itself to the production of variety of effect of the expression of diverse emotions."[10] She sang with the Philadelphia Orchestra with Leopold Stokowski conducting.[11] She toured in the United States again in 1920.[12]

Personal life

Koenen died in The Hague in 1941, aged 67 years.[1]

References

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