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Physical Release: 21 November 2025
Digital Release: 28 November 2025
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Emilie Mayer – A Pioneer of Romanticism
Emilie Mayer (1812–1883) was one of the most prolific female composers of the nineteenth century and a central figure in German instrumental music of her time. She wrote with extraordinary confidence and originality, especially in the chamber-music repertoire, which became the privileged field for the refinement of her style and the consolidation of her artistic identity. To appreciate her achievement, it is necessary to consider the wider cultural and professional networks that shaped nineteenth-century musical life. The presence and visibility of women composers varied considerably across regions, with Germany and France appearing to offer comparatively more fertile ground, yet the overall picture remains complex and continues to invite further research. Within this multifaceted context, Mayer stands out as one of the most compelling examples of discipline, talent, and determination applied to the art of composition.
Not much is known about her life, yet the sparse testimonies of her contemporaries, together with the few surviving biographical notes, paint the image of a woman with an independent and somewhat eccentric personality, determined to live by her music without making compromises. In 1850, when she moved to Berlin, she had a plaque fixed next to her doorbell reading “Emilie Mayer, Composer,” and a few years later, in 1862, the writer Marie Schilling, a friend of her niece, described her as follows:
“She did not care about appearing presentable; she was easygoing, not necessarily following conventions; she was forgetful, and for that reason she would pin essential objects to her clothes, whether an umbrella or her glasses. E.M. would sometimes attend festive ceremonies without even a hat – unthinkable for a lady – and she amused herself with the astonishment of those present.”
Emilie Mayer was the daughter of a pharmacist in the town of Friedland, in the region of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern northeast of Berlin. She received her first piano lessons at the age of five from the town organist and, after her father’s death, she continued her studies in nearby Stettin, becoming a pupil of the famous composer Carl Loewe. She never married, a choice that, while less common within bourgeois society, allowed her to devote herself entirely to her artistic career. She spent her life mostly between Berlin—where she also studied with the music theorist Adolph Bernhard Marx—and Stettin, engaging with various musical genres. She began with sonatas and youthful chamber works, then, during her Berlin period, composed symphonies and numerous orchestral pieces, refining her mastery of chamber-music writing, which culminated in her twelve string quartets, eight of which survive today. Later she turned to piano music and lieder.
In the years between 1870 and her death, Emilie Mayer gradually reduced her compositional activity. While still based in Berlin and maintaining some ties to the city’s musical life, she focused mainly on revising her earlier works, seeking to secure their publication and circulation. No new major compositions are known from this period: her creativity turned instead to shorter vocal or piano pieces, though without the intensity of her earlier years.
Despite her recognized talent, she never received official appointments, and her final years were marked by a certain isolation. She died in 1883 in Berlin, and, having no direct heirs, she was forgotten by much of the public.
Mayer’s career, far from being an isolated phenomenon, reflects a broader pattern in which many nineteenth-century women composers built professional reputations independently, without relying on familial or marital associations. The more familiar cases of Fanny Hensel-Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann, or Alma Mahler-Werfel—whose biographies became closely linked to those of famous male relatives—were in fact exceptions within this wider landscape. By contrast, numerous contemporaries in the German-speaking world, among them Luise Adolpha Le Beau, Josephine Lang, Sophie Menter, and Agnes Zimmermann, pursued their artistic paths autonomously. Today she is being rediscovered as part of a wider constellation of nineteenth-century women composers whose work is attracting renewed attention. Alongside her German contemporaries—such as the above mentioned Fanny and Clara—and figures from other traditions, including the French composer Louise Farrenc, Mayer represents one of the many significant voices that contributed to shaping the musical culture of her time.
As her contemporary, the writer Elisabeth Sangalli-Marr, reported in 1877:
“…the world should know that in this woman feeling and intellect, idealism and professional work ethic form a unity. She made music her profession, considering it her lifelong companion, the ideal of her love, faith, and hope! In this way she filled her entire existence.”
“A quiet, introverted, and harmless nature, decidedly singular in character and artistically fulfilled in herself…”
The String Quartets
Among Emilie Mayer’s chamber works, the string quartets stand out, combining respect for the classical forms of Haydn and Mozart with a profoundly Romantic, almost avant-garde harmonic and thematic sensibility. In these works, Mayer experiments with contrasting thematic motifs, intense developments, and bold modulations, demonstrating full command of the compositional language of her time, as well as deep study of the great masters, especially Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Vivaldi.
Emilie Mayer’s quartets are not only examples of structural solidity, but also expressions of an independent artistic voice, fully engaged in the Romantic musical debate and circulating within the critical and professional circuits—such as publishing houses, journals, and concert reviews—that shaped the reception of composers and music of the time. Although the number of women active in these networks was smaller, their works were nonetheless discussed, reviewed, and performed alongside those of their male colleagues. Her chamber music, long ignored, is today being rediscovered for its artistic value, emotional depth, and balance between tradition and innovation.
Quartet in F major (F-Dur)
Composed in 1851 in Berlin.
This quartet was completed during one of Emilie Mayer’s most productive periods, shortly after her move to Berlin, where she had already gained recognition as a composer of symphonies and chamber music.
This quartet stands out for its balance between melodic vitality and formal rigor. Mayer opens with an Allegro moderato combining sweetness and brilliance, where contrapuntal interaction between the strings is prominent.
The second movement, Scherzo Allegro, is lyrical and gently melancholic, with shifting harmonies that add emotional depth.
The third movement, Andante cantabile, may be considered the structural and expressive centerpiece of the quartet. It presents a theme followed by a set of variations, some adhering to more traditional models, others marked by notable originality and innovation. Each variation articulates a distinct affect and adopts a novel harmonic strategy, at times departing significantly from the initial thematic material. The movement concludes with the return of the main theme, reintroduced through flowing triplet figures and balanced dialogic exchanges among all instruments.
The Allegretto Finale brings back a sense of playful lightness and technical virtuosity.
Quartet in G major (G-Dur)
Composed in 1856, presumably in Berlin.
Although the source does not explicitly indicate the city, evidence suggests that Mayer was still residing in Berlin at this time, where she remained active in the musical scene and published her works.
This quartet reveals a more experimental approach, while adhering even more rigorously to the traits and structure of sonata form.
The first movement, Allegro moderato, is notable for its marked thematic contrasts and dynamic variations, making dramatic use of pauses and harmonic suspensions.
The slow movement, Adagio, is particularly innovative for its time, characterized by a dialogue between instruments with an almost improvisatory flow and by extremely bold modulation in the central section.
The third movement carries a subtly ironic character and reveals Beethoven’s influence. Following the customary Minuet–Trio–Minuet structure, it alternates passages of playful lightness with a contrasting section of greater intensity and nostalgic expressiveness.
The quartet closes with a lively Finale in Rondo form, rich in rhythmic energy and formal brilliance.
Murasaki Fukuda Violin
Chiara Siciliano Violin
U Chon Wong Viola
Anna Tonini-Bossi Cello
Amai Quartet
Formed in late 2020, the Amai Quartet is composed of four musicians who graduated from the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna (MDW): Murasaki Fukuda, Chiara Siciliano (violins), U Chon Wong (viola), and Anna Tonini-Bossi (cello).
Just a few months after its foundation, the ensemble won third prize at the “Pakosky” Competition in Piacenza (June 2021), followed by first prize and the Audience Prize at the inaugural “Pietro Marzani” Competition for Young String Quartets in Rovereto (October 2021).
These successes quickly led to invitations from prestigious festivals and concert series in Italy and abroad, including Classiche Forme (Lecce), Fortissimissimo Firenze Festival, Kultursommer Wien (Vienna), Lingotto Musica (Turin), Musica con le Ali (Venice), Musica con Vista – Comitato Amur, Pianodrom (Tirana), Settenovecento (Rovereto), Orangerie Sonore (Paris) and Trame Sonore (Mantua).
The quartet has refined its artistry under the guidance of distinguished musicians, studying at MDW with Prof. Peter Matzka (Wiener Streichsextett, ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna), Prof. Florian Schötz (Goldmund Quartet), musicologist Clive Brown and Prof.
Vida Vujic, as well as at the Accademia Stauffer in Cremona, where it earned the Stauffer Artist Diploma in Chamber Music under the mentorship of the Quartetto di Cremona. They have also participated in masterclasses with leading chamber musicians, including Xiang Lu and Danfeng Shen (Simply Quartet), Alexander Pavlovsky (Jerusalem Quartet), Günther Pichler (Alban Berg Quartet), Henk Guittart (Schönberg Quartet), Pavel Nikl (Pavel Haas Quartet) and Oliver Wille (Kuss Quartett).
Alongside the study and refinement of the standard classical repertoire, the ensemble has always been interested in exploring the vast range of sound possibilities of the string quartet, collaborating with various artists such as mezzo-soprano Manuela Leonhartsberger (Wiener Volksoper), clarinetist Gianluigi Caldarola (Opéra Royal de Wallonie, Liège), accordionist Pietro Roffi, and performing important works—often world premieres—by contemporary composers Rainer Bischof and Michael Public (Austria), Paolo Marzocchi (Italy), and Alexander Peçi (Albania). In addition, the quartet actively champions music by women composers past and present, from Fanny Hensel, Emilie Mayer and Amy Beach to Ruth Schonthal, Sylvie Bodorová, Silvia Colasanti and Caroline Shaw.
A key goal of the Amai Quartet since its inception has been to bring string quartet music beyond traditional concert halls: since 2021, the ensemble has been part of Yehudi Menuhin – Live Music Now Wien, an organization promoting concerts in schools, nursing homes, and prisons. Since 2023, the quartet has been developing innovative concert formats for children and families, combining music with theatre. These projects include the European MERITA Platform production Say it with Classical Music and the theatrical collaboration Planet Zauberflöte (2024) for Vienna’s Neue Staatsoper NEST.
The creative spirit and drive for innovation of the Amai Quartet led to the foundation, in November 2023, of the AMAI – Association for Music and Artistic Interaction, based in Vienna: a creative community dedicated to bringing classical music to new audiences and blending it with other art forms to create dynamic, engaging performances for diverse listeners.
https://www.amaiquartet.com/
(b Friedland, Mecklenburg, 14 May 1821; d Berlin, 10 April 1883). German composer and sculptor. The daughter of an apothecary, she received piano lessons and soon began to compose short piano pieces. In Stettin (now Szczecin) she took lessons with Carl Loewe. During this period she composed songs, chamber music, overtures and symphonies. In 1847 she moved to Berlin, where she studied fugue and counterpoint with Adolf Bernhard Marx and orchestration with Wilhelm Wieprecht. She organized private performances of her music at home and in other houses, as well as in the Königliches Schauspielhaus. Her Sinfonia in B minor (1852), one of her most successful compositions, was given several public performances by Karl Liebig. She went with her brothers to Vienna, and travelled between Berlin, Stettin and Pasewalk, spending considerable money and energy on having her music printed and performed. Later, her financial affairs seem to have deteriorated. Her music was performed in Brussels, Lyons, Budapest, Dessau, Halle, Leipzig and Munich, and was much acclaimed during her lifetime. She was the most prolific German woman composer of the Romantic period, yet most of her music (which is in the Berlin Staatsbibliothek) has remained unperformed since her death.
Her output includes a Singspiel Die Fischerin, several sinfonias and overtures, choral settings and lieder. Among her instrumental works are 9 sonatas for violin and 13 for cello, 11 piano trios and 7 string quartets. She also wrote three sonatas for piano, as well as shorter pieces. Her work adheres to the classical tradition and is modelled on the style of Mendelssohn. Besides composing, she worked as a sculptor, and some of her works were retained in royal collections.
13.76€
Physical Release: 24 April 2026 Digital Release: 1 May 2026
Physical and Digital Release: 24 April 2026
Physical Release: 24 April 2026 Digital Release: 1 May 2026