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Ludvig Minkus : ウィキペディア英語版
Ludwig Minkus

Ludwig Minkus (), also known as Léon Fyodorovich Minkus (23 March 1826 – 7 December 1917), was an Austrian composer of ballet music, a violin virtuoso and teacher.
Minkus is noted for the music he composed while serving as the official Composer of Ballet Music to the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres in Russia. During his long career, he wrote for the original works and numerous revivals staged by the renowned Ballet Masters Arthur Saint-Léon and Marius Petipa. Among the composer's most celebrated compositions was his score for ''La source'' (1866; composed jointly with Léo Delibes), ''Don Quixote'' (1869); and ''La Bayadère'' (1877). During his career Minkus wrote a substantial amount of supplemental material for insertion into already existing ballets. Among these pieces, Minkus is noted for the ''Grand Pas classique'' and ''Mazurka des enfants'' written especially for Marius Petipa's 1881 revival of the ballet ''Paquita''. For this revival Minkus also created an expanded version of the ballet's ''Pas de trois'', which would go on to become known as the ''Minkus pas de trois''.
Today, Minkus's music is some of the most performed in all of ballet, and is a most integral part of the traditional classical ballet repertory.
== Early life ==
Ludwig Minkus was born Aloysius Bernhard Philipp Minkus on 23 March 1826, in the Innere Stadt district of Vienna, the capital of the Austrian Empire. His father, Theodor Johann Minkus, was born in 1795 in Groß-Meseritsch, Moravia (today known as Velké Meziříčí near Brno, Moravia, in what is now the Czech Republic) and his mother, Maria Franziska Heimann was born in 1807 in Pest, Hungary.〔 Minkus was of Jewish descent〔—his parents converted to Catholicism not long before their relocation to Vienna, and were married on the following day.〔
Minkus's father was a wholesale merchant of wine in Moravia, Austria and Hungary. He opened a restaurant in the Innere Stadt district of Vienna that featured its own small orchestra. This may have influenced the young Minkus—it is possible that he composed for his father's ''Tanzkapelle'', one of many such orchestras in the imperial capital. By the age of four he began to receive private lessons in the violin, and from 1838 to 1842 he began his musical studies at the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna.〔
Minkus made his public début at a recital in Vienna at the age of eight. On 18 October 1845 an announcement in the Viennese newspaper ''Der Humorist'' commented on the performances of the previous season, and noted that, ''" ... (Minkus's playing featured) a conservative style with a glittering performance."''〔 Soon the young Minkus was appearing in various concert halls as a soloist of note, having been declared a child prodigy by the public and critics.
Minkus began composing for his instrument while he was still a student. Five pieces for the violin were published in 1846.〔 At this time Minkus began to try his hand at conducting. For a time he was the regular conductor of an orchestra that competed with another under the baton of the young Johann Strauss II (in later years Strauss was acquainted with Minkus's brother Eugen, a bank director in Vienna).〔
Minkus's life from 1842 to 1852 is poorly documented—travel applications survive which show requests to visit Germany, France and England.〔 In 1852 Minkus accepted the position of principal violinist to the Vienna Court Opera, but because this meant that he also had to fulfill the usual duties this position demanded, he resigned that same year to take up an important musical assignment abroad that would change his life forever.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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