Johann Wilhelm Wilms
Johann Wilhelm Wilms (March 30, 1772 (baptized) – July 19, 1847) was a Dutch-German composer, best known for setting the poem Wien Neêrlands Bloed to music,[1] which served as the Dutch national anthem from 1817 to 1932. BiographyWilms was born in Witzhelden, a small town near Solingen. After receiving lessons from his father and oldest brother in piano and composition, Wilms studied flute on his own. He moved to Amsterdam in 1791 where he played the flute in two orchestras and was soloist in Mozart and Beethoven piano concertos, giving them their Dutch premieres. Here, he also received further instruction in musical theory from the Saxony-born composer Georg Casper Hodermann (1740-1802). Around 1793, his first composition was published, a sonata for keyboard (harpsichord or possibly fortepiano), which is lost. Three years later, Wilms was one of the six founders of the society Eruditio Musica, which organised concerts at which he was active as pianist and composer. He taught piano at the Koninklijk Nederlandsch Instituut voor Wetenschappen (the precursor of the present Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences) after it was founded by the first King of Holland, Louis Napoleon. He soon became a valued member of his adoptive nation's musical community, interviewing applicants for church organist positions, judged composition competitions and wrote for the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, a publication he once used as a soapbox to complain about the lack of performance of music by contemporary Dutch composers like himself. He received many commissions from wealthy Amsterdam music lovers. His work also became known outside Amsterdam, with his fourth symphony being premiered in Leipzig. However, Wilms could not live from composing alone and also had to remain active as a performing musician and music teacher. However, in December 1805 he married Nicoletta Theodora Versteegh, the daughter of a wealthy art collector, which improved his financial situation as well. As the events of the French Revolution affected the Netherlands, Wilms wrote several patriotic hymns. However, following the fall of Napoleon and the return of the House of Orange to power, Wilms in 1816 won the open competition for the new Dutch anthem with Wien Neêrlands Bloed (with lyrics by Hendrik Tollens). It became the official Dutch national anthem from 1817 to 1932. At the same contest, he also won the prize for a "cheerful anthem" with "Wij leven vrij, wij leven blij" to lyrics by J. Brand van Cabauw. These awards led to an increase in commissions by churches and other organisations. In 1820, he won a composition competition of the Ghent Society of Fine Artswith his sixth symphony in D minor, Op. 58. This was also his last major orchestral work to be published. His wife died in the summer of 1821, a few weeks after a miscarriage. The following year, he lost a two-and-a-half-year-old daughter. He then largely withdrew from public musical life and became organist of the Mennonite congregation "Het Lam" in Amsterdam in 1823. From then on, he mainly composed works for occasions, such as an annual cantata for the philanthropic Maatschappij tot Nut van 't Algemeen. After 1823, he restricted himself to composing and publishing piano variations and songs (with a patriotic character at the time of the Belgian revolution of 1830). His works were performed less and less, and in 1841 he resigned as a member of the Amsterdam Maatschappij tot Bevordering der Toonkunst , of which he had been co-founder in 1829. From 1845, he gradually lost his eyesight and had to be replaced as organist more often by one of his pupils. He died in Amsterdam in 1847. LegacyIn 2003, the International Johann Wilhelm Wilms Society (German: Johann Wilhelm Wilms Gesellschaft) was established in Bonn.[2][3] RecordingsA sonata by Wilms was recorded in the early nineteenth century on a cylinder for an automatic organ (present in the current Geelvinck Pianola Museum in Amsterdam). Wilms' Symphony No. 6 in D minor and Symphony No. 7 in C minor, were recorded in 2003 by Concerto Köln for Deutsche Grammophon. The German label cpo started a recording project of Wilms' works in 2009 with the Symphonies No. 1 and No. 4 and the Overture in D major, conducted by Howard Griffiths. In 2024, cpo released a recording of Symphony No. 6, the overtures in E flat major and F minor, and the Concert Overtures in E major and E flat major. The piano quartets in C major and F major were also recorded (2019). Selected list of worksSymphoniesWilms wrote seven symphonies. His symphony in F major (No. 2) was lost and the others sank into obscurity after his death. The chronology of the five early symphonies is not clear even to experts. The seventh symphony was long assumed to be lost, but its first performance took place in Brussels in 2002)
Overtures
Piano Concertos
Other Concertante Works
Chamber Music
Piano Music
Songs
Bibliography
References
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