Julie Rivé-King

Julie Rive-King (1854-1937)

Julie Rivé-King (1854?  28 July 1937) was an American pianist and composer.

Biography

Julie Rivé-King was born on an uncertain date in Cincinnati, Ohio, of parents Caroline Staub Rivé and Léon Rivé. Her mother was a singer, teacher and composer who studied with Manuel Garcia in France, and her father was an artist and teacher. After a cholera epidemic that took three of their children in New Orleans, the couple moved to Baton Rouge, Louisville and then to Cincinnati where they found teaching positions and where Julie was born.

Jullie took music lessons from her mother and appeared in recitals at age eight. She studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory with Henry Andrès and in 1870 in New York with Sebastian Bach Mills, William Mason, Francis Korbay and Dionys Pruckner. She also studied in Europe with Franz Liszt and Carl Reinecke and made her debut in Leipzig in 1873. She began a concert tour of Europe, but returned to the US when her father was killed in a railroad accident.[1]

She made a debut in Cincinnati in 1874, officially debuted the next year with the New York Philharmonic and then toured the Eastern and Midwestern US. In 1876 she married Frank H. King, her manager, and began a career as a composer and teacher, though still working as a concert pianist. To enhance her reputation, King persuaded her to publish his own works under her name. During her lifetime six companies published compositions by King but bearing Rivé-King’s name.[2] Her husband died in 1900 and she moved to Chicago and took a position at the Bush Conservatory. Among her students was Clara Baur, founder of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.[3][4]

Works

Rivé-King composed mostly for piano.

Works:

References

  1. Petteys, Leslie (1987). Julie Rivé-King: American pianist. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
  2. "Julie Rivé-King". Retrieved 11 December 2010.
  3. "Julie Rivé-King". Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  4. Macleod, Beth Abelson (2001). Women performing music: the emergence of American women as instrumentalists and conductors. Retrieved 12 November 2010.

External links

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