Composers

Wind Sextet

Composer: Simon James

Instruments: Flute Oboe Clarinet Bassoon French horn Piano

Tags: Sextet

Download free scores:

I. Allegro con passione PDF 0 MBII. Andante contemplativo PDF 0 MBIII. Finale (Paraphrase über ein Motiv) PDF 0 MB
Flute PDF 0 MBOboe PDF 0 MBClarinet (A) PDF 0 MBBassoon PDF 0 MBHorn (F) PDF 0 MB
Wikipedia
James Simon (29 September 1880 – 12/14 October 1944) was a German composer, pianist and musicologist.
James Simon was born into a Jewish family in Berlin and murdered in Auschwitz in 1944 following his internment at Theresienstadt. He studied at the Musikhochschule in Berlin piano (Conrad Ansorge) and composition (Max Bruch). In 1934 he was forced to leave Germany to Zurich, later Amsterdam where he was arrested and deported to Theresienstadt. From there, on 12 October 1944, James Simon boarded the transport to Auschwitz and died in a gas chamber shortly after his arrival. He was last seen sitting on his suitcase composing music.
His older son, Jörn Martin Simon, died in the purge of the Moscow Trials in 1937. The younger son, Ulrich Ernst Simon, survived, escaping to London, where as a young man he converted to Christianity, became a noted Anglican writer and theologian, and was a member of the council of King's College, London.
While some of Simon's piano pieces, songs and his opera Frau im Stein (1918) (based on Rolf Lauckner’s work) were published, many of his compositions remain unperformed. He is called the "Lost Composer".
His Lamento für Cello und piano (in jemenitischer Weise), Meinem Lieber Martin! (17/18. XII. 1938) was premiered in Prague by Czech cellist František Brikcius as part of the "Weinberger Tour" on 23 April 2007 at the Spanish Synagogue.
A cantata, Ein Pilgermorgen (A Pilgrim’s Morning, 1929-30) for soprano, tenor, baritone, chorus and orchestra to a text by Rilke, survives in manuscript.