Arno Lücker
Born (1979-04-14) 14 April 1979
Education
Occupations
Organizations
AwardsHans Stieber Prize
Websitewww.arnoluecker.de

Arno Lücker (born 14 April 1979) is a German composer, musicologist, music critic and music dramaturge. He worked as a journalist in Berlin for press and radio, and as dramaturge at the Konzerthaus Berlin where he installed the series 2 x hören, presenting the same music twice. He has been lecturer of musicology at the University of Marburg, and journalist for Opernwelt, the leading trade journal for opera.

Life

Born in Braunschweig, Lücker grew up in Langenhagen near Hanover. As a boy, he received piano lessons.[1] He studied musicology and philosophy in Hanover, Freiburg and Berlin from 1999. He completed studies of musicology at the Free University of Berlin with a work about Gustav Mahler's Lieder.[1]

In 2000, he earned the Hans Stieber Prize, a composition prize of the Hallische Musiktage, for Variations on a Theme by Sergei Prokofiev, premiered by Ensemble Sortisatio.[2] He has published in various musicological journals, and has been active as a music critic, among others for the Berliner Zeitung[1] and the Neue Musikzeitung. His works have been produced by various radio stations, such as Bayerischer Rundfunk, Deutschlandfunk and Deutschlandradio.[1]

Lücker lives and works as a composer, musicologist and freelance journalist for rbb Kultur in Berlin.[1] Since 2008, he has worked as the managing director of the Berliner Gesellschaft für Neue Musik.[1] From 2010, he was dramaturge for contemporary music at the Konzerthaus Berlin.[1] He installed a concert series, 2 x hören (listen twice),[3] focused each time on one piece of music, which was first performed without any introduction or program notes, followed by interviews with performers and sometimes the composer, and finally presenting the music a second time.[3] The series alternated between 2 x hören klassisch, with Lücker as the moderator, and 2 x hören zeitgenössisch with contemporary music, moderated by Christian Jost.[3] In 2018, Lücker's career at the Konzerthaus Berlin was ended after a controversy surrounding a parody shred video.[4] The violinist Daniel Hope, dubbed in it with lewd remarks, had threatened legal action.[5] Lücker then deleted the video from his YouTube channel, and reconciled with Hope.[6]

In 2021, Lücker developed a website to find women composers.[7] He has been lecturer of musicology at the University of Marburg,[8] and journalist for Opernwelt, the leading trade journal for opera.[9][10]

Awards

Publications

  • Reinhard Keisers Orpheus-Opern – Anmerkungen zu den Libretti. In Frankfurter Zeitschrift für Musikwissenschaft. 7 (2004) 9, pp. 6992.
  • „Mahlers Gefahr ist die des Rettenden“. Trost bei Adorno und das „Lied von den schönen Trompeten“. In Musik & Ästhetik. 11 (2007) 43, pp. 6879.
  • So normal wie ein Audioguide im Museum. Ein Gespräch über Vermittlungsmotivationen. In positionen. 92 (2012), pp. 2123.
  • Arno Lücker: op. 111 / Ludwig van Beethovens letzte Klaviersonate Takt für Takt (in German) Wolke-Verlag 2020

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Arno Lücker wird Dramaturg des Konzerthauses Berlin" (in German). Konzerthaus Berlin. 27 September 2010. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  2. Manfred Weiss: Hallische Musikgeschichte: Erinnerungen an Hans Stieber. Festrede anlässlich der Verleihung des Hans-Stieber-Preises 2000 gehalten am 26 November 2000 im Händel-Haus von Prof. Manfred Weiss. In Händel-Hausmitteilungen, 3/2000, pp. 3133.
  3. 1 2 3 Vogt, Anna (13 April 2016). "Doppelt hält besser!". niusic.de (in German). Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  4. Cooper, Michael (20 January 2018). "Can Classical Music Take a Joke? A Violinist Is Shredded". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  5. Berliner Konzerthaus verteidigt Maßnahme gegen Moderator Arno Lücker
  6. Benda, Susanne (22 October 2018). "Daniel Hope und das Shred-Video / Klassik lacht nicht". Konzerthaus Berlin (in German). Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  7. "Komponistin-O-Mat hilft bei Suche nach Komponistinnen" (in German). NDR. 23 June 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  8. "Arno Lücker" (in German). University of Marburg. 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  9. "Opernwelt / Das internationale Opernmagazin" (in German). Musikinformationszentrum. 2022. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  10. "Opernwelt" (in German). dfv Mediengruppe. 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022.

Further reading

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