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Friday, April 24, 2026

Maria Yudina: The Fearless Soviet Pianist Who Defied Stalin

  

A deeply religious musician living in the Soviet Union during the twentieth century, Yudina was both revered – and feared – for her uncompromising moral and musical vision.

Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina

Born in the provincial town of Nevel, she rose from humble beginnings to become one of the Soviet Union’s most formidable pianists and teachers.

She also became a celebrated interpreter of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven…as well as modern composers like Stravinsky, Hindemith, and Bartók.

Today, we’re looking at the extraordinary life and times of pianist Maria Yudina.

Maria Yudina’s Childhood

Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina was born on 9 September 1899 in the Russian town of Nevel, 500 kilometers south of St. Petersburg, on the present-day border between Russia and Belarus.

She was the fourth of five children of physician and physiologist Veniamin Yudin and his wife Raisa Yudina.

Her father had come from grinding poverty and had worked his way up to becoming a well-trained doctor. He suffered no fools when it came to securing resources for his impoverished community. In the words of Maria’s half-sister, “Family legend has it that Father shouted at the Governor and threw some visiting dignitary down the stairs. That was in his style.” Maria would inherit his pluck.

Her mother was a kind woman who came from a musical family. Her cousin Ilya Slatin founded the Kharkov Symphony Orchestra.

The Yudins were secular, culturally Jewish, and big believers in education. All of the children went on to have impressive careers in medicine, science, and filmmaking.

Maria Yudina’s Early Piano Studies

Maria began playing piano at the age of seven.

Her first important teacher was Frieda Teitelbaum-Levinson, a former winner of the gold medal at the St. Petersburg Conservatory.

Sensing her daughter’s talent, Maria’s devoted mother took her on the hundred-kilometer-long journey to take piano lessons a few times a month.

At 13, she went to St. Petersburg to study with Anna Yesipova, a teacher who taught some of the greatest pianists in Russia at the time, including Sergei Prokofiev, Leo Ornstein, and Isabelle Vengerova.

After Yesipova’s sudden death in 1914, a year after Maria began working with her, she was transferred to the class of Vladimir Drozdov.

She also – likely on the sly – took supplementary lessons with Felix Blumenfeld, who was Vladimir Horowitz’s teacher.

Importantly, she also began training as a preschool teacher. She cared deeply about the piano, but was not preparing for the life of a globetrotting virtuoso.

Maria Yudina’s Revolutionary Days

Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina

When the Russian Revolution began in 1917, she was swept up in it. When firearms were distributed to the throng of citizens, Maria took a rifle.

Things didn’t go as planned. “But the wretched thing went off by itself!” she later wrote. “The bullet went through the ceilings of four storeys, and I was very lucky that I didn’t wound anybody on the fifth!”

Despite her flirtation with revolutionary activity and politics, she returned to the Conservatory in 1917.

That summer, she moved back closer to home and taught local children. She also continued her study of philosophy that she had begun in St. Petersburg. By her late teens, philosophy and theology had become a kind of obsession with her.

In 1918, she found herself torn when she fell in love with her friend, literary critic and philosopher Lev Pumpyansky.

However, she wasn’t ready to marry, and she decided to distract herself by studying conducting…an unusual pursuit for a woman in 1918.

“I have one aim in front of me. Conducting! This will cure me, and help me find my way back to reality,” she wrote in her diary.

Her Conversion and Return to Petrograd

In 1919, she moved back to Petrograd, where she resumed her music studies at the Conservatory and also took formative courses in philology and philosophy at Petrograd University.

In May of that year, although they were no longer an item, she followed the example of Pumpyansky and joined the Russian Orthodox faith.

Her atheist father struggled deeply with his daughter’s conversion, but she never wavered, even after he physically abused her for believing.

Her religion would serve as a foundation for her artistic and moral convictions over the years to come.

A Rocky Start to a Celebrated Career

Yudina graduated from the conservatory in the early 1920s and was asked to join the faculty there.

She taught at the Petrograd Conservatory (later the Leningrad Conservatory) between 1921 and 1930.

Even after she secured the job, she refused to hide her faith, conspicuously wearing a large cross around her neck even when she was on stage.

Not surprisingly, her beliefs repeatedly put her at odds with authorities.

Once, the director of the Leningrad Conservatory led a surprise “raid” on Yudina’s class, demanding to know if she believed in God. Yudina answered yes, citing her constitutional right to do so. Days later, a state newspaper denounced her with a mocking cartoon of “the preacher at the Conservatory.”

In 1930, she was dismissed from her job for her religious beliefs. This led to a period of transience during which she was unemployed and homeless.

Moving to Moscow

Thankfully, in the mid-1930s, pianist Heinrich Neuhaus vouched for her, and she was hired at the Moscow Conservatory. She taught there between 1936 and 1951.

In 1944, in the middle of her Moscow Conservatory tenure, she also joined the Gnessin Institute, the second-most prestigious music school in town after the Moscow Conservatory. She taught ensemble and vocal classes there until 1960.

Once again, she was fired there because of her religion, as well as her embrace of challenging, intellectual modern music abhorred by Soviet authorities.

Maria Yudina, the Performing Pianist

Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina

In addition to her teaching career, Yudina also worked as a pianist and kept up an ambitious performing schedule across the Soviet Union.

She boasted a striking stage presence. She was a large woman; she didn’t follow fashion trends and always wore a long black dress, looking somewhat like a nun. (Her colleague Dmitri Shostakovich once joked that she wore the same dress her entire life.) She was also known to give concerts barefoot.

She became especially popular in the Soviet Union during World War II. She played on the radio, played for soldiers at the front, played for patients in hospitals, and played in Leningrad during the siege of that city.

She cheerfully programmed all kinds of composers, from Bach to Beethoven to cutting-edge avant-garde modern-day masters like Stravinsky, Hindemith, and Bartók.

In fact, she was one of the only virtuosos of her generation in the Soviet Union to approach programming in such an adventurous way.  

Unfortunately, because of Soviet travel restrictions, she was allowed to travel abroad only twice (once to Poland and once to East Germany).

So, despite her genius, she was never appreciated by audiences in the West until after the fall of the Iron Curtain, which only happened after her death.

Running Into Trouble With the Authorities – And Always Escaping

All that said, she was even occasionally banned from public performances within the Soviet Union.

In the early 1960s, she read her friend Boris Pasternak’s censored poetry onstage as an encore. That act of defiance led to a five-year ban from Soviet concert halls.

She also thumbed her nose at authority by visiting various prisons and gulags, where she would exchange messages with arrested compatriots who were artists, writers, clergymen, and the like.

Despite this constant rebellion, she was never arrested or imprisoned.

In the end, it seems she slipped through the cracks because she was viewed as relatively harmless. She was a woman; she was unmarried; she gave away her money and lived a life of poverty, even eschewing owning her own piano. She could, in short, be dismissed as an eccentric. (She had also likely earned a certain amount of goodwill for her devotion to performance and uplifting national morale during World War II.)

Shostakovich once said of her, “I accused her of behaving like a yurodivy (holy fool)…but I can say this – she never lied.”  

Maria Yudina’s Recordings

Yudina’s artistry was preserved in a number of notable recordings and remembered in a few memorable legends.

She was especially celebrated for her interpretations of the core classical repertoire.

Her Bach playing had an especially rousing rigor to it (later commentators noted she anticipated some of Glenn Gould’s approach to the composer).

Her transcendent performances of Mozart and Beethoven were revered for their spiritual depth and intensity.

Yudina, Stalin, and the Legendary Mozart Piano Concerto Recording

One of Yudina’s most famous recordings is of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 23 in A-major, made in 1948 with conductor Alexander Gauk.

This recording is tied to the most famous legend of her life.  

According to a story found in the controversial book Testimony, supposedly originating from Shostakovich’s recollections, Joseph Stalin heard Yudina play this Mozart concerto on a live radio broadcast around 1944, and was so moved that he demanded a copy of the performance.

Afraid to tell the dictator that no copies existed, officials scrambled to summon Yudina and an orchestra in the middle of the night to record the piece. A single acetate record was pressed and delivered to Stalin by morning.

In gratitude, Stalin sent Yudina 20,000 rubles as a reward. She wrote him a reply thanking him for the money, and informing him that she’d donated it to the church to help atone for his sins.

There’s no documentary evidence that this wild story actually occurred. But it certainly captures the emotional truth about her lifelong bravery, indifference to authority, and devotion to her art and her church.

The story was dramatized in the 2017 film The Death of Stalin, introducing her to wider modern audiences who may never have heard of her.

The Legacy of Maria Yudina

Maria Yudina died in Moscow in 1970. She was 71 years old.

Although she was never able to pursue a truly international career, she worked as hard as she could to bolster music inside the Soviet Union, even during its darkest days.

She also made her mark on music in a way that impacted and influenced generations to come.

In the exasperated but adoring words of pianist Sviatoslav Richter:

She was immensely talented and a keen advocate of the music of her own time: she played Stravinsky, whom she adored, Hindemith, Krenek and Bartók at a time when these composers were not only unknown in the Soviet Union but effectively banned. And when she played Romantic music, it was impressive—except that she didn’t play what was written. Liszt‘s Weinen und Klagen was phenomenal, but Schubert‘s B-flat major Sonata, while arresting as an interpretation, was the exact opposite of what it should have been, and I remember a performance of the Second Chopin Nocturne that was so heroic that it no longer sounded like a piano but a trumpet. It was no longer Schubert or Chopin, but Yudina.

A New Ave Maria

  

The Ave Maria verse as done in historiated initials, ca 1480–1496 (From the Heures de Charles d'Angoulême, folio 52r) (Gallica, btv1b52502694t/f. 133)

The Ave Maria verse as done in historiated initials, ca 1480–1496 (From the Heures de Charles d’Angoulême, folio 52r)
(Gallica, btv1b52502694t/f. 133)

Originally, Gounod had just improvised over Bach’s Prelude. His future father-in-law, the composer and pianist Pierre Zimmerman, transcribed the work and wrote it out as a work for a string instrument (violin or cello) over keyboard (piano and harmonium). It was published under the title of Méditation sur le 1er prélude de piano de S. Bach.

Bayard & Bertall:  Charles Gounod, 1860 (Gallica, btv1b84542916)

Bayard & Bertall: Charles Gounod, 1860 (Gallica, btv1b84542916)

The same year, the words to Alphonse de Lamartine’s poem, ‘Le livre de la vie’ (The Book of Life), were set to Gounod’s improvised melody.

François Gérard: Alphonse de Lamartine, 1830

François Gérard: Alphonse de Lamartine, 1830

Le livre de la vie est le livre suprême
Qu’on ne peut ni fermer, ni rouvrir à son choix ;
Le passage attachant ne s’y lit pas deux fois,
Mais le feuillet fatal se tourne de lui-même :
On voudrait revenir à la page où l’on aime,
Et la page où l’on meurt est déjà sous nos doigts

Alphonse de Lamartine

The book of life is the supreme book,
That one can neither close nor reopen at will;
The cherished passage cannot be read twice,
But the fatal page turns of its own accord:
One would like to return to the page where one loves,
And the page where one dies is already beneath our fingers

Alphonse de Lamartine

By 1857, the French publisher Heugel had already added the work to his collection of modern classics for the piano (Classiques Modernes du Piano) and published it as a solo piano work. In his preface, Heugel argues that modern French pianists shouldn’t have to beg for a place at the table where MozartHaydnBeethoven, and Weber already held court. Along with Gounod / Bach piece, Heugel included works by Thalberg, Alkan, Czerny, Herz, and others.

In 1859, Heugel added the Latin text of the Ave Maria prayer, and with that addition, created the perfect combination of words and music that, more than 160 years later, still has a place in the repertoire.

Ave Maria, gratia plena,
Dominus tecum.
Benedicta tu in mulieribus,
et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Iesus.
Sancta Maria, Mater Dei,
ora pro nobis peccatoribus,
nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

Hail Mary, full of grace,
The Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou amongst women,
And blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God,
Pray for us, sinners,
Now and at the hour of our death. Amen.

Now, in a new combination of Bach and the Ave Maria prayer, French composer Christophe Loiseleur des Longchamps has created his own new Ave Maria. Combining the Prelude from the First Suite for Solo Cello, BWV 1007, with a new melody, Loiseleur des Longchamps has updated a once-familiar work, perhaps too familiar, and makes us hear the perfect combination of music, improvisation, and text.

Christophe Loiseleur des Longchamps

Christophe Loiseleur des Longchamps   

Christophe Loiseleur des Longchamps attended the Conservatoire de La Celle Saint-Cloud, studying harp, before moving to the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Toulouse. From the harp, he expanded into the world of choral music and was founder and director of the Notre-Dame de Brive Choir School from 2000 to 2012, while also serving as the director of sacred music for the diocese of Cahors. He’s currently in Limousin at the Collège Jean-Baptiste de La Salle. As a composer, he’s written operas, oratorios, and musicals, and his works are being performed around the world, from Korea to the UK and France.

In addition to this version for voice and cello, the composer has also prepared a version for soprano, cello and chamber orchestra, and we look forward to hearing that!

Website: christopheloiseleurdeslongchamps.com

Khatia Buniatishvili: “Beyond the Eccentricity of Planet Pogorelich”

  

Khatia Buniatishvili

Khatia Buniatishvili

One of the most visually glittering pianists today, Khatia Buniatishvili steadily appears on television sets, front covers of glossy magazines and every imaginable social media outlet. She certainly attracts attention; on the cover of a recent Schubert release, Khatia takes on the physical persona of the famous corpse Ophelia, prompting a critic to sheepishly ask, “artistic or airheaded?” Unquestionably, she is one of the most highly sought after pianists, and readily appears in the world’s most prestigious concert halls. And it is her appearance in outfits with often plunging necklines that have earned her various nicknames, including the “Betty Boop” of the piano, and “the pop star of the classical music world.” For some, Khatia is a phenomenon “titillating the classical public… shaking and disrupting this fragile world.” To others, she is a “Lady Gaga or Beyoncé craving attention, with fashion as the best kind of projection.” To me, this simply begs the question of what makes Khatia Buniatishvili tick.  

Khatia Buniatishvili Plays Schubert, released in 2019

Khatia Buniatishvili Plays Schubert, released in 2019

Khatia Buniatishvili was born in the town of Batoumi near the Black Sea on 21 June 1987. At that time, Georgia was still under Soviet authority, and life was anything but placid. When Georgia declared independence in 1991, every day became a struggle for survival and for keeping poverty at bay. “Early on, I got a taste of what real discipline is,” she explains, “and of how a human being can develop their imaginary world amidst a schedule that’s busy and difficult both mentally and physically.” Khatia was introduced to music by her mother, who apparently also instilled her with a sense of fashion by “sewing together magnificent dresses for her two daughters from bits of cloth she had managed to scavenge.” Khatia had discovered the piano at the age of three, and her mother would leave a new musical score on the piano each day. By age 6, Khatia first appeared publically with the Tbilisi Chamber Orchestra in the Concerto Op. 44 by Isaac Berkovich, a composer closely associated with the Soviet regime. That highly successful debut resulted in the invitation to tour internationally with the orchestra.   

Khatia Buniatishvili in BerlinIn Tbilisi, Khatia took lessons with the renowned Georgian Chopin interpreter Tengiz Amirejibi, and it was during a local piano competition that she met Oleg Maisenberg. He convinced her to come to Vienna and study with him. She arrived in Vienna full of enthusiasm, and became an eager student. “I wanted to absorb everything I could, and the University had virtually unlimited knowledge on offer.” She still has only praise for Oleg Maisenberg, whom she describes as a magnificent musician of unlimited imagination and depth. “Every lesson was a work of art and remains deeply engraved in my memory.” Khatia’s rise to fame began in earnest in 2008, when she was awarded the 3rd prize and the Public prize by the prestigious Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master competition in Tel-Aviv. In the same year she was invited to perform at Carnegie Hall, and she issued her first album in 2011 with works by Franz Liszt. Concurrently with her rapid rise to fame, Khatia is determined to follow her own path. And once she sits down at the piano, everything goes, including attitude, emotion, and outfit.   

Khatia BuniatishviliKhatia Buniatishvili is adamant about the freedom of her performances, and she defends her right to “re-appropriate each work and to perform them without necessarily respecting the tradition or model imposed by her predecessors.” The human being stands squarely in the center of her art, as “we can subtly reveal our emotions all the while staying perfectly intimate with our instrument.” Emotion is her guiding and motivating force, and she is in love with complexity and paradoxes, not complications and oppositions. Her music is fundamentally bound to political activism, as she is involved in numerous social rights project, including among others the DLDwomen13 Conference in Munich, or the United Nation’s 70th Anniversary Humanitarian Concert benefiting Syrian refuges. Khatia Buniatishvili refuses all invitations to perform in Russia as long as president Putin is in power. As to Khatia’s musical performances, they have either been called “hauntingly original” or “beyond the eccentricity of Planet Pogorelich.” This fundamental disagreement depends on how commentators interpret the communicative aspects of music, and that surely includes attire and all other performative aspects. We would love to hear your opinion, please let us know.

12 Forgotten Women Composers Born In the Early Romantic Era

  

The early Romantic Era, which roughly corresponds to the first half of the nineteenth century, brought an explosion of emotional depth and individuality to classical music. 

The stories we usually hear about the composers of the time focus almost entirely on men: figures like ChopinSchumann, and Liszt.

In reality, dozens of women composers were also writing symphonies, operas, piano works, and chamber music that matched their male contemporaries in imagination and skill…and sometimes exceeded them.

The surviving works of rediscovered women composers remind us that the true spirit of the Romantic movement was never confined to men alone.

Here are twelve forgotten women composers who were born in the early Romantic Era.

Louise Bertin (1805–1877)

Louise Bertin

Louise Bertin


Born into an intellectual Parisian family, Louise Bertin was the daughter of the editor of the Journal des débats: a relationship that granted her access to Paris’s artistic elite.

She was a musical child and studied composition with François-Joseph Fétis, who taught a number of famous French composers of the day.

She was one of the few women of her time to compose large-scale operas.

Her Fausto (1831) and La Esmeralda (1836) – the latter with a libretto by her friend Victor Hugo, based on his recent novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame – showed extraordinary dramatic instinct…but also provoked controversy, with critics claiming she’d only gotten it produced because of her family’s influence.

After La Esmeralda’s failure, Bertin turned away from opera and toward chamber music and poetry.

Leopoldine Blahetka (1809–1885)  

Leopoldine Blahetka was born just outside of Vienna in 1809 to two teachers. Her father was friends with Beethoven.

As a child, she studied with Joseph Czerny (Carl Czerny’s father), Friedrich Kalkbrenner, and Ignaz Moscheles.

Leopoldine Blahetka

Leopoldine Blahetka

She made her debut when she was nine, and by eleven, she was including her own works on her recital programs.

As an adult, she toured Europe as a piano soloist for around twenty years.

Her contemporaries Chopin and Schumann both thought highly of her.

Josephine Lang (1815–1880)   

Josephine Lang was born in 1815 in Munich to the Munich Kapellmeister and his opera singer wife.

Although her health had been poor since childhood, she was a brilliant prodigy. She made her debut at eleven and started composing around the same time. (Felix Mendelssohn was one of her teachers.)

Josephine Lang

Josephine Lang

After a performance for the king and queen of Bavaria, the queen noticed her poor health and sent her to the mountain spa town of Wildbad Kreuth to improve her health.

While she was there, she met her future husband, lawyer Christian Köstlin. They married in 1842 and had six children together.

After his death from cancer, she sought refuge in music. She is especially renowned today for her lieder.

Kate Loder (1825–1904)   

Kate Loder was born in 1825 in Bath, England, to a flutist and his piano teacher wife.

She studied at the Royal Academy of Music and performed Mendelssohn’s first piano concerto in London in 1843, when she was seventeen.

At eighteen, she became the first woman harmony professor at the Royal Academy.

Kate Loder

Kate Loder

She married a surgeon in 1851 and had three children with him.

She stopped playing piano in public, but continued composing and teaching.

Teresa Milanollo (1827–1904)   

Teresa Milanollo was born in Savigliano to a luthier.

At four, after seeing a violin played at church, she insisted upon being taught, despite the fact that top-level women violin soloists were unheard of.

She was a child prodigy, and her family toured Europe during her childhood.

Teresa Milanollo

Teresa Milanollo

In time, she joined forces with her sister Maria, who also took up the violin and was five years her junior. Teresa was Maria’s only violin teacher.

The sisters became two of the most successful classical musicians in mid-century Europe, on par with Liszt and Paganini.

Maria died of tuberculosis in 1848 as a teenager. Teresa was devastated. But after a period of time away from the public eye, she returned to the concert stage.

She married a military engineer and amateur musician in 1857 at the age of 29. As was customary, she gave up her career to support her husband.

Laura Netzel (1839–1927)   

Laura Netzel was born in Rantasalmi, Finland, in 1839, the youngest of six children. Her father brought the family to Stockholm when she was a year old.

She was a musically gifted child and studied piano, voice, and composition in Stockholm. She made her debut there at eighteen, playing the Moscheles piano concerto in G-minor.

Laura Netzel

Laura Netzel

She also nurtured a talent for composition that she kept quiet for a long time. At 35, she submitted a piece to a Stockholm women’s chorus under the pseudonym “Lago.” Lago became an increasingly popular composer, but she kept her identity secret until the 1890s.

In 1866, she married a gynecology professor named Wilhelm Netzel. She became famous for the charitable work she undertook, with a special emphasis on supporting women and working people.

Alice Mary Smith (1839–1884)   

Alice Mary Smith was born in 1839 to a wealthy family in London.

She was a musical child and took lessons from William Sterndale Bennett and George Alexander Macfarren.

She published her first song in 1857, when she was still in her teens.

Alice Mary Smith

Alice Mary Smith

Her first symphony was written when she was 24 and performed that same year. She also wrote an operetta, cantatas, overtures, two symphonies, chamber music, a massive amount of choral music, and more.

In 1867, she married a lawyer, but she didn’t give up composing.

Ingeborg Starck Bronsart von Schellendorf (1840–1913)  

Ingeborg Starck was born in St. Petersburg in 1840, the daughter of a saddle-maker and his wife, both amateur musicians.

Their daughter Ingeborg began playing the piano as a little girl and composing a year later. By fourteen, her music was appearing in print.

Ingeborg Starck

Ingeborg Starck

In 1858, she traveled to Weimar to study under Liszt. Three years later, she married fellow Liszt student and piano virtuoso Hans von Bronsart. They had a daughter in 1864 and a son in 1868.

In 1867, her husband was appointed Intendant at the court theater in Hanover. Wives of court officials were forbidden from making money, so she was forced to quit her career as a soloist and ended up turning to composing during the second half of her life.

She gravitated toward large forms and wrote four operas.

Elfrida Andrée (1841–1929)   Play

Elfrida Andrée was born in 1841 in Visby, Sweden, to a liberal doctor and his wife.

The family embraced the women’s movement, and Elfrida was encouraged to study music and compose. She even became one of the first officially appointed female organists in Scandinavia.

Elfrida Andrée

Elfrida Andrée

In 1897, she became the conductor of the Gothenburg Workers Institute Concerts, which made her the first woman to conduct an orchestra in Sweden.

She wrote an opera, two symphonies, a wide variety of tuneful chamber music, and a number of other works.

Louise Héritte-Viardot (1841–1918)   

Louise Héritte-Viardot was born in December 1841 to Louis Viardot and Pauline Garcia-Viardot, the most popular mezzo-soprano of her age. (It’s worth noting that Pauline was also a talented pianist and composer.)

Louise was largely self-taught, musically speaking.

In 1863, she married a diplomat named Ernest Héritte and had a son with him, but they separated.

Louise Héritte-Viardot

Louise Héritte-Viardot

To support herself, she taught voice in St. Petersburg, London, Frankfurt, and Berlin.

Many of her compositions have been lost, but the ones that survive suggest a truly delightful talent.

Marie Jaëll (1846–1925)  

Marie Jaëll was born in 1846 in Alsace. She began studying piano at the age of six, and quickly developed into a child prodigy.

In 1862, the year she turned sixteen, she entered the Paris Conservatory. After just four months of study, she won the first prize in piano.

Marie Jaëll

Marie Jaëll

She married her colleague, virtuoso pianist Alfred Jaëll, in 1866. She was almost twenty; he was 34. The couple often worked together.

After her marriage, she began taking lessons from César Franck and Camille Saint-Saëns, determined to become a good composer.

Her husband died in 1882. She devoted the rest of her life to studying music, the physicality of playing piano, composition, learning new repertoire, teaching, and more. Her appetite for music was voracious.

Josephine Amann-Weinlich (1848–1887)  

Josephine Weinlich was born in 1848 in a small town in present-day Slovakia.

Her father was a formerly wealthy ribbon manufacturer who lost a fortune during the Slovak Uprising of 1848-49. For his second act, he applied for a license to found a family folk music ensemble in Vienna.

We don’t know much about Josephine’s training, only that she played violin with her family band until 1865, when she started her own dance band.

Josephine Weinlich with her orchestra in 1874

Josephine Weinlich with her orchestra in 1874

In 1867, she went a step further and started a ladies’ string quartet. The string quartet grew into one of the world’s first women’s orchestras.

Under Josephine’s leadership, the orchestra toured internationally and helped to get audiences used to the idea of women playing in orchestras.

During all of this, she composed, including irresistible dance music like the piece above (Freie Gedanken, or Free Thoughts).

Conclusion

The women who composed during the early Romantic era wrote fabulous music, even as they navigated the restrictions their society placed upon them.

Whether they were leading orchestras like Elfrida Andrée, composing operas like Louise Bertin and Ingeborg Bronsart von Schellendorf, or performing for Europe’s elite like Teresa Milanollo, they all carved out professional lives in a world that never made it easy for them to do so.

Their stories reveal a forgotten chapter of the long story of music history: one that is filled with persistence, resilience, and tons of great music.

Who’s your favorite woman composer from the early Romantic Era?