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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Louis_SpohrLouis Spohr - Wikipedia

    In Kassel on 3 January 1836, he married his second wife, the 29-year-old Marianne Pfeiffer, daughter of the jurist Burkhard Wilhelm Pfeiffer. She survived him by many years, living until 1892.

  2. Marianne Pfeiffer was a gifted amateur pianist. Read about her love story with composer Louis Spohr and how it inspired a series of chamber music.

  3. Inspired by his wife, Spohr composed a number of dedicated works, which the couple took on periodic concert tours, frequently lasting the better part of 6 months. The union produced three daughters, and according to her husband, “Dorette was the model of wifely devotion and artistic integrity.”

  4. Feb 13, 2021 · Spohr and his wife undertook several concert tours together between 1806 and 1813, during which time the couple had two daughters. Other music composed during the Gotha period included a number of string quartets, more violin concertos and a number of duos for two violins.

  5. www.prestomusic.com › classical › articlesLouis Spohr | Presto Music

    Apr 16, 2024 · There he met his future wife, a harpist and singer named Dorette Scheidler. Their marriage seems to have been happy; initially they formed a musical duo of equals, with Spohr writing works for violin and harp for them to perform together, though in later years Scheidler hung up her instrument in order to raise the couple’s children.

  6. www.louis-spohr.comLouis Spohr

    Spohr was born as the oldest of seven children of the Braunschweig doctor Karl Heinrich Spohr (1756–1843) and his wife and cousin Juliane Ernestine Luise Henke (17631840).

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  8. Louis Spohr (born April 5, 1784, Brunswick, Brunswick [Germany]—died Oct. 22, 1859, Kassel, Hesse [Germany]) was a German violinist, composer, and conductor whose compositions illustrate an early aspect of the Romantic period in German music.

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