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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Elsa_RegerElsa Reger - Wikipedia

    Elsa Reger. Margarete Ulrike Augusta Marie Karoline Elsa Reger (née von Bagenski; previously von Bercken, 25 October 1870 – 3 May 1951) was a German writer, the wife of the pianist and composer Max Reger, whose memory she kept alive by founding an archive, the Max-Reger-Institute, and a foundation, all dedicated to him and his work.

  2. 30 de mar. de 2018 · Max Reger (1873-1916). Elsa Reger, in her book (1930), writes in some detail about the circumstances surrounding Reger’s death. She arrived in the afternoon of May 11, 1916 at the death-bed of her beloved husband (p. 153) and stayed the whole night (p. 154), meaning until May 12.

  3. hmn.wiki › es › Elsa_RegerElsa Reger

    Margarete Ulrike Augusta Marie Karoline Elsa Reger (de soltera von Bagenski; anteriormente von Bercken, 25 de octubre de 1870 - 3 de mayo de 1951) fue una escritora alemana, esposa del pianista y compositor Max Reger, cuya memoria mantuvo viva al fundar un archivo, el Instituto Max-Reger y una fundación, todos dedicados a él y su obra.

  4. Biographien Elsa Reger. geboren am 25. Oktober 1870 in Kolberg. gestorben am 3. Mai 1951 in München. Ehefrau, Biographin und Nachlasspflegerin Max Regers. 70. Todestag am 3. Mai 2021. Biografie • Weblinks • Literatur & Quellen.

  5. 1 de dic. de 2004 · Likewise, he was more inclined to a conventional construct of religion, particularly with respect to music. Regers output includes many settings of sacred texts for chorus and voice, as well as organ music. His wife, Elsa, was Protestant and he himself Catholic, a circumstance that permitted him to keep contact with both traditions.

  6. About us. The Max-Reger-Institut / Elsa Reger Foundation (MRI) was established on 25 October 1947 by Elsa Reger, the composer’s widow, knowing that Max Reger thirty years after his death on 11 May 1916 had fallen into undeserved oblivion. For nearly 50 years the Foundation had its headquarters in Bonn, where Elsa Reger - without biographical ...

  7. maxreger.info › biography › 1915Max-Reger-Portal

    Max and Elsa Reger with their adopted daughters Lotti and Christa in front of their villa in Jena (ca. 1915). – Max-Reger-Institut, Karlsruhe. Living in the quiet scholarly town of Jena in his first own villa from March and freed from courtly and professional constraints, Reger regains his compositional élan.