Georg Liebling (22 January 1865 – 7 February 1946) was a German pianist and composer. Part of the Liebling family of musicians, he had an active international career as a concert pianist and accompanist from the 1880s into the 1920s. He also worked as a piano teacher for most of his life, beginning that occupation at the age of 16 and continuing up until his death more than 50 years later. He taught on the faculties of the Kullack Conservatory in Berlin (1881–1889), the Guildhall School of Music in London (1898–1906), and the Hollywood Conservatory of Music in the early 1930s in addition to teaching privately in Berlin, Munich, and New York City. As a composer, his salon compositions are noteworthy, especially the Air de Ballet and Romance; a gavotte, and the vocal Lieblingswalzer.[1] Also notable is his 1908 opera Die heilige Katharina.[2]
Early life and career in Germany and as a touring pianist
Born in Berlin, Liebling was a child prodigy on the piano and began his studies at a young age at the Kullak Conservatory where he was a pupil of Theodor Kullak and his son Franz.[3] He was from a prominent Jewish family of musicians.[2] His three brothers, Sally, Emil, and Max Liebling, were also successful pianists, and all four of them studied the piano with Franz Liszt at some point during their training.[4] The four brothers also had success as composers in addition to being notable performers. His older brother Max moved to New York City as a teenager having already had a career as a concert pianist in Europe.[4] Max was the father of several successful musicians, including the soprano and famous voice teacher Estelle Liebling; the cellist James Liebling; and the music critic, pianist, composer, and opera librettist Leonard Liebling.[4]
In 1890 Georg became court pianist for Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.[6] In the mid 1890s he assisted his nephew Leonard in establishing his career as a concert pianist in Europe by including him within his own concerts.[7]
Career in London
From December 1897 through July 1898 Liebling gave a series of ten recitals at St James's Hall in London which were well received by critics; drawing particular praise for his performances of works by Beethoven, Liszt, and Chopin in addition to his own compositions.[8][9][6][10][11] He was engaged by conductor and composer Stewart Macpherson to perform Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 in March 1898 with the Westminster Orchestral Society at Westminster Town Hall.[12] He performed with that organization again in the world premiere of Macpherson's Concertstück, a work for piano and orchestra, at St James's Hall on 11 May 1898.[13]
In August 1898 Liebling joined the piano faculty of the Guildhall School of Music in London.[14] That same month both he and his wife were invited to Osborne House by Queen Victoria to perform for Her Majesty, and he was presented with a diamond pin as a gift from the Queen in addition to joining her for a private dinner.[15] He remained active as a concert pianist in London and a teacher at the Guildhall School of Music through 1906.[16]
Later life and career in Germany and the United States
Liebling returned to Germany in 1906 where he was active as a pianist and teacher in Munich and Berlin into the 1920s.[2][17] His opera Die heilige Katharina premiered at the Stadttheater Koblenz on 8 March 1908.[18]
In 1923 he and soprano Elsa Alsen performed in a twenty-week-long concert tour in the United States.[17] He taught at the Hollywood Conservatory of Music in California in the early 1930s,[19] where one of his students was composer and pianist Edith Wire.[20] He was active as a teacher of piano in New York City during the latter part of his life.[2] He died there in 1946.[2]