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Johan Wagenaar (1 November 1862 – 17 June 1941) was a Dutch composer and organist.
Life
Born in Utrecht, out of wedlock, he was the son of Cypriaan Gerard Berger van Hengst and Johanna Wagenaar. Wagenaar's parents were of different social strata: his father was an aristocrat, while his mother was of more humble origins.[1] For this reason, Wagenaar's parents were not married, and thus Wagenaar received his mother's name as his family name. While Wagenaar resented that his parents never got married, he was by no means neglected by his father.[2]
Wagenaar evidenced a talent for music as a child. However, he did not begin to receive a formal education in music until age 13, with subsequent instruction in piano, organ, violin, theory, and composition. He was under the tutelage of the composer Richard Hol and the organist Samuel de Lange, Jr. In 1892, he studied with Brahms' friend Heinrich von Herzogenberg in Berlin, specifically taking lessons in counterpoint.
On 23 July 1897, Wagenaar married Dina Petronella van Valkenburg. They had two daughters.[4] He died in Den Haag.
Works
Wagenaar's compositions include operas, cantatas, organ music, and orchestral works.[5] The music of Hector Berlioz had a modest influence on his works, but a much more pronounced influence was Richard Strauss.
In his later years, Wagenaar received an honorary Doctorate of Music from Utrecht University.
Compositions (partial list)
Opera
Proefzingen, humoristic scene in one act, WoO. (1913)
^"Johan Wagenaar". Archived from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). donemus.nl