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Johann Strauss Jr

Johann Strauss II
Johann Strauss II by Fritz Luckhardt.jpg
Johann Strauss II
Born Johann Strauss II
(1825-10-25)October 25, 1825
Vienna, Austrian Empire
Died June 3, 1899(1899-06-03) (aged 73)
Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Occupation Composer

Johann Strauss II (October 25, 1825 — June 3, 1899) — also known as Johann Strauss Jr., the Younger, the Son (German: Sohn), and Johann Baptist Strauss — was an Austrian composer of light music, particularly dance music and operettas. He composed over 500 waltzes, polkas, quadrilles, and other types of dance music. In his lifetime he was known as the “Waltz King” and was largely responsible for popularizing that dance in Vienna. Famous among his waltzes are G’schichten aus dem Wienerwald (Tales from the Vienna Forest, 1868), Wein, Weiber und Gesang (Wine, Women and Song, 1869), Wiener Blut (Vienna Blood, 1873), Rosen aus dem Süden (Roses from the South, 1880), Frühlingsstimmen (Spring Voices, 1882), the Kaiser-Walzer (Emperor Waltz, 1888), and — especially — An der schönen, blauen Donau (On the Beautiful Blue Danube, 1867). Besides, his Die Fledermaus (1874) remains the most celebrated and most frequently performed operetta ever written. Strauss had two younger brothers, Josef and Eduard Strauss, who became composers of light music as well, although never as well known as their elder brother.

Although the name Strauss can be found in reference books frequently with “ß,” Strauss himself wrote his name with a long s and a round s (Strauſs), which was a replacement form for the Fraktur-ß used in antique manuscripts. His family called him “Schani,” derived from the Italian “Gianni,” a nickname.

Strauss was born in St Ulrich near Vienna (now a part of Neubau), Austria, on October 25, 1825, to the composer Johann Strauss I. His paternal great-grandfather was a Hungarian Jew – a fact which the Nazis, who lionised Strauss's music as "so German", later tried to conceal. His father did not want him to become a musician but rather a banker. Nevertheless, Strauss Junior studied the violin secretly as a child with the first violinist of his father's orchestra, Franz Amon. When his father discovered his son secretly practising on a violin one day, he gave him a severe whipping, saying that he was going to beat the music out of the boy. It seems that rather than trying to avoid a Strauss rivalry, the elder Strauss only wanted his son to escape the rigours of a musician's life. It was only when the father abandoned his family for a mistress, Emilie Trampusch (), that the son was able to concentrate fully on a career as a composer with the support of his mother.


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