Ferdinand Giovanni Schediwy

Ferdinand Giovanni Schediwy (2 June 1801[1] – 12 October 1877) was a Norwegian conductor, composer, organist and teacher. He immigrated from Prague to Bergen, Norway, where he became very active in the musical environment. He was Edvard Grieg's first music teacher and became leader of the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra (then called Harmonien) in 1827.[2]

The Coral Quartet, Schediwy

Ferdinand Giovanni Schediwy is not related to Franz Schediwy, founder and owner of a company under the same name in Ludwigsburg, Germany, which manufactured and sold fine brass instruments for orchestral use. The firm, F. Schediwy, manufactured a line of well built brass that is an uncommon find today. A few examples can be seen on the internet at http://www.horn-u-copia.net/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1130591348/3[permanent dead link]

Norbert Bobble of Ditzingen, Germany, at his Musik Bopple Brass Manufacturing and Repair Shop, is the last of the trained lineage repair experts of the F. Schediwy brass instruments. His website can found in English and German at http://www.jbs-brass.com/ Archived 2013-01-26 at archive.today

References edit

  1. ^ Ferdinand G. Schediwy: český muzikant v Bergenu
  2. ^ "Ferdinand Giovanni Schediwy". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved January 1, 2020.