Max Schlossberg (5 November 1873 – 23 September 1936) was a Jewish-Baltic trumpeter, conductor, composer, and teacher. His legacy is a large number of successful trumpet students and the method book, Daily Drills and Technical Studies.

Max Schlossberg
Birth nameMax Schlossberg
Born(1873-11-05)November 5, 1873
Liepāja, Latvia
OriginLatvia; Berlin; New York City
DiedSeptember 23, 1936(1936-09-23) (aged 62)
Bethlehem, New Hampshire, U.S.
Occupation(s)Musician, trumpeter, conductor, teacher
InstrumentTrumpet
Years active1897–1936

Life

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Max Schlossberg was born in Libau, Courland, Russian Empire, now Liepāja, Latvia in 1873 to Nathan Schlossberg and an unknown mother.[1] He went to the Moscow Conservatory at the age of nine. He emigrated first to the United States in 1894 as his father had done previously, but returned to Riga shortly thereafter for compulsory military service which he never completed.[2] There, Schlossberg married Jennie Lohak in 1902 before emigrating to the United States again that same year.

In 1910, Max Schlossberg moved to The Bronx in New York City for his career.[3] He spent the remainder of his career performing and teaching there. He had three children with Jennie: Charles, Katherine Benjamin, and another daughter who would marry Harry Freistadt. In 1936, Schlossberg suffered a heart attack which prompted him to visit Bethlehem, New Hampshire, where he would later die.

Career

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Following his time at the Moscow Conservatory, Max Schlossberg played trumpet in Saint Petersburg. After moving to Berlin, he studied under Julius Kosleck and toured with Arthur Nikisch, Hans Richter, and Felix Weingartner. Following his return to Latvia in the 1890s, he supported himself by conducting.

Once in New York City, he performed with the New York Philharmonic for the remainder of his life, first under Gustav Mahler and finally under Arturo Toscanini. He was part of the faculty of Juilliard School.[4] Some of his many trumpet students include Louis Davidson, Harry Glantz, Saul Caston, Renold Schilke, William Vacchiano, Mannie Klein, Bernie Glow, and James Stamp.

Daily Drills and Technical Studies

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Harry Freistadt compiled the manuscripts left behind by his teacher and father-in-law, Max Schlossberg, after his death. The resulting method book was Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet, first published in 1937 by J. & F. Hill before the copyright passed along to M. Baron Company in 1938. Max Schlossberg's son, Charles, edited an arrangement of the method for trombone titled Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trombone.

The daily drills consist of 156 exercises divided into eight parts: long note drills (37 exercises), intervals (11 exercises), octave drills (10 exercises), lip drills (11 exercises), chord drills (19 exercises), scale drills (27 exercises), chromatic scale drills (13 exercises), and short études (28 exercises). The étude labeled as exercise 156, now attributed to Guillaume Balay, has been omitted from the book after the 1941 edition.

References

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  1. ^ "Max Schlossberg". O.J.'s Trumpet Page. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  2. ^ Nussbaum, Jeffrey; Hosticka, Frank (June 2009). "An Examination of Max Schlossberg's Daily Drills and Technical Studies for Trumpet and the Existing Schlossberg Manuscripts" (PDF). International Trumpet Guild Journal: 2–15. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Max Schlossberg, 64, Noted Musician, Dies". The New York Times. 24 September 1936. Archived (PDF) from the original on 31 December 2002. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  4. ^ Freistadt, Harry (1937). Foreword. Daily Drills and Technical Studies. By Schlossberg, Max. West Mystic, CT: M. Baron Company. p. ii.