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Victor Urbancic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dr. Victor Urbancic, Austrian composer in Iceland. Photograph by Jón Kaldal.

Dr. Victor Urbancic or Viktor Ernest Johann von Urbantschitsch (9 August 1903 – 4 April 1958) was an Austrian composer, conductor, teacher and music scholar from Vienna. He emigrated to Iceland in 1938. His wife, Melitta, came from a Jewish family. Urbancic stayed for the second half of his life in Iceland and had a big influence[1] on the music development in the country at the time.

Urbancic worked as teacher and director of the opera studio at the Conservatory of Graz before he came to Iceland in 1938. He also was lecturer of musicology of the University of Graz. In Iceland he was very important for the music-life. He became music director of the Icelandic National Theater in Reykjavík.[2] He conducted the first opera in Iceland which was Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi in 1951. He taught at the Reykjavík College of Music. He was organist and choir director of the Landakotskirkja in Reykjavík. Urbancic died on Good Friday in 1958 in Reykjavík.

He is the grandson of Viktor Urbantschitsch through his father, Dr. Ernst Urbantschitsch, and related to Christoph Waltz through the latter's mother Elisabeth Urbancic.

A recent book by Icelandic musicologist Árni Heimir Ingólfsson, Music at World’s End: Three Exiled Musicians from Nazi Germany and Austria and Their Contribution to Music in Iceland, discusses Urbancic’s life and career in detail.[3]

Selected works

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  • Caprices mignons for piano, Op. 1
  • Sonatina in G major for piano, Op. 2
  • Sonata No. 1 in F minor for violin and piano, Op. 3
  • Sonata No. 2 for violin and piano, Op. 5
  • Vier Lieder (4 Songs), Op. 6
  • Partita for cello and piano, Op. 7
  • Elizabeth for voice and piano, Op. 8
  • Fantasie und Fuge for viola and piano, Op. 9 (1937)
  • Orchesterkonzert (Concerto for Orchestra), Op. 11
  • Fimm Þættir (5 Factors) for 2 trumpets, horn, 2 trombones and piano, Op. 12
  • Concertino for 3 saxophones and string orchestra, Op. 13
  • Ballade for violin and piano
  • Gamanforleikur (Festive Prelude) in C major for orchestra
  • Konzertrondo (Concert Rondo) for 2 pianos
  • Mouvement de valse for piano
  • Ouvertüre zu einer Komödie (Overture to a Comedy) for orchestra (1952)
  • Sonata in G major for cello and piano

Selected recordings

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Object Metadata @ LexM".
  2. ^ Rudolf Habringer: Emigration an den Rand der Welt. Die Geschichte des Musikers Victor Urbancic, in: Zwischenwelt. Literatur, Widerstand, Exil, Jg. 20, H. 2, Wien: 2003, S. 33-41.
  3. ^ Ingólfsson, Árni Heimir (2025). "Music at World's End: Three Exiled Musicians from Nazi Germany and Austria and Their Contribution to Music in Iceland".