- Nissel, Siegmund Walter
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▪ 2009“Siggi”German-born Austrian violinistborn Jan. 3, 1922, Munich, Ger.died May 21, 2008, London, Eng.toured for almost 40 years with the chamber group the Amadeus Quartet, best known for its repertoire of music by Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Haydn, and Schubert. Nissel was evacuated to Britain in 1938. While interned (1940) on the Isle of Man as an enemy alien, he met violinists Norbert Brainin and Peter Schidlof. Once released, the three men were introduced to cellist Martin Lovett and formed a quartet, with Schidlof playing viola. Although the group was originally called the Brainin Quartet, the name was changed, at Nissel's suggestion, to the Amadeus Quartet when the group debuted (1948) in London. With Nissel playing second violin and serving as unofficial manager, the group enjoyed enormous popularity from its inception. Nissel concerned himself with ensuring that the quartet had an adequate musical balance and frequently mediated differences between other members. They toured worldwide and made hundreds of recordings over the next four decades, but after Schidlof's death (1987), the quartet broke up. Thereafter Nissel concentrated on teaching music at the Royal Academy of Music in London and the Musikhochschule in Cologne, Ger. Nissel's life was the subject of the 2002 film Deutschland Deutschland. He was made OBE in 1970.
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Universalium. 2010.