Paul's parents were Ludwig Pisk, a secular Jewish lawyer, and Eugenie Pollack, a Protestant. Paul was the elder of two sons; his younger brother was named Otto. They were raised Protestant. Their mother died when Paul was four. Ludwig remarried and his second wife also bore a son, Hans. Ludwig was against Paul's becoming a musician but respected academia and relented when he learned Paul could get a doctorate in musicology. Otto and Paul both served in the Habsburg Army in World War I. Paul was a supply sergeant for the cavalry. (They did not serve in the same unit). Otto was stationed in Montenegro and, according to family lore, was one of the soldiers who built the scale model of Montenegro that can still be seen in the Cetinje Palace today.
Paul married Martha Maria Frank in 1919. She was also a student of music. She was from a once-wealthy family from the Habsburg region near Czernowitz. Martha bore him two sons: Gerhardt Manuel in 1922 and Georg Michael in 1932. Gerhardt's name was Anglicized to Gerald when the family emigrated to the U.S. Gerald died of "valley fever" in his 20s. George attended Yale, got his PhD in English literature at the University of Texas, and married Rita Gurley in 1958. They had two children: Camille (born 1960) and Gerald (born 1962, named for Gerhardt).
Martha Pisk died in 1973, only a few months after she and Paul had moved back to Austin, Texas, from St. Louis, Missouri. After her death, Paul moved to Los Angeles and remarried. He had known his second wife, singer and voice coach Irene Hanna (born Johanna Schwartz) for many years. Hanna died in 1981. Paul Pisk died in Los Angeles in 1990.
PA Pisk, "Max Reger, Briefwechsel mit Herzog Georg II von Sachsen-Meiningen." Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 3, No. 2,149-151. Summer, 1950. JSTOR829816
PA Pisk – "Subdivision of Tones: A Modern Music Theory and Philosophy" Bulletin of the American Musicological Society, 1942, v.36 JSTOR829215
PA Pisk "The Fugue Themes in Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier" Bulletin of the American Musicological Society, No. 8 (Oct., 1945), pp. 28–29- JSTOR829395
Compositions :
Der große Regenmacher, 1931 (szenisches Ballett)
Schattenseite, 1931 (Monodram)
Passacaglia for orchestra
String quartet
Notes
^Teresa Palomo Acosta (April 4, 2001). "In Memoriam: Paul A. Pisk". Faculty Council Biographical Sketches. University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
^ abWolz, Larry. "Pisk, Paul Amadeus". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
^Winter, Robert (1996). Das Akademische Gymnasium in Wien: Vergangenheit und Gegenwart. Böhlau Verlag Wien. p. 199. ISBN978-3-205-98485-6.
^Bailey, Kathryn (1998). The life of Webern. Cambridge University Press. p. 37. ISBN978-0-521-57566-9.
^Hailey, Christopher (1993). Franz Schreker, 1878-1934: a cultural biography. CUP Archive. p. 338. ISBN978-0-521-39255-6.
References
Jennifer Ruth Doctor, The BBC and Ultra-modern Music, 1922–1936: Shaping a Nation's Tastes (1999) – Cambridge University Press
J Glowacki. Paul A. Pisk: Essays in His Honor (1966) – College of Fine Arts, University of Texas
E Antokoletz, "A Survivor of the Vienna Schoenberg Circle: An Interview with Paul A. Pisk" Tempo, Tempo, New Ser., No. 154, 15–21.(1985) JSTOR946353