Selmar Bagge (30 June 1823 – 16 July 1896)[1] was a German composer, music journalist and academic.[2]
Biography
Bagge was born in Coburg in 1823; his father Johann Bagge was rector of the Latin school there. In 1837 he went to Prague Conservatory, studying composition with Friedrich Dionys Weber and cello with Johann Hüttner. For two years from 1840 he was first cello in the municipal theatre in Lemberg (present-day Lviv).[3]
He resigned his professorship in 1855. He began to write about music; in 1855 in Monatsschrift für Theater und Musik he wrote articles critical of Vienna Conservatory, later dealing with general musical topics. In 1859 he became editor of Deutsche Musikzeitung, in which he was one of the first in Vienna to promote the music of Schumann and Brahms.[1][3]
George Grove wrote in A Dictionary of Music and Musicians: "Bagge is a strong conservative and an able writer. Beethoven and Schumann are his models in art, and he has no mercy on those who differ from him.... His music is correct and fluent, but poor in invention and melody."[4]