Composers

Carl Heins

Piano
Voice
Piece
Dance
Gavotte
Fantasia
Lied
Song
Rondo
Character piece
Bagatelle
Waltz
by popularity

#

17 Piano Pieces2 dunkle Augen, Op.2122 Morceaux de salon, Op.2112 Piano Pieces, Op.213 Klavierstücke, Op.1093 Salonstücke, Op.1066 Piano Pieces, Op.99

A

Aus Berg und Thal, Op.135

B

Bunte Blätter, Op.270Buntes Allerlei, Op.41

C

Chicagoer Weltausstellungs-Gavotte, Op.130

D

Die Spieluhr

F

FrauenlobFrohe Botschaft, Op.61Frühlings Einkehr, Op.50

G

Goldne Myrthen, Op.60

H

Hirtenidyll, Op.174

R

Reisebilder, Op.112Rosenblätter, Op.110

S

Schweizers GrussSenners Traum, Op.171

T

Tanzstunden-Kränzchen, Op.229Traum der Jugend, Op.64

U

Um die Linde, Op.162

V

Vöglein auf dem Baume, Op.230Von der Wanderschaft zurück!

Z

Zum Vorspielen, Op.133Zur Aufmunterung, Op.12Zur Maienzeit, Op.233
Wikipedia
Carl Heins (8 June 1859 - 10 September 1923) was a German pianist, and a composer of light salon music in classical music style. He wrote both solo piano works and parlor songs.
Heins' pieces show a special pianoesque ability to fashion pretty melodies picturesquely in the salon style of the time. His competency on the keyboard led him to perform and compose. He composed the song 'Zwei Dunkle Augen', which was recorded by the tenor Fritz Wunderlich. Stylistically his music is similar to that of his older compatriot Carl Bohm.
Robert Leonhardt, an operatic baritone who sang with the New York Metropolitan Opera company between 1913 and 1922, made numerous recordings for many major record labels, both in Europe and in the United States. An early recording he made on Gramophone 42325 with matrix number 1113B[54] was "Zwei dunkle Augen" by Carl Heins. Leonhardt recorded it onto a 78rpm in October 1901 when he was 24.