Maria Schüppel

Maria Schüppel (28 May 1923 – 27 June 2011) [1] [2] was a German composer, educator, pianist and pioneering music therapist who composed works for lyre and voice, and experimented with electronic music.

After her father’s death, her family moved to Görlitz, where she studied piano with Eberhard Wenzel.

In 1950, Schüppel found a job in East Berlin, where she gave harpsichord and clavichord recitals and studied the trautonium (an early electronic synthesizer) with Oskar Sala.

She worked at the German University of Music (today the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler Berlin) until 1957 when she moved to West Berlin to focus on music therapy.

She traveled throughout Europe and studied or collaborated with Hans-Heinrich Engel, Karl König, Anny von Lange, Hermann Pfrogner, Edmund Pracht, Gotthard Starke, and Rudolph Treichler.