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Conductor and violinist. Anger met Antonin Dvorak during his engagement with the Provisional Theatre Orchestra, where he played in the second violin section (1862-1868). He later worked as a conductor in various towns and cities in former Austria-Hungary (including Vienna and Salzburg); from the year 1881 he held the post of second conductor at the National Theatre in Prague. Dvorak and Anger spent a lot of time together during the period 1864-5, when they shared lodgings at Senovazne namesti no. 1375. At this time Dvorak was working on his second symphony in B flat major and, according to an insufficiently documented story, we apparently have Anger to thank for its survival: he contributed towards the costs of binding the score, and when Dvorak later succumbed to a feverish bout of self-censorship and wanted to destroy the work, Anger demanded that Dvorak pay back his loan. But the composer was unable to do this, so Anger exacted the score from him as compensation, thus the music was saved from destruction. |