He married in 1936. He worked at the Munich radio station from 1936 to 1938. In 1939, he became professor of composition at the Mozarteum in Salzburg.
He was a soldier in the final years of World War II, fighting on the Western front. After the war he worked as an organist and choral director in Mittersill, Austria. There he met Anton Webern, who made a significant impression on him. In 1947, he began to teach again at the Mozarteum, eventually becoming a professor.
In 1956, he married pianist Eleonore Jorhan.
Like his friend Carl Orff, he work in extensively in pedagogy. He was also an organist and choir director.[1]
Totentanz nach Holbein for Piano & Small Orchestra (1947), written after the shock of WWII, inspired by Holbein's Totentanz woodcuts, and making extensive use of the folksong Der grimmig Tod.[1]
"Im Anfang war der Rhythmus", Heinrichshofen Verlag 1977, ISBN3-7959-0217-7
References
12Scholz, Gottfried (1993). Österreichische Musik der Gegenwart: eine Anthologie zur Schallplattenreihe des Österreichische Musikrates. Wien: Doblinger. ISBN3-900695-22-9. OCLC31984326.
↑"Bresgen, Cesar". Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon (in German). 25 May 2001. Retrieved 12 November 2020.