Heymann studied at
Cologne Conservatory with
Ferdinand Hiller and upon his debut was called the "new
Liszt" or the "second
Rubinstein" by some experts. In spite of many interruptions to his early and fast rise to fame by psychological suffering, he was considered one of the most important pianists of his generation and was also known as a composer. He succeeded to in teaching at the
Hoch Conservatory in
Frankfurt am Main from 1879 to 1880. Following his period in Frankfurt, he returned to live in Bingen. After the 1880s the name of the brilliant young Heymann's name disappeared from the musical world. He spent the last third of his life in an institution. Heymann's repertoire included the virtuoso piano concertos of
Ferdinand Ries,
Johann Nepomuk Hummel,
John Field,
Moscheles,
Reinecke,
Chopin,
Mendelssohn and
Schumann. Among his students in Frankfurt were the American pianist and composer
Edward MacDowell whom he found to be so talented, that in 1880 he suggested, when illness forced him to resign, that MacDowell be his successor at the Hoch Conservatory, at the age of 19. == References ==