Month: October 2025

New articles in our Library

The library of our study group contains an extensive collection of philatelic magazine articles from all areas of music philately. These articles can be read online by our members.

The new articles deal with the following topics, among others: Yehudi Menuhin / Semperoper / Comicstrip / Johann-Baptiste Krumpholz / East German Culture Days 1941 / Bookmarks and record postcards / Shepherd’s Dance Couple / Wacken Open Air / Augsburg Peace Celebration / Antonio Salieri / German Fairy Tale Route

 


Go to the archive (members only)

Please also visit the Blog “Musical Stamps”
by our American member Jayson Dobney
 

New Postmarks 2025

In many countries there are special postmarks to commemorate musical events or first day cancellations for new music stamps. The list of music related postmarks in the members-only-section is updated several times per month.

 


27.7.: Germany / USA / Serbia / Poland / India / Great Britain / Italy / Uruguay
13.9.: Armenia / Croatia / Germany / Japan / USA / India / Italy / Czech Republic / Guatemala / Latvia
14.9.: Paraguay
28.9.: Germany / Bulgaria / Spain
5.10.: Poland / Germany / Italia / Moldova / USA

 

Music postmarks 2025 (members only)

New Postmarks 2024

In many countries there are special postmarks to commemorate musical events or first day cancellations for new music stamps. The list of music related postmarks in the members-only-section is updated several times per month.

 


22.3.: Armenia / France
30.4.: Spain
1.5.: Great Britain / Slowenia
14.9.: Austria / Slovakia / United Kingdom
5.10.: India / Poland

 

Music postmarks 2024 (members only)

New Stamps 2025

Every year, numerous new stamps are issued on the theme of music. The list of new issues published in the members-only-section of our website is updated several times per month.
 

31.8.25: Indonesia / Japan
6.9.25: Armenia / Croatia / Germany / Isle of Man / Monaco
13.9.25: Australia / Great Britain / Ireland / Japan / Monaco / Paraguay
21.9.25: China / Hungary / Portugal / San Marino
4.10.25: Australia / France/ Lithuania / Macau / Moldova / Netherlands / Norway / Poland / Romania / Slovenia

Stamps Europe (members only)  Stamps Overseas (members only)
 
Planned issues 2025 (members only)

New Checklists

The members only section of our website contains a collection of checklists about various topics of music philately. The collection is constantly expanding and can be read online by our members.
 


New enhancements:
4.10.24: Postal Stationery of Romania (updated)
7.12.24: Giacomo Puccini (new)
10.12.24: Clarinet & Saxophone (Excel / updated)
4.2.25: Theaters, Opera Houses, Concert Halls (updated)
2.3.25: Postal Stationery of Ukraine (new)
4.5.25: Frederic Chopin (new)
31.5.25: Faust (new)
1.10.25: Music Stamps (Excel / updated)

Go to the checklists (members only)  Checklists Postal Stationery (members only)

Stamp of the Month: October 2025

Johann Strauss II

The Austrian composer Johann Baptist Strauss was born on October 25, 1825, in St. Ulrich. He died on June 3, 1899, in Vienna. October 2025 marks the 200th anniversary of his birth.
 
Johann Strauss was nicknamed “Son” to distinguish him from his father of the same name, who feared competition within his own family and therefore actually envisioned a civil service career for his sons. Against his father’s wishes, his mother enabled young Johann to study music. Already the son’s very first performance in a Viennese concert café was a huge success. After his father’s death, he merged the two orchestras.
In 1848, Johann Strauss sympathized with the insurgents of the German Revolution. This led to some of his compositions being banned, and despite his popularity, he temporarily fell out of favor at

Austria 18.1.2025
the royal and imperial court. In 1863, he was nevertheless appointed music director of the Imperial and Royal Court Ball. From then on, he also composed dance music for the court balls he conducted,


Serbia 27.6.2025
with sheet music of the waltz
“The Beautiful Blue Danube”
including the waltz “The Beautiful Blue Danube” in 1867, which is now considered the unofficial anthem of Austria.
In 1864, Johann Strauss met Jacques Offenbach, who introduced him to operetta. In 1871, he performed his first operetta, “Indigo and the 40 Robbers,” in Vienna, and in 1874, his arguably best-known operetta, “Die Fledermaus,” premiered at the Theater an der Wien. The work was added to the repertoire of the Vienna State Opera in 1894 and is the only operetta performed there to this day.
 
The oeuvre of the composer, internationally known as the “Waltz King,” includes twenty operettas, around 500 waltzes, polkas, and marches, as well as a ballet and an opera.


The video shows André Rieu and his orchestra performing the waltz “The Beautiful Blue Danube” by Johann Strauss II., recorded live on September 16, 2011 in Vienna’s Schönbrunn Palace with dancers from the famous Austrian dance school Elmayer.