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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ART OF MUSIC - VOL. 7 ***
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* * * * *
THE ART OF MUSIC
The Art of Music
A Comprehensive Library of Information
for Music Lovers and Musicians
Editor-in-Chief
DANIEL GREGORY MASON
Columbia University
Associate Editors
EDWARD B. HILL LELAND HALL
Harvard University Past Professor, Univ. of Wisconsin
Managing Editor
CÉSAR SAERCHINGER
Modern Music Society of New York
In Fourteen Volumes
Profusely Illustrated
[Illustration]
NEW YORK
THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC
[Illustration: Home Concert]
_Painting by Fritz von Uhde_
THE ART OF MUSIC: VOLUME SEVEN
Pianoforte and Chamber Music
Department Editor:
LELAND HALL, M.A.
Past Professor of Musical History, University of Wisconsin
Introduction by
HAROLD BAUER
[Illustration]
NEW YORK
THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC
Copyright, 1915, by
THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC, Inc.
[All Rights Reserved]
PREFATORY NOTE
The editor has not attempted to give within the limits of this single
volume a detailed history of the development of both pianoforte and
chamber music. He has emphasized but very little the historical
development of either branch of music, and he has not pretended to
discuss exhaustively all the music which might be comprehended under
the two broad titles.
The chapters on pianoforte music are intended to show how the great
masters adapted themselves to the exigencies of the instrument, and in
what manner they furthered the development of the difficult technique
of writing for it. Also, because the piano may be successfully treated
in various ways, and because it lends itself to the expression of
widely diverse moods, there is in these chapters some discussion of the
great masterpieces of pianoforte literature in detail.
The arrangement of material is perhaps not usual. What little has been
said about the development of the piano, for example, has been said in
connection with Beethoven, who was the first to avail himself fully of
the advantages the piano offered over the harpsichord. A discussion, or
rather an analysis, of the pianoforte style has been put in the chapter
on Chopin, who is even today the one outstanding master of it.
In the part of the book dealing with chamber music the material has
been somewhat arbitrarily arranged according to combinations of
instruments. The string quartets, the pianoforte trios, quartets, and
quintets, the sonatas for violin and piano, and other combinations
have been treated separately. The selection of some works for a more
or less detailed discussion, and the omission of even the mention of
others, will undoubtedly seem unjustifiable to some; but the editor
trusts at least that those he has chosen for discussion may illumine
somewhat the general progress of chamber music from the time of Haydn
to the present day.
For the chapters on violin music before Corelli and the beginnings of
chamber music we are indebted to Mr. Edward Kilenyi, whose initials
appear at the end of these chapters.
LELAND HALL
INTRODUCTION
The term Chamber Music, in its modern sense, cannot perhaps be strictly
defined. In general it is music which is fine rather than broad,
or in which, at any rate, there is a wealth of detail which can be
followed and appreciated only in a relatively small room. It is not,
on the whole, brilliantly colored like orchestral music. The string
quartet, for example, is conspicuously monochrome. Nor is chamber
music associated with the drama, with ritual, pageantry, or display,
as are the opera and the mass. It is--to use a well worn term--very
nearly always absolute music, and, as such, must be not only perfect in
detail, but beautiful in proportion and line, if it is to be effective.
As far as externals are concerned, chamber music is made up of music
for a solo instrument, with or without accompaniment (excluding, of
course, concertos and other like forms, which require the orchestra,
and music for the organ, which can hardly be dissociated from
cathedrals and other large places), and music for small groups of
instruments, such as the string trio and the string quartet, and
combinations of diverse instruments with the piano. Many songs, too,
sound best in intimate surroundings; but one thinks of them as in a
class by themselves, not as a part of the literature of chamber music.
With very few exceptions, all the great composers have sought
expression in chamber music at one time or another; and their
compositions in this branch seem often to be the finest and the most
intimate presentation of their genius. Haydn is commonly supposed
to have found himself first in his string quartets. Mozart’s great
quartets are almost unique among his compositions as an expression
of his genius absolutely uninfluenced by external circumstances and
occasion. None of Beethoven’s music is more profound nor more personal
than his last quartets. Even among the works of the later composers,
who might well have been seduced altogether away from these fine and
exacting forms by the intoxicating glory of the orchestra, one finds
chamber music of a rich and special value.
This special value consists in part in the refined and unfailing
musical skill with which the composers have handled their slender
material; but more in the quality of the music itself. The great
works of chamber music, no matter how profound, speak in the language
of intimacy. They show no signs of the need to impress or overwhelm
an audience. Perhaps no truly great music does. But operas and even
symphonies must be written with more or less consideration for external
circumstances, whereas in the smaller forms, composers seem to be
concerned only with the musical inspiration which they feel the desire
to express. They speak to an audience of understanding friends, as it
were, before whom they may reveal themselves without thought of the
effectiveness of their speech. They seem in them to have consulted only
their ideals. They have taken for granted the sympathetic attention of
their audience.
The piano has always played a commanding rôle in the history of chamber
music. From the early days when the harpsichord with its figured bass
was the foundation for almost all music, both vocal and instrumental,
few forms in chamber music have developed independently of it, or of
the piano, its successor. The string quartet and a few combinations of
wind instruments offer the only conspicuous exceptions. The mass of
chamber music is made up of pianoforte trios, quartets, and quintets,
of sonatas for pianoforte and various other instruments; and, indeed,
the great part of pianoforte music is essentially chamber music.
It may perhaps seem strange to characterize as remarkably fine and
intimate the music which has been written for an instrument often
stigmatized as essentially unmusical. But the piano has attracted
nearly all the great composers, many of whom were excellent pianists;
and the music which they have written for it is indisputably of the
highest and most lasting worth. There are many pianoforte sonatas which
are all but symphonies, not only in breadth of form, but in depth of
meaning. Some composers, notably Beethoven and Liszt, demanded of
the piano the power of the orchestra. Yet on the whole the mass of
pianoforte music remains chamber music.
The pianoforte style is an intricate style, and to be effective must be
perfectly finished. The instrument sounds at its best in a small hall.
In a large one its worst characteristics are likely to come all too
clearly to the surface. And though it is in many ways the most powerful
of all the instruments, truly beautiful playing does not call upon its
limits of sound, but makes it a medium of fine and delicately shaded
musical thought. To regard it as an instrument suited primarily to big
and grandiose effects is grievously to misunderstand it, and is likely,
furthermore, to make one overlook the possibilities of tone color
which, though often denied it, it none the less possesses.
In order to study intelligently the mechanics, or, if you will, the
art of touch upon the piano, and in order to comprehend the variety
of tone-color which can be produced from it, one must recognize at
the outset the fact that the piano is an instrument of percussion.
Its sounds result from the blows of hammers upon taut metal strings.
With the musical sound given out by these vibrating strings must
inevitably be mixed the dull and unmusical sound of the blow that set
them vibrating. The trained ear will detect not only the thud of the
hammer against the string, but that of the finger against the key, and
that of the key itself upon its base. The study of touch and tone upon
the piano is the study of the combination and the control of these two
elements of sound, the one musical, the other unmusical.
The pianist can acquire but relatively little control over the musical
sounds of his instrument. He can make them soft and loud, but he
cannot, as the violinist can, make a single tone grow from soft to
loud and die away to soft again. The violinist or the singer both
makes and controls tone, the one by his bow, the other by his breath;
the pianist, in comparison with them, but makes tone. Having caused a
string to vibrate by striking it through a key, he cannot even sustain
these vibrations. They begin at once to weaken; the sound at once grows
fainter. Therefore he has to make his effects with a volume of sounds
which has been aptly said to be ever vanishing.
On the other hand, these sounds have more endurance than those of the
xylophone, for example; and in their brief span of failing life the
skillful pianist may work somewhat upon them according to his will.
He may cut them exceedingly short by allowing the dampers to fall
instantaneously upon the strings, thus stopping all vibrations. He may
even prolong a few sounds, a chord let us say, by using the sustaining
pedal. This lifts the dampers from all the strings, so that all vibrate
in sympathy with the tones of the chord and reënforce them, so to
speak. This may be done either at the moment the notes of the chord are
struck, or considerably later, after they have begun appreciably to
weaken. In the latter case the ear can detect the actual reënforcement
of the failing sounds.
Moreover, the use of the pedal serves to affect somewhat the color
of the sounds of the instrument. All differences in timbre depend on
overtones; and if the pianist lifts all dampers from the strings by the
pedals, he will hear the natural overtones of his chord brought into
prominence by means of the sympathetic vibrations of other strings he
has not struck. He can easily produce a mass of sound which strongly
suggests the organ, in the tone color of which the shades of overtones
are markably evident.
The study of such effects will lead him beyond the use of the pedal
into some of the niceties of pianoforte touch. He will find himself
able to suppress some overtones and bring out others by emphasizing
a note here and there in a chord of many notes, especially in an
arpeggio, and by slighting others. Such an emphasis, it is true, may
give to a series of chords an internal polyphonic significance; but if
not made too prominent, will tend rather to color the general sound
than to make an effect of distinct drawing.
It will be observed that in the matter of so handling the volume of
musical sound, prolonging it and slightly coloring it by the use of
the pedal or by skillful emphasis of touch, the pianist’s attention is
directed ever to the after-sounds, so to speak, of his instrument. He
is interested, not in the sharp, clear beginning of the sound, but in
what follows it. He finds in the very deficiencies of the instrument
possibilities of great musical beauty. It is hardly too much to say,
then, that the secret of a beautiful or sympathetic touch, which has
long been considered to be hidden in the method of striking the keys,
may be found quite as much in the treatment of sounds after the keys
have been struck. It is a mystery which can by no means be wholly
solved by a muscular training of the hands; for a great part of such
training is concerned only with the actual striking of the keys.
We have already said that striking the keys must produce more or less
unmusical sounds. These sounds are not without great value. They
emphasize rhythm, for example, and by virtue of them the piano is
second to no instrument in effects of pronounced, stimulating rhythm.
The pianist wields in this regard almost the power of the drummer to
stir men to frenzy, a power which is by no means to be despised. In
martial music and in other kinds of vigorous music the piano is almost
without shortcomings. But inasmuch as a great part of pianoforte music
is not in this vigorous vein, but rather in a vein of softer, more
imaginative beauty, the pianist must constantly study how to subject
these unmusical sounds to the after-sounds which follow them. In this
study he will come upon the secret of the legato style of playing.
If the violinist wishes to play a phrase in a smooth legato style,
he does not use a new stroke of his bow for each note. If he did so,
he would virtually be attacking the separate notes, consequently
emphasizing them, and punctuating each from the other. Fortunately for
him, he need not do so; but the pianist cannot do otherwise. Each note
he plays must be struck from the strings of his instrument by a hammer.
He can only approximate a legato style--by concealing, in one way or
another, the sounds which accompany this blow.
The so-called legato touch on the keyboard is one in which the fingers
cling closely to the keys, and by which, therefore, the keys are
pressed down rather than struck. In this way the player actually
eliminates one of the three sounds of attack, namely, that of the
finger hitting the key. To a certain extent he also minimizes the
sound of the key hitting its base, a sound which, moreover, the felt
cushion of the base does much to lessen. At the risk of throwing all
preconceived theories of legato touch into question, it may be said
that this unpleasant sound can be wholly eliminated by a sort of light,
quick, lifting touch, which, without driving the key down even to its
base, will yet cause the hammer to spring up and hit the string above
it.
By such means as these the pianist can at least subdue, if he cannot
silence, the noises which in some measure must inevitably accompany his
playing. The more he can do so, the smoother and pleasanter his playing
will become. In so far as the tone of the pianoforte can be sensuous
and warm, he can make it so in the measure in which he avoids giving
prominence to the blows and thuds which ever threaten it perilously.
The player who pounds is the player whose ear has not taken into
account this harsh and unmusical accompaniment of noises. The player
who can make the piano sing is he who, in listening to the mysterious
vibrations of its after-sounds, has come to recognize and subdue those
noises which too often interrupt and obscure them.
The value of the piano as an instrument of musical expression will
always be the subject of discussion. It has undoubtedly two great
shortcomings, which place the pianist under serious disadvantages. It
cannot sustain tone, and the tones which can be produced on it will
ever be more or less marred by unmusical noises which cannot often
be avoided. But these very shortcomings make possible some peculiar
beauties and a peculiar vitality which characterize pianoforte music
alone. And, apart from these, in its great power, its possibilities
of dynamic nuances, and its unlimited scope of harmonic effects,
it is not excelled, if, indeed, it is equalled, by any other single
instrument.
Finally, let it be remembered that there is in a great deal of
pianoforte music--in that of Mozart, Schubert, Schumann, Chopin, Brahms
and Debussy--almost unfailingly an intimacy of mood. It is for this
quality of intimacy that pianoforte music will long be cherished as
chamber music. It is a quality of which the player who wishes not only
to interpret great music, but also to win what there is of genuine
musical beauty from his instrument, should ever be mindful.
HAROLD BAUER
November, 1915.
CONTENTS OF VOLUME SEVEN
PAGE
PREFATORY NOTE vii
INTRODUCTION BY HAROLD BAUER ix
PART I. THE CLASSICAL PERIOD OF PIANOFORTE MUSIC
CHAPTER
I. KEYBOARD INSTRUMENTS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF KEYBOARD
TECHNIQUE 1
Keyboard instruments and their derivation; the clavichord
and its mechanism; the harpsichord and its relatives,
virginal, _cembalo_, etc.; technique and use of the
harpsichord--The beginnings of harpsichord music; the
Gabrielis and Merulo; early forms; the influence of
harmony and the crystallization of form--Frescobaldi
and other organist-composers for harpsichord; early
English virginal collections; John Bull, etc.--Genesis
of the suite; influence of lute-music; Froberger, Denis
Gaultier, etc.; Kuhnau--Development of the harpsichord
‘style’; great players: Chambonnières, etc.
II. THE GOLDEN AGE OF HARPSICHORD MUSIC 40
The period and the masters of the ‘Golden Age’--Domenico
Scarlatti; his virtuosity; Scarlatti’s ‘sonatas’;
Scarlatti’s technical effects; his style and form; æsthetic
value of his music; his contemporaries--François Couperin,
_le Grand_; Couperin’s clavecin compositions; the ‘musical
portraits’; ‘program music’--The quality and style of
his music; his contemporaries, Daquin and Rameau--John
Sebastian Bach; Bach as virtuoso; as teacher; his technical
reform; his style--Bach’s fugues and their structure--The
suites of Bach: the French suites, the English suites,
the Partitas--The preludes, toccatas and fantasies;
concertos; the ‘Goldberg Variations’--Bach’s importance;
his contemporary Handel.
III. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PIANOFORTE SONATA 89
Vienna as the home of the sonata; definition of
‘sonata’--Origin and history of the standard sonata
cycle; relationship of sonata movements--Evolution of the
‘triplex’ form: Pergolesi’s ‘singing allegro’; the union of
aria and binary forms; Padre Martini’s sonatas, Scarlatti’s
true sonata in C; Domenico Alberti; the Alberti bass; the
transitional period of the sonata--Sonata writers before
Haydn and Mozart; J. C. Bach; Muzio Clementi--Schubert and
Wagenseil; C. P. E. Bach; F. W. Rust.
IV. HAYDN, MOZART AND BEETHOVEN 131
The ‘Viennese period’ and the three great
classics--Joseph Haydn; Haydn’s clavier sonatas;
the Variations in F minor--W. A. Mozart; Mozart as
pianist and improvisator; Mozart’s sonatas; his piano
concertos--Ludwig van Beethoven; evolution of the modern
pianoforte--Musical qualities of Beethoven’s piano music;
Beethoven’s technical demands; his pianoforte sonatas;
his piano concertos; conclusion.
V. PIANOFORTE MUSIC AT THE TIME OF BEETHOVEN 175
The broadening of technical possibilities and its
consequences--Minor disciples of Mozart and Beethoven:
J. N. Hummel; J. B. Cramer; John Field; other
contemporaries--The pioneers in new forms: Weber and
Schubert; technical characteristics of Weber’s style;
Weber’s sonatas, etc.; the _Konzertstück_; qualities of
Weber’s pianoforte music--Franz Schubert as pianoforte
composer; his sonatas; miscellaneous works; the
impromptus; the Moments musicals--The Weber-Schubert era
and the dawn of the Romantic spirit.
PART II. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD OF PIANOFORTE MUSIC
VI. MENDELSSOHN, SCHUMANN AND BRAHMS 211
Influence of musical romanticism on pianoforte
literature--Mendelssohn’s pianoforte music, its
merits and demerits; the ‘Songs without Words’;
Prelude and Fugue in D minor; _Variations Sérieuses_;
Mendelssohn’s influence, Bennett, Henselt--Robert
Schumann, ultra-romanticist and pioneer; peculiarities
of his style; miscellaneous series of piano pieces;
the ‘cycles’: _Carnaval_, etc.--The _Papillons_,
_Davidsbündler_, and _Faschingsschwank_; the Symphonic
Études; _Kreisleriana_, etc., the Sonatas, Fantasy and
Concerto--Johannes Brahms; qualities of his piano music;
his style; piano sonatas, ‘Paganini Variations,’ ‘Handel
Variations,’ Capriccios, Rhapsodies, Intermezzi; the
Concertos; conclusion.
VII. CHOPIN 250
Chopin’s music and its relative value in musical
value; racial and personal characteristics; influences
and preferences; Chopin’s playing--His instinct for form;
the form of his sonatas and concertos; the
_Polonaise-Fantaisie_; the Preludes--Chopin as a harmonist;
Chopin’s style analyzed: accompaniment figures, inner
melodies, polyphonic suggestions, passages, melodies and
ornaments--His works in general: salon music; waltzes;
nocturnes; mazurkas; polonaises; conclusion.
VIII. HERZ, THALBERG, AND LISZT 284
The career of Henri Herz, his compositions and his style;
virtuosity and sensationalism; means of effect--Sigismund
Thalberg: his playing; the ‘Moses’ fantasia, etc.;
relation of Herz and Thalberg to the public--Franz Liszt:
his personality and its influence; his playing; his
expansion of pianoforte technique; difficulties of his
music estimated--Liszt’s compositions: transcriptions;
fantasia on _Don Giovanni_--Realistic pieces, Années de
pèlerinage--Absolute music: sonata in B minor; Hungarian
Rhapsodies; conclusion.
PART III. MODERN PIANOFORTE MUSIC
IX. IMITATORS AND NATIONALISTS 320
Inevitable results of Schumann, Chopin and Liszt--Heller,
Raff, Jensen, Scharwenka, Mozkowski, and other German
composers--The influence of national characteristics:
Grieg, his style and his compositions; Christian
Sinding--The Russians: Balakireff, Rubinstein,
Tschaikowsky, Arensky, Glazounoff, Rachmaninoff,
Scriabin and others--Spanish traits; I. Albéniz;
pianoforte composers in England and the United States.
X. MODERN FRENCH PIANOFORTE MUSIC 341
Classical traditions: Saint-Saëns, and others; C.
V. Alkan--César Franck: his compositions and his
style--Vincent d’Indy; Fauré--The new movement: Debussy
and Ravel; Debussy’s innovations: new harmonies, scales,
overtones, pianoforte technique; his compositions--Ravel
differentiated; his compositions; Florent Schmitt and
Eric Satie--Conclusion.
PART IV. VIOLIN MUSIC
XI. EARLY VIOLIN MUSIC AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF VIOLIN TECHNIQUE 368
The origin of stringed instruments; ancestors of the
violin--Perfection of the violin and advance in
violin technique; use of the violin in the sixteenth
century; early violin compositions in the vocal style;
Florentino Maschera and Monteverdi--Beginnings of
violin music: Biagio Marini; Quagliati; Farina; Fontana
and Mont’Albano; Merula; Ucellino and Neri; Legrenzi;
Walther and his advance in technique, experiments in
tone painting--Giov. Battista Vitali; Tommaso Vitali
and Torelli; Bassani; Veracini and others--Biber and other
Germans; English and French composers for the violin; early
publications of text-books and collections.
XII. VIOLIN COMPOSERS IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 396
Corelli, Vivaldi, Albinoni--Their successors, Locatelli,
F. M. Veracini, and others; Tartini and his pupils;
pupils of Somis: Giardini and Pugnani--French violinists
and composers: Rébel, Francœur, Baptiste Anet, Senaillé
and Leclair; French contemporaries of Viotti: Pagin,
Lahoussaye, Gaviniès; Viotti--Violinists in Germany and
Austria during the eighteenth century: Pisendel, J. G.
Graun, Franz Benda; Leopold Mozart--The Mannheim school:
J. Stamitz, Cannabich and others; Dittersdorf, Wranitzky
and Schuppanzigh--Non-violinist composers: Handel, Bach,
Haydn, Mozart--Conclusion.
XIII. VIOLIN MUSIC IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 430
The perfection of the bow and of the classical
technique--The French school: Kreutzer, Rode, and
Baillot--Paganini: his predecessors, his life and fame,
his playing, and his compositions--Ludwig Spohr: his style
and his compositions; his pupils--Viennese violinists:
Franz Clement, Mayseder, Boehm, Ernst and others--The
Belgian school: De Bériot and Vieuxtemps--Other violinist
composers: Wieniawski, Molique, Joachim, Sarasate, Ole
Bull; music of the violinist-composers in general--Violin
music of the great masters.
PART V. CHAMBER MUSIC
XIV. THE BEGINNINGS OF CHAMBER MUSIC 467
The term ‘chamber music’; fifteenth-century dances; lute
music, early suites; vocal ‘chamber music’--Early
‘sonatas’: Gabrieli; Rossi; Marini; etc.--Vitali, Veracini,
Bassani and Corelli; Corelli’s pupils; Vivaldi; Bach and
Handel.
XV. THE FIRST PERIOD OF THE STRING QUARTET 486
The four-part habit of writing in instrumental
forms--Pioneers of the string quartet proper: Richter,
Boccherini and Haydn; Haydn’s early quartets--The Viennese
era of the string quartet; Haydn’s _Sonnen_ quartets; his
‘Russian’ quartets; his later quartets--W. A. Mozart;
Sammartini’s influence; Mozart’s early (Italian) quartets;
Viennese influences; Mozart’s Viennese quartets--His last
quartets and their harmonic innovations.
XVI. THE STRING QUARTET: BEETHOVEN 509
Beethoven’s approach to the string quartet; incentives; the
six quartets opus 18--The Rasumowsky quartets; _opera_
74 and 95--The great development period; the later
quartets, op. 127 _et seq._: The E-flat major (op. 127)--The
A minor (op. 132); the B-flat major (op. 130); the
C-sharp minor (op. 131); the F major (op. 135).
XVII. THE STRING ENSEMBLE SINCE BEETHOVEN 534
The general trend of development: Spohr, Cherubini,
Schubert--Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms, etc.--New
developments: César Franck, d’Indy, Chausson--The
characteristics of the Russian schools: Tschaikowsky,
Borodine, Glazounoff and others--Other national types:
Grieg, Smetana, Dvořák--The three great quartets since
Schubert and what they represent; modern quartets and the
new quartet style: Debussy, Ravel, Schönberg--Conclusion.
XVIII. THE PIANOFORTE AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS IN CHAMBER MUSIC 573
The trio--Pianoforte quartets and quintets--Sonatas for
violoncello and piano--The piano with wind
instruments--Chamber music for wind instruments by the great
composers.
ILLUSTRATIONS IN VOLUME SEVEN
‘Home Concert’ painting by Fritz von Uhde (in colors) _Frontispiece_
FACING
PAGE
The Virginal and the Gravicembalo 8
The Clavichord and the Harpsichord 8
Title page of Kuhnau’s ‘Neue Clavier-Übung’ 32
Fac-simile of Bach’s Manuscript of the Prelude in C major
(Well-Tempered Clavichord) 80
Harpsichord Composers (D. Scarlatti, Couperin, C. P. E. Bach,
Clementi) 110
Beethoven’s Broadwood Piano 156
Pianoforte Classics (Moscheles, Czerny, Hummel, Field) 182
Caricature of Johannes Brahms on His Way to
the ‘Red Porcupine’ 238
Frédéric Chopin (after painting by Ary Scheffler) 268
Anton Rubinstein’s Hand 332
Famous Pianists (d’Albert, Busoni, Gabrilowitch, Paderewski) 364
Relatives of the Violin 372
Stradivarius at Work 386
Great Violin Composers (Corelli, Vivaldi, Tartini) 398
Caricature Statuette of Paganini 438
Great Violinists (Wieniawski, Joachim, Vieuxtemps, de Bériot) 448
Modern Violinists (Sarasate, Kreisler, Ysaye, Thibaut) 464
‘The Concert’; painting by Terborch (in colors) 476
Pioneers of the String Quartet (Boccherini, Haydn, Richter
and Dittersdorf) 488
Ludwig Spohr 536
The Flonzaley Quartet 550
Great 'Cellists (Popper, Gerardi, Casals) 596
Arnold Schönberg 602
PIANOFORTE AND CHAMBER MUSIC
CHAPTER I
KEYBOARD INSTRUMENTS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF KEYBOARD TECHNIQUE
Keyboard instruments and their derivation; the clavichord
and its mechanism; the harpsichord and its relatives,
virginal, _cembalo_, etc.; technique and use of the
harpsichord--The beginnings of harpsichord music; the
Gabrielis and Merulo; early forms; the influence of
harmony and the crystallization of form--Frescobaldi and
other organist-composers for harpsichord; early English
virginal collections; John Bull, etc.--Genesis of the
suite; influence of lute-music; Froberger, Denis Gaultier,
etc.; Kuhnau--Development of the harpsichord ‘style’; great
players: Chambonnières, etc.
I
The foundations of pianoforte music were laid during the second half
of the sixteenth century and throughout the seventeenth, with the
foundations of instrumental music in general. Though there were at
this time no pianofortes, there were three keyboard instruments, all
of which not only took their part in the development of instrumental
music, but more especially prepared the way for the great instrument of
their kind which was yet unborn. These were the organ, the harpsichord,
and the clavichord.
The organ was then, as now, primarily an instrument of the church,
though there were small, portable organs called _regals_, which were
often used for chamber music and even as a part of accompaniment,
together with other instruments, in the early operas. With the history
of its construction we shall not concern ourselves here (see Vol. VI,
Chap. XIV). From the middle of the fourteenth century Venice had been
famous for her organists, because the organs in St. Mark’s cathedral
were probably the best in Europe. Up to the end of the seventeenth
century they were very imperfect. Improvements were slow. Great as was
the rôle taken by the organ all over Europe, from the basilica of St.
Peter’s in Rome to the northern town of Lübeck in Germany, the action
was hard and uneven, the tuning beset with difficulties. But the organ
was the prototype of all keyboard instruments. Upon the imperfect
organs of those days composers built up the keyboard style of music.
The harpsichords and the clavichords were what one might call the
domestic substitutes for the organ. Of these the clavichord was
perhaps slightly the older instrument. Its origin is somewhat obscure,
though it is easy to see in it the union of the organ keyboard with
strings, on the principle of that ancient darling of the theorists,
the monochord, the great and undisputed ruler over intervals of
musical pitch, from the days of Pythagoras down throughout the Middle
Ages. This monochord was hardly an instrument. It was a single
string stretched over a movable bridge. By shifting the bridge the
string could be stopped off into different lengths, which gave out,
when plucked, different pitches of sound. The relative lengths of
the stopped string offered a simple mathematical basis for the
classification of musical intervals.
The clavichord worked on the same principle. At the back end of each
key lever was an upright tangent, at first of wood, later of metal,
which, when the key was depressed, sprang up against the wire string
stretched above it. The blow of this tangent caused the wire to
vibrate and produce sound; and at the same time the tangent determined
the length of the string which was to vibrate, just as the finger
determines the length of a violin string by stopping it at some point
on the fingerboard. The strings of the clavichord were so stretched
that of the two lengths into which the tangent might divide them, the
longer lay to the left. It was this longer length which was allowed
to vibrate, giving the desired pitch; the shorter length to the right
being muffled or silenced by strips of felt laid or woven across
the strings. Thus the little tangents at the back end of the keys
performed the double function of sounding the string by hitting it and
determining its pitch by stopping it. Thus, too, one string served
several keys. By the middle of the sixteenth century the normal range
was four full octaves, from C to c^3. There were many more keys than
strings, which was a serious restriction upon music for the instrument;
for notes which lay as closely together as, let us say, C-sharp and E
could not be sounded at once, since both must be played upon the same
string. Not until practically the beginning of the eighteenth century
were clavichords made with a string for each key. They were then called
_bundfrei_, in distinction from the older clavichords, which had been
called _gebunden_.
The clavichord always remained square or oblong in shape, and for
many years had no legs of its own, but was set upon a table like a
box--hence one of its old names, _Schachbrett_, chess-board. The case
was often of beautiful wood, sometimes inlaid and adorned with scrolls,
and the under side of the cover was often painted with allegorical
pictures and pious or sententious mottoes. The keys were small, the
touch extremely light. The tone, though faint, had a genuine sweetness
and an unusual warmth; and, by a trembling up and down movement of the
wrist while the finger still pressed the key, the skilled player could
give to it a palpitating quality, allied to the vibrato of the human
voice or the violin, which went by the name of _Bebung_. This lifelike
pulsing of tone was its most precious peculiarity, one which unhappily
is lacking to the pianoforte, in most ways immeasurably superior.
Hardly less prized by players who esteemed fineness of expression
above clearness and brilliance, was the responsiveness of its tone
to delicate gradations of touch. This made possible fine shading and
intimate nuances. On this account it was highly valued, especially
in Germany, as a practice instrument, upon which the student could
cultivate a discriminating sensitive touch, and by which his ear could
be trained to refinement of perception.
The tone of the clavichord was extremely delicate. Its subtle carrying
quality could not secure it a place in the rising orchestras, nor in
the concert hall. It belonged in the study, or by the fireside, and
in such intimate places was enshrined and beloved by those who had
ears for the finer whisperings of music. But not at once was it so
beloved in the course of the early development of our instrumental
music. Frail and restricted, it was but a makeshift to bring within the
circle of the family the growing music of its powerful overshadowing
prototype--the organ.
The harpsichord was quite different and shared with its weaker sister
only the keyboard and the wire strings. It was in essence a harp
or a psalter played by means of a keyboard. The strings were tuned
as in a harp and were plucked by means of quills attached to the
key-levers. The tone was sharp and dry and could not be influenced by
the player’s touch. Instruments of this nature seem first to have been
made in England. At any rate it was in England that a considerable
literature was first written for them. The English virginals are small
harpsichords. The origin of the quaint name is no longer carried
back to the love of the Virgin Queen Elizabeth for such music as
the instrument could produce. Nor is it likely that it was so named
on account of its size (it could be held on the lap), whereby it
recommended itself to the convenience of young ladies with a musical
turn. Most likely its name is due to its range, which was the high
range of a young woman’s voice, an octave higher than the centre
octave of the organ.
The harpsichord, or, more exactly, instruments which were plucked by
quills attached to key-levers, went by many names besides virginals.
In Italy it was called the _clavicembalo_, later the _gravicembalo_,
or merely _cembalo_; in France the _clavecin_; in Germany the
_Kielflügel_. The more or less general name of spinet seems to be
derived from the name of a famous Italian maker working at the
beginning of the sixteenth century, Giovanni Spineta, of Venice.
These instruments developed side by side with the clavichord but
to much greater proportions. In the course of time several strings
were strung for one note, one or all of which might be used, at the
discretion of the player, by means of stops similar in appearance and
use to organ stops. Sometimes the extra strings of a note would be
tuned at the octave or upper fifth, permitting the player to produce
the mixture effects common to the organ. Many instruments were fitted
with two and even three banks of keys, which operated upon distinct
sets of strings, or might bring some special sort of quill into play;
and these keyboards could be used independently for contrast, or
coupled for volume, or the music might be divided upon them. There were
also pedals for special effects.
There was great need of these numerous sets of strings, these various
sorts of quills, these keyboards and devices for coupling them, because
the mechanism of the harpsichord action was unsusceptible to the fine
gradations of touch. It was essentially a mechanical instrument; its
range of what we may call tone-shading was defined by the number of
purely mechanical adjuncts with which it happened to be furnished.
Variety depended upon the ingenuity of the player in bringing these
means into play. This does not, of course, imply that there was no
skill in ‘touching’ the harpsichord. The player had to practice hours
then as now, to make his touch light and, above all, regular and even.
The slightest clumsiness was perhaps even more evident to the ear of
the listener in the frosty tones of the harpsichord than it would be
today in the warmer and less distinct tone of the pianoforte. But
once this evenness and lightness attained, the science of ‘touch’ was
mastered and the player proceeded to search out musical effects in
other directions.
In the course of these years from 1500 to 1750 it was made more and
more to impress the ear by means of added strings and stops and sets
of quills, till it became the musical keystone of chamber music, of
growing orchestra and flowering opera. At the same time it was made
ever more beautiful to the eye. It grew fine in line and graceful in
shape; its wood was exquisitely finished and varnished; it was inlaid
with mother-of-pearl, and was beautifully decorated and enscrolled.
The keys were small and usually of box-wood, the diatonic keys often
black, the chromatic keys white with mother-of-pearl or ivory. Artisan
and artist lavished their skill upon it. What a centre it became! How
did it sound under the fingers of Count Corsi, behind the scenes of his
private theatre in the Palazzo Corsi at Florence, while noble men and
gentle ladies sang out the story of Orpheus and Eurydice to a great
king of France and Maria de Medici his bride, when the first Italian
opera was sung in public?
The great Monteverdi’s antique orchestra clustered about two
harpsichords, only a few years later in Mantua, when ‘Ariadne’ brought
tears to the eyes of princes. How was it in Venice when Cavalli was of
all musicians the most famous, in the public theatre of San Cassiano?
It supported the oratorios of Carissimi in Rome, and his cantatas
as well. And in 1679 the great Bernardo Pasquini, organist of the
people and the senate of Rome, presided at the harpsichord when the
new theatre of Capranica was opened, and the amiable Corelli led the
violins. And so they all presided at the harpsichord, these brilliant
writers of operas now of all music the most discarded, down to the days
of the great Scarlatti in Naples, of Handel in London, of Keiser and
Graun in Hamburg, and Hasse, the beloved Saxon, in Dresden. Lully the
iron-willed, he who watched alertly the eyebrow of great King Louis XIV
of France, sat at his harpsichord in his lair and spilled snuff on the
keys while he wrought his operas out of them. Then there was Mattheson,
who would sing Antony, and die in the part, yet would come back and
play the harpsichord in the Hamburg opera house orchestra after all the
house had seen him die. He was determined to sit at the harpsichord, in
the centre of the orchestra, and accompany his Egyptian queen to death,
when all knew he should rightfully be waiting for her in Heaven with a
lyre!
The harpsichord was indeed the centre of public music of orchestra and
opera. Even after a race of virtuosi had pulled it to the fore as a
brilliant solo instrument it still held its serviceable place in the
orchestra. When in the course of time overtures became symphonies,
it was still from the harpsichord that the conductor, usually the
composer, led the performance of them. Gluck wished to banish it from
the orchestra of the opera house; but, when Haydn came to London in
1790 and again in 1794 to lead a performance of his specially composed
symphonies, he sat at the instrument which, more than any other, had
assisted at the growth of independent instrumental music--at the
harpsichord, now slowly but surely withdrawing into the background
before the victorious pianoforte.
It is easy to pick flaws in it, now that we can thunder it to silence
with our powerful concert grands. It is natural to smile at its thin
and none too certain sounds. It is difficult to imagine that the
hottest soul of a musician-poet could warm away the chill of it.
But what a place it held, and how inextricably is it woven with the
development of nearly all the music that now seems the freest speech
of passion and imagination! What men gave service to it: Domenico
Scarlatti, François Couperin, and Rameau; great Bach and Handel; the
sons of Bach, some of them more famous once than their father; and
the child Mozart, with a dozen courts at worship of him! The music
they wrote for it has come down to us; we hear it daily in our concert
halls. Few will deny that it gains in beauty and speaks with richer
voice through our pianoforte; but they who wrote it never heard it so;
and we who hear it, hear it not as they. Even when by the efforts of
some devoted student it is brought to performance upon the instrument
which saw its birth, we cannot truly hear it as it sounded once.
We listen, as it were, to an intruder hailing from the past, whose
usurpation of our modern ears we tolerate because we are curious and
because he is winning. With the wigs and powder, the breeches and
slippers, the bows and elegancies, it has faded into the past. Its
sound is dumb and its spirit is gone.
II
The clavichord and the harpsichord were the instruments upon which
music was first shaped for the pianoforte during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. Looming behind them and quite dominating them
until the last quarter of the seventeenth, until even much later in
Germany, was the organ. Instrumental music had a long road to travel
before either of the two smaller instruments received the special
attention of composers. The organ led this uncertain way, setting out
milestones which mark the successive stages in the development of
the great forms of instrumental music. Later bands of strings took
this leadership away from her. Always the clavichord and the
harpsichord followed submissively in the trail of the organ, or carried
the impedimenta for the strings, until late in the seventeenth century.
Considering the wilderness through which composers had to make their
way, their progress was rapid. In the course of the seventeenth century
they found forms and styles of music quite unknown when the march began.
[Illustration]
Top: the virginal and the gravicembalo.
Bottom: the clavicord and the harpsichord.
In the year 1600 there was no pure-blooded instrumental music. The
sets of pieces for organ, lute, or groups of instruments which had
appeared up to that time, and such sets had appeared as early as 1502,
were almost strict copies of vocal forms, in which the vocal style was
scarcely altered. Frequently they were simply arrangements of famous
madrigals and _chansons_ of the day. The reason is obvious. For well
over a century and a half, the best energy of musicians had gone into
the perfecting of unaccompanied choral music, into masses and motets
for the church, and into madrigals, the secular counterparts of the
motets. Long years of labor had amassed a truly astonishing technique
in writing this sort of music. The only art of music was the special
art of vocal polyphony. Instruments were denied a style and almost
a music of their own.[1] But improvements in sonority and mechanism
brought instruments into prominence, and the spirit of the Renaissance
stimulated composers to experiment with music for them. This was the
beginning of a new art, fraught with difficulties and problems, to meet
which composers had only the skill acquired in the old.
By far the most serious of these was the problem of form. The new music
was independent of words, and, in order to enjoy freedom from words
of any sort and at the same time to exist and to walk abroad, it had
to become articulate of itself; had, so to speak, to build a frame or
a skeleton out of its proper stuff. It had to be firmly knit and well
balanced.
The music of the masses of Palestrina, woven about a well-known text,
like that of the madrigals and _chansons_ of Arcadelt and Jannequin,
which depended upon popular love-poems, was vague and formless. Such
inner coherence as it had of itself was the result of continuous and
skillful repetition of short phrases or motives in the course of the
various voice-parts. In religious music these motives were for the
most part fragments of the plain-song chant, nearly as old as the
church itself; and masses frequently went by the name of the plain-song
formula out of which they were thus built. Over and over again these
bits of melody appeared, now in one part, now in another, the voices
imitating each other so constantly that the style has been aptly called
the imitative style. It was this style in which the great organists of
the sixteenth and early seventeenth century first shaped music for the
organ. It was the one principle of musical form upon which they knew
how to build.
Thus were constructed the _ricercars_ of the famous Andrea Gabrieli
(d. 1586), Claudio Merulo (d. 1604), and Giovanni Gabrieli (d. 1612),
the great pioneers. The name ricercar is itself significant. It came
from _ricercare_ (_rechercher_), to seek out over and over again. Such
were the pieces, a constant seeking after the fleeing fragment of a
theme. Older names, originally applied to vocal music, were _fuga_ and
_caccia_--flight and chase. Always there was the idea of pursuit. A
little motive of a few notes was announced by one part. The other parts
entered one by one upon the hunt of this leader, following, as best the
composer could make them, in its very footsteps.
There was a unity in this singleness of purpose, a very logical
coherence, so long as the leader was not lost sight of. Little
counter-themes might join in the chase and give a spice of variety
within the unity. But unhappily for the musical form of these early
works, the theme which began was run to earth long before the end of
the piece; another took its place and was off on a new trail, again to
be run down and to give way to yet a third leader. Unity and coherence
were lost, the piece ambled on without definite aim or limit. There is,
however, a piece by Giovanni Gabrieli in which the opening theme and
a definite counter-theme are adhered to throughout. This is a rather
brilliant exception, becoming as the century grows older more and more
the rule until, other principles mastered and applied, composers have
built up one of the great forms, the true _fugue_. Toward the end of
the sixteenth century the name _fantasia_ is applied to this same
incoherent form and in the seventeenth that of _capriccio_ appears.
Later, at the time of Bach, the word _ricercar_ signified a fugue
worked with unusual technical skill.[2]
The ricercar was the most important of the early instrumental forms, if
form it may be called which was at first but a style. The _canzona_,
another form at first equally favored by composers, was destined to
have but little effect upon the development of keyboard music. There
was no real principle of construction underlying it. It was merely
the instrumental counterpart of the famous French _chansons_ of the
day. These were part-songs divided into several contrasting sections
according to the stanzas of the poems to which they were set. Some of
the sections were in simple chord style, like hymns of the present day;
others in more or less elaborate polyphonic style. The instrumental
_canzona_ followed the same plan. The sections were irregular in
length, in number and in metre; and the piece as a whole lacked unity
and balance. After the middle of the seventeenth century it was
generally abandoned by organists. Other composers, however, took it
up, and by regulating the length and number of the various sections,
by expanding them, and, finally, by bringing each to a definite close,
laid the foundations for the famous Italian _sonata da chiesa_, cousin
germain to the better known Suite.
Other names appear in the old collections, such as Toccata and Prelude,
which even today have more or less vague meaning and then were vaguer
still. Toccata was at first a general name for any keyboard music. All
instrumental music was originally _sonata_ (from _sonare_, to sound),
in distinction from _cantata_ (from _cantare_, to sing); and from
_sonata_ keyboard music was specially distinguished by the appellation
_toccata_ (from _toccare_, to touch). When a characteristic keyboard
style had at last worked itself free of the old vocal style, the word
toccata signified a piece of music which need have no particular form
but must display the particular brilliance of the new style.
The Prelude, too, was at first equally free of the limits of form. As
the name plainly tells, it was a short bit of music preparatory to
the greater piece to come. Not long ago it was still the fashion for
concert pianists to preludize before beginning their programs, running
scales and arpeggios over an improvised series of harmonies. The old
preludes were essentially the same, very seriously limited, of course,
by the childish condition of instrumental technique, and more or less
aimless because harmonies were then undefined and unstable. Toward the
middle of the seventeenth century organists built up definite schemes,
if not forms, of preludizing before the singing of chorales in the
Lutheran Church; but this art was naturally restricted to the organ.
Preludes for the harpsichord and clavichord took on definite form only
when the relatively modern system of major and minor keys had grown up
out of the ruin of the ancient system of ecclesiastical modes.
Indeed, it is not an exaggeration to say that all forms of instrumental
music had to attend the definite shaping and establishment of the
harmonic idea of music. This was a slow process, and nearly all
instrumental music written before 1650, no matter how skillfully the
thematic material is woven, lacks to our ears logical form, because of
the vagueness or the monotony of its harmony. The system of harmony
upon which our great instrumental music rests is so clear and familiar
that it is hard for us to imagine another art of music in which it did
not constitute a groundwork, in the structure of which, indeed, it held
no firm place. Yet in the magnificent vocal music in the style of which
Palestrina has left imperishable models, harmony, as we understand
it today, did not enter. He and his great predecessors were guided
seldom, it is easy to say they were guided not at all, by the beauties
of chord progressions. They did not aim at modulations. Rather, by
the rules of the art of their day, modulation was forbidden them. No
composer might lead his music out of the _mode_ in which it began,
to bewilder his hearer in a vague ecstasy of unrest, later to soothe
him, gently shifting the harmonies back again home. Before his mind
was the ideal of weaving many voice-parts, and to his pen the skill of
countless imitations and independent melodies. The beauty of consonance
after dissonance could not be appreciated by him, since to him each
dissonance was a blemish. His was a music of flowing concord. Such
harmonic discord as was inevitable was so smoothly prepared, so gently
touched, that it now passes all but unobserved. This was essentially
religious music.
Many causes brought about the awakening of musicians to the beauty of
harmony and its expressive power. The most effectual was the growing
opera. The aim of the first writers of opera was the combination of
dramatic recitation and music, from the union of which they shaped
a style of music we now call _recitative_. The singing or reciting
voice was accompanied by a few scattered chords upon the harpsichord,
these chords serving at first mainly to mark cadences, later little by
little to intensify the emotion of the play. It was then but a step
to dramatic effects of harmony, to harsh, unprepared discords. The
player at the harpsichord, always the nucleus about which the operatic
orchestra grouped itself, began to appreciate chords as a power in
music. The organist, under the influence of the dramatic style, thought
of chords now and then in his slow-moving ricercars. The modes were
broken down. A new system of scales, our own, grew up, which was
adaptable to the new need of composers, to the sequence and contrast
of chords. Harmony grew into music, became more than themes, than
imitation and pursuit, the balance of its form.
Until music had thus knit itself anew upon harmony, it was
fundamentally unstable. Toccatas, ricercars, canzonas, preludes, even
fugues, all wandered unevenly, without proper aim, until harmony
came to lay the contrast and balance of chords and keys as the great
principle of form. Especially was instrumental music dependent upon
this logical principle, for, as we have noted, music without words
stands in vital need of self-sufficing form, and without it totters and
falls in scattered pieces.
The best skill at knitting themes together was of no avail without
harmony. It left but a texture of music flapping to the caprice of
the wind of invention. Or, to change the figure, composers laid block
by block along the ground; but, without harmony, had not the art to
build them up one upon the other into lasting temples. And so the music
of the Gabrielis, of Merulo, and of many another man from many a wide
corner of Europe lies hidden in the past. It is tentative, not perfect.
And the music of later and perhaps greater men lies similarly hidden.
III
The construction of instrumental music on the basis of one central
key with excursions or modulations into other keys for the sake of
development and variety began to be understood about the middle of
the seventeenth century. A very noticeable advance in this direction
shows in the music of Girolamo Frescobaldi (1583-1644), one of the
most brilliant organists before the time of Bach. Much of his music
has an archaic sound to our ears. He is by no means wholly free of the
old modal restrictions. But he stands as one of the pioneers in the
relatively new art of organ music--a bold innovator, guided by the
unerring taste of a great artist.
A romantic glory is about his name. As a player he was probably
unmatched in his day, and his fame was widespread. It is said that
when he played in St. Peter’s at Rome, where for many years he held
the position of organist, the vast cathedral was filled with people
come to hear him. One of the great masters of the next generation, the
German Froberger, was granted four years of absence from his duties
at the court of Vienna, that he might go to study with Frescobaldi in
Rome. His compositions were published in several sets, which included
ricercars, toccatas, preludes, canzonas, capriccios, and so forth. All
these, not excepting even the preludes, are in the contrapuntal style
which is the outgrowth of the old vocal polyphony. But they are greatly
enlivened by rapid figures, scales and arpeggios as well as trills and
ornamental devices. Such figures, being not at all suitable to voices
but only to a keyboard instrument, mark the progress of the keyboard
style toward a distinct individuality if not independence from the
ancient past of vocal masses and motets, an independence which no great
music has ever quite achieved.
All these sets of pieces were written in good faith for the harpsichord
as well as for the organ. But in reality, except in so far as certain
principles of form are valuable to all music, and a few figures of
musical ornamentation are common to all keyboard music, harpsichord
music profits but vicariously from Frescobaldi. His music is
essentially organ music, and the development it marks as accomplished,
and that toward which it points, are proper to the organ and not to
the harpsichord. To the one instrument breadth and power are fitting,
to the other lightness and fleetness. Inasmuch as the same distinction
exists between the organ and the pianoforte at the present day, with
some allowances made for improvements in the mechanism of the organ and
for the great sonority of the pianoforte, which allowances affect only
the degree but not the kind of differences, Frescobaldi can be said to
have influenced the development of pianoforte music only by what he
contributed toward the solution of very general problems of form and
structure.
The same must be said of many other great organists of his and of later
days, such as Zweelinck, Samuel Scheidt, Buxtehude, Bohm, Pachelbel,
and others. It may be noted that after the death of Frescobaldi the art
of organ-playing passed from Italy, the land of its birth and first
considerable growth, to Germany. Here a great line of virtuosi added
more and more to the splendor and dignity of organ music, perfecting
and embellishing style, inventing new forms and making them firm. They
remained loyal to the polyphonic style, partly because this is almost
essentially proper to the organ with its unlimited power to sustain
tone; partly because it is the impressive and noble style of music most
in keeping with the spirit of the church, from which the organ will
apparently never be wholly dissociated.[3]
It cannot be said that this style is in any measure so fitting to the
harpsichord and the clavichord or to the pianoforte. For these, a
markedly different sort of polyphony has been devised. But so long as
organists alone walked in music with the power of assurance--and they
were well in command of the problems of their special art while other
instrumentalists and writers of operas were floundering about--so long
did their influence keep instrumental music in sway.
How, then, did the great organists of the sixteenth and the seventeenth
century affect the growth of pianoforte music? By establishing certain
forms, notably the fugue, which have been adapted to every kind of
serious instrumental music and to the pianoforte with only less
propriety than to the organ; by helping to lay the harmonic foundation
of music which, as we have said, is the basis for all music down to
the present day and is but now being forsaken; by discovering the
effectiveness of certain styles of ornamentation and runs which are
essentially common to all keyboard instruments. They helped to give
music a form made of its own stuff, and a beauty and permanence which
is the result of such form perfected. In their workshops two of such
forms were rough-hewn which proved of later service to pianoforte
music--the harmonic prelude and the fugue.
We must look elsewhere for the development of other forms, less perfect
perhaps, but no less important in the history of pianoforte music. Such
are the rondo and the variation form. The rondo may be mentioned here
because of its great antiquity. Like the ballade, it was originally a
dance song, really a song with a burden and varying couplets. No form
could be simpler. The burden recurring regularly gives an impression of
unity, which, only in case of too many recurrences, has the fault of
monotony. The varying couplets, constituting the episodes between the
reiterations of the burden or main theme, offer variety and contrast.
Yet, in spite of the merits of this scheme of musical structure,
the form was little used by composers down to the beginning of the
eighteenth century. Relatively long pieces of music, in which the rondo
form could be used, were generally written in the style of fugues.
Furthermore, until the harmonic art was developed and the contrast of
keys appreciated, the episodes, being restricted by the old modal laws
to the tonality of the main theme, would be in a great measure without
the virtue of contrast.
The variation form, on the other hand, was greatly used, conspicuously
so by a number of writers for the virginal in England, whose works,
surviving in several ancient collections, form a unique and practically
isolated monument in the history of pianoforte music. These collections
have often been described in detail and carefully analyzed. The most
comprehensive is that long known as the Queen Elizabeth Virginal Book,
now called merely the Fitzwilliam Collection, a beautifully worked
manuscript preserved in the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge. Others are
Benjamin Cosyn’s Virginal Book and Will Foster’s, both of which are at
Buckingham Palace; a smaller book, known as Lady Nevile’s Book, and the
_Parthenia_, famous as the first collection of virginal music printed
in England.
The _Parthenia_ was printed in 1611. But an old manuscript collection,
the Mulliner Collection, contains music that can hardly be later
than 1565. The activity of the English composers, therefore, during
the years between 1565 and 1611 produced an extraordinary amount of
music designed expressly for the virginal or harpsichord. Among the
composers three stand out prominently: John Bull, William Byrd, and
Orlando Gibbons; Byrd by reason of his fine artistic sense, Bull by
his instinct for instrumental effect. Indeed, Bull, though a great
organist, was a virtuoso for the harpsichord quite as remarkable in a
limited sphere as Liszt was to be in a much broader one. In much of his
virginal music there is a variety of figuration far more in keeping
with the peculiar nature of the instrument for which it was written
than that which is to be found in the work of his successors of any
land, nearly to the time of Domenico Scarlatti.
Of all forms of musical structure, the most frequently employed in
the works which make up these collections is the variation form. It
is to be understood, of course, that these variations are not the
variations of Bach, of Beethoven, Schumann, and Brahms. These great
masters subjected their chosen themes to the influences of diverse
moods, as it were, from which the themes took on new rhythm, new form,
even new harmony. They were born with a great instrumental technique to
hand, from which to select a thousand devices wherewith to adorn and
color their themes. Byrd, Bull, and Gibbons, for all their conspicuous
genius, could not expand to great proportion the art of writing for
domestic keyboard instruments. It was still in a weak infancy. Nor was
the emotional power of music at all appreciated at that time, nor the
treatment of the same theme as the expression of various emotions in
turn likely to occur to the mind of the most gifted of musicians.
The variation form, then, was merely a means to spin out a piece of
considerable length, which should yet have consistency and coherence.
The theme itself was scarcely if at all altered in its various
repetitions, but went on over and over again, while the composer added
above it an ever more complicated or a more animated counterpoint.
The counterpoint was for the most part conjunct; that is to say, that
it progressed by short steps, not by skips. Scales are therefore far
more frequent than arpeggios. The shade of the old vocal art is deep
even over these composers. John Bull alone is, as we have said, at
times astonishingly modern. His brilliant imagination devised arpeggio
figures which today have by no means lost their effectiveness, and
he could split up the theme itself into a series of lively, skipping
figures.
Any theme, from the ancient plain-song or from the treasure of
folk-music, was suitable to serve as a ‘ground’ to these variations,
or divisions, as they were called. One comes across delightful old
dance-tunes and songs popular in that day. These in themselves are full
of the charm of English melody, but when harnessed, as it were, to
the slow-moving counterpoint of the variation style, with its archaic
harmony and lifeless rhythm, they are robbed of their spirit and their
life. We have saved to us again a dead music.
Most lifeless of all, and almost laughably pompous in their rigor,
are the variations on the first six notes of the scale, the so-called
_Fantasias on ut re mi fa sol la_. Every composer tried a hand at this
sort of composition. The six notes usually marched up and down the
scale, with no intermission. A great deal of modulation was attempted.
Sometimes the formula was gone through upon the successive notes of
the scale. It was set upon its way in various rhythms, sometimes in
long, steady notes, again in rapid notes, yet again in dotted rhythms.
At the best the result was a display of some cleverness on the part of
the composer, a bit of daring in chromatic alterations, some novelty in
combinations of rhythms. It can hardly be supposed that they expressed
any æsthetic aspiration. They stand in relation to the development of
pianoforte music only as technical exercises of a sort.
The same may be said in some instances of the variations upon songs,
but is not in the main true. Here is distinctly a groping toward
beauty, largely in the dark, to be sure, but tending, on the one hand,
toward the development of a fitness of style and, on the other, of a
broad and varied form, the noble possibilities of which have become
manifest through the genius of all the great instrumental composers
since the time of Bach.
The influence of these gifted Englishmen and their extraordinary work
upon the development of harpsichord music in general was probably
relatively slight. A piece by Sweelinck, the famous Dutch organist,
is in the Fitzwilliam collection; a fact which points to the intimacy
between Holland and England in matters musical. The presence of
famous English organists in Holland throughout the first half of the
seventeenth century points in the same direction. But the course of
harpsichord music in Holland and Germany was, down to the time of
Emanuel Bach, guided by organ music. Inasmuch as perhaps the most
remarkable feature of this English virginal music is the occasional
flashes of instrumental skill and of intuition for harpsichordal
effects from the pen of John Bull, and as these stirred to no emulation
in Germany, the effect of the English virginal music as such upon the
history of the special art may be set down as practically negligible.
The famous collections endure, quite like Purcell’s music a whole
century later, as an isolated monument of a sudden national development.
The toccata, prelude, fugue, and variations are the results of the
labor of musicians during the sixteenth and the first half of the
seventeenth centuries to invent and improve forms of music which, as
independent compositions, might impress the hearer with their organic
unity, so to speak, and serve as dignified expression of their own
skill and their own ideals of beauty. Of these the prelude alone, with
its basis of chord sequences, is wholly a product of the new time. The
others rest heavily upon the vocal skill of the past. None of them,
however, is perfect. Skill in laying a harmonic groundwork of wide
proportions is still to be acquired; and, so far as the harpsichord and
clavichord are concerned, a sense for instrumental style and special
instrumental effects has to be cultivated much further. We shall have
to wait another half-century before that sense has become keen enough
to influence development of harpsichord music.
IV
Meanwhile the growth and relative perfection of another form is to
be observed, namely, the suite.[4] This is a conventional group of
four short pieces in dance forms and rhythms. A great amount of dance
music had been published for the lute in Italy as early as 1502. Of
the twenty-one pieces published in the _Parthenia_ more than a hundred
years later, five were pavans and ten were galliards. In all these
early dance pieces the rhythm is more or less disguised under a heavy
polyphonic style; so we may presume that they were not intended to be
played in the ballroom, but rather that the short and symmetrical forms
of good dance music were regarded by composers as serviceable molds
into which to cast their musical inspirations. Indeed, they must have
made a strong appeal to composers at a time when they were baffled in
their instrumental music by ignorance of the elementary principles of
musical structure.
The early Italian lute collections already reveal a tendency on the
part of composers to group at least two of these dances together. The
two chosen are the pavan and the galliard, the one a slow and stately
dance in double time, the other a livelier dance in triple time.
Often, it is true, these two are not grouped together in the printed
collections; but it seems likely that the lutenists of the sixteenth
century were fond of such a selection in performance. In 1597 Thomas
Morley, an English musician, published in the form of dialogues his
‘Plaine and Easie Introduction to Practicall Musicke.’ In this he
treated of dance music at some length, and made special note of the
pleasing effect to be got by alternating pavans and galliards.
This group of two pieces is the nucleus about which the suite developed
during the first half of the seventeenth century. The several steps in
its growth are rather obscure; and, as they are to be observed more in
music for groups of strings than in harpsichord music, it will serve
us merely to mention them. The pavan and the galliard gave way early
to the _allemande_ and the _courante_. The origin of the former is
doubtful. There were two kinds of courantes--one evidently native to
France, the other to Italy. Both were in triple time, but were in many
other ways clearly differentiated. To the allemande and courante was
later added a slow dance from Spain--the _sarabande_; and before the
middle of the century the _gigue_, or _giga_, from Italy, made secure
its place as the last of the standard group of four. These four pieces
so combined were invariably in the same key. Apart from this they had
no relationship.[5] The tie which held them together was wholly one of
convention.
Such is the stereotype of the suite when it becomes firmly established
in music for the harpsichord, as we find it in the works of the
German J. J. Froberger. Froberger died in 1667, but his suites for
harpsichord, twenty-eight in all, were written earlier; some in 1649,
others in 1656, according to autograph copies. He had been a wanderer
over the face of Europe. After studying with Frescobaldi in Rome he had
spent some years in Paris, where he had come into contact with French
composers for the harpsichord, whose work we shall discuss later on.
Thence he had gone to London, where his skill in playing the organ
and harpsichord seems to have lifted him from the mean position of
pumping air into the organ at Westminster (he had been robbed on his
journey and had reached London friendless and poverty-stricken) to that
of court favorite. Later he returned to Europe, evidently pursued by
ill luck, and he died at Héricourt, near Montbelliard, at the home of
Sibylla, Duchess of Würtemberg, a pupil who had offered him refuge.
By far the majority of his suites for the harpsichord, and be it noted
they are for harpsichord and not for organ, are in the orthodox order
of _Allemande_, _Courante_, _Sarabande_, and _Gigue_. The dances are
all constructed upon the same plan, a plan at the basis of which the
new idea of harmony has at last been solidly established. Each piece
is divided neatly into two sections of about equal length, each of
which is repeated. The harmonic groundwork is simple and clear. The
dance opens in the tonic key. If the piece is major it modulates to the
dominant, if minor to the relative major; and in that key the first
section ends. This section having been repeated, the second section
begins in the key in which the first section left off, and modulates
back again, usually through one or two keys, to end in the tonic. The
whole makes a compact little piece, very neatly balanced. It would seem
to be quite sealed in perfection and to contain no possibilities of new
growth; but the short passages of free modulation through which the
second section pursues its way from dominant or relative major back to
tonic contained germs of harmonic unrest which were to swell the whole
to proportions undreamed of.
The change from tonic to dominant and back, with the few timid
modulations in the second section, offered practically all the contrast
and variety there was within the limits of a single piece. Except in
the _sarabande_, the musical texture was woven in a flowing style. The
effect is one of constant motion. A figure, not a theme, predominated.
The opening figure, it is true, was modified, often gave way to quite a
different figure in the dominant key; but the style remained always the
same, and there was but the slightest suggestion of contrast in the way
one figure glided into another.
In the suite as a whole, the uniformity of key which ruled over all
four movements precluded in the main all contrast but the contrast of
rhythm. Yet a few peculiarities of style became associated with each
of the dances and thus gave more than rhythmical variety to the whole.
The counterpoint of the allemande, for example, was more open and more
dignified, so to speak, than that of the fleet, sparkling Italian
courante. In the French courante a counterpoint of dotted quarters and
eighths prevailed, and a shifting between 6/4 and 3/2 rhythm stamped
the movement with a rhythmic complexity not at all present in the
other movements. The second section of the gigue was almost invariably
built upon an inversion of the figures of the first section, and the
solid chord style of the sarabande not only contrasted radically with
the style of allemande, courante, and gigue, but, moreover, beguiled
composers into the expression of personal emotion now noble, now
tender, which put sarabandes in general in a class by themselves amid
the music of that time.
Though the normal suite was constituted of these four dances in the
order we have named, other dances came to find a place therein. Of
these the favorites were _gavottes_, _minuets_, _bourrées_, _loures_,
_passepieds_, and others; and they were inserted in any variety or
sequence between the sarabande and the gigue. Sometimes in place of
extra dances, or among them, is to be found an _air_ or _aria_, the
salient quality of which is not rhythm, but melody, usually highly
ornamented in the style made universally welcome by the Italian opera.
More rarely the air was simple and was followed by several variations.
The best known of these airs and variations which were incorporated
into suites is probably Handel’s famous set upon a melody, not his own,
which has long gone by the name of ‘The Harmonious Blacksmith.’ By the
beginning of the eighteenth century many composers were accustomed to
begin their suites with a prelude, usually in harmonic style.
In the music of the great French lutenists and clavecinists of the
seventeenth century the suite never crystallized into a stereotyped
sequence. The principle of setting together several short pieces in
the same key was none the less clearly at work, though nothing but
the fancy of the composer seems to have limited the number of pieces
which might be so united. On the other hand, the idea of emphasizing
rhythm as the chief element of contrast within the suite was often
secondary to the idea of contrasting mood. How much of this contrast
of mood was actually effective it is hard to say, but the great number
of little pieces composed either for lute or clavecin in France of the
seventeenth century, were given picturesque or fanciful names by their
composers.
This custom was firmly established by the great lutenist, Denis
Gaultier, whose collection of pieces, _La rhétorique des dieux_,
comprises some of the most exquisite and most beautifully worked music
of the century. The pieces in the collection are grouped together by
modes; but the modes by this time have become keys, and differ from
each other in little except pitch. The greater part of the pieces are
given names, borrowed for the most part from Greek mythology. _Phaèton
foudroyé_, and _Juno, ou la jalouse_ are indicative of the general tone
of them.
Close upon Gaultier’s pieces for lute came the harpsichord pieces of
Jacques Champion, son of a family of organists, who took upon himself
the name of Chambonnières. Two books of his pieces were published
in 1670. Here again the pieces are grouped in keys, in, however, no
definite number; and, though most have still only dance names to
distinguish them, many are labelled with a title.
In spite of these titles, the tendency to call upon an external idea
to aid in the construction of a piece of music is not evident in this
early harpsichord music. There is little attempt at picture drawing
in music. The names are at the most suggestive of a mood, indicative
of the humor which in the composer gave birth to the music, hints to
the listener upon the humor in which he was to take it. The structure
of the music is independent of the titles, and is of a piece with
the structure of the dance tunes which make up the German suite. The
influence of this music was not important upon the growth of form, but
upon the molding and refinement of style.
To be sure, a tendency toward realistic music crops out from time to
time all through the seventeenth century. The twitter of birds no less
than the roar of battle was attempted by many a composer, resulting,
in the case of the latter especially, in hardly more than laughably
childish imitations. Further than this composers did not often go
until, just before Bach entered upon his professional career, J. F.
Kuhnau, of Leipzig, published his extraordinary Biblical sonatas.
Besides these, the ‘Rhetoric of Gods,’ the ‘Hundred Varieties of
Musical Fruit,’ the ‘jealous ladies’ and the ‘rare ladies,’ even the
battles and the gossips, all of which have been imitated in music,
appear conventional and absolute. Here is narrative in music and a
flimsiness of structure which is meaningless without a program. There
are six of these strange compositions, upon the stories of David
and Goliath, of David and Saul, of Jacob and Leah, and others. Some
years later they undoubtedly suggested to Sebastian Bach the delicate
little capriccio which he wrote upon the departure of his brother
for the wars. Apart from this they are of slight importance except
as indications of the experimental frame of mind of their composer.
Indeed, beyond imitation and to a small extent description, neither
harpsichord nor pianoforte music has been able to make much progress in
the direction of program music.
Kuhnau’s musical narratives were published in August, 1700. Earlier
than this he had published his famous _Sonata aus dem B_. The work so
named was appended to Kuhnau’s second series of suites or _Partien_.
It has little to recommend it to posterity save its name, which here
appears in the history of clavier music for the first time. Nor does
this name designate a form of music akin to the sonatas of the age
of Mozart and Beethoven, a form most particularly associated with
the pianoforte. Kuhnau merely appropriated it from music for string
instruments. There it stood in the main for a work which was made up of
several movements like the suite, but which differed from the suite in
depending less upon rhythm and in having a style more dignified than
that which had grown out of experiments with dance tunes. In addition,
the various movements which constituted a sonata were not necessarily
in the same key. Here alone it possessed a possible advantage over the
suite. Yet though in other respects it cannot compare favorably to our
ears with the suite, Kuhnau cherished the dignity of style and name
with which tradition had endowed it. These he attempted to bestow upon
music for the clavier.[6]
The various movements lack definite form and balance. The first is in
rather heavy chord style, the chords being supported by a dignified
counterpoint in eighth notes. This leads without pause into a fugue
on a figure of lively sixteenth notes. The key is B-flat major. There
follows a short adagio in E-flat major, modulating to end in C minor,
in which key the last movement, a short allegro in triple time, is
taken up. The whole is rounded off by a return to the opening movement,
signified by the sign _Da Capo_.
Evidently pleased with this innovation, Kuhnau published in 1696 a set
of seven more sonatas called _Frische Clavier Früchte_. These show no
advance over the _Sonata aus dem B_ in mastery of musical structure.
Still they are evidence of the efforts of one man among many to give
clavier music a life of its own and to bring it in seriousness and
dignity into line with the best instrumental music of the day, namely,
with the works of such men as Corelli, Purcell, and Vivaldi. That he
was unable to do this the verdict of future years seems to show. The
attempt was none the less genuine and influential.
In the matter of structure, then, the seventeenth century worked out
and tested but a few principles which were to serve as foundation
for the masterpieces of keyboard music in the years to come. But
these, though few, were of vast importance. Chief among them was the
new principle of harmony. This we now, in the year 1700, find at
the basis of fugue, of prelude and toccata, and of dance form, not
always perfectly grasped but always in evidence. Musical form now and
henceforth is founded upon the relation and contrast of keys.
Consistently to hold to one thematic subject throughout a piece in
polyphonic style, skillfully to contrast or weave with that secondary
subjects, mark another stage of development passed. The fugue is the
result, now articulate, though awaiting its final glory from the hand
of J. S. Bach. To write little dance pieces in neat and precise form
is an art likewise well mastered; and to combine several of these,
written in the same key, in an order which, by affording contrast of
rhythms, can stir the listener’s interest and hold his attention, is
the established rule for the first of the so-called cyclic forms,
prototype of the symphony and sonata of later days. Such were the great
accomplishments of the musicians of the seventeenth century in the
matter of form.
V
In the matter of style, likewise, much was accomplished. We have had
occasion frequently to point out that in the main the harpsichord
remained throughout the first half of the seventeenth century under
the influence of the organ. For this instrument a conjunct or _legato_
style has proved to be most fitting. Sudden wide stretches, capricious
leaps, and detached runs seldom find a place in the texture of great
organ music. The organist strives for a smoothness of style compatible
with the dignity of the instrument, and this smoothness may be taken as
corollary to the fundamental relationship between organ music and the
vocal polyphony of the sixteenth century.
On the other hand, by comparison with the vocal style, the organ style
is free. Where the composer of masses was restricted by the limited
ability of the human voice to sing wide intervals accurately, the
organist was limited only by the span of the hand. Where Palestrina
could count only upon the ear of his singers to assure accurate
intonation, the organist wrote for a keyboard which, supposing the
organ to be in tune, was a mechanism that of itself could not go
wrong. Given, as it were, a physical guarantee of accuracy as a basis
for experiment, the organist was free to devise effects of sheer
speed or velocity of which voices would be utterly incapable. He had
a huge gamut of sounds equally at his command, a power that could be
mechanically bridled or let loose. His instrument could not be fatigued
while boys could be hired to pump the bellows. So long as his finger
held down a key, or his foot a pedal, so long would the answering note
resound, diminishing, increasing, increasing, diminishing, according to
his desire, never exhausted.
Therefore we find in organ music, rapid scales, arpeggios rising
from depths, falling from heights, new figures especially suited to
the organ, such as the ‘rocking’ figure upon which Bach built his
well-known organ fugue in D minor; deep pedal notes, which endure
immutably while above them the artist builds a castle of sounds;
interlinked chords marching up and down the keyboard, strong with
dissonance. There are trills and ornamental turns, rapid thirds and
sixths. And in all these things organ music displays what is its own,
not what it has inherited from choral music.
Yet, notwithstanding the magnificent chord passages so in keeping with
the spirit of the instrument, in which only the beauty of harmonic
sequence is considered, the treatment of musical material by the
organists is prevailingly polyphonic. The sound of a given piece is
the sound of many quasi-independent parts moving along together, in
which definite phrases or motives constantly reappear. The harmony
on which the whole rests is not supplied by an accompaniment, but by
the movement of the several voice-parts themselves in their appointed
courses. And it may be said as a generality that these parts progress
by steps not wider than that distance the hand can stretch upon the
keyboard.
During the first half of the seventeenth century the harpsichord was
but the echo of the organ. Even the collections of early English
virginal music, which in some ways seem to offer a brilliant exception,
are the work of men who as instrumentalists were primarily organists.
In so far as they achieved an instrumental style at all it was usually
a style fitting to a small organ. The few cases where John Bull’s
cleverness displayed itself in almost a true virtuoso style are
exceptions which prove the rule. Not until the time of Chambonnières
and Froberger do we enter upon a second stage.
About the middle of the seventeenth century Chambonnières was famous
over Europe as a performer upon the harpsichord. As first clavicinist
at the court of France, his manner of playing may be taken to represent
the standard of excellence at that time. Constantine Huygens, a Dutch
amateur exceedingly well-known in his day, mentions him many times in
his letters with unqualified admiration, always as a player of the
harpsichord, or as a composer for that instrument. Whatever skill he
may have had as an organist did not contribute to his fame; and his two
sets of pieces for harpsichord, published after his death in 1670, show
the beginnings of a distinct differentiation between harpsichord and
organ style.
[Illustration]
Title page of Kuhnan's "Neue Clavier-Übung".
The harpsichord possesses in common with the organ its keyboard or
keyboards, which render the playing of solid chords possible. The
lighter action of the harpsichord gives it the advantage over the
organ in the playing of rapid passages, particularly of those light
ornamental figures used as graces or embellishments, such as trills,
mordents, and turns. A further comparison with the organ, however,
reveals in the harpsichord only negative qualities. It has no volume
of sound, no power to sustain tones, no deep pedal notes.
Consequently the smooth polyphonic style which sounds rich and flowing
on the organ, sounds dry and thin upon the weaker instrument. The
composer who would utilize to advantage what little sonority there is
in the harpsichord must be free to scatter notes here and there which
have no name or place in the logic of polyphony, but which make his
music sound well. Voice parts must be interrupted, notes taken from
nowhere and added to chords. The polyphonic web becomes disrupted, but
the harpsichord profits by the change. It is Chambonnières who probably
first wrote in such a style for the harpsichord.
He learned little of it from what had been written for the organ, but
much from music for the lute, which, quite as late as the middle of the
century, was interchangeable with the harpsichord in accompaniments,
and was held to be equal if not superior as a solo instrument. It was
vastly more difficult to play, and largely for this reason fell into
disuse. The harpsichord is by nature far nearer akin to it than to
the organ. The free style which lutenists were driven to invent by
the almost insuperable difficulties of their instrument, is nearly as
suitable to the harpsichord as it is to the lute. Without doubt the
little pieces of Denis Gaultier were played upon the harpsichord by
many an amateur who had not been able to master the lute. The skilled
lutenist would find little to give him pause in the harpsichord
music of Chambonnières. The quality of tone of both instruments is
very similar. For neither is the strict polyphony of organ music
appropriate; for the lute it is impossible. Therefore it fell to the
lutenists first to invent the peculiar instrumental style in which
lie the germs of the pianoforte style; and to point to their cousins,
players of the harpsichord, the way towards independence from organ
music.
Froberger came under the influence of Denis Gaultier and Chambonnières
during the years he spent in Paris, and he adopted their style and
made it his own. He wrote, it is true, several sets of ricercars,
capriccios, canzonas, etc., for organ or harpsichord, and in these
the strict polyphonic style prevails, according to the conventionally
more serious nature of the compositions. But his fame rests upon the
twenty-eight suites and fragments of suites which he wrote expressly
for the harpsichord. These are closely akin to lute music, and from
the point of view of style are quite as effective as the music of
Chambonnières. In harmony they are surprisingly rich. Be it noted, too,
in passing, that they are not lacking in emotional warmth. Here is
perhaps the first harpsichord music which demands beyond the player’s
nimble fingers his quick sympathy and imagination--qualities which
charmed in Froberger’s own playing.
Kuhnau as a stylist is far less interesting than Froberger, upon whose
style, however, his clavier suites are founded. His importance rests
in the attempts he made to adapt the sonata to the clavier, in his
experiments with descriptive music, and in the influence he had upon
his contemporaries and predecessors, notably Bach and Handel. Froberger
is the real founder of pianoforte music in Germany, and beyond him
there is but slight advance either in style or matter until the time of
Sebastian Bach.
What we may now call the harpsichord style, as exemplified in the
suites of Chambonnières and Froberger, is relatively free. Both
composers had a fondness for writing in four parts, but these parts
are not related to each other, nor woven together unbrokenly as in the
polyphonic style of the organ. They cannot often be clearly followed
throughout a given piece. The upper voice carries the music along, the
others accompany. The arrangement is not wholly an inheritance from the
lute, but is in keeping with the general tendency in all music, even
at times in organ music, toward the monodic style, of which the growing
opera daily set the model.
But the harpsichord style of this time is by no means a simple system
of melody and accompaniment. Though the three voice parts which support
the fourth dwell together often in chords, they are not without
considerable independent movement. They constitute the harmonic
background, as it were, which, though serving as background, does not
lack animation and character in itself. In other words, we have a
contrapuntal, not a polyphonic, style.
A marked feature of the music is the profuse number of graces and
embellishments. These rapid little figures may be akin to the vocal
embellishments which even at the beginning of the seventeenth century
were discussed in theoretical books; but they seem to flower from
the very nature of the harpsichord, the light tone and action of
which made them at once desirable and possible. They are but vaguely
indicated in the manuscripts, and there can be no certainty as to what
was the composer’s intention or his manner of performance. Doubtless
they were left to the discretion of the player. At any rate for a
century more the player took upon himself the liberty of ornamenting
any composer’s music to suit his own whim. These _agrémens_[7] were
held to be and doubtless were of great importance. Kuhnau, in the
preface to his _Frische Clavier Früchte_, speaks of them as the sugar
to sweeten the fruit, even though he left them much to the taste of
players; and Emanuel Bach in the second half of the eighteenth century
devoted a large part of his famous book on playing the clavier to an
analysis and minute explanation of the host of them that had by then
become stereotyped. They have not, however, come down into pianoforte
music. It is questionable if they can be reproduced on the pianoforte,
the heavy tone of which obscures the delicacy which was their charm.
They must ever present difficulty to the pianist who attempts to make
harpsichord music sound again on the instrument which has inherited it.
The freedom from polyphonic restraint, inherited from the lute, and
the profusion of graces which have sprouted from the nature of the
harpsichord, mark the diversion between music for the harpsichord
and music for the organ. In other respects they are still much the
same; that is to say, the texture of harpsichord music is still
close--restricted by the span of the hand. This is not necessarily
a sign of dependence on the organ, but points rather to the young
condition of the art. It is not to be expected that the full
possibilities of an instrument will be revealed to the first composers
who write for it expressly. They lie hidden along the way which time
has to travel. But Chambonnières, in France, and Froberger, in Germany,
opened up the special road for harpsichord music, took the first step
which others had but to follow.
Neither in France nor in Germany did the next generation penetrate
beyond. Le Gallois, a contemporary of Chambonnières, has remarked that
of the great player’s pupils only one, Hardelle, was able to approach
his master’s skill. Among those who carried on his style, however,
must be mentioned d’Anglebert,[8] Le Begue,[9] and Louis and François
Couperin, relatives of the great Couperin to come.
In Germany Georg and Gottlieb Muffat stand nearly alone with Kuhnau
in the progress of harpsichord music between Froberger and Sebastian
Bach. Georg Muffat spent six years in Paris and came under French
influence as Froberger had come, but his chief keyboard works
(_Apparatus Musico Organisticus_ (1690)) are twelve toccatas more
suited to organ than to harpsichord. In 1727 his son Gottlieb had
printed in Vienna _Componimenti musicali per il cembalo_, which show
distinctly the French influence. Kuhnau looms up large chiefly on
account of his sonatas, which are in form and extent the biggest works
yet attempted for clavier. By these he pointed toward a great expansion
of the art; but as a matter of fact little came of it. In France,
Italy, and Germany the small forms were destined to remain the most
popular in harpsichord music; and the sonatas and concertos of Bach are
immediately influenced by study of the Italian masters, Corelli and
Vivaldi.
In Italy, the birthplace of organ music and so of a part of harpsichord
music, interest in keyboard music of any kind declined after the
death of Frescobaldi in 1644, and was replaced by interest in opera
and in music for the violin. Only one name stands out in the second
half of the century, Bernardo Pasquini, of whose work, unhappily,
little remains. He was famous over the world as an organist, and the
epitaph on his tombstone gives him the proud title of organist to the
Senate and People of Rome. Also he was a skillful performer on the
harpsichord; but he is more nearly allied to the old polyphonic school
than to the new. A number of works for one and for two harpsichords
are preserved in manuscript in the British Museum, and these are named
sonatas. Some are actually suites, but those for two harpsichords have
little trace of dance music or form and may be considered as much
sonatas as those works which Kuhnau published under the same title. All
of Kuhnau’s sonatas appeared before 1700 and the date on the manuscript
in the British Museum is 1704. Pasquini was then an old man, and it is
very probable that these sonatas were written some years earlier; in
which case he and not Kuhnau may claim the distinction of first having
written music for the harpsichord on the larger plan of the violin
concerto and the sonatas of Corelli.[10]
Two books of toccatas by Alessandro Scarlatti give that facile composer
the right to be numbered among the great pioneers in the history of
harpsichord music. These toccatas are in distinct movements, usually
in the same key, but sharply contrasted in content. The seventh is
a theme and variations, in which Scarlatti shows an appreciation of
tonal effects and an inventiveness which are astonishingly in advance
of the time. He foreshadows unmistakably the brilliant style of his
son Domenico; indeed, he accounts in part for what has seemed the
marvellous instinct of Domenico. If, as is most natural, Domenico
approached the mysteries of the harpsichord through his father, he
began his career with advantages denied to all others contemporary
with him, save those who, like Grieco, received that father’s
training. Alessandro Scarlatti was one of the most greatly endowed of
all musicians. The trend of the Italian opera during the eighteenth
century toward utter senselessness has been often laid partly to his
influence; but in the history of harpsichord music that influence makes
a brilliant showing in the work of his son, who contributed perhaps
more than any other one man to the technique of writing not only for
harpsichord but for pianoforte.
Little of the harpsichord and clavichord music of the seventeenth
century is heard today. It has in the main only an historical interest.
The student who looks into it will be amazed at some of its beauties;
but as a whole it lacks the variety and emotional strength which claim
a general attention. Nevertheless it is owing to the labor and talent
of the composers of these years that the splendid masterpieces of a
succeeding era were possible. They helped establish the harmonic
foundation of music; they molded the fugue, the prelude, the toccata,
and the suite; they developed a general keyboard style. After the
middle of the century such men as Froberger and Kuhnau in Germany,
Chambonnières, d’Anglebert, and Louis and François Couperin in France,
and Alessandro Scarlatti in Italy, finally gave to harpsichord music
a special style of its own, and to the instrument an independent and
brilliant place among the solo instruments of that day. Out of all the
confusion and uncertainty attendant upon the breaking up of the old art
of vocal polyphony, the enthusiasm of the new opera, the creation of
a new harmonic system, the rise of an instrumental music independent
of words, these men slowly and steadily secured for the harpsichord a
kingdom peculiarly its own.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] It should be noted in passing that during the early stages of the
growth of polyphonic music, roughly from the eleventh to the fifteenth
century, composers had brought over into their vocal music a great deal
of instrumental technique or style, which had been developed on the
crude organs, and on the accompanying instruments of the troubadours.
In the period which we are about to treat the reverse is very plainly
the case.
[2] At the head of Sebastian Bach’s _Musikalisches Opfer_ stands the
Latin superscription: _Regis Iussu Cantio et Reliqua Canonica Arte
Resoluta_. The initial letters form the word ricercar.
[3] _Cf._ Vol. VI, Chap. XV.
[4] Suites were known in England as ‘lessons,’ in France as _ordres_,
in Germany as _Partien_, and in Italy as _sonate da camera_.
[5] There was a form of suite akin to the variation form. In this the
same melody or theme served for the various dance movements, being
treated in the style of the allemande, courante, or other dances
chosen. _Cf._ Peurl’s Pavan, Intrada, Dantz, and Gaillarde (1611); and
Schein’s Pavan, Gailliarde, Courante, Allemande, and Tripla (1617).
This variation suite is rare in harpsichord music. Froberger’s suite on
the old air, _Die Mayerin_, is a conspicuous exception.
[6] ‛_Denn warum sollte man auf dem Clavier nicht eben wie auf anderen
Instrumenten dergleichen Sachen tractieren können?_’ he writes in his
preface to the ‘Seven New _Partien_,’ 1692.
[7] So they were called in France, which until the time of Beethoven
set the model for harpsichord style. In Germany they were called
_Manieren_.
[8] D’Anglebert published in 1689 a set of pieces, for the harpsichord,
containing twenty variations on a melody known as _Folies d’Espagne_,
later immortalized by Corelli.
[9] Le Begue (1630-1702) published _Pièces de clavecin_ in 1677.
[10] See J. S. Shedlock: ‘The Pianoforte Sonata,’ London, 1895.
CHAPTER II
THE GOLDEN AGE OF HARPSICHORD MUSIC
The period and the masters of the ‘Golden Age’--Domenico
Scarlatti; his virtuosity; Scarlatti’s ‘sonatas’;
Scarlatti’s technical effects; his style and form; æsthetic
value of his music; his contemporaries--François Couperin,
_le Grand_; Couperin’s clavecin compositions; the ‘musical
portraits’; ‘program music’--The quality and style of
his music; his contemporaries, Daquin and Rameau--John
Sebastian Bach; Bach as virtuoso; as teacher; his technical
reform; his style--Bach’s fugues and their structure--The
suites of Bach: the French suites, the English suites,
the Partitas--The preludes, toccatas and fantasies;
concertos; the ‘Goldberg Variations’--Bach’s importance; his
contemporary Handel.
In round figures the years between 1700 and 1750 are the Golden Age of
harpsichord music. In that half century not only did the technique,
both of writing for and performing on the harpsichord, expand to its
uttermost possibilities, but there was written for it music of such
beauty and such emotional warmth as to challenge the best efforts of
the modern pianist and to call forth the finest and deepest qualities
of the modern pianoforte.
It was an age primarily of opera, of the Italian opera with its
senseless, threadbare plots, its artificial singers idolized in every
court, its incredible, extravagant splendor. The number of operas
written is astonishing, the wild enthusiasm of their reception hardly
paralleled elsewhere in the history of music. Yet of these many works
but an air or two has lived in the public ear down to the present day;
whereas the harpsichord music still is heard, though the instrument for
which it was written has long since vanished from our general musical
life.
Practically the whole seventeenth century has been required to lay
down a firm foundation for the development of instrumental music in
all its branches. This being well done, the music of the next epoch
is not unaccountably surprising. As soon as principles of form had
become established, composers trod, so to speak, upon solid ground;
and, sure of their foothold, were free to make rapid progress in all
directions. In harpsichord music few new forms appeared. The toccata,
prelude, fugue, and suite offered room enough for all the expansion
which even great genius might need. Within these limits the growth
was twofold: in the way of virtuosity and refinement of style, and in
the way of emotional expression. That music which expands at once in
both directions, or in which, rather, the two growths are one and the
same, is truly great music. Such we shall now find written for the
harpsichord.
Each of the three men whose work is the chief subject of this chapter
is conspicuous in the history of music by a particular feature.
Domenico Scarlatti is first and foremost a great virtuoso, Couperin
an artist unequalled in a very special refinement of style, Sebastian
Bach the instrument of profound emotion. In these features they stand
sharply differentiated one from the other. These are the essential
marks of their genius. None, of course, can be comprehended in such
a simple characterization. Many of Scarlatti’s short pieces have the
warmth of genuine emotion, and Couperin’s little works are almost
invariably the repository of tender and naïve sentiment. Bach is
perhaps the supreme master in music and should not be characterized
at all except to remind that his vast skill is but the tool of his
deeply-feeling poetic soul.
I
It will be noticed that each of these great men speaks of a different
race. We may consider Scarlatti first as spokesman in harpsichord music
of the Italians, who at that time had made their mark so deep upon
music that even now it has not been effaced, nor is likely to be. His
father, Alessandro, was the most famous and the most gifted musician in
Europe. From Naples he set the standard for the opera of the world, and
in Naples his son Domenico was born on October 26, 1685, a few months
only after the birth of Sebastian Bach in Eisenach. Domenico lived with
his father and under his father’s guidance until 1705, when he set
forth to try his fame. He lived a few years in Venice and there met
Handel in 1708, with whom he came back to Rome. Here in Rome, at the
residence of Corelli’s patron, Cardinal Ottoboni, took place the famous
contest on organ and harpsichord between him and Handel. For Handel he
ever professed a warm friendship and the most profound admiration.
He remained for some years in Rome, at first in the service of Marie
Casimire, queen of Poland, later as _maestro di capella_ at St.
Peter’s. In 1719 came a journey to London in order to superintend
performances of his operas. From 1721 to 1725 he seems to have been
installed at the court of Lisbon; and then, after four years in Naples,
he accepted a position at the Spanish court in Madrid. Just how long he
stayed there is not known. In 1754 he was back again in Naples, and in
Naples he died in 1757, seven years after the death of Bach.
Scarlatti wrote many operas in the style of his father, and these
were frequently performed, with success, in Italy, England, Spain,
and elsewhere. During his years at St. Peter’s he also wrote sacred
music; but his fame now rests wholly upon his compositions for the
harpsichord and upon the memory of the extraordinary skill with which
he played them.
We have dwelt thus briefly upon a few events of his life to show
how widely he had travelled and in how many places his skill as a
player must have been admired. That in the matter of virtuosity he
was unexcelled can hardly be doubted. It is true that in the famous
contest with Handel he came off the loser on the organ, and even his
harpsichord playing was doubted to excel that of his Saxon friend.
But these contests were a test of wits more than of fingers, a trial
of _extempore_ skill in improvising fugues and double fugues, not of
virtuosity in playing.
Two famous German musicians, J. J. Quantz and J. A. Hasse, both heard
him and both marvelled at his skill. Monsieur L’Augier, a gifted
amateur whom Dr. Burney visited in Vienna, told a story of Scarlatti
and Thomas Roseingrave,[11] in which he related that when Roseingrave
first heard Scarlatti play, he was so astonished that he would have cut
off his own fingers then and there, had there been an instrument at
hand wherewith to perform the operation; and, as it was, he went months
without touching the harpsichord again.
Whom he had to thank for instruction is not known. There is nothing in
his music to suggest that he was ever a pupil of Bernardo Pasquini,
who, however, was long held to have been his master. J. S. Shedlock, in
his ‘History of the Pianoforte Sonata,’ suggests that he learned from
Gaëtano Greco or Grieco, a man a few years his senior and a student
under his father; but it would seem far more likely that Domenico
profited immediately from his father, who, we may see from a letter to
Ferdinand de’ Medici, dated May 30, 1705, had watched over his son’s
development with great care. It must not be forgotten that Alessandro
Scarlatti’s harpsichord toccatas, described in the previous chapter,
are, in spite of a general heaviness, often enlivened by astonishing
devices of virtuosity.
Scarlatti wrote between three and four hundred pieces for the
harpsichord. The Abbé Santini[12] possessed three hundred and
forty-nine. Scarlatti himself published in his lifetime only one set
of thirty pieces. These he called exercises (_esercizii_) for the
harpsichord. The title is significant. Before 1733 two volumes, _Pièces
pour le clavecin_, were published in Paris; and some time between 1730
and 1737 forty-two ‘Suites of Lessons’ were published in London under
the supervision of Roseingrave. More were printed in London in 1752.
Then came Czerny’s edition, which includes two hundred pieces; and
throughout the nineteenth century various selections and arrangements
have appeared from time to time, von Bülow having arranged several
pieces in the order of suites, Tausig having elaborated several in
accordance with the modern pianoforte. A complete and authoritative
edition has at last been prepared by Sig. Alessandro Longo and has been
printed in Italy by Ricordi and Company.
By far the greater part of these many pieces are independent of each
other. Except in a few cases where Scarlatti, probably in his youth,
followed the model of his father’s toccatas, he keeps quite clear of
the suite cycle. The pieces have been called sonatas, but they are
not for the most part in the form called the sonata form. This form
(which is the form in which one piece or movement may be cast and is
not to be confused with the sequence or arrangement of movements in
the classical sonata) is, as we shall later have ample opportunity
to observe, a tri-partite or ternary form; whereas the so-called
sonatas of Scarlatti are in the two-part or binary form, which is, as
we have seen, the form of the separate dance movements in the suite.
Each ‘sonata’ is, like the dance movements, divided into two sections,
usually of about equal length, both of which are to be repeated in
their turn. In general, too, the harmonic plan is the same or nearly
the same as that which underlies the suite movement, the first section
modulating from tonic to dominant, the second back from dominant to
tonic. But within these limits Scarlatti allows himself great freedom
of modulation. It is, in fact, this harmonic expansion within the
binary form which makes one pause to give Scarlatti an important place
in the development of the sonata form proper.
The harmonic variety of the Scarlatti sonatas is closely related to the
virtuosity of their composer. He spins a piece out of, usually, but not
always, two or three striking figures, by repeating them over and over
again in different places of the scale or in different keys. His very
evident fondness for technical formulæ is thus gratified and the piece
is saved from monotony by its shifting harmonies.
A favorite and simple shift is from major to minor. This he employs
very frequently. For example, in a sonata in G major, No. 2 of the
Breitkopf and Härtel collection of twenty sonatas[13] measures 13, 14,
15, and 16, in D major, are repeated immediately in A major. In 20, 21,
22, and 23, the same style of figure and rhythm appears in D major and
is at once answered in D minor. Toward the end of the second part of
the piece the process is duplicated in the tonic key. In the following
sonata at the top of page seven occurs another similar instance. It is
one of the most frequent of his mannerisms.
The repetition of favorite figures is by no means always accompanied
by a change of key. The two-measure phrase beginning in the fifteenth
measure of the third sonata is repeated three times note for note;
a few measures later another figure is treated in the same fashion;
and in yet a third place, all in the first section of this sonata,
the trick is turned again. Indeed, there are very few of Scarlatti’s
sonatas in which he does not play with his figures in this manner.
We have said that often he varies his key when thus repeating himself,
and that such variety saves from monotony. But it must be added that
even where there is no change of key he escapes being tedious to the
listener. The reason must be sought in the sprightly nature of the
figures he chooses, and in the extremely rapid speed at which they are
intended to fly before our ears. He is oftenest a dazzling virtuoso
whose music appeals to our bump of wonder, and, when well played,
leaves us breathless and excited.
The pieces are for the most part extremely difficult; and this,
together with his ever-present reiteration of special harpsichord
figures, may well incline us to look upon them as fledgling études. The
thirty which Scarlatti himself chose to publish he called _esercizii_,
or exercises. We may not take the title too literally, bearing in mind
that Bach’s ‘Well-Tempered Clavichord’ was intended for practice, as
were many of Kuhnau’s suites. But that Scarlatti’s sonatas are almost
invariably built up upon a few striking, difficult and oft-repeated
figures, makes their possible use as technical practice pieces far
more evident than it is in the ‘Well-Tempered Clavichord’ or even
the ‘Inventions’ of Bach. He undoubtedly offers the player enormous
opportunity to exercise his arms and his fingers in the production of
brilliant, astonishing effects.
Of these effects two will always be associated with his name: the
one obtained by the crossing of the hands, the other by the rapid
repetition of one note. Both devices will be found freely used in the
works of his father, and it is absurd to suppose that the son invented
them. Yet it is hardly an exaggeration to say that he made more use of
them than any man down to the time of Liszt. The crossing of the hands
is not employed to interweave two qualities of sound, as it oftenest is
in music for the organ or for the German and French harpsichords which
have two or more manuals that work independently of each other. The
Italian harpsichords had but one bank of keys, and Scarlatti’s crossing
of the hands, if it be not intended merely for display, succeeds
in making notes wide apart sound relatively simultaneous, and thus
produces qualities of resonance which hitherto had rested silent in the
instrument.
It has been suggested that the device of repeated notes was borrowed
from the mandolin, on which, as is well known, a _cantabile_ is
approximated by rapid repetition of the notes of the melody. Scarlatti,
however, rarely employs it to sustain the various notes of his
tune. In his sonatas it is usually, if not intentionally, effective
rhythmically; as it is, unfailingly, in more modern pianoforte music.
On the harpsichord, moreover, as on the pianoforte, it can make a
string twang with a sort of barbaric sound that still has the power to
stir us as shrieking pipes and whistles stirred our savage ancestors.
Still another mannerism of his technique or style is the wide leap of
many of his figures. A plunge from high to low notes was much practised
in contemporary violin music and was considered very effective, and
probably suggested a similar effect upon the harpsichord. Into this
matter again Scarlatti may well have been initiated by his father,
by whom it was not left untried. In the son’s sonatas it succeeds in
extending the range of sonority of the harpsichord, and thus points
unmistakably to developments in the true pianoforte style.
It is, in fact, by this extension of figures, by sudden leaps, by
crossing of hands, that Scarlatti frees harpsichord music from all
trace of slavery to the conjunct style of organ music; and he may
therefore be judged the founder of the brilliant free style which
reached its extreme development in the music of Liszt. Though we may
not fail to mention occasionally his indebtedness to his father and
to instrumental music of his time, we cannot deny that he is a great
inventor, the creator of a new art. He was admitted by composers of
his day to have not only wonderful hands, but a wonderful fecundity of
invention.
What guided him was chiefly instinct. He had, no doubt, considerable
strict training in the science of counterpoint and composition. He
wrote, as we know, not only harpsichord pieces, but operas and sacred
music as well. In the sonatas there is a great deal of neat two-part
writing, and an occasional flash of skill in imitations; but musical
science is almost the last thing we should think of in connection
with them. Rules are not exemplified therein. Burney relates, through
L’Augier, that Scarlatti knew he had broken established rules of
composition, but reasoned that ‘there was scarce any other rule worth
the attention of a man of genius than that of not displeasing the only
sense of which music is the object.’ And, further, that he complained
of the music of Alberti and other ‘modern’ composers because it did not
in execution demand a harpsichord, but might be equally well or perhaps
better expressed by other instruments. But, ‘as Nature had given him
[Scarlatti] ten fingers, and, as his instrument had employment for
them all, he saw no reason why he should not use them.’ He might have
included his two arms among his natural gifts. Certainly the free use
he made of them in most of his sonatas marks a new and extraordinary
advance in the history of keyboard music.
In the matter of form Scarlatti is not so strikingly an innovator as
he is in that of style. He is in the main content to cast his pieces
in the binary mold common to most short instrumental pieces of his
day. Yet, as has already been suggested, the harmonic freedom which
he enjoys within these relatively narrow limits is significant in
the development of the sonata form; and even more significant is his
distribution of musical material within them.
The binary form, such as we find it in the suites of Froberger and
even in those of J. S. Bach, is essentially a harmonic structure. The
balance and contrast which is the effect of any serviceable shape of
music is here one of harmony, principally of tonic and dominant and
dominant and tonic, with only a few measures of modulation for variety.
There is, in addition, some contrast between that musical material
which is presented first in the tonic key and that which appears later
in the dominant. But, while we may speak of these materials as first
and second themes or subjects, their individuality is hardly distinct
and is, in effect, obliterated by the regularity and smoothness of
style in which these short pieces are conventionally written. The
composer makes no attempt to set them off clearly, one against the
other. The entrance into the dominant key is almost never devised
in such a way as to prepare the listener for a new musical thought,
quite separate and different from that which he has already heard. The
transitional passage from tonic to dominant emerges from the one and
merges into the other, without break or distinctions.
In the matter of setting his themes in their frame, Scarlatti hardly
differs from his contemporaries. His style, though free and varied, is
in constant motion. But his genius was especially fertile in clean-cut
figures; and when, as he often does, he combines two or three distinct
types of these in one short piece, the music is full of thematic
variety and sparkles with an animation which at times is almost
dramatic.
Scarlatti is, indeed, hovering close to the sonata form in a great many
of his pieces, and in one actually strikes it.[14] We shall, however,
postpone a more detailed discussion of Scarlatti’s pieces in relation
to the sonata form to the next chapter. The distribution of his musical
material is quite whimsical and irregular, always more instinctive than
experimental. It is chiefly by the quality of this material that he
stands apart from his contemporaries, and as the founder of the free
and brilliant pianoforte style.
There remains little to be said of the æsthetic worth of his music.
During the years of his most vigorous manhood he was almost invariably
a virtuoso. Sheer delight in tonal effects rather than more sober need
of self-expression stimulated him. The prevalence of trumpet figures
such as those which constitute the opening phrases of the eleventh
and fourteenth sonatas in the Breitkopf and Härtel edition already
referred to, suggests that he took a good deal of material ready-made
from the operas of the day. Burney says there are many passages in
which he imitated the melody of tunes sung by carriers, muleteers, and
common people. But what he added to these was his own. A number of
pieces are conspicuous by especially free modulation and expansion
of form; and in these, technical effects are not predominant, but
rather a more serious interest in composition. It has therefore been
suggested that these pieces are the work of later years.[15] Though it
is said that while in Spain he grew too fat to cross his hands at the
harpsichord as was his wont in his youth, this physical restriction is
not alone responsible for the mellowness and warmth of such pieces as
the so-called Pastoral in D minor, familiar to audiences in Tausig’s
elaborated transcription. A great number of his pieces are rich in pure
musical beauty; and the freshness which exhales from all true musical
utterance is and probably always will be theirs.
None of his contemporaries in Italy approached him in the peculiar
skill which has made him conspicuous in the history of pianoforte
music. Francesco Durante (1684-1755) and Nicolo Porpora (1686-1767),
the great singing master, both wrote pieces for the harpsichord; the
one, ‘sonatas’ in several movements, the other fugues; but their music
lacks charm and can hardly be considered at all influential in the
development of the art of writing for keyboard instruments. Domenico
Alberti and P. D. Paradies will be considered in the following chapter.
II
The art of Couperin is flawless, the charm of his music not to be
described. It has that quality of perfection with which Nature marks
her smallest flowers. It is the miniature counterpart in music of a
perfected system of living, of the court life of France under Louis XIV.
Scarlatti was a rover. He tried his fortune in Italy, in England, in
Portugal and Spain. He won it by the exhibition of his extraordinary
and startling powers. He was on the alert to startle, his tribute the
bravas and mad applause of his excited hearers. He was the virtuoso in
an old sense of the word, the man with his powers consciously developed
to the uttermost. Bach, on the other hand, was an introspective, mighty
man, immeasurably greater than his surroundings, fathomless, personal,
suggestive. Between them stands Couperin, for the greater part of his
life in the intimate service of the most brilliant court the world has
ever seen, delicate in health, perfect in etiquette, wise and tender.
Of his life little need be said. He was born in Paris on November 10,
1668, the son of Charles Couperin, himself a musician and brother to
Louis and François Couperin, disciples of the great Chambonnières.
The father died about a year after his son was born, and the musical
education of the young François seems to have been undertaken by
his uncle, François, and later by Jacques Thomelin, organist in the
king’s private chapel in Versailles. Practically nothing is known
of his youth, and, though it is certain that he was for many years
organist at the church of St. Gervais in Paris, as his uncle and even
his grandfather had been before him, the time at which he took up his
duties there has not been exactly determined. There is on record,
however, the account of a meeting held on the twenty-sixth of December,
1693, at Versailles, at which Louis XIV heard Couperin play and chose
him from other competitors to succeed Thomelin as his private organist.
Thenceforth he passed his life in service of the king and later of the
regent. He died in Paris in 1733, after several years of ill health.
The great François was, no doubt, an unusually skillful organist, but
his fame rests upon his work for the clavecin, the French harpsichord,
and his book of instruction for that instrument. His duties at court
were various. He says himself that for twenty years he had the honor
to be with the king, and to teach, almost at the same time, Monseigneur
le Dauphin, the Duke of Burgundy, and six princes or princesses of the
royal house.
In his preface to the _Concerts royaux_ he informs us that chamber
concerts were given in the king’s presence on Sunday afternoons at
Versailles, and that he was commanded to write music for them and that
he himself played the clavecin at them. His book on the art of playing
the clavecin, written in 1716, was dedicated to the king. By all
accounts he was a beloved and highly prized teacher and performer. And
neither his pupils nor his fame were confined solely to the court.
There is no doubt that he was a public favorite and that he published
his pieces for the clavecin to satisfy a general demand. Also in a
measure to safeguard his music. For at that time instrumental pieces
were not often published, but were circulated in manuscript copies in
which gross errors grew rapidly as weeds; and which, moreover, were
common booty to piratical publishers, especially in the Netherlands.
So Couperin took minute care in preparing his music for his public.
Each set of pieces was furnished with a long preface, nothing in the
engraving was left to chance, the books were beautifully bound so that
all might be in keeping with the dainty and exquisite art of the music
itself. Since his day his pieces were never published again until
Madame Farrenc included the four great sets in her famous _Trésor des
Pianistes_ (1861-72). This edition was, according to Chrysander,[16]
very carelessly prepared and is full of inaccuracies. Chrysander
planned a new, accurate and complete edition, to be edited by Brahms,
of which unhappily only one volume, containing Couperin’s first two
books, ever came to print.
The original editions being now rare and priceless, and hardly
serviceable to the average student on account of the confusing obsolete
clef signs, it is to be hoped that before long Chrysander’s plan
will be carried out and the almost forgotten treasures of Couperin’s
clavecin music be revealed in their great beauty to the lover of music.
Couperin published in all five books of _pièces de clavecin_. Of these
the first appeared early in the century and is not commonly reckoned
among his best works. The other four sets appeared respectively in
1713, 1716, 1722, and 1730.
Each book contains several sets of pieces grouped together in _ordres_,
according to key.[17] The canon of the suite is wholly disregarded
and there is very little of the spirit of it. The first _ordre_, it
is true, has as the first six pieces an allemande, two courantes, a
sarabande, a gavotte, and a gigue; but there are twelve pieces in
addition, of which only three are named dances. The second _ordre_,
too, has an allemande, two courantes, and a sarabande at the beginning;
but there follow eighteen more pieces of which only four are strictly
dances. The fourth _ordre_ is without true dance forms; so are the
sixth, the seventh, the tenth, and others. Even the orthodox dances are
given secondary titles, or the dance name is itself secondary. In fact,
not only by including within one _ordre_ many more pieces than ever
found place within the suite, but by the very character of the pieces
themselves, Couperin is dissociated from the suite writers.
He wrote in the preface to his first book of pieces,[18] that in
composing he always had a particular subject before his eyes. This
accounts for the titles affixed to most of his pieces. We have already
referred to ‘battle’ pieces of earlier composers, and to Kuhnau’s
narratives in music. Couperin’s music is not of the same sort. The
majority of his titled pieces are pure music, admirable and charming
in themselves. They are seldom copies. They make their appeal, or they
are intelligible, not by what they delineate, but by what they express
or suggest. The piece as a whole gives an impression, not the special
figures or traits of which it is composed.
Let us consider a few of many types. Take what have been often called
the portraits of court ladies. In these we cannot by any effort of the
imagination find likenesses. It would be ludicrous to try. As ladies
may differ in temperament from each other, so do these little pieces
differ. There is the allemande _L’Auguste_, which is a dignified,
somewhat austere dance piece in G minor; another, _La Laborieuse_, in
a complicated contrapuntal style unusual with him. There are three
sarabandes called _La Majesteuse_, _La Prude_, and _La Lugubre_,
impressive, meagre, and profound in turn. These pieces are hardly
personal, nor have they peculiar characteristics apart from the spirit
which is clear in each of them.
Another type of portrait fits its title a little more tangibly. There
is _La Mylordine_, in the style of an English jig; _La Diane_, which
is built up on the fanfare figure always associated with the hunt; _La
Diligente_, full of bustling finger work. _Les Nonnettes_ are blonde
and dark, the blondes, oddly enough, in minor, the dark in major.
Many others are so purely music, delicate and tender, that the titles
seem more to be a gallant tribute to so and so, rather than the names
of prototypes in the flesh. _La Manon_, _La Babet_, _La fleurie, ou
la tendre Nanette_, _L’Enchanteresse_, _La tendre Fanchon_, and many
others are in no way program music; nor can they ever be interpreted
as such, since no man can say what charming girl, two centuries dead,
may have suggested their illusive features.
It is these ‘portraits’ particularly which are Couperin’s own new
contribution to the art of music. So individual is the musical life in
each one, so special and complete its character, so full of sentiment
and poetry, that, small as it is, it may stand alone as a perfect and
enduring work of art. It has nothing to do with the suite or with
any of the cyclic forms. Here are the first flowers from that branch
of music from which later were to grow the nocturnes of Field, the
_Moments musicals_ of Schubert, the preludes of Chopin.
Between these and the few pieces which are frankly almost wholly
dependent upon a program are a great number of others lightly
suggestive of their titles. Sometimes it is only in general character.
_Les vendangeuses_ and _Les moissoneurs_ do not seem so particularly
related to wine-gathering or harvesting that the titles might not
be interchanged; but both have something of a peasant character. In
_Les abeilles_ and in Le moucheron the characterization is finer. The
pleasant humming of the bees is reproduced in one, the monotonous
whirring of the gnat in the other. _Les bergeries_ is simply pastoral,
_Les matelots Provençales_ is a lively march, followed by a horn-pipe.
_Les papillons_ is not unlike the little piece so named in the Schumann
_Carnaval_, though here it means but butterflies. There are some
imitative pieces which are in themselves charming music, such as _Les
petits moulins à vent_, _Le réveille-matin_, _Le carillon de Cythère_,
and _Les ondes_, with its undulating figures and fluid ornamentation.
Finally the program music is in various degrees programmistic. A
little group of pieces called _Les Pèlerines_ (Pilgrims) begins with a
march, to be played gaily. Then comes a little movement to represent
the spirit of alms-giving, in a minor key, to be played tenderly; and
this is followed by a cheerful little movement of thanks, to which is
added a lively coda. The whole is rather an expression of moods than a
picture of actions. _Les petits ages_ is in some respects more literal.
The first movement, _La muse naissante_, is written in a syncopated
style, the right hand always following the left, which may well express
weakness and hesitation. _L’adolescente_, the third movement, is a
lively rondo in vigorous gavotte rhythm.
Two sets are entirely program music. One of these, _Les Bacchanales_,
has a march (_pésament, sans lenteur_) of the gray-clad ones; then
three movements expressive of the delights of wine, the tenderness
to which it warms and the madness to which it enflames. The music is
not of itself interesting. More remarkable, though devoid of musical
worth save a good bit of the comical, is _Les fastes de la grande et
ancienne Mxnxstrxndxsx_. These records or tales are divided into five
acts, which represent the notables and judges of the kingdom, the old
men and the beggars (over a drone bass), the jugglers, tumblers and
mountebanks, with their bears and monkeys, the cripples (those with
one arm or leg played by the right hand, those who limp played by the
left), and, finally, the confusion and flight of all, brought about by
the drunkards and the bears and monkeys.
III
The last of these compositions are in no way representative of Couperin
the artist. They might have been written by any one who had a love for
nonsense, and they are not meant to be taken seriously. The quality
of Couperin’s contribution to music must be tested in such pieces as
_Le bavolet-flottant_, _La fleurie_, _Les moissoneurs_, _Le carillon
de Cythère_, and _La lugubre_. His harmony is delicate, suggesting
that of Mozart and even Chopin, to whom he is in many ways akin. He
does not, like Scarlatti, wander far in the harmonic field; but in
a relatively small compass glides about by semi-tones. There is, of
course, a great deal of tonic and dominant, such as will always be
associated with a certain clear-cut style of French dance music; but
the grace of his melody and his style is too subtle to permit monotony.
The harmonies of the sarabande _La lugubre_ are profound.
In form he is precise. His use of the rondo deserves special attention.
In this form he cast many of his loveliest pieces, and it is one
which never found a place in the suite. It is very simple, yet in
his hands full of charm. The groundwork of one main theme recurring
regularly after several episodes or contrasting themes was analyzed in
the previous chapter. Couperin called his episodes couplets, and his
rondos are usually composed of the principal theme and three couplets.
He does not invariably repeat the whole theme after each couplet, but
sometimes, as in _Les bergeries_, only a characteristic phrase of it.
The couplets are generally closely related to the main theme, from
which they differ not in nature, but chiefly in ornamentation and
harmony. Much of the charm of his music is due to the neat proportions
of this hitherto neglected form. It was native to him as a son of
France, where, from the early days of the singers of Provence, the song
in stanzas with its dancing refrain had been beloved of the people.
Through him it found a place in the great instrumental music of the
world.
Couperin’s style is too delicate to be caught in words. To call it the
_style galant_ merely catalogues it as a free style, highly adorned
with _agrémens_. The freedom is of course the freedom from all trace of
polyphony in the old sense, of strict leading of voices from beginning
to end. Couperin adds notes to his harmonic background when and where
he will; so that it is impossible to say whether a piece is in two, or
three, or four parts, because it is in no fixed number of parts at all.
The countless _agrémens_ are more than an external feature of his
music, and of other music of his time. The analogies which have often
been drawn between them and the formal superficialities of court life
under the great Louis are in the main false. Both Couperin and Emanuel
Bach, a man of perhaps less sensitive, certainly of less elegant,
taste, regarded them as of vital importance. Even the learned Kuhnau,
who can hardly be called a stylist at all, considered them the sugar
of his fruit. It would seem as if only by means of these flourishes
harpsichord music could take on some grace of line and warmth of color.
Whatever subtlety of expression the dry-toned instrument was capable
of found life only in the _agrémens_. We cannot judge of the need of
them nor of their peculiar beauties by the sound of them on the modern
pianoforte, even under the lightest fingers. It is open to question
whether any but a few of them should be retained in the performance of
Couperin’s works, now that the instrument, the shortcomings of which
they were intended to supplement, has been banished in general from the
concert stage.
This is not only because the peculiarities of the pianoforte call for
a different kind of ornamentation, but also because the playing of
harpsichord flourishes is practically a lost art. Couperin and Emanuel
Bach left minute directions and explanations in regard to them; but
in their treatises we have only the letter of the law, not the spirit
which inspired it. Even in their day, in spite of all laws, the
_agrémens_ were subject to the caprice of the player; and they remained
so down to the time of Chopin.
Neither the freedom from polyphonic strictness nor the profusion of
ornaments are the special peculiarities of Couperin’s style. They
were more or less common to a great deal of the harpsichord music of
his day. But he had a way, all his own at that time, of accompanying
his melodies with a sort of singing bass or a melodious inner voice
that moved with the melody in thirds or sixths, or in smooth contrary
motion. This may be studied in such pieces as _La fleurie_, _Le
bavolet-flottant_, _Les moissoneurs_, _Les abeilles_, and many others.
It has little to do with polyphony. The accompanying voices are only
suggested. They never claim attention by their own movement. They seem
a sort of spirit or tinted shadow of the melody, hardly more than
whispering.
This accounts in part for what we may call the tenderness of Couperin’s
music, a quality which makes itself felt no matter how elusive it
may be. He marked most of his pieces to be played with a special
expressiveness, and frequently used the word _tendrement_. This, he
admitted in one of his prefaces, was likely to surprise those who were
aware of the limitations of the clavecin. He knew that the ‘clavecin
was perfect as regards scope and brilliance, but that one could not
increase or diminish the tone on it.’ His thanks would be forthcoming
to one who through taste and skill would be able to improve its
expression in this respect. He was not above all else a virtuoso.
‛_J’ayme beaucoup mieux ce qui me touche que ce qui me surprend_,’
he wrote in 1713. There is no doubt that he desired the greatest
refinement of touch and shading in the expression of his music, and
that he suffered under the limitations of the instrument for which
he wrote. For the texture of his music is soft and delicate, its
loveliness has a secret quality, hardly more than suggested by the
shadowy inner voices. We cannot but be reminded of Chopin, in whose
music alone the spirits of music whispered again so softly together.
Among the contemporaries of Couperin, Marchand, Claude Daquin
(1694-1772), and J. P. Rameau (1683-1764) are best known, at least by
name, today. Marchand is remembered chiefly by reason of the episode
with Bach in Dresden. Daquin enjoyed a brilliant reputation as an
organist in his day. One of his pieces for clavecin--‘The Cuckoo’--is
still heard today. J. B. Weckerlin quoted an amusing bird-story[19]
about Daquin, the burden of which is that one Christmas eve Daquin
imitated the song of a nightingale so perfectly on the organ in church
that the treasurer of the parish dispatched beadles throughout the
edifice in search of a live songster.
Rameau is a greater figure in the general history of music than
Couperin himself; yet, though his harpsichord pieces are, perhaps
therefore, better known than those of the somewhat earlier man, they
lack the most unusual charm and perfection of Couperin’s. There are
fifty-three of these in all. Ten were published in 1706, of which
a gavotte in rondo form in A minor is best known. A second set of
twenty-one pieces appeared in 1724, containing the still famous _Rappel
des oiseaux_, the _Tambourin_, _Les niais de Sologne_, _La poule_, the
Gavotte with variations, in A minor, and many others. Sixteen more
followed, written between 1727 and 1731. In 1747 a single piece--_La
Dauphine_--was published. Besides these, all written originally for
harpsichord, he published five arrangements of his _Pièces de concert_,
written in the first place for a group of three or more instruments.
Rameau’s style is less delicate than Couperin’s. It is not only that
there are fewer _agrémens_. The workmanship is more vigorous, more
dramatic; the music itself less intimate. The first gavotte in A
minor, the doubles in the Rigaudon and in _Les niais de Sologne_, the
variations in the second gavotte in A minor, and _La Dauphine_, all
speak of a technical enlargement. Yet a certain fineness is lacking.
It will be noticed that he showed hardly more allegiance to the canon
of the suite than Couperin had shown; and there is a large portion of
titles such as _Les tendres plaintes_, _Les soupirs_, _L’entretien
des muses_, and there are also many portraits: _La joyeuse_, _La
triomphante_, _L’Egyptienne_, _L’agaçante_, and others.
In the preface to the new edition of his works published under the
supervision of Camille Saint-Saëns, there is the following quotation
from Amadée Mereaux’s _Les clavecinistes de 1637-1790_, which
summarizes his position in the history of harpsichord music. ‘If there
is lacking in his melodies the smoothness of Couperin, the distinction,
the delicacy, the purity of style which give to the music of that
clavecin composer to Louis XIV its so precious quality of charm, Rameau
has at least a boldness of spirit, an animation, a power of harmony and
a richness of modulation. The reflection of his operatic style, lively,
expressive, always precise and strongly rhythmical, is to be found
in his instrumental style. In treatment of the keyboard Rameau went
far ahead of his predecessors. His technical forms, his instrumental
designs, his variety and brilliance in executive resources, and his
new runs and figures are all conquests which he won to the domain of
the harpsichord.’ Rameau is primarily a dramatic composer. It may be
added that several of his harpsichord pieces later found a place in his
operas, usually as ballet music.
IV
A glance over the many pieces of Scarlatti and Couperin discovers a
vast field of unfamiliar music. If one looks deep enough to perceive
the charm, the beauty, the perfection of these forgotten masterpieces,
one cannot but wonder what more than a trick of time has condemned
them to oblivion. For no astonished enthusiasm of student or amateur
whose eye can hear, renders back glory to music that lies year after
year silent on dusty shelves. The general ear has not heard it. The
general eye cannot hear it as it can scan the ancient picture, the
drama, the poetry of a time a thousand or two thousand years ago. Music
that is silent is music quite forgotten if not dead.
And, what is more, the few pieces of Couperin which are still heard
seem almost to live on sufferance, as if the life they have were not
of their own, but lent them by the listener disposed to imagine a
courtier’s life long ago washed out in blood. ‘Sweet and delicate,’ one
hears of the music of Couperin, as one hears of some bit of old lace or
old brocade, that has lain long in a chest of lavender. Yet the music
of Couperin is far more than a matter of fashion. It is by all tokens
great art. The lack is in the race of musicians and of men who have
lost the art of playing it and the simplicity of attentive listening.
To a certain extent the music of Sebastian Bach suffers from the same
lack. On the other hand, the spirit of his music is perennial and
it holds a rank in the modern ear far above that held by any other
harpsichord music. Apart from indefinable reasons of æsthetic worth
there are other reasons why Bach’s music, at any rate a considerable
part of it, is still with us.
In the first place, the style of its texture is solid. Instead of being
crushed, as Couperin’s music is, by the heavy, rich tone of the modern
pianoforte, it seems to grow stronger by speaking through the stronger
instrument. Bach’s style is nearly always an organ style, whether he is
writing for clavichord, for chorus, for bands or strings. It is very
possible that a certain mystical, intimate sentiment which is innate in
most of his clavichord music cannot find expression through the heavy
strings of the pianoforte. This may be far dearer than the added depth
and richness which the pianoforte has, as it were, hauled up from the
great reservoirs of music he has left us. But it is none the less true
that the high-tensioned heavy strings on their gaunt frame of cast iron
need not call in vain on the music of Bach to set the heart of them
vibrating.
In the second place, the two-and three-part ‘Inventions,’ and the
preludes and fugues in the ‘Well-Tempered Clavichord’ have proved
themselves to be, as Bach himself hoped, the very best of teaching
or practice pieces. It is not that your conventional Mr. Dry-as-dust
teacher has power to inflict Bach upon every tender, rebellious
generation. It is rather that the pieces themselves cannot be excelled
as exercises, not only for the fingers but for the brain. One need
not delve here into the matter of their musical beauty, but one must
pause in amazement before their sturdiness, which can stand up, still
resilient, under the ceaseless hammering of ten million sets of
fingers. Clementi and Czerny are being pounded into insensibility;
Cramer, despite the recommendations of Beethoven, is breathing his
last; Moscheles, Dohler, Kalkbrenner, and a host of others are laid to
rest. But here comes Bach bobbing up in our midst seeming to say: ‘Hit
me! Hit me as hard as you like and still I’ll sing. And when you know
me as well as I know you, you’ll know how to play the piano.’ So Bach
has been, is, and will be introduced to young people. He inspires love,
or hate, or fear--a triple claim to remembrance.
In the third place, there is an intellectual complexity in his music
which, as a triumph of human skill over the masses of sound, deserves
and has won an altar with perpetual flame. And the marvel is that this
skill is rarely used as an end in itself, but as a means of expressing
very genuine and frank emotion. Here we come upon perhaps the great
reason of Bach’s immortality--the warmth of his music. It is almost
uniquely personal and subjective. In it he poured forth his whole soul
with a lack of self-consciousness and a complete concentration. His was
a powerful soul, always afire with enthusiasm; and his emotion seems
to have clarified and crystallized his music as heat and pressure have
made diamonds out of carbon.
Bach was a lovable man, but a stern and somewhat bellicose one as
well. He was shrewd enough to respect social rank quite in the manner
of his day, as the dedication of the Brandenburg concertos plainly
shows; but the records of his various quarrels with the municipal
authorities of Leipzig prove how quick he was to unrestrained wrath
whenever his rights either as man or artist were infringed upon. A
great deal of independence marked him. The same can hardly be said
either of Scarlatti or of Couperin, the one of whom was lazy and
good-natured, the other gently romantic and extremely polite. Scarlatti
rather enjoyed his indifference to accepted rules of composition; and
there was nothing either of self-abasement or of self-depreciation
in Couperin; but both lacked the stalwart vigor of Bach. Scarlatti
aimed, confessedly, to startle and to amuse by his harpsichord pieces.
He cautioned his friends not to look for anything particularly
serious in them. It is hard to dissociate an ideal of pure and only
faintly colored beauty from Couperin. But in the music of Bach one
seldom misses the ring of a strong and even an impetuous need of
self-expression. In the mighty organ works, and in the vocal works,
one may believe with him that he sang his soul out to the glory of his
Maker; but in the smaller keyboard pieces sheer delight in expressing
himself is unmistakable.
It is this that makes Bach a romanticist, while Couperin, with all
his fanciful titles, is classic. It is this that made Bach write in
nearly the same style for all instruments, drawing upon his personal
inspiration without consideration of the instrument for which
he wrote; while Couperin, exquisitely sensitive to all external
impressions, forced his fine art to conformity with the special and
limited qualities of the instrument for which he wrote the great part
of his music. And, finally, it is this which produced utterance of so
many varied moods and emotions in the music of Bach; while in the music
of Couperin we find all moods and emotions tempered to one distinctly
normal cast of thought.
Bach has been the subject of so much profound and special study that
there is little to be added to the explanation of his character or of
his works. In considering him as a composer for the harpsichord or
clavichord, one has to bear two facts in mind: that he was a great
player and a great teacher.
There is much evidence from his son and from prominent musicians who
knew him, that the technical dexterity of his fingers was amazing.
He played with great spirit and, when the music called for it, at a
great speed. Perhaps the oft-repeated story of his triumph over the
famous French player, Marchand, who, it will be remembered, defaulted
at the appointed hour of contest, has been given undue significance.
As we have had occasion to remark, in speaking of the contest between
Handel and D. Scarlatti, such tourneys at the harpsichord were tests of
wits, not of fingers. Bach was first of all an organist and it may be
suggested, with no disloyalty to the great man among musicians, that he
played the harpsichord with more warmth than glitter. We find little
evidence in his harpsichord music of the sort of virtuosity which makes
D. Scarlatti’s music astonish even today; or, it may be added, of the
special flexible charm which gives Couperin’s its inimitable grace.
Bach is overwhelming as a virtuoso in his organ music, especially
in passages for the pedals. In his harpsichord music he achieves a
rushing, vigorous style. It must not be overlooked that Bach wrote also
for the clavichord, quite explicitly, too. Most of the Forty-eight
Preludes and Fugues are distinctly clavichord, not harpsichord, music.
That is to say, they require a fine shading which is impossible on the
harpsichord. When he wrote for the harpsichord he had other effects in
mind. The prelude of the English suite in G minor or the last movement
of the Italian concerto may be taken as representative of his most
vigorous and effective harpsichord style. They are different not only
in range and breadth, but in spirit as well, from practically all of
the ‘Well-Tempered Clavichord.’ Nevertheless, though these may be taken
fairly as examples of his harpsichord style at its best and strongest,
they are not especially effective as virtuoso music. There is sheer
virtuosity only in the Goldberg Variations.
To Bach as a teacher we owe the Inventions and the ‘Well-Tempered
Clavichord,’ both written expressly for the use and practice of young
people who wished to learn about music and to acquire a taste for
the best music. Volumes might well be filled with praise of them. It
will suffice us only to note, however, that to master the technical
difficulties of the keyboard was always for Bach only a step toward the
art of playing, which is the art of expressing emotion in music. These
two sets of pieces are all-powerful evidence of this--his creed--in
accordance with which he always nobly lived and worked. They have
but one parallel in pianoforte music: the _Études_ of Chopin. The
‘Well-Tempered Clavichord’ is, and always will be, essentially a study
in expression.
His system of tempering or tuning the clavichord, by reason of which
he has often been granted a historical immortality, was the relatively
simple one of dividing the octave into twelve equal intervals. Only the
octave itself was strictly in tune, but the imperfections of the other
intervals were so slight as to escape detection by the most practised
ear. By paying the nominal toll of theoretical inaccuracy, Bach
opened the roads of harmonic modulation on every hand. It must not be
forgotten, however, that most of the pieces of Couperin or Scarlatti,
not to mention many an outlandish chromatic _tour de force_ in the
works of the early English composers, would have been intolerable on a
harpsichord strictly in tune. Other men than Bach had their systems of
temperament. We may take Bach’s only to be the simplest.
Furthermore, that he created a new development of pianoforte technique
by certain innovations in the manner of fingering passages, is
open to question. It is well known that up to the beginning of the
eighteenth century the use of the thumb on the keyboard was generally
discountenanced. Bach himself had seen organists play who avoided using
the thumb even in playing wide stretches. Scales were regularly played
by the fingers, which, without the complement of the thumb, passed
sideways over each other in a crawling motion which is said to have
been inherited from the lutenists. Couperin advocated the use of the
thumb in scales, but _over_, and not under, the fingers. Bach seems the
first to have openly advised and practised passing the thumb under the
fingers in the manner of today. Yet even he did not give up entirely
the older method of gliding the fingers over each other in passages up
and down the keyboard.
His system passed on through the facile hands of his son Emanuel, the
greatest teacher of the next generation; and if it is not the crest
of the wave of new styles of playing which was to break over Europe
and flood a new and special pianoforte literature, is at any rate a
considerable part of its force. Yet it must be borne in mind that
Scarlatti founded by his own peculiar gifts a tradition of playing the
piano and composing for it, in which Clementi was to grow up; and that,
influential as Emanuel Bach was, Clementi was the teacher of the great
virtuosi who paved the way to Chopin, the composer for the piano _par
excellence_.
The foundation of all Bach’s music is the organ. Even in his works
for violin alone, or in those for double chorus and instruments, the
conjunct, contrapuntal style of organ music is unmistakable. His
general technique was acquired by study of the organ works of his great
predecessors, Frescobaldi, Sweelinck, Pachelbel, Buxtehude, Bohm, and
others. He was first and always an organist. So it is not surprising to
find by far the greater part of his harpsichord and clavichord music
shaped to a polyphonic ideal; and, what is more, written in the close,
smooth style which is primarily fitting to the organ.
His intelligence, however, was no less alert than it was acute. There
is evidence in abundance that he not only knew well the work of most
of his contemporaries, but that he appropriated what he found best in
their style. He seems to have found the violin concertos of Vivaldi
particularly worthy of study. He was indebted to him for the form of
his own concertos; and, furthermore, he adapted certain features of
Vivaldi’s technique of writing for the violin to the harpsichord. Of
the influence of Couperin there is far less than was once supposed. The
‘French Suites’ were not so named by Bach and are, moreover, far more
in his own contrapuntal style than in the tender style of Couperin.
Kuhnau’s Bible sonatas are always cited as the model for Bach’s little
Capriccio on the departure of his brother; but elsewhere it is hard to
find evidence of indebtedness to Kuhnau.
But he even profited by an acquaintance with the trivial though
enormously successful Italian opera of his day, and used the _da
capo_ aria as frankly as A. Scarlatti or J. A. Hasse. Still, whatever
he acquired from his contemporaries was but imposed upon the great
groundwork of his art, his organ technique. He never let himself go
upon the stream of music of his day, but held steadfast to the ideal he
had inherited from a century of great German organists, of whom he was
to be the last and the greatest.
So, for the most part, the forms which had evolved during the
seventeenth century were the forms in which he chose to express
himself. Of these, two will be for ever associated with him, because he
so expanded them and filled them with his poetry and emotion that no
further growth was possible to them. These are the fugue and the suite.
V
Most of Bach’s predecessors and many of his contemporaries regarded
the fugue as the highest form of instrumental music. It was the form
in which they put their most serious endeavor. The harmonic basis of
music was generally accepted and skill in weaving a contrapuntal or
a polyphonic piece out of a principal motive or theme, and two or
three subsidiary ones, was more or less common to all musicians. Yet
fugues up to the time of Bach lacked a logical unity of construction.
Excellent as the craftsmanship displayed in them might be, the effect
was not satisfactory. There seemed, for instance, to be no very clear
reason why a fugue should end except that the composer chose to end
it. There was no principle of balance governing the work as a whole.
It was architecturally out of proportion, or it failed to impress its
proportions upon the listener. Bach alone seems to have given the fugue
a perfectly balanced form, to have endowed it not only with life but
with organization as well.
The secret of this is that at the bottom of his fugues lies a broadly
conceived, well-balanced and firmly constructed harmonic plan. It must
be granted, besides, that the subjects out of which he builds them have
a singular vitality and are full of suggestion. But Bach, with his
fertility in highly charged musical ideas and his apparently unlimited
power to weave and ravel and weave musical material in endless
variety of effects, rarely let his skill or his enthusiasm betray his
sense of proportion. There is a compactness in nearly all his fugues
which results from the compression of expressive ideas within the
well-defined limits of a logical, harmonic plan.
Doubtless, the definiteness of this harmonic plan is more or less
concealed from our modern ears by the uninterrupted movement of the
voice parts, which was part of the conventional ideal of polyphonic
writing. We are used to the pauses or stereotyped repetitions of the
more modern style, which throw harmonic goals into prominence whereon
the mind may perch and rest for a moment. Such perches are for the
most part lacking in the Bach fugues. The subject takes flight and
flies without rest until the end. Moreover, the art of playing Bach
which brings out more than the regular and mechanical march of the
voice-parts is unhappily extremely rare. Evenness of execution, that
unhappy _bête-noire_ of the striving student, is exalted far above any
really more difficult, subtle variation of touch which may veil the
flow of the various independent melodies in order to bring out the
beautiful changing harmonies, arising from them like colored mist. But
a simple analysis of any fugue will reveal the clear, well-balanced
plan underneath it.
Pause for a moment at one or two of those that are better known. Take,
for example, the fugue in C-sharp major from the first book of the
‘Well-tempered Clavichord.’ There is the conventional opening section,
in which the theme and secondary themes are announced. We have tonic,
dominant, and a clear cadence again in the tonic. Then begins the
strong pull toward the dominant, so nearly inevitable in most kinds of
musical form, and finally the dominant triumphant with the main theme
strong and clear, and a solid cadence.
Here, on the basis of harmony, the first broad part ends, and the music
goes on to explore and develop through other keys. The harmonies are
rich, the counterpoint melodious, the theme whispered as a recollection
from the first land of familiar tonic and dominant. Then clearly we are
held for a moment to enjoy E-sharp minor before we play back again,
with fragments of the theme, to our well-known dominant and tonic. Off
again on motives we cannot fail to recognize, as if we were again to
wander afield in harmonies. But, no; we sink firmly upon a swelling
G-sharp, our dominant again, the best known note of our theme. The
captive harmonies rise and fall. Movement they have, but escape is
impossible. The return home is inevitable, it is imminent, it is done.
Cheerfully our theme traces its old ground. It pauses a moment as if
contemplating further flight, but the tonic key is all-powerful and the
flight is ended and with it our fugue.
It is all lucid and logical: the first broad section with its
twice-told tonic and its accustomed urge to the dominant; the many
measures of wandering that yet pause to make harmonies clear; the long
struggle against the anchoring G-sharp that pulls ultimately home.
Or take, for example, the more complicated fugue in G minor (Book I).
We find, with few exceptions, the same plan. There are four voices
to enter, and the exposition of the theme and counter-subjects is
consequently longer. But they come in regularly, one after the other,
tonic, dominant, tonic, dominant; and then the irresistible sway of
the whole fabric to the relative major, made clear by an unusually
obvious cadence. There follows the development section and the various
episodic modulations, all held intimately together by recurrences of
the main theme. The keys are well-defined. Then, instead of a firm
anchoring of all this variety on a pedal point, we have a descending,
regular sequence which inevitably suggests an objective point to be
reached--the return of the music at last to the keys in which it was
first made known to us. And now in this final restatement, instead of
retracing step by step the opening measures, we hear the entrances of
the theme pressed close together, overlapping, a persistent leading
F-sharp from which there is but one escape, the final chords settling
majestically into G minor.
Both these fugues are built upon a well-balanced and yet varied
harmonic groundwork. The art of Bach shows especially in the middle
or developing section in the clearness with which he brings out the
various harmonic stages through which he leads his music, and in the
manner in which, by the unmistakable method of a persistent pedal point
or a regular sequence, he brings back the final restatement of his
material in a section balancing the opening section.
Other fugues in the same collection, such as those in C-sharp minor and
in B-flat minor, are more architectural. But, though the marvellous
building up of themes and counter-themes, as in the C-sharp minor
fugue, seems to outline a very cathedral of sound, we shall find none
the less the same tri-partite harmonic base underneath the work as a
whole.
In longer fugues, such as the great one in C minor coupled with a
toccata and that in D minor which is associated with the ‘Chromatic
Fantasy,’ the balance between the opening and closing sections is
somewhat obscured by the long free section in between. But even here a
unity is maintained by the skillful repetition of striking passages and
the return to the final section is always magnificently prepared.
Bach did not bind himself to rules in writing his fugues. He handled
his material with great freedom. Witness many fugues like that in F
minor in the second part of the ‘Well-tempered Clavichord,’ in which
he often subdued the main theme to a capricious, obvious second theme.
Such a treatment of the fugue approaches the dramatic; and this,
together with the division, quite clear in so many, into three sections
of exposition, development and restatement, cannot but suggest some
sort of kinship between the fugue as Bach conceived it and the movement
in so-called sonata form which grew to such splendid proportions in
the half-century after his death. At any rate, we are compelled to
recognize that in spite of the contrapuntal style, inherited from an
age in which harmonic sequence was a secondary element in music, the
Bach fugues owe their imperishable form to the same principles of
harmonic foundation as those upon which the sonata-form of Mozart and
Beethoven is known to rest.
VI
Though in the matter of musical form the name of Bach at once suggests
the fugue, he brought the suite to no less perfection and significance.
It must, however, be granted that the suite suffers by comparison with
the fugue as a great form in music. First, the convention that all its
movements be in the same key is more than likely to make the work as
a whole monotonous. Secondly, the more or less obligatory dependence
upon dance rhythms tends to restrict emotional vivacity and subtlety.
Thirdly, since there can be but little contrast and variety among the
separate movements, the suite lacks organic or internal life.
On the other hand, the emphasis laid upon rhythm may give the
individual movements more obvious charm than the fugue is likely
to exert. Furthermore, though the scope of the movements is more
restricted than that of the fugue, the form is freer. And the neat
balance of structure, with its two repeated sections, is undoubtedly
more sympathetic to our modern ear than the involved architecture of
the fugue. Lastly, though the sequence of allemande, courante, bourrée,
gigue and other conventional movements may give us too much of a good
thing, the sarabande does afford that striking point of contrast which
is the precious asset of the great cyclic forms, whether sonata, string
quartet, or symphony.
Bach wrote three complete sets of suites: the so-called French suites,
which seem to have been written for his second wife during the time of
his stay at Cöthen; the English suites,[20] and the ‘Partitas,’ which
we may call the German suites. Both the English suites and the Partitas
were written at Leipzig, and the latter were among the few works
engraved and printed during his lifetime.
Inasmuch as the form of the suite, its sequence and normal number of
movements, had been clearly defined both by Froberger and Kuhnau some
time before Bach began to write, he cannot be said to have assisted in
its creation, as he did in the creation of the fugue. From the point of
view of form he neither added anything nor, strictly speaking, improved
upon what he inherited. What he did do was to expand the limits of the
various movements to great and noble proportions, and to fill them with
a wealth of musical vigor and imagination hardly suggested before his
day in any instrumental music except Corelli’s.
The French suites are the simplest and the most conventional. The style
of them is unquestionably lighter than that of the later suites; but
this may well be due less to an attempt to write in the _style galant_
of Couperin, than to a desire to compose music technically within
the grasp of his young and charming second wife. The sequence of the
movements is conventional. All six have as their first three movements
the normal allemande, courante and sarabande. All close with a gigue.
Between the sarabande and the gigue he placed a number of extra dances,
two minuets in the first suite, an air and minuet in the second, two
minuets and an _Anglaise_ in the third. The fourth and fifth have each
three of these _intermezzi_, including gavottes, a bourrée and a loure;
and the last has an odd group of four, consisting of a gavotte, a
polonaise, a bourrée and a minuet. Only two of the courantes follow the
French model with its complicated shifting rhythm. The others are of
the more rapid Italian style.
The movements are all short and in the now familiar binary form, with
its first section modulating from tonic to dominant, and repeated; and
its second section going by way of a few more complicated modulations
back again from dominant to tonic. There is little trace of a marked
differentiation between the musical material given first in the tonic,
and that given later in the dominant.
The hand of Bach is, however, not to be mistaken even here in these
relatively simple pieces. The style is firm and for the most part
close upon the organ style; the melodies--and there are melodies--are
surprisingly sweet and fresh; the rhythm, delightfully crisp and
vivacious. It is to be regretted that these early suites have generally
dropped from the concert stage.
In looking over the English suites, which are undoubtedly the greatest
works of their kind, one is first struck by the magnificent preludes.
Each of the six suites has its prelude, longer by far and more
powerful than any of the subsequent movements. In breadth of plan, in
all-compelling vigor and vitality, in a magnificent, healthy emotion,
these preludes may hold their places beside any single movements which
have since been written. It cannot be denied that their style is more
the style of organ than pianoforte music. A certain severity must also
be admitted, which may leave something lacking to the modern ear that
in a relatively long movement craves something of sensuous warmth. But
their power is truly immense.
The style is highly contrapuntal and with few exceptions follows the
convention of uninterrupted movement. This tends, as in many of the
fugues, to hide the formal outline. The listener hears the music
flowing on page after page and may be pardoned if, being able to
recognize in the torrent of sound only one distinctly recurring theme,
he thinks he is hearing music akin to the fugue. As a matter of fact,
however, with the exception of only the first, the structure of these
preludes is astonishingly formal and astonishingly simple. The second,
fourth, fifth and sixth are fundamentally arias, on a huge scale.
The aria form is one of the simplest in music, one of the most
effective as well, and was the first to develop under the influence of
the Italian opera of the seventeenth century. It has frequently been
called the A-B-A form. This is because it is made up of three distinct
sections of which the first and last, predominantly in the tonic key,
are identical, and the middle in some contrasting key or keys and
of contrasting musical material. To spare themselves the trouble of
writing out the last section, composers adopted the convention of
merely writing the Italian words _da capo_ (from the beginning) at
the end of the second section, and of placing a double bar at the
end of the first, over which the singer or player was not to pass
upon his second performance of this section. Bach could have adopted
this economical device, had he so desired, in the four preludes just
mentioned; for each of them proves, upon examination, to be composed
of three distinct sections, the middle more or less the longest, the
first and last note for note the same.
We have already remarked how most of Bach’s fugues, especially the
shorter ones, can be divided into three sections based upon harmony.
In the preludes to the English suites the question of musical material
enters into the division. Take for analysis the prelude in A minor
to the second suite. The first section ends at the beginning of the
fifty-fifth measure. It will be seen to open with a bold figure, the
first notes of which are at once imitated in the left-hand part.
There follows then a constant flow of figure work over a relatively
simple harmonic foundation and through orderly sequences, the hands
frequently imitating each other. Fragments of the opening phrase are
heard five times. In the thirty-first measure a very distinct phrase
is introduced, still in the tonic key, it will be observed, though in
dominant harmony; and this is repeated in purely conventional manner in
three registers, giving way to formal passage work which, falling and
rising, leads to a good stout reiteration of the opening motive. With
this the first section ends, in a full tonic cadence.
The second section begins at once with a wholly new figure which
dominates the music from now on up to the one hundred and tenth
measure. At this measure the second section ends, and here Bach might
have written the words _da capo_; for what follows is but a repetition
of the first fifty-five measures.
It must be noticed that, although the middle section is decidedly
dominated by a figure which does not appear in the first, still the
first theme is not allowed to be forgotten. It may be found five times
in the course of the middle section, dividing, as it were, the new
material into distinct clauses, and serving as well to impress upon our
ears the unity of the piece as a whole.
This device is not truly germane to the aria form. It is suggestive of
the rondo in general; and in particular of the modified rondo form of
the Vivaldi violin concerto, of which we know Bach made a minute study.
In the splendid prelude to the third suite, in G minor, this concerto
form is far more in evidence than the aria form. But the fourth,
fifth, and sixth (barring the slow introduction) are like the second
in superbly simple three-part aria form. This fact is well worth
recollecting in connection with the development of the sonata form of a
later period.
The remaining movements of the suites present no irregularities. These
are the dignified allemandes, the Italian or French courantes, the
elusive, sad sarabandes, always one or two Intermezzi, a Gavotte, a
Bourrée, a Passepied or a Minuet, and the final Gigues with their
conventional contrapuntal tricks and turns.
The Partitas are far less regular in structure. The opening movements
are called by various names. There is a prelude for the first, short
and in simple, rich style; a _Sinfonie_ for the second, with three
distinct parts, suggesting the French overture; a _Fantasie_ for the
third; and for the fourth, fifth, and sixth, respectively, an Overture,
a Preamble, and a Toccata. The second and third have odd movements,
such as a Rondo, a Caprice, a Burlesca, and a Scherzo. On the whole, in
spite of the technical perfection never absent in Bach’s work, and some
movements such as the closing Gigue of the first partita, these suites
are inferior to the English suites. There is something tentative about
the new styles of preludes and about the interpolation of freakish
intermezzi, which rather mars them from the point of view of unity and
balance in the cyclic forms.
But the English suites stand out as magnificent specimens of vigorous
and yet emotional music, great and broad in scope, perfect in
detail--keyboard music which in many ways has never been surpassed.
VII
Besides the fugues and the suites there is a great deal of other and
less easily defined harpsichord and clavichord music. We are not
wanting in titles. We have Preludes, Toccatas, and Fantasias, also some
Capriccios. These are, on the whole, of free and more or less whimsical
structure. The preludes, and one thinks of the forty-eight little
masterpieces of the ‘Well-tempered Clavichord,’ are usually simple
and short. They are for the most part clearly harmonic music. Some
are nothing more than a series of chords, notably those in C major, C
minor, D minor, in the first part. The origin of this simple form of
music has already been discussed; but the origin of the particular and
well-nigh matchless beauty of these of Bach’s preludes can be found
only in the great depths of his own genius, which here more almost than
anywhere else, is incomprehensible. The subtlety of the modulations,
the great tenderness and poetry of the chords, the infinite suggestion
of feeling--all these within little pieces that might easily be printed
on half a page, that have no definite outline, no trace of melody: we
can but close our eyes and wonder.
Other preludes which are far more articulate, so to speak, are still
fundamentally only harmonic music. So we may reckon the preludes in
C-sharp major, in C-sharp minor, in E-flat minor, in G minor, in E
major, in the first book. In these there is but a faint network of
melody, usually contrapuntally treated, thrown over the profoundly
moving harmonies underneath. Some others are little studies in
fleetness or brilliancy of playing, such as those in D major and B-flat
major; and still others are lyrical, suggesting Couperin, or even the
Preludes of Chopin. It may be mentioned in passing that there is little
internal relationship between preludes in the ‘Well-tempered
Clavichord’ and the fugues which follow them. Nor is there evidence
to show that the ones were composed for the others. Rather there is
in many cases reason to believe that the preludes were composed often
without any consideration of a fugue to follow. Still one cannot fail
to observe, or rather to feel, a subtle affinity between most of the
little pieces so united, which must have guided Bach in his selection
and pairing.
[Illustration]
Fac-simile of Bach's Manuscript of the Prelude in C major
(Well-Tempered Clavichord.])
The toccatas and the fantasias are on a much broader plan than the
preludes. The former are essentially impressive, if not show pieces.
They are usually built up upon a series of brilliant runs, oftenest
scales or close arpeggios, with slower moving passages of chords and
contrapuntal weavings scattered here and there. The fantasias are, as
the name implies, quite free and irregular in form. Both fantasias and
toccatas are for the most part distinctly in organ style. Their glory
is, like the beauty of the preludes, a glory of harmony. The long,
rapid runs may have lost their power to thrill ears that have heard the
studies of Liszt; but the chords which lie under them have a majesty
that seems to defy time.
There are several ‘concertos’ and ‘sonatas’ of which to say much is to
repeat what has already been said of other forms of his music. Both are
obviously indebted to Vivaldi for style, or the external features of
style, as well as for form.
The idea of the concerto in Bach’s day was not the idea which Mozart
planted firmly in the mind of musicians. To show off the special
qualities of the harpsichord against the background of an orchestra
is not often evident as a purpose in Bach’s concertos. He wrote
for the harpsichord much as he wrote for the orchestra; or for the
orchestra as he wrote for the harpsichord. To the solo instrument he
allotted passages which required a fineness in execution of details,
or passages which he wished to be softer than the general run of the
music. There is a clear intention to get contrast between the group of
instruments and the solo instrument, but apparently little to write for
the two in a distinct style.
One may take the D minor concerto for harpsichord and a group of
instruments, or even better, the Italian Concerto, for a single
harpsichord, preferably with two manuals, as the perfect type. The
arrangement and number of movements is well worth noticing. There are
three, of which the first and last are in the same key and of about the
same length and style. The middle movement is in a contrasting key, is
shorter and nearly lyric in character. The scheme is perfectly balanced
as a whole, and, it will be noticed, shows little kinship with the
suite.
The first and last movements are in the same rapid tempo and both
are treated contrapuntally throughout. Their internal structure is
fundamentally tri-partite, like the fugues and the preludes in the
English suites, the opening and closing sections being the same. The
middle section brings out new material, but also retains suggestions
of that already announced; the new material tending to take on an
episodic character, like the couplets in Couperin’s rondos. This is
unusually clear in the middle section of the last movement of the
Italian Concerto, in which there are three very distinct episodes, one
of which appears twice, quite after the manner of the Beethoven rondo.
But one feature, which Bach probably acquired from Vivaldi, makes the
whole procedure different from Couperin’s. This is that the main theme,
either the short or long part of it which may be restated between the
episodes, appears in different keys. The same feature is evident in the
preludes to the English suites.
The slow movements in both the D minor and the Italian concertos are
written upon a favorite plan of Bach’s. The bass repeats a certain
form or ground over and over again, above which the treble spins an
ever varied, rhapsodical melody, highly ornate in character. The plan
is an exceedingly simple and a very old one. It may be traced in the
old motets of the mensuralists of the thirteenth century, with their
droning _ordines_; and in the favorite ‘divisions’ of the early English
composers. The Chaconne and the Passacaglia are but variants from the
same root. It is, of course, a simple form of variations.
This leads us, at last, to a brief consideration of what is perhaps
from the point of view of the pianist, if not indeed from that of
the musician, the most astonishing of Bach’s harpsichord music,--the
Goldberg Variations. The story of their origin will bear repetition for
the light it throws on the mood in which they were written.
A certain Count Kaiserling, at one time Russian ambassador to the court
of Saxony, supposedly suffered from insomnia and nervous depression.
He had in attendance a clavecinist named Goldberg, a pupil of Bach’s,
who, among other duties, had by his playing to wile away the miserable
night hours of his unhappy patron. Hearing of the great Bach through
Goldberg, Kaiserling requested him to write some harpsichord music of
pleasant, cheerful character especially for these weary vigils. Bach
composed and sent back a theme and thirty variations, which so pleased
the count that he presented Bach with a goblet filled with one hundred
Louis d’or.
One cannot but smile; the mere thought of thirty variations is
soporific. Yet an examination of them will convince one that Kaiserling
must have rewarded Bach for sheer delight in the music, not for the
blessed forgetfulness in sleep to which it may have been expected to
seduce him. The quality of these variations is inexpressibly vivacious
and charming. Bach shows himself, it is true, always the master of
sounds and the science of music; but this may be taken as the secure
foundation on which he allows himself for once to be the brilliant and
even dazzling virtuoso.
With the object in view of enchanting an amateur who must have been,
_ex officio_, very much a man of the world at large, Bach composed
objectively. That is to say he wrote not so much to express himself as
to please another. The same might be said of two other of the latest
harpsichord works, the _Musikalisches Opfer_ and the _Kunst der Fuge_;
except that in both of these masterpieces his aim was more technical.
In the Goldberg Variations he is, so to speak, off duty.
Consequently, there is in them little trace of the stern, albeit tender
idealist, or of the teacher, or of the man sunk in the mystery of
religious devotion. There are nine canons, at every interval from the
unison to the ninth, some in contrary motion. But even in these learned
processes there is a social suavity and charm. Witness especially the
canon at the third (the ninth variation), and that at the sixth (the
eighteenth variation). Only the twenty-fifth variation seems to show
Bach entirely submerged within himself. Elsewhere he is for the most
part primarily a virtuoso. In the matter of wide skips, of crossing the
hands, and of sparkling velocity, he outruns Scarlatti. In fact the
virtuosity of the variations as a whole is far beyond Scarlatti.
To begin with, he wrote for a harpsichord with two manuals; and in
many of the variations, conspicuously in the eighth, the eleventh, the
twentieth, and the twenty-third, he availed himself to the uttermost
of the advantages of such an instrument. The hands constantly pass
by each other on their way from one extremity of the keyboard to the
other, or cross and recross. The parts which they play are interwoven
in complications which, unhappily, must forever be the despair of the
pianist. In such cases, of course, he may not justly be compared with
Scarlatti, who wrote always for one manual.
But take for example the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth variations,
which may be played on either one or two manuals. The trills and double
trills in the former, together with the wide and sudden crossing of the
hands, savor of Paganini and Liszt. So do the interlocked chord trills
in the latter, and the airy, whirring triplets which follow them.
Indeed, leaving aside a few effects in double notes, and certain others
of the thunder and lightning variety which were wholly beyond the
possibilities of the harpsichord, the modern pianoforte virtuoso style
has little to show in advance upon the style of the Goldberg Variations.
Furthermore, if the Goldberg Variations are thus amazing from the point
of view of the pianist, they are none the less so to the musician
regarding their general form. There is in them positively no trace of
the stereotyped form of variations of that day, which consisted either
of a repetition of the theme with more and more elaborate ornament, or
at best of a series of arabesques over the more or less bare harmonic
foundation of the theme. The theme is for Bach but the simple germ
of an idea, which, throughout the whole elaborate series, undergoes
change, transformation, metamorphosis, hardly to be recognized in
any of its varied forms, scarcely suggesting a unity to the work as
a whole. Mood and rhythm change. New ideas sprout, seemingly quite
independent of their origin. Even the harmonic foundation is veiled and
altered. Bach speaks, as it were, in beautiful metaphors.
This conception and treatment of the variation form render it true
greatness; endow it, indeed, as a form, with immortal life. External
figurations will grow old-fashioned, or the ear will become satiated
with them. But the Goldberg Variations have an inner life that cannot
wither or decay. Bach’s warm imagination inspired them, gave them
poetry as well as brilliance. No more modern variations are quite
comparable with them except Brahms’ great series on a theme of Handel,
in which, however, there is less warmth than severity, less imagination
than art.
VIII
How shall Bach be placed in the history of music, in particular of
pianoforte music? What part may he be said to play in the development
of the art? The paternity which most composers of the nineteenth
century rejoiced to fasten upon him, is hardly fitting. Bach was the
father of twenty-two children in this life, but musically he died
without heir. His sons Emanuel and Christian were two of the most
influential composers of the next generation; but both discarded their
father’s inheritance as of little service to them in the forward march
of music.
Even before his death Bach knew that the forms and style of music which
he had given his life to perfect and ennoble were already of the past.
That he invented a simple system of temperament in order to afford
himself the harmonic freedom necessary to his expression, or that
he devised a system of fingering which considerably facilitated the
playing of his difficult music, does not constitute him the progenitor
of the new style of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The
composers who followed him knew little or nothing of his music. They
were far less likely to appropriate what they might have found useful
in his old-fashioned art, than to meet the problems inherent in the
new, which they served, with their own ingenuity. Accept, if you like,
Scarlatti as the founder of the modern pianoforte style; Couperin as
the creator of the salon piece. The fugue had had its great day, and so
had the suite. The flawless counterpoint of Bach, with its involutions
and its smoothness, was of too compact a substance to serve the
adolescent, transparent sonata. His harmonies were too rich and fluent.
And Bach had been but once the Bach of the Goldberg Variations.
No; Bach’s harpsichord music attained perfection. A river flowed into
the sea. Further than this no art can go. Where a parallel excellence
seems since to have been achieved, the growth of which it was the
ultimate perfection was from another root. Bach is hardly more the
father of Beethoven, Schumann and Chopin, than Praxiteles is the father
of Michelangelo, or Sophocles of Shakespeare. But he left a standard
in music of the complete mastery and welding of all the elements
which make an art everlasting,--of form, of texture, of noble and
impassioned emotion. And by virtue of this standard which he fixed, he
has exercised over the development of music down to the present day a
greater spiritual influence than that of any other single composer.
The harpsichord works of his great contemporary Handel are far less
significant. Several sets of suites were published in London between
1720 and 1735, also six fugues for organ or harpsichord. In the third
suite of the first set (1720) there is an air and variations. In the
fifth of the same series is the so-called ‘Harmonious Blacksmith,’
the best known of his works for the harpsichord. It is a theme and
variations. The air and variations in B-flat major which has served as
the groundwork of a great cycle of variations by Brahms constitutes the
first number of the second series (1733). There are in other suites
a _Passacaglia_ and two _Chaconnes_, all of which are monotonous
series of variations. One _Chaconne_ has no less than sixty-two varied
repeats. In these works Handel shows little ingenuity. His technical
formulas are conventional and in general uninteresting. The dance
movements of the suites are worthier of a great composer.
Scarlatti, Couperin, and Bach are the great names of harpsichord
music; great because each stands for a supreme achievement in the
history of the art. It may be questioned whether, if the pianoforte
had not come to supplant the harpsichord, composers would have been
able to progress beyond the high marks of these three men, either in
style or in expressiveness. New forms had made their appearance, it
is true, before the death of Bach. These would have run their course
upon the harpsichord without doubt; but it is not so certain that they
could have brought to light any new resources of the instrument. These
had been not only fully appreciated by the three great men, Scarlatti,
Couperin, and Bach, but had been developed to their fullest extent.
And, indeed, it may be asked whether any music has more faithfully
expressed the emotions and the aspirations of humanity than the
harpsichord music of Bach.
FOOTNOTES:
[11] An Englishman, organist at St. George’s, Hanover Square, from
1725 to 1737, when he became insane. He died about 1750. He had made
the acquaintance of both Scarlattis during a stay in Italy, and was
instrumental in bringing D. Scarlatti’s operas and harpsichord pieces
before the British public.
[12] A learned Roman collector, born in 1778, died in 1862. Mendelssohn
had the free use of his library and wrote that as regards old Italian
music it was most complete.
[13] This collection is available to students in America. The sonatas
contained in it are representative of Scarlatti’s style, though, of
course, they represent but a small portion of his work. The collection
can be far more easily used for reference than the cumbersome Czerny.
Unfortunately the complete Italian edition is still rare in this
country.
[14] J. S. Shedlock writes in ‘The Pianoforte Sonata’: ‘The return to
the opening theme in the second section, which divides binary from
sonata form, is, in Scarlatti, non-existent.’ Out of some two hundred
sonatas which I have examined, I have found but one to disprove the
statement. This one exception, No. 11 in the Breitkopf and Härtel
edition of twenty, is so perfectly in sonata form that one cannot but
wonder Scarlatti did not employ the form oftener. [EDITOR.]
[15] See articles by Edward J. Dent in _Monthly Musical Record_ for
September and October, 1906.
[16] See Chrysander’s articles prefatory to his own edition
(_Denkmäler_), edited by Brahms, in the _Monthly Musical Record_ for
February, 1889, _et seq._
[17] The pieces in one _ordre_ may be in major or minor. The first
_ordre_ is in G, that is the pieces in it are either in G minor or G
major. The second is in D, minor and major, the third in C, etc.
[18] That which appeared in 1713. The earlier set is not commonly
reckoned among his publications.
[19] _Musiciana_, Paris, 1877.
[20] The origin of the title is rather doubtful. On the first page
of the manuscript copy, which was in the hands of Christian Bach, of
London, were written the words: _Fait pour les anglais_. The first
prelude is on a theme by Dieupart, a composer then popular in England.
CHAPTER III
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SONATA FORM
Vienna as the home of the sonata; definition of
‘sonata’--Origin and history of the standard sonata cycle;
relationship of sonata movements--Evolution of the ‘triplex’
form: Pergolesi’s ‘singing allegro’; the union of aria
and binary forms; Padre Martini’s sonatas, Scarlatti’s
true sonata in C; Domenico Alberti; the Alberti bass; the
transitional period of the sonata--Sonata writers before
Haydn and Mozart: J. C. Bach; Muzio Clementi--Schobert and
Wagenseil; C. P. E. Bach; F. W. Rust.
Turning our backs upon Bach and looking over the musical marches, we
shall observe many roads in the second half of the eighteenth century
making their way even from the remotest confines towards Vienna. There
they converge towards the end of the century. Thither comes pouring
music from England, from France, volumes of music from Italy; music
from Prussia, from Saxony, from Russia; from all the provinces, from
Poland, from Bohemia and from Croatia. There is a hodge-podge and a
_pêle-mêle_ of music, of types and nationalities. There are the pompous
oratorios from the west, light operas and tuneful trios and sonatas
from the south, dry-as-dust fugues from the north, folk-songs gay and
sad from the east. All whirling and churning before Maria Theresa, or
her lovable son, or the intelligent courtiers about them. France will
grow sick before the Revolution, Italy will become frivolous, Germany
cold. Only Vienna loves music better than life. Presently up will come
Haydn from Croatia, and Mozart from Salzburg, and Beethoven from Bonn.
Then young Schubert will sing a swan-song at the feast from which the
honored guests have one by one departed; and waltzes will whirl in to
gobble up all save what fat Rossini can grab for himself.
And what is the pianoforte’s share in this profusion of music?
Something of all, variations, pot-pourris from the operas, rondos and
bagatelles and waltzes; but chiefly sonatas, and again sonatas.
Now sonatas did not grow in Vienna. Vienna laid before her honored
guests the great confusion of music which had poured into her for fifty
years from foreign lands, and in that confusion were sonatas. They
were but babes, frail and starved for lack of many things, little more
than skin and bones. But they had bright eyes which caught Haydn’s
fatherly glance. He dragged them forth from the rubbish and fed them
a good diet of hearty folk-songs, so that they grew. Mozart came from
many wanderings and trained them in elegance and dressed them with his
lovely fancies. And at last when they were quite full-grown, Beethoven
took charge of them and made them mighty. What manner of babe was this
that could so grow, and whence came it to Vienna?
The word sonata slips easily over the tongues of most people, great
musicians, amateurs, dilettanti and laymen alike; but it is not a word,
nor yet a type, easily defined. The form is very properly associated
with the composers of the Viennese period. Earlier sonatas, such as
those of the seventeenth century composers, like Kuhnau and Pasquini,
are sonatas only in name, and not in the generally accepted sense of
the word. The rock which bars their entrance into the happy kingdom of
sonatas is the internal form of the movements. For a sonata is not only
a group of pieces or movements in an arbitrary whole. At least _one_
of the separate movements within the whole must be in the special form
dubbed by generations with an unfortunate blindness to ambiguity, the
_sonata form_. Attempts have been made from time to time to rename this
form. It has been called the _first movement_ form; because usually
the first movements of sonatas, symphonies and other like works, are
found to have it. Unhappily it is scarcely less frequently to be found
in the last movements. Let us simply cut the Gordian knot, and for no
other reason than that it may help in this book to render a difficult
subject a little less confusing, call this special form arbitrarily the
_triplex_ form.
I
To trace the development of the pianoforte sonata, then, is a twofold
task: to trace the tendency towards a standard group of pieces or
movements in one whole; and to trace the development of the triplex
form of movement, the presence of which in the group gives us the
somewhat despotic right to label that group a sonata.
The first task leads upon something of a wild-goose chase. The number
of movements which a sonata might contain never became rigidly fixed.
A single movement, however, is not a sonata in the generally accepted
meaning of the word. It is true that the separate pieces of D.
Scarlatti are still called sonatas; but this is only one of the few
cases where the original natural use of the word has persisted beside
the arbitrarily restricted one. We are, as a matter of fact, almost
forced to this continued free use of the term by the lack of a more
specific one to cover the circumstance, or even of a suitable abstract
one. As we have seen, the few pieces Scarlatti published himself he
called _esercizii_. Even in his day the word sonata was applied mostly
to compositions made up of two or more movements. His pieces were not
fugues; neither were they dances. They were too regular and too compact
to be called fantasies or toccatas. They were not rondos, and his
imagination was sterile in fanciful titles such as Couperin gave to his
pieces. Our modern minds reject his own title as utterly unmusical.
In abstract terms we have ‘piece,’ which may do for the historian but
not for the program. ‘Movement’ has been chained up in the sonata and
symphony. ‘Gems’ and ‘jewels’ are too often in music a paste of musk
and tears. So we hold to sonata, for the lack of anything better.
Though the word originally signified any music sounded or played on
instruments, thus differentiating instrumental music from vocal, its
use was limited early in the seventeenth century to music written
for groups of strings or wind. At that time, it will be remembered,
harpsichord and clavichord music was still essentially organ music, to
which the word sonata was rarely applied.
The string sonatas had developed chiefly from the old _chanson_, the
setting of a poem in stanzas to polyphonic vocal music. The composer
attempted in this old form to reflect in his music the varied meaning
of the stanzas of his poem. Thus the music, taken from its words and
given to groups of strings to play, was more or less clearly divided
into varied sections, showing, as it were, the shape or skeleton upon
which it had originally been moulded. At first the instrumentalists,
even the organists, as we have seen, were content merely to play upon
their instruments what had been thus written for voices. Such had long
been their custom with popular madrigals and with other simpler forms.
Soon the organists broke ground in a wholly different direction. But
the other instrumentalists, chiefly the violinists, on the contrary,
though they began to compose their own music with an ever-growing
regard to the special qualities of their instruments, still retained
the well-known form. Hence the many fledgling sonatas in the last
quarter of the sixteenth century and even the first quarter of the
seventeenth, with their title of _canzon a suonare_. This title was
soon cut down to sonata. The form was enormously expanded by the
enthusiasm and rapidly soaring skill of the instrumental composers. The
many more or less vague sections, fossil outlines, as it were, of the
poem in stanzas, swelled out to broad and clear proportions. The number
of them was consequently cut down to four or even three, the selection
and sequence of which had been almost unconsciously determined by
principles of contrast. Finally the influence of the growing suite
combined with the breadth and formal perfection of the several sections
to cut them off distinctly, each from the other. The word sonata, then,
it will be observed, was applied almost from the beginning to a piece
of music divided into several more or less clearly differentiated
sections or movements.
The growth of the suite was, as we have seen, of quite a different
nature. The sonata developed rapidly from a seed. The suite was a
synthesis of various dance pieces, held together by a convention,
without any inherited internal relationship. In spite of the number
of suites written during the seventeenth century for string band
and even other combinations of instruments, it is practically a
special development of keyboard music. The lighter character of the
music itself, depending largely upon dance rhythms for its vitality,
encouraged the free style suitable to the harpsichord. Its influence
upon the string sonata is, however, unmistakable.
Thus, though harpsichord music and the suite were more or less
neglected in Italy during the second and third quarters of the
seventeenth century, we find Corelli publishing between 1683 and 1700
his epoch-making works for violin and other instruments in alternate
sets of _suonate_ (sometimes called _suonate da chiesa_), and suites,
which he called _suonate da camera_. In the former the movements had
no titles but the Italian words which marked their character, such as
_grave_, _allegro_, _vivace_, and other like words. In the latter most
of the movements conformed to dance rhythms and were given dance names.
The normal number of movements in both sonatas and suites is four, and
normally these four are in the order of slow, fast, slow, fast. The
movements of the suite are all normally in the same key; but among
the sonatas the middle adagio is often in a different key from the
other movements. This variety of key is nearly always present as a
distinctive feature of the sonata.
Corelli’s works are, leaving aside his personal genius, indicative of
the state of the sonata at the end of the seventeenth century. That
the sonatas with suite movements were called chamber sonatas and the
others church sonatas gives us some hint of the relative dignity of
the two forms in the minds of composers of that day. In 1695 J. Kuhnau
published in Leipzig his sonata in B-flat for the harpsichord, with the
prefatory remarks that he saw no reason why the harpsichord, with its
range of harmony and its possibilities in contrapuntal music, should
be restricted to the lighter forms of music (such as the suite). He
therefore offered to the public a piece for harpsichord written in the
more dignified form of the violin music of the day, which he called the
_Sonate aus dem B_.
Here, as we remarked in chapter I, the word sonata comes into
pianoforte music, bringing with it a dignity, if not a charm, which was
felt to be lacking in the suite. Kuhnau’s sonata is in four movements,
none of which is very clearly articulated. The _adagio_ comes between
the second and fourth and is in the key of E-flat major. This sonata
was followed by seven more, published the next year under the title of
_Frische Clavier Früchte_. The tone of all is experimental and somewhat
bombastic. But at any rate we have at last keyboard sonatas.
During the lifetime of Corelli two other Italian violinists rose to
shining prominence, Locatelli[21] and Vivaldi[22]. To them is owing
a certain development in the internal structure of a new form of the
sonata called the concerto, of which we shall say more later on.
Here we have to note, however, the tendency of both these composers
to make their concertos and sonatas in three movements: two long
rapid movements with a slow movement between. Corelli left _sonate
da camera_ and _sonate da chiesa_ of the same description; but the
procedure seems to have recommended itself to Sebastian Bach mainly
by the works of Vivaldi, of which, as we have seen, he made a most
careful study. Hence we have from Bach not only the beautiful sonatas
for violin and harpsichord in three movements, but harpsichord
concertos,--many of which were transcriptions of Vivaldi’s works, but
some, like the exquisite one in D minor cited in the last chapter, all
his own,--likewise on the same plan. So, too, were written many of the
Brandenburg concertos, notably the one in G major, No. 5. Finally we
have the magnificent concerto in the Italian style for cembalo alone,
which is more truly a sonata, leaving for all time a splendid example
of the symmetry of a well-wrought piece in three movements.
Of this perfect masterpiece we have already spoken. It is well to
recall attention to the fact, however, that the first and last
movements are of about equal length and significance. Both are in rapid
tempo and of careful and more or less close-knit workmanship; and both
are in the key of F major. The movement between them is in a different
key (D minor) and of slow tempo and wholly contrasting character.
Here, then, as regards the number and grouping of movements in the
sonata, we have in the work of the father, the model for the son
Emanuel. For so far as Emanuel Bach contributed at all to the external
structure of the pianoforte sonata, it was by adhering consistently to
this three-movement type which was later adopted by Haydn, Mozart, and,
to a great extent, Beethoven.
His consistency in this regard is indeed well worth noticing. For
between the years 1740 and 1786, when he composed and published his
numerous sets of sonatas, there was much variety of procedure among
musicians. Bach, however, rarely varied; and this, together with the
models his father left, justifies us in calling the sonata in three
movements distinctly the German type of this period.
Meanwhile composers who were more in the current of Italian music
fought shy of committing themselves to a fixed grouping of movements.
Italian instrumental music was taking a tremendous swing towards melody
and lightness. This was especially influential in shaping the triplex
form of movement; but was also affecting the general grouping. Padre
Martini (1706-84) of Bologna alone adhered to a regular, or nearly
regular, number and sequence of movements in harpsichord sonatas. His
twelve harpsichord sonatas, published in Amsterdam in 1742, but written
some years earlier, seem strangely out of place in their surroundings.
To begin with, even at this late date they are written either for organ
or for harpsichord. This alone prepares us for the general contrapuntal
style of them all. Then, though named sonatas, they are far more nearly
suites. Each is composed of five movements. The first is regularly in
sonorous prelude style, suitable to the organ. The second is regularly
an allegro in fugal style, the third usually an adagio. The fourth and
fifth are in most cases dances,--gavottes, courantes or gigues, with
sometimes an aria or a theme and variations. All the movements in one
sonata are in the same key. Only one feature resembles those of the
growing Italian harpsichord sonata: the generally light dance character
of the last or the last two movements. For what is very noticeable in
the sonatas of E. Bach is that the last movements, though cheerful in
character, are usually of equal musical significance with the first.
Far more in the growing Italian style are the eight sonatas of
Domenico Alberti, the amateur thorn in the professional side. Just
when they were written is not known. The young man was born in 1717
and died probably in 1740 if not before. None of them has more than
two movements. Both are in the same key and the second is usually the
livelier of the two, often a minuet.
A group of the Italians preferred the sonata in two movements,
Francisco Durante (1684-1755), for example, and later Domenico Paradies
(1710-92). Later still, some sonatas of Johann Christian Bach, youngest
son of Sebastian, who submitted quite to the Italian influence, have
but two movements; and the first of Clementi’s sonatas also. Other
Italians, like Baldassare Galuppi (1706-85), seem never to have decided
upon any definite number, nor any definite order of movements.
What is, however, due particularly to the Italian influence is the
persistent intrusion of a dance form in the cycle--usually a minuet. We
find it in Alberti, in Christian Bach, and especially in the clavecin
works of Jean Schobert, a young Silesian, resident in Paris from about
1750 to 1766, one of the most brilliant clavecinists of his day, one of
the most charming, and one who brought a very decided influence upon
the development of the young Mozart.
The Italian tendency was invariably to put at the end of the sonata
a movement of which the lightness and gaiety of the contents were to
bring refreshment or even relief after the more serious divulgences of
the earlier movements,--a rondo or even a dance. To this impulse Haydn
and Mozart both yielded, retaining from Emanuel Bach only the standard
number of three movements.
It must be added here that something is due to Slavic influences in the
ultimate general triumph of the objectively gay over the subjectively
profound in the last movement or movements of the sonata and the
symphony. Not only did Haydn incorporate in the scheme the lively
expressive melodies and the crisp rhythms so native to the Slavic
peoples among whom he grew to manhood. Earlier than he the Bohemian,
Johann Stamitz, had thus enlivened and clarified the symphony, and
given it the great impetus to future development which bore so
splendidly in Vienna. And Schobert, whom we have but now mentioned, was
from a Polish land. What such men brought was essentially of spiritual
significance; but in music, as in other arts, the new spirit brings the
new form.
As we have already said, the number and sequence of movements in
the pianoforte sonata has never been rigidly fixed. But an average
combination is clear. The majority of sonatas by Haydn and by Mozart,
as well as by lesser men like Clementi, Dussek and Rust, and many of
the sonatas by Beethoven, are in three movements. Of these the first
and last are invariably in the same key (major and minor). The first
movement is normally of a dignified, formal, and more or less involved
character, though such a generalization may be quickly stoned to death
by numbers of conspicuous and great exceptions. The second movement is
normally in a key contrasting with the first movement, usually of slow
and lyrical character, usually also simple, at least as regards form.
The last movement is, in perhaps the majority of cases, more brilliant,
more obvious and more rapid than the others, calculated to amuse and
astonish the listener rather than to stir his emotions, to send him
away laughing and delighted, rather than sad and thoughtful.
The number three was established by Emanuel Bach. The character of
the last movement, however, was determined by Italian and Slavic
influences, and is somewhat reminiscent of the suite. If one more
sign is necessary of the complex crossing and recrossing of various
lines of development before the pianoforte sonata rose up clear on
its foundations, we have but to note the curious facts that the suite
was neglected in Italy during the seventeenth century in favor of
the string sonata; that the suite reached its finest proportions in
Germany, chiefly at the hands of Sebastian Bach; that through Sebastian
Bach the three-movement sonata group passed from the Italian Vivaldi to
Emanuel Bach, who established it as a norm; finally that the Italians,
who neglected the suite in the seventeenth century, conceived an
enthusiasm for it in the eighteenth and brought their love of it to
bear on the German sonata group, introducing the minuet and giving to
the last movement the lively care-free form of a dance or a rondo.
Before proceeding to outline the development of the triplex form in
which at least one movement of this sonata group was written and which
is one of the most distinctive features of the sonata, it is not out of
place to stop to consider what relationship, if any, existed between
the movements. Was the sonata as a whole an indissoluble unit? Rather
decidedly no. The grouping of several movements together came to be
as conventional and as arbitrary, if not so regular, as the grouping
of the suites. There is about the sonatas of Emanuel Bach a certain
seriousness and an emotional genuineness which might prevail upon the
pianist today, if ever he should think of playing them in concert, to
respect the grouping in which the composer chose to present them to
the world. But there is no organic life in the sonatas as a whole.
Occasionally in his sonatas and in those of Clementi and Haydn the slow
middle movement leads without pause into the rapid finale. In these
cases, however, the slow movement is introductory to the last, to which
it is attached though not related.
Haydn, Mozart and even Beethoven took movements from one work and
incorporated them in another. Moreover, it was the custom even as late
as the time that Chopin played in Vienna, to play the first movement
of a symphony, a concerto or a sonata early in a program and the last
movements considerably later, after other works in other styles had
been performed. The sonatas and symphonies of the last quarter of
the eighteenth and the first quarter of the nineteenth centuries in
the main lacked any logical principle of unity. We say in the main,
because Emanuel Bach, F. W. Rust, and Beethoven succeeded, in some of
their greatest sonatas, in welding the movements inseparably together.
Clementi, too, in the course of his long life acquired such a mastery
of the form. But these developments are special, and signalize in a way
the passing on of the sonata. As a form the sonata proper was doomed by
the lack of a unity which composers in the nineteenth century felt to
be necessary in any long work of music.
The day will come, if indeed it has not already come, when most sonatas
will have been broken up by Time into the various distinct parts of
which they were pieced together. Out of the fragments future years will
choose what they will to preserve. Already the Bach suites have been so
broken. It makes no difference that their separate numbers are for the
most part of imperishable stuff. Movements of Haydn and Mozart will
endure after their sonatas as wholes are dead. So, too, with many of
the Beethoven sonatas. The links which hold their movements together
are often but convention; and there is evidently no convention which
Time will not corrode.
II
In looking over the vast number of sonatas written between 1750 and
1800 one is impressed, if one is kindly, not so much by their careless
structure and triviality as by their gaiety. In the adagios the
composers sometimes doff their hats, somewhat perfunctorily, to the
muse of tragedy; but for the most part their sonatas are light-hearted.
They had a butterfly existence. They were born one day but to die the
next. Yet there was a charm about them. The people of that day loved
them. A run and a trill do, it is true, but tickle the ear; but that
is, after all, a pleasant tickling. And simple harmonies may shirk
often enough the weight of souls in tragic conflict, to bear which
many would make the duty of music; yet their lucidity is something
akin to sunlight. The frivolities of these countless sonatas are the
frivolities of youth. There is no high seriousness in most of them. And
our triplex form came sliding into music on a burst of youth. A star
danced and it was born.
What gave definite shape to this fundamentally simple form is the
Italian love of melody. So far as it may be traced to the influence of
one man, it may be traced to Giovanni Pergolesi, whose trio-sonatas
first gave to the world as a prototype of the classical triplex form
what is now known as the ‘singing allegro.’ Pergolesi was born in 1704
and lived to be only thirty-three years old; but in that brief life,
gaily and recklessly squandered as it seems to have been, he exerted
an influence upon the growth of music which apparently started it upon
a new stage. He was all but worshipped by his countrymen. His opera,
_La serva padrona_ (1733), won instant success, not only in Italy,
but well over all Europe; and had an influence comparable to that of
but few other single works in the history of music. On the ground of
instrumental music his trio-sonatas have, as it seems now, accomplished
scarcely less.
We must here restrict ourselves to the harpsichord music of the time in
Italy, in which the ‘singing allegro’ found place almost at once. Let
us first consider what lay at the bottom of the new form.
We may plunge at once to the very foundation, the harmonic groundwork.
As we have seen, perhaps the most important accomplishment in music
of the seventeenth century was the discovery and establishment of key
relationships in that harmonic conception of music which has endured
almost to the present day. Instrumental forms developed upon this
re-organization of musical material. Subsequently, however polyphonic
the texture of a piece of music--a fugue of Bach’s, for instance--might
be, its shape was moulded upon a frame of harmony. The piece was in a
certain key, clearly affirmed at the beginning and at the end, points
in the structure which in a piece of music as in a paragraph are
naturally the most emphatic. Within these limits there was the life
and variety of a harmonic development, which, departing from the tonic
key, must return thence. Long before the year 1700 the regulation of
such harmonic procedures had definitely fixed the symmetrical plan of
two forms: the so-called aria form and the binary form. Neither was in
itself capable of much development; and it was in a sort of fusion of
both that the harmonic plan of the triplex form was created.
The aria form was in three sections which we have elsewhere represented
by the letters A, B, A. A, the opening section, was all in the tonic
key, and was practically complete in itself. B, the second section,
was in a contrasting key or was harmonically unstable. A, the third
section, was but an exact repetition of the first, to give balance
and unity to the whole. The limitations of the form were essentially
harmonic. The first section offered little or no chance for modulation.
Its tonality must be unmistakably and impressively tonic. Therefore it
did not develop into the second section by means of harmonic unrest.
The second was simply a block of contrasting harmonies, like a block
of porphyry set beside a block of marble. Frequently, however, the
second section was incomplete without the third. In such cases a hyphen
between the B and the second A in our lettered scheme would represent
the relations between the three sections more nearly, thus: A, B-A.
The binary form, in which most of the dance movements of the suite
were composed, was usually shorter than the aria form; but though
apparently simpler, it was, from the point of view of harmony, more
highly organized. It consisted, as we have seen, of two sections, each
of which was repeated in turn. The first modulated from the tonic key
to the dominant or relative major; the second from that key back to the
tonic again. It will be observed that the first section really grew
into the second by harmonic impulse; for the first section, ending as
it did in a key that was not the key of the piece, was incomplete. The
two sections together not only established a perfect balance of form
and harmony, but had an organic harmonic life which was lacking in the
aria.
However, the tendency of most forms was towards the triple division
typified by the aria, with a clearly defined first section, a second
section of contrasting and uncertain character, and a third section
which, being a restatement of the first, reestablished the tonic key
and gave to the piece as a whole a positive order. In the binary
forms of Froberger and Chambonnières there is the harmonic embryo of
a distinct middle section; namely, the few modulations through which
the music passes on its way from dominant back to tonic in the second
section. It can be easily understood that composers would make the
most of this chance for modulation as they became more and more aware
of the beauty of harmony; likewise, that the bolder their harmonic
ventures in these measures, the greater was their need to emphasize the
final re-establishment of the tonic key. Ultimately a distinct triple
division was inevitable, with an opening section modulating from tonic
to dominant, a second section of contrasting keys and few modulations;
finally a restatement of the first section, as in the aria, but
necessarily somewhat changed so that the whole section might be in the
tonic key. Such is the harmonic foundation of the triplex form.
Such a form makes its appearance in music very shortly after the
beginning of the eighteenth century. It seems akin now to the aria,
now to the binary form. One may suspect the latter relationship if the
first section is repeated, and the second and third sections (as one)
likewise. These repetitions are obviously inherited from the binary
form. On the other hand, if these sections are not thus repeated, the
piece resembles more nearly the aria.
Take, for example, an adagio from the second sonata in a set of twelve
published by Padre Martini in 1742, written probably many years
earlier. These sonatas were republished by Madame Farrenc in the third
volume of her _Trésor des pianistes_. The adagio in question is clearly
in three sections very like an aria, with the difference that the first
section ends in the dominant (in the eighth measure), and the last is
consequently changed from the first so that it may end in the tonic.
There are no repeats.
Far more remarkable is a sonata in C major by D. Scarlatti. It is
the eleventh in the Breitkopf and Härtel collection of twenty to
which reference has already been made. Here we find a first section
modulating from tonic to dominant. This is repeated. Then follows the
second section, full of free modulations, and this section comes to
a very obvious half-close. The last section very nearly repeats the
first, except for the necessary changes in harmony so that all may be
in the tonic key. Scarlatti nowhere else wrote in this form so clearly.
Did he merely chance upon it? The wide crossing of the hands marks
an early stage in his composing, yet the form is clearly triplex and
astonishingly orthodox.
The most striking aspect of this little piece is the obvious, clear
divisions of the sections. The first section is marked off from the
second by the double bar for the repeat. There is a pause before the
third section, or restatement, begins. But clearest of all is the
arrangement of musical material. By this we know positively that the
triplex form has become firmly fixed, that the old binary form has
expanded to a ternary form, submitting to the same influences that had
made the perfect aria and the perfect fugue.
It will be remembered that in the old binary form, composers made
little effort to differentiate the material proper to the dominant
part of the first section from that which had already been given out
in the tonic. Such pieces dealt not in clear themes but in one or two
running figures which lent themselves to more or less contrapuntal
treatment. The opening figure was usually the most definite. The
second section began with this figure in the dominant key; but in the
final restoration of the tonic key the figure played no part. In other
words, the chief figure of the whole piece almost never appeared
in the second section in the tonic. It was not until the embryonic
middle section, which, as we have seen, consisted of but one or two
modulations, had developed to something of the proportions of the
contrasting section of the aria, that composers realized that in order
fully to re-establish the tonic key at the end, the chief figure should
again make its appearance and usher in the final section, which thus
became a restatement of the first.
Scarlatti’s treatment of the binary form was always brilliant and
clear. He was, as we know, fertile in sparkling figures. His sonatas
are always made up of two or more of these, which, unlike the figures
in the suites of most of his contemporaries, are distinct from each
other. But in most of his pieces, long as the middle section might be,
the tonic key was never re-introduced by the return of the opening
figure of the first section. It is precisely this that he has done
in the sonata in C major now in question. The first section presents
two distinct figures or subjects, one in the tonic, the other in the
dominant. The first, or opening figure, is in the nature of a trumpet
call. The second is conspicuous by the wide crossing of the hands.
The second section begins immediately after the double bar in the
proper manner of the binary form; that is, with a modification of the
first subject in the key of the dominant. Then follow many interesting
modulations, leading to the unmistakable half-close, prefatory to the
third section. And the third section begins at once with the _first_
figure in the _tonic_ key, and proceeds to the second, now likewise
in the tonic. This, more than all else, marks the passing of the
binary form into the triplex. The Padre Martini adagio presents the
same feature, but less clearly because the second figure is hardly
articulate.
These two little pieces, which are but two out of many now known and
others yet to be discovered, seem to reveal to us a stage at which
the aria form and the binary form merged into the form of movement
generally known as the sonata form, which we have chosen arbitrarily
to call the triplex. The three distinct sections, the last repeating
the first, seem modelled on the aria. The highly organized harmonic
life seems inherited from the binary form of the dance movements of the
suite. Finally the arrangement and development of two distinct figures
or subjects on this plan are proper to the new form alone.
Upon this hybrid foundation Pergolesi built up his ‘singing allegro.’
Where Scarlatti had employed figures, Pergolesi employed melodies.
Therefore we find a melody in the tonic key, a melody in the dominant,
these two constituting with the measures which accomplish the
modulation between them, the first section, which is repeated. Then
follows a section of free modulation, in which fragments of either
melody, but chiefly of the first, play their parts; and lastly the
return of both melodies in the tonic key.
It is the Italian love of melody which gives it its final stamp.
To this love Scarlatti hardly felt free to abandon himself in his
harpsichord music; partly, probably, because of the ancient polyphonic
tradition which still demanded of organ and of harpsichord music the
constant movement we find in the preludes of Bach’s English suites;
also because as a virtuoso he was interested in making his instrument
speak brilliantly, and because he realized that the harpsichord was
really unfitted to melody.
But the singing allegro of Pergolesi won the world at a stroke, and
almost at once we find it applied to the harpsichord by the young
amateur, Domenico Alberti. One should give the devil his due. Poor
Alberti, hardly more than a youth, for having supposedly seduced the
world of composers to bite the juicy apple of what is called the
Alberti bass, has been excoriated by all soberminded critics and
treated with unveiled contempt. Let us look into his life and works for
a moment.
Little enough is known of him, and that little smacks of faëry. He
was probably born in Venice in 1717. He died about 1740, probably in
Rome. Only twenty-three, masters, but he tied his bass to the tail of
music and there it swings to this day. But more of the bass anon. He
was an amateur, according to Laborde,[23] a pupil of Biffi and Lotti.
He was a beautiful singer. At least we read that he went to Madrid in
the train of the Venetian ambassador, and astonished Farinelli, one of
the greatest and most idolized singers of the day, who was then living
in high favor at the Spanish court. Later he came back to Rome, where
he recommended himself to the patronage of a certain Marquis Molinari.
About 1737 he set two of Metastasio’s libretti, _Endymion_ and
_Galatea_, to music, which was, according to Laborde, highly esteemed.
All his teachers recalled him with great enthusiasm. He could so play
on the harpsichord, so improvise, that he charmed large assemblies
during whole nights. And sometimes he would go abroad at night through
the streets of Rome with his lute, singing, followed by a crowd of
delighted amateurs. He died young and much regretted. Laborde closes
his article by saying that Alberti wrote thirty-six sonatas which are
said to be superb, and of a new kind (_d’un genre neuf_). Laborde’s
article, though pleasing, is a bit highly colored. From it we have a
right only to infer that Alberti was lovable, a good singer and a good
player. That he speaks of the sonatas as being of a new sort, however,
should not be forgotten.
Dr. Burney mentions Alberti twice in his ‘Present State of Music in
Germany,’ both times in connection with his stay in Vienna in the
autumn of 1772, more than thirty years after Alberti’s death. Once
it is to give his name among the seven men who were at that time
considered to be the greatest composers for harpsichord and for organ.
Other names were Handel, Scarlatti, and Bach (either Emanuel or
Christian: the father was not then generally appreciated). High company
for poor Alberti, from which he since has fallen most low. But that he
should have been reckoned with such men thirty years after his death,
speaks irrefutably for the influence his works must have had, for a
time, at any rate, upon the development of pianoforte music.
Reference was made in the second chapter to the other mention of
Alberti in Dr. Burney’s book. It occurred in connection with Dr.
L’Augier’s reminiscences of D. Scarlatti. Scarlatti had told the
eminent physician that he had always borne in mind, while writing his
pieces for the harpsichord, the special qualities of that instrument,
whereas other ‘modern’ composers, like Alberti, were now writing in
a style that would be more fitting to other instruments. In the case
of Alberti, Scarlatti must have had the voice in mind, for Alberti’s
harpsichord sonatas are hardly more than strings of melodies.
Considering then that Alberti was held in such high esteem as late as
1772, and that D. Scarlatti complained of him that he wrote in a manner
less fitting to the harpsichord than to some other instrument, it seems
likely that to him in part is due the appearance of the singing allegro
in harpsichord music, which was to be characteristic of Christian Bach,
of Mozart, of Haydn, of Clementi and in some part of Beethoven.
The sonatas themselves bear this out. The eight which we have been
able to study, are light stuff, indisputably. But the triplex form is
clear in most of the movements. He uses two separate distinct melodies
as themes. The first appears at once in the tonic, the second later
in the dominant. The first section, which is nothing more than the
exposition of these two themes, is repeated. After the double bar
follows a section of varying length, usually dominated by reminiscences
of the first theme, the modulations of which are free but by no means
unusual. Then the third section repeats both melodies in the tonic
key. The first movement of a sonata in G major is conspicuous for the
length of its second section, in which there is not only a good bit of
interesting modulation, but also actually new material.
The bass which bears his name is no more than the familiar breaking of
a chord in the following manner:
[Illustration: Music score]
It is hardly more true that he invented it than that such a formula is
intrinsically as contemptible as many musicians, mostly theoreticians,
would make it out to be. If a musician is, in a given composition,
concerned with melody, he may be justified in following the procedure
which makes that melody reign undisputed over his music. This
inevitably will reduce the accompaniment to the simplest function
possible; namely, outlining or supplying the harmony upon which all
melodies, since the Middle Ages at least, have been felt to rest.
In the first sophisticated experiments with melody--the opera early in
the seventeenth century--the accompaniment to a song was frequently
no more than a few occasional chords upon the harpsichord. These
chords were not even written out for the accompanist, but were
indicated to him by figures placed over the notes of a single bass
part. As composers acquired skill in combining several instruments in
accompaniments to their operas, the figured bass lost its importance;
but it was still employed as a sort of harmonic groundwork almost to
the end of the eighteenth century. It was a prop to the harmonies woven
more or less contrapuntally by other instruments, which, unlike
the harpsichord, had power to sustain tone.
[Illustration]
Harpsichord composers. From top left to bottom right:
D. Scarlatti, Couperin, C. P. E. Bach, Clementi.
When a man like Alberti at last endeavored to write purely melodic
music on the harpsichord alone, which by the way was wholly unfitted
to sing, three methods of accompaniment were open to him. One of these
was to give to the left hand, as accompanist, a counter-melody or
counter-melodies, which, interweaving with the upper melody, would
create harmonic progressions. Allowing him to have had the skill
to do this, as Couperin or Bach had been able to do, it would not
have recommended itself to him as the best way to set off the chief
melody. Such a procedure inevitably tangled melody with accompaniment.
Secondly, he could give to the left hand a series of chords. But owing
to the nature of the harpsichord, these would sound dry and detached,
with cold harmonic vacancies between; unless he chose to repeat the
chords rapidly, which process was decidedly clumsy. Finally he could
break up the chords into their separate notes, combine these in groups
easily within the grasp of the hand, and by playing these groups
rapidly over and over again, produce a constantly moving harmonic
current on which his melody might float along. This is in fact what
Alberti did, and this is the legitimate function of the Alberti bass,
one which can no more be dispensed with from pianoforte music than the
tremolo from the orchestra.
It is hardly possible to believe that he invented the particular
formula which plays such a part in his music. Bach had devised many
methods of breaking chords so that their component parts might be kept
in rapid and constant vibration. Witness alone the first and second
preludes in the first book of the ‘Well-tempered Clavichord.’ In the
ninth toccata of the elder Scarlatti there is an eight-measure passage
of chords broken exactly in the Alberti manner. But such devices were
employed by Bach and likewise by A. Scarlatti in passages of purely
harmonic significance. Alberti must be among the first, if he is not
actually the first, to use them to supply a simple harmonic basis for
his melodies.
From the almost universal acceptance of the formula in the last half of
the eighteenth century one may deduce two facts: one, that a good many
composers were too lazy or too lacking in natural endowment to bother
with acquiring a skill in counterpoint; second, that the whole trend of
music was away from the contrapuntal style towards the purely melodic.
Both facts are true; but one should no more deplore the former than be
thankful for the latter, to which is owing many an imperishable page of
Mozart and of Beethoven.
Other formulas of accompaniment in no way superior to Alberti’s were
quick to make their appearance. Among them should be noticed the
arpeggio figures:
[Illustration: Music score]
and the perhaps even more monotonous ones which one finds even in
such a sublime masterpiece as the sonata in A-flat major (op. 110) of
Beethoven.
[Illustration: Music score]
Alberti is a convenient figure to whom to trace an early style of
sonata movement which developed through Christian Bach and Clementi,
and Haydn and Mozart. He fits the case pretty well because he happened
to write a number of sonatas for harpsichord alone. But the great
influences which, apart from Pergolesi, affected the growth of this
triplex form not only in the symphony, but in the sonata as well,
emanated from Mannheim in the Upper Palatinate. The orchestra there
under the gifted Johann Stamitz had come to be, before the middle
of the century, the best in Europe. The two great composers who were
associated with it, Franz Xaver Richter (1709-89) and Stamitz (1717-57)
himself, did perhaps more than any other composers of the time to
strengthen the new form and give it use as a vehicle of lively feeling.
Their energy and their success left an indelible impression upon
the symphony, and upon the string-quartet. And they made themselves
felt upon the pianoforte sonata; in Vienna through the famous
pianist-composer, G. C. Wagenseil (1715-1777); in Paris through the
young and popular Jean Schobert (d. 1767) already mentioned; and even
in London through Christian Bach.
Emanuel Bach, who was frequently publishing sets of sonatas in
Berlin from 1740 to 1786, rather gradually adopted the new form than
contributed to its development. He never quite shook off a conception
of music inherited from his father, which was at the time a little too
serious to submit wholly to the new influences. Hence, for example,
the triplex form is always a little vague in his music. The themes
which he employed, though often beautiful and poetic, were not of the
distinct and melodious type which was characteristic of the form. The
first and second themes were not often clearly differentiated. In fact
he frequently inclined towards constructing his movements out of one
theme, which dominated them as the opening figure dominated the old
binary form. And he very rarely made use of the stereotyped formulas of
the harmonic accompaniment, born of the universal tendency towards a
melodic or homophonic style.
He cannot be closely associated with the developments which took place
within the ‘singing allegro,’ preparing it for use in the great sonatas
of the Viennese period. These took the form of setting the two themes
out of which the movement was constructed distinctly apart from each
other, in strong _relief_, so to speak; and of similarly giving the
three sections a clear outline, and the movement as a whole a stable
balance.
The processes by which this was accomplished in harpsichord music may
be briefly touched upon. The first theme tended towards simplicity.
Already in sonatas of Christian Bach and Jean Schobert a dignified and
somewhat declamatory type of melody is favored for the opening. This
was usually repeated, that it might be impressed upon the mind of the
listener. Often it came to an end squarely in a full tonic cadence.
The transitional passage which was then to accomplish the modulation
to the dominant or relative major key in which the second theme was to
be announced, tended to become highly conventional, a sort of service
music with little more than formal significance. Usually a figure of
some technical brilliance carried the music along in repetitions that
could not fail to attract the attention of the listener and arouse his
curiosity as to what was coming next. These figures might or might not
be fragments of the opening theme. The modulation to the desired key
having been accomplished, the passage came to an end in a flourish or
in a pause of a beat or two. No feature of the triplex form is more
distinctive than these conventional transitional passages which seem to
carry on the double function of porter and herald.
After the claim to attention had been thereby established the second
theme was allowed to sing. The general tendency was to give to this
second theme a gentler and more truly melodious character than the
first. Here was the great domain of the Alberti bass, for instance. And
following the second theme came another busy little passage, service
music again, of which the duty was to bring the first section of the
movement to an orderly close in the key of the dominant.
The treatment of the middle section varied. It remained always the
part in which the composer exercised the most freedom. It might be
long or short, in the manner of a fantasia; it might merely present
fragments of the first or second themes or both in a series of
modulations or sequences. It may be said that the tendency towards a
more or less dramatic development made an appearance before the end
of the century, as if the composer was submitting his will to the
suggestions of the themes themselves. The greater the inherent vitality
of these themes the more likely were they to assert themselves in this
middle section and to reveal, as it were, the germinating power within
them and color the section with their nature. The end of the section
was more and more contrived to lead up to the last section in an
obvious manner, either with a long run, a series of flourishes reaching
a climax, or a pause, or anticipations of the coming theme.
The last section differed little from the first except that the second
theme now appeared in the tonic key. The transitional passage was
taken, along with the themes themselves, from the first section; but,
relieved of one half its duty--that of bringing to pass a modulation
from tonic to dominant--was likely to be considerably shortened. The
closing measures, however, were usually an exact reduplication in the
tonic key of those which had closed the first section in the dominant.
The first section was always repeated, and so were the second and
third, _en bloc_.
Such was the sonata form of movement which we have chosen to call
the triplex form; a movement in three clear sections, made up of two
themes appearing variously in each of them. The three sections are
generally known in English as the exposition, the development, and
the recapitulation or restatement; and what distinguishes them is the
conventional figure or passage work which was used to mark them off,
one from the other, and to stand as dividing line between the first
and second themes. In the sonatas of Christian Bach all these things
are clear and _en règle_; in Emanuel Bach they are obscure. They are
clear in the works of the Mannheim group, and in those of the Viennese
and Parisian composers who responded to their influence. They are
clear in the sonatas and symphonies of Haydn and Mozart and can still
be traced in most of those of Beethoven. Hence it would seem that in
many ways Emanuel Bach, instead of being the source of the pianoforte
sonata, stands very nearly outside the current of influences to which
it really owes its most distinctive feature.
We may again define the sonata as a piece of music which is a
conventional group of several pieces or movements, usually three, more
rarely four. The movements are not internally related to each other.
The bond which holds them together is only traditional. One of these
movements, most often the first, is written in a form sprung of the
love of Italians and Slavs for melody, known generally as the _sonata
form_. The presence of a movement in this form in a group of pieces
will give an unchallenged right to call that group a sonata.[24]
III
The pianoforte sonata was a sufficiently clearly defined product of
musical craftsmanship, if not art, before Haydn and Mozart began
seriously to express themselves in it. It is right then to summarize
briefly the musical value of the chief sonatas before their day.
The many writers may be divided according to the countries in which
they practised their art. In London are to be found P. D. Paradies
(1710-1792) and Baldassare Galuppi (1706-1785), both Italians, and
Johann Christian Bach, submitting almost unconditionally to Italian
influence. In the London group too must be reckoned one of the most
important men in the development of pianoforte music, Muzio Clementi.
In Vienna the chief figure is G. C. Wagenseil; in Paris, Jean
Schobert; in Berlin, Emanuel Bach, with whom may be reckoned Friedrich
Wilhelm Rust, who, through his brother Johann Ludwig Anton, a pupil
of Sebastian Bach, was clearly influenced by the works of the great
masters.
Both Galuppi and Paradies rather continue the tradition of Scarlatti
than contribute to the development of the new style. Both, however,
published sets of sonatas, that is sets of pieces in more than one
movement; though the triplex form is practically unfamiliar to them.
Their music has great sprightliness and charm. It should be mentioned
because the work of Paradies especially was admired and recommended by
Clementi.
Christian Bach, on the other hand, is full of the new idea. His life
itself may well claim attention. It is sufficiently remarkable that he
almost alone of the great Bach family which had for generations played
a part in the development of music in Germany, and was to play such a
part there for many years to come, broke the traditions of his fathers,
went to Italy for eight years, even became a Catholic, and finally
decided to pass the last twenty years of his life in London. Though
the many stories of his extravagances and dissipations have been most
unrighteously exaggerated, he was none the less of a gay, light-hearted
and pleasure-loving nature which is in sharp contrast to the graver and
more pious dispositions of his ancestors.
His father died when he was but fifteen years old. He had already shown
marked ability as a player of the harpsichord, and his brother Emanuel
took him to Berlin after the father’s death and trained him further in
the art for four years. Then followed the eight years in Italy where he
was beloved and admired by all with whom he came in contact, not the
least by the great Padre Martini in Bologna, with whom he studied for
many years. In 1762 he went to London, chiefly to write operas. He was
enormously popular and successful. He was court clavecinist to Queen
Anne and in 1780 a Bath paper spoke of him as the greatest player of
his time.
At some time not long after his arrival in England he published a set
of six sonatas for the harpsichord, dedicated to the amusement of
‘His Serene Highness, Monseigneur le duc Ernst, duc de Mecklenburg.’
Of these the second, in D major, offers a particularly excellent
example of clear, lucid writing in the sonata form. The first movement
is admirable. The first theme is composed of vigorous chords. It is
given twice, then followed by a transitional passage full of fire; the
right hand keeping a continuous flow of broken chord figures, over
the rising and falling powerful motives in the left. The preparation
for the announcement of the second theme is in remarkably mature
classical manner, and the lovely melodious second theme, with its
gentle Albertian accompaniment, is clearly a promise of Mozart to
come. There is a fine free closing passage. The development section
is long and varied, astonishingly modern; and the return to the first
theme, prepared by a long pedal point and a crescendo, is not a little
fiery and dramatic. The second movement, an andante in G major, and
the quick final movement in D again, round off a work which for
clearness of form, for balance in proportions, and for a certain fine
and healthy charm, is wholly admirable. Above all there is about all
his work a real grace which, superficial as it may be, is a precious
and perhaps a rare quality in pianoforte music, a quality both of
elegance and amiability. It is a reflection of his own amiable nature,
so conspicuous in all his dealings with the little Mozart during the
spring of 1765.
Christian Bach is no careless musician. His work is done with a sure
and unfailing hand. No man could have lived fifteen years in the
house of his father, Sebastian, and four more in that of his brother
Emanuel, and yet again eight under the strong personal influence of
Padre Martini, the most learned contrapuntist of his day, without
acquiring a mastery of the science of music. Such Christian Bach had at
his command; such he chose to conceal under a lightness and gaiety of
thought and style.
As regards instrumental music in particular his influence upon Mozart,
though in some ways ineradicable, was largely supplanted by the
influence of Josef and Michael Haydn. What Mozart received from him in
the domain of opera, however, as summarized by Messrs. de Wyzewa and
Saint-Foix in their ‘W. A. Mozart’ (Paris, 1912), was characteristic
of all of Bach’s music: ‘A mixture of discrete elegance and melodic
purity, a sweetness sometimes a little too soft [_un peu molle_] but
always charming, a preference of beauty above intensity of dramatic
expression, or rather a constant preoccupation to keep expression
within the limits of beauty.’
Muzio Clementi was born in Rome in 1752, but when hardly more than
a lad of fourteen was brought to London by an English gentleman,
and London was henceforth his home until he died in 1832. He was a
brilliant virtuoso, though he travelled but little to exhibit his
powers; an excellent pedagogue; a very shrewd business man. Among his
many compositions of all kinds, about sixty are sonatas for pianoforte.
The first series of three was published in 1770 and is usually taken to
determine the date at which the pianoforte began really to supplant the
harpsichord.
Concerning Clementi’s relation to the development of a new pianoforte
technique we shall speak further on. Here we have to do with the
musical worth of his sonatas. Clementi was born before Mozart and
Beethoven. He outlived them both, not to mention Haydn, Weber and
Schubert. Mozart, after a test of skill with him in Vienna, had little
to say of him save that he had an excellent, clear technique. He
remained primarily a virtuoso in all his composition; but on the one
hand he undoubtedly influenced Mozart and Beethoven,--and not only
in the matter of pianoforte effects,--while on the other he no less
obviously held himself open to influence from them, particularly from
Beethoven.
His pianoforte sonatas show a steady development towards the curtailing
of sheer virtuosity and the supremacy of emotional seriousness. In the
early works, op. 2, op. 7, and op. 12, for example, he is obviously
writing for display. The sonatas in op. 2 have but two movements. After
that he generally composes them of three. The spirit of Scarlatti
prevails, though it is almost impossible to point to any close
relationship between the two men. The last movement of the second
sonata in op. 26 perhaps resembles Scarlatti as definitely as any. But
the fundamental difference between them, which may well obliterate all
traces of the indebtedness of the one to the other, is that Clementi
writes in the new melodic style. That he was a skilled contrapuntist
did not restrain his use of the Alberti bass and other formulas of
accompaniment.
He composed with absolute clearness. The classical triplex form, with
its conventional transitional passages, its clear-cut sections, and,
above all, its well-defined thematic melodies, can nowhere else be
better exemplified. What perhaps mars his music, or at any rate makes
a great part of it tiresome to modern ears, is the employment of long
scale passages in many of his transitional passages. They cannot but
suggest the exercise book and the hours of practice which are back of
them. The concise figures of Schobert, of Haydn and Mozart may sound
thin, but, though they suggest sometimes the schoolboy, they spare us
the school.
On the other hand, Clementi was wonderfully fertile in figures that
sound well on the piano, and many of his sonatas, empty enough of
genuine feeling, are still pleasant and vivacious to the listener.
Yet they seem to have sunk down into the tomb. They are perhaps never
heard in concerts at the present day. Those which are only show music
may willingly be let go. They lack the diamond sparkle of Scarlatti.
But there are others, even among the earlier ones, which are musically
too worthy and still too interesting to be so ruthlessly consigned to
the grave as the modern temper has consigned them. Have we after all
too much pianoforte music as it is? It seems to be more than a change
of fashion that keeps Clementi dead. Perhaps it is the shade of the
admirable but awful _Gradus ad Parnassum_ over all his other work.
Perhaps a man has the right to live immortally by the virtue of but one
of his excellencies. In the case of Clementi posterity has chosen to
remember only the success of a teacher. The great series of studies or
exercises published in 1817 under the usual pompous title of _Gradus ad
Parnassum_ alone of all his work still retains some general attention.
And this in spite of many beauties in his sonatas. Even among the
early ones there are some distinguished by a fineness of feeling and
a true if not great gift of musical expression. Take, for example,
the sonata in G minor, number three of the seventh opus. The first
movement, _allegro con spirito_, has more to recommend it than unusual
formal compactness and perfection. The opening theme has a color not
in the power of the mere music-maker. It is true that there is the
almost ever-present scale passage in the transition to the second
theme; but the second theme itself has a grace of movement and even
a certain sinuousness of harmony that cannot but suggest Mozart.
There are sudden accents and rough chords that foreshadow a mannerism
of Beethoven; and the full measure of silence before the restatement
begins is a true romantic touch.
The spirit of the slow movement is perhaps a trifle perfunctory. There
is little hint of Mozart, who, alone of the classical composers, could
somehow always keep the wings of his music gently fluttering through
the leaden _tempo adagio_. The sharp--one may well say shocking--sudden
fortissimos herald Beethoven again. The movement is, however, blessedly
short; and the final _presto_ is full of fire and dark, flaring and
subsiding by turns.
Of the later sonatas that in B minor, op. 40, No. 2, and that in G
minor, op. 50, No. 3, have been justly admired. Yet excellent as they
are, one can hardly pretend to do more than lay a tribute on their
graves. Only some unforeseen trump can rouse them from what seems to be
their eternal sleep. One feature of the former may be noted: the return
of a part of the slow movement in the midst of the rapid last movement.
Such a process unites at least the last two movements very firmly
together, tends to make of the sonata as a whole something more than a
series of independent movements put in line according to the rule of
convention.
The sonata in G minor also seems to have an organic life as a whole.
Clementi gave it a title, _Didone abbandonata_, and called the whole
a _scena tragica_. This is treating the whole sonata as a drama based
upon a single idea; but inasmuch as it was written probably between
1820 and 1821, this conception of the sonata probably came to him from
Beethoven rather than from his own idealism.[25]
It is hard to turn our thumbs down on Clementi. It may be unjust as
well. He entered the arena of the sonata and in many ways no man
excelled him there. Mozart’s impulsive condemnation has gone hard
with him. We are like sheep, and even the wisest will listen all but
unquestioning to a man who had, if ever man had, the voice of an
angel. And so Clementi is all but forgotten as a sonatorial gladiator
and remembered only as a trainer. That the greatest of the fighters
profited by his teaching cannot be doubted. That they despoiled him of
many ideas and even of his finery before his flesh was cold is also
true. They made better use of them.
A glance over Clementi’s sonatas can hardly astonish more than by
what it reveals of the great commonness of musical idioms during
the Viennese period. Phrase after phrase and endless numbers of
fragments bob up with the features we had thought were only Haydn’s,
or Mozart’s, or Beethoven’s. Mozart quite openly appropriated a theme
from one of Clementi’s sonatas[26] as the basis of his overture to the
‘Magic Flute.’ Such a fact is, however, far less suggestive than the
intangible similarity between the stuff Clementi used and that which
his greater contemporaries in Vienna built with. Compare, for instance,
the first movement of Clementi’s sonata in B-flat, op. 34, No. 2, with
the first movement of Beethoven’s symphony in C minor. Likeness of
treatment, likeness of skill, likeness of mood there are not; but the
juxtaposition of the two movements creates a whisper that Clementi
passed through music side by side with some of the greatest of all
composers.
IV
Both Schobert in Paris and Wagenseil in Vienna are more than straws
which show the way the wind blew through the classical sonata. They
are streaks in the wind itself. On the one came the seeds of the new
works in Mannheim to the clavecins in Paris; and on the other such
seeds were blown to harpsichords in Vienna. Both men wrote great
quantities of music for the harpsichord, but oftenest with a part for
violin added. This part was, however, usually _ad libitum_.
Concerning Schobert we may quote once more from the ‘Life of Mozart’
by Messrs. de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix. ‘From 1763 up to the general
upheaval caused by the Revolution, he was the most played and the most
loved of all the composers of French sonatas. * * * Outside France,
moreover, his works were equally highly prized; we find testimony to it
in every sort of German, English and Italian treatise on the history or
on the _esthétique_ of the piano.’
Concerning Wagenseil we may recall the anecdote of little Mozart who
one evening, on the occasion of his first visit to Vienna, refused
to play unless Wagenseil, the greatest of players and composers for
harpsichord in Vienna, were present. Dr. Burney visited him some years
later and heard him play, old and ailing, with great fire and majesty.
Schobert was, as we have said, of Silesian origin. He came to Paris
as a young man, probably by way of Mannheim, some time between 1755
and 1760; and from then on to the time of his death in 1767 adapted
his music more and more to the French taste. Hence we find in it a
simple but strong expression, an elegant clearness and a touch of that
_sensibilité larmoyante_ made fashionable by Rousseau, showing itself
in the frequent use of minor keys, evidently at the root of the very
personal emotional life of his music.[27] Mozart came very strongly
under his influence.
Wagenseil, on the other hand, shows yet more of the Italian influence,
so strong even at that day in Vienna, to which Haydn was to owe much.
His work lacks emotion and poetry, is facile and brilliant and clear,
without much personal color.
In the matter of emotional warmth the sonatas of Emanuel Bach, however
vague they may be in form by contrast with those of Schobert and his
brother Christian, are distinguished above those of his contemporaries.
Emanuel--his full name was Carl Philipp Emanuel--was born in Weimar
in March, 1714. An early intent to devote himself to the practice of
law was given up because of his marked aptitude for music. In 1740 he
entered the service of Frederick the Great as court cembalist. In 1757
he gave up this post and went to Hamburg, where he worked as organist,
teacher, and composer until his death there on the fourteenth of
December, 1788.
The works by which he is best known are the six sets of sonatas, with
rondos and fantasies too, which he published between 1779 and 1787 in
Leipzig under the title of _Sonaten für Kenner und Liebhaber_ (‘Sonatas
for Connoisseurs and Amateurs’). Many of the sonatas, however, had been
composed before 1779.
An earlier set, dedicated to the Princess Amelia of Prussia and
published in 1760, bears the interesting title, _Sechs Sonaten fürs
Clavier mit veränderten Reprisen_ (‘Six Sonatas for Clavier with Varied
Repeats’). This title, together with Bach’s preface to the set, shows
conclusively that in repeating the sections of movements of sonatas,
players added some free ornamentation of their own to the music as the
composer published it. The practice seems to have been an ancient one,
applied to the suite before the sonata came into being. Thus some of
the _doubles_ of Couperin and Sebastian Bach may be taken as special
efforts on the part of the composers to safeguard their music from the
carelessness and lack of knowledge and taste of dilettanti. To what an
extent such variation in repeat might go and how much it might add to
the richness of the music are shown, for example, by the double of the
sarabande in Sebastian Bach’s sixth English suite.
Emanuel Bach’s sonatas are of very unequal merit. The sonata in F
minor,[28] published in the third set for _Kenner und Liebhaber_ in
1781, but written nearly twenty years earlier, has little either of
extrinsic or intrinsic beauty to recommend it. Not only does the
inchoate nature of the second theme in the first movement fail to
save the movement from monotony; the first theme itself is stark and
devoid of life. There is a lack of smoothness, a constant hitching. The
andante is not spontaneous for all its sentimentality, and the final
movement is fragmentary.
A sonata in A major, on the other hand, written not long after, and
published in 1779, is charming throughout. The first theme in the
first movement is conventional enough, but it has sparkle; and though
the second theme is not very distinctly different from the first,
the movement is full of variety and life. Particularly charming are
the measures constituting an unusually long epilogue to the first
section. The harmonies are richly colored, if not striking; and the
use of the epilogue in the development section is most effective. So
is the full measure pause before the cascade of sound which flows into
the restatement. The andante is over-ornamented, but the harmonic
groundwork is solid and interesting. The last movement suggests
Scarlatti, and has the animated and varied flow which characterizes the
first.
A sonata in A minor, written about 1780 and published in the second
series for _Kenner und Liebhaber_, is in many ways typical of
Emanuel Bach at his best. There is still in the first movement that
vagueness of structure which may usually be attributed to the lack
of distinctness of his second theme. But the first theme has a
fine declamatory vigor, in the spirit of the theme out of which his
father built the fifth fugue in the first book of the ‘Well-tempered
Clavichord’; and the movement as a whole has the broad sweep of a
brilliant fantasy.
The andante, with its delicate imitations, foreshadowing Schumann, is
full of poetic sentiment. It leads without break into the rapid final
movement. Here the declamatory spirit of the first movement reigns
again, but in lighter mood. There is in fact an unmistakable kinship
between the first and last movements, which must be felt though it
cannot be traced to actual thematic relationship. Here is a sonata,
then, which, though divided into three movements, seems sprung of one
fundamental idea.
Such a conception of the sonata is by no means always so clear in his
work; yet it must be said that he, more than any composer down to
Beethoven, was inclined to make of the sonata a poetic whole. His aim
was rather furthered than hindered by the vagueness of form of the
separate movements. His sonatas are all the more fantasies for being
less clearly sonatas; and they are often rich in that very quality in
which the regular classical sonata was so poor--imagination.
Most of what has been said regarding his creation or establishing of
the sonata, particularly of the triplex form, must be very largely
discounted. Haydn and Mozart learned little from him in the arrangement
of their ideas, which is form; much in the treatment of them, which is
expression. That quality of poetry which we may still admire in his
music today, vague or obscure as its form may be, was the quality in
his playing most admired by those contemporaries who heard him.
His excellent book on how to play the clavier counsels clearness and
exactness, but it is a heartfelt appeal for beauty and expressiveness
as well. What is the long, detailed analysis of _agrémens_ but the
explanation of practically the only means of subtle expression which
the cembalist could acquire? His love for the clavichord, which, for
all the frailty of its tone, was capable of fine shadings of sound,
never waned. He commended it to all as the best instrument upon which
to practise, for the clumsy hand had no power to call forth the charm
which was its only quality. Indeed, he received the pianoforte coldly.
His keyboard music was probably conceived, the brilliant for the
harpsichord, the more intimate for the clavichord. And towards the end
of his life he gave utterance to his belief that the only function of
music was to stir the emotions and that the player who could not do
that might as well not play.
In turning to the best of his sonatas one turns to profoundly beautiful
music, music that unquestionably has the power to stir the heart. The
great spirit of the father has breathed upon it and given it life.
The turns of his melodies and their ineffably tender cadences, and,
above all, the chromatic richness of his harmonies are the voice of
his father. One may be constantly startled and bewildered. There is
something ghostly abroad in them. We hear and do not hear, we almost
see and do not see, the all-powerful Sebastian. But it is the voice of
the father in a new language, his face in shadow, in the mist before
dawn. One is tempted to cry with Hamlet: ‘Well said, old mole! Canst
work i’ the ground so fast?’ It is easy to understand that Haydn, worn
out with his daily fight against starvation, could come back to his
cracked clavichord and play away half the night with the sonatas of
Emanuel Bach; that Mozart could call him father of them all. But in
spirit, not in flesh. And it is, after all, the spirit of Sebastian
that thus attends the succeeding births and rebirths of music.
The harpsichord works by W. Friedemann Bach, the oldest and, according
to some accounts, the favorite son of Johann Sebastian, have had
probably far less influence upon the development of pianoforte music.
But they contain many measures of great beauty. Madame Farrenc included
twelve polonaises, a sonata (in E-flat major), several fugues, and four
superb fantasias in the _Trésor des pianistes_. The sonata is regular
in form, and a few of the polonaises are in the triplex form. Thus
Friedemann Bach shows that he, too, like his brother Emanuel, allied
himself to the new movement in music. His mastery of musical science,
however, is evident; and that he knew the keyboard well is proved by
the unusual brilliance of his fantasias. In the main it may be said
that the greatest beauty of his music whispers of his father.
Something of the spirit shows itself in the pianoforte sonatas of
Friedrich Wilhelm Rust, a composer now little known, whose work
deserves study. He died at Dessau, where most of his life had been
spent, in 1796, just on the eve of Beethoven’s rise to prominence.
Twelve of his sonatas have recently been published in Paris under the
supervision of M. Vincent d’Indy. They show a blending of two styles:
the German style which he acquired from Emanuel Bach in Berlin, and
the Scarlatti style, of which he made a study during two years spent
in Italy. Three sonatas, in E minor, in F-sharp minor, and in D major,
written near the close of his life, are in two movements, both of which
seem welded together in the manner of the later sonatas of Beethoven.
The treatment of the pianoforte or harpsichord is modern, particularly
in the major section of the Rondo of the sonata in E minor, and in the
passage work contrasted with the beautiful first theme of the sonata
in F-sharp minor. In a sonata in C major, belonging to this period, a
fugue is introduced as an episode in the final rondo. Haydn had already
used the fugue as the last movement of the string quartet, Mozart as
the last movement of a symphony. Rust, in applying it to the pianoforte
sonata, foreshadowed Beethoven.[29]
FOOTNOTES:
[21] Pietro Locatelli, b. Bergamo, 1693; d. Amsterdam, 1764; famous
violinist, pupil of Corelli. His works, _Concerti_, trio sonatas, etc.,
are important in the development of the sonata form.
[22] Antonio Vivaldi, b. Venice, ca. 1680; d. 1743; completed Torelli’s
and Albinoni’s work in the creation of the violin concerto.
[23] Jean Benjamin de Laborde: _Essai sur la musique ancienne et
moderne_, 1780.
[24] It seems hardly worth while to add that there are well-known
sonatas in which no movement is in the triplex form. _Cf._ the Mozart
sonata in A major (K. 331) and the Beethoven sonata in A-flat major,
op. 26.
[25] It is worthy of note that a sonata in G minor for violin by
Tartini was at one time known by the name _Didone abbandonata_. _Cf._
Wasielewski: _Die Violine und ihre Meister_.
[26] Opus 43, No. 2.
[27] _Op. cit._, Vol. I, p. 65, _et seq._
[28] See Musical Examples (Vol. XIII).
[29] The sonatas of Rust as printed by his grandson showed many
extraordinary modern features which have since been proved forgeries.
The fiery discussions to which they gave rise have been summarized by
M. D. Calvocoressi in two articles in the _Musical Times_ (London) for
January and February, 1914.
CHAPTER IV
HAYDN, MOZART, AND BEETHOVEN
The ‘Viennese period’ and the three great classics--Joseph
Haydn; Haydn’s clavier sonatas; the Variations in F
minor--W. A. Mozart; Mozart as pianist and improvisator;
Mozart’s sonatas; his piano concertos--Ludwig van Beethoven;
evolution of the modern pianoforte--Musical qualities of
Beethoven’s piano music; Beethoven’s technical demands; his
pianoforte sonatas; his piano concertos; conclusion.
The association of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven with Vienna affords
historians a welcome license to give to a conspicuous epoch in the
development of music a local habitation and a name. Their work is
commonly granted to constitute a more or less definite era known as the
Viennese period. All three speak, as it were, a common idiom. There is
a distinct family likeness between their separate accomplishments. They
were personally acquainted. Haydn and Mozart were warm friends, despite
the difference in years between them. Mozart was among the first in
Vienna to recognize the greatness latent in Beethoven, who later was
for a while even the pupil of Haydn. Moreover, all three reckoned among
their friends the same families, even the same men and women. The
three great men now sit on golden chairs, enshrined in the same niche,
Beethoven considerably to the fore.
The insulation which circumstances of time and space may seem to have
woven about them proves upon investigation to be quite imperfect. To
begin with, Bach was but a year dead, D. Scarlatti still alive, and
Rameau with more than a decade yet to live when Haydn was writing his
first mass and along with it clavier sonatas for the benefit of his
few pupils. Mozart had written his three immortal symphonies in 1786,
before Emanuel Bach had ceased publishing his sonatas for _Kenner und
Liebhaber_. On the other end, Moscheles was a famous though very young
pianist before Beethoven had half done writing sonatas; and Carl von
Weber’s _Freischütz_ had begun to act upon the precocious Richard
Wagner before Beethoven had completed his ninth symphony, his last
sonata, his great mass and his great quartets.
Merely as regards pianoforte technique the period was a transitional
one. Even the Beethoven sonatas as late as opus 27 were published
for either harpsichord or pianoforte. Both Mozart and Beethoven were
influenced by men who, in a narrow sense, seem far more than they to
belong to a modern development. Clementi, for example, deliberately
burned his harpsichords and clavichords behind him in the very year
Beethoven was born, and from then on gave up his life to the discovery
of new possibilities and effects upon the pianoforte, by which his
pupils Cramer and Field paved the way for Chopin.
Yet, all signs to the contrary, the Viennese period remains a period
of full fruition, and this because of the extraordinary genius of the
men whose works have defined it. Each was highly and specially gifted
and poured into forms already made ready for him a musical substance
of rare and precious quality. In considering keyboard music we have to
deal mostly with this substance, in fact with the musical expression of
three unusual and powerful personalities.
It is to be regretted that Haydn and even Mozart have been in no
small measure eclipsed by Beethoven. This is especially true of their
keyboard music. It may be questioned whether this be any more just for
being seemingly natural. There are many reasons to account for it. The
most obvious is the more violent and fiery nature of Beethoven, his
explicit and unusual trials. These, wholly apart from his music, will
for ever make the study and recollection of him as a man of profound
interest. Haydn can urge but a few young years of hardship for the
human sympathy of generations to come. Mozart’s disappointments, so
sickening to the heart that puts itself in tune with him, have after
all but the ring of hard luck and merit disregarded, to which the weary
world lends only a passing ear. But Beethoven’s passionate nature, his
self-inflicted labor of self-discipline, his desperate unhappiness and
the tragic curse of his deafness, are the stuff out of which heroes are
made.
So his music, reflecting the man, is heroic in calibre. Even its humor
is titanic. It will impress by its hugeness and its force many an
ear deaf to more engaging and more subtle language. Its poignancy is
unmistakable, nearly infallible in its appeal; so that Beethoven is a
name with which to lay even the clod under a spell.
But another reason why Mozart and Haydn lie hidden or but partly
perceived in the shade of Beethoven, is more recondite, is, in fact,
paradoxical. This is no other than the extreme difficulty of their
music. Clara Schumann, writing in her diary of the music of Richard
Wagner, which she rejected in spite of the world’s acclaim, conceived
that either she or the world at large had gone mad. To one who writes
of the difficulties of Haydn’s and Mozart’s sonatas a similar idea is
likely to occur. At the present day they are put into the hands of
babes and sucklings, in whose touch, however, there is no wisdom. Yet
if ever music needed a wise hand, it is these simple pieces; and a lack
of wisdom has made them trivial to the world.
The art of the pianist should be, as Emanuel Bach declared, that of
drawing from his instrument sounds of moving beauty, beautiful in
quality, in line and in shading. His tools are his ten fingers which he
must train to flexibility, strength and security. It is right that as
soon as he can play a scale or shake a trill, he should put his skill
to test upon a piece of music. So the teacher lays Haydn and Mozart
under the clumsy little fingers of boy and girl. ‘Stumble along there
on your way to great Beethoven, whom you must approach with firm and
tested stride.’ That is the burden of the pædagogic lay. It echoes in
the mind of riper age, Haydn and Mozart have been put aside, like the
perambulator, the bib and the high table chair; or, like toys, are
brought out rarely, to be smiled upon.
If they are toys, then maturity should bring a sense of their exquisite
beauty and meaning, and may well shudder at the destruction youth made
imminent upon them. This it all too rarely does, because only ten
fingers in ten thousand can reveal the loveliness of these sonatas, and
because, also, ears are rare that now delight in such a revelation. You
must give to fingers the skill to spin sound from the keyboard that is
like the song of birds, or, if more vocal, is more like the voice of
fairies than the voice of man. It is easier to make thunder; and even
mock thunder intimidates. So your player will pound Beethoven, and
lightning will flash about his head as the sarcastic Heine fancied it
about Liszt’s. Some will scent sacrilege and cover their ears from the
noise. But let the soulless man play Mozart and his hearers will cover
their mouths, as all well-bred people are trained to do when boredom
seeks an outlet.
Technically Haydn and Mozart may be held to have condemned their music
to the sort of galley-service it now performs. Both wrote perhaps the
majority of their sonatas for the use of their pupils. Bach wrote the
‘Well-tempered Clavichord’ with what seems to be the same purpose;
but Bach’s aim was constantly to educate and to expand the power of
the students under his care; whereas both Haydn and Mozart may be
often suspected of wishing rather to simplify their music than to tax
and strengthen the abilities of their high-born amateurs. There is
something comical in the fact that even with this most gracious of
intentions both were occasionally accused of writing music that was
troublesome, i.e., too difficult. Haydn may have been grieved to be
found thus disagreeable. Mozart’s letters sometimes show a delicate
malice in enjoyment of it. But one can hear Beethoven snort and rage
under a similar reproach.
Yet the wonder is that sonatas so written should be today full of
freshness and beauty. This they undoubtedly are. Composed perfunctorily
they may have been, but the spirit of music is held fast in most of
them, no less appealing for being oftener in smiles than tears. And if
to evoke this spirit in all her loveliness from a box of strings chance
to be the ideal of some player, let him take care to bring to the
sonatas of Haydn and Mozart the most precious resources of his art and
he will not call in vain.
I
The prevalent mood in Haydn’s music is one of frank cheerfulness.
His native happy disposition, his kindliness and his ever-ready,
good-natured humor, won him friends on every hand. These qualities
in his music recommended it to the public. For the public wanted
light-hearted music. Italian melody had won the world. Haydn’s happy,
almost jovial melodies and his lively, obvious rhythms spread over the
world almost as soon as he began to write.
From the start, however, he treated his art seriously. He was never
a careless writer, though he had the benefit of little regular
instruction. Clavier sonatas he had composed for his pupils were so
much copied and circulated in manuscript that a piratical publisher
finally decided money could be made from them. He had written quartets
for strings, which were received with favor at soirées given by Porpora
and men of rank. He won the approval of men like Wagenseil, Gluck, and
Dittersdorf. All his work, though simple, is beautifully and clearly
done.
He was not, like Mozart and Beethoven, a great player on the
harpsichord or piano. In this respect, and, indeed, in many others,
he is a little like Schubert. Both men wrote extremely well for the
keyboard. The music of both has an unusual stamp of spontaneous
originality. In Haydn’s music as in Schubert’s the quality of
folk-melodies and folk-rhythms is very distinct. In spite of most
obvious differences in temperament and in circumstances, they speak of
the same race unconsciously influenced by Slavic elements.
The collection of thirty-four sonatas for pianoforte published by
Peters includes, with perhaps one exception, the best of his work for
that instrument alone. On looking over them one cannot but be struck by
the general similarity of any one to the others. Some are more frankly
gay, more boyish, than others; some tempered by seriousness. It may
be added, however, that those of a later period do not seem generally
more profound than those of an earlier one. The later ones are more
elaborate, sometimes musically more complicated, but a single mood is
on the whole common to them all.
The same is in part true of Mozart’s sonatas. Except as these show
distinct traces of the various influences under which he came from time
to time, they do not differ strikingly from each other. There is over
both Haydn’s and Mozart’s keyboard music a normal cast of thought, as
there is over the music of Couperin. In this they suffer by comparison
with Beethoven, as Couperin suffers by comparison with Bach. One would
have no difficulty in choosing ten Beethoven sonatas, each one of which
is entirely distinct from the others, not by reason of form or style
or content, but by reason of a very special emotional significance.
One could not choose ten Haydn sonatas of such varied character. One
does not, in other words, sit down to the piano with a volume of Haydn
sonatas, expecting to confront a wholly new problem in each one, to
meet a wholly new range of thought and feeling, passing from one to the
other. One looks for the same sort of thing in each one, and with few
exceptions one finds it.
To what is this due? To the nature of the man or to the circumstances
under which most of the sonatas were written? Or is it due to public
taste of the day and the consequent attitude of the man towards the
function of music? To answer these questions would lead us far afield.
But it is doubtless in large measure owing to this fact that Haydn, and
Mozart too, have been thought to concern themselves primarily with form
in music. And Beethoven has again and again been described as the man
who overthrew the supremacy of the formal element in music, to which
his predecessors are imagined to have sworn prime allegiance.
It is a great injustice so to stigmatize Haydn and Mozart. The beauty
of their music is far more one of spirit than one of form. In his own
day Haydn was thought to be an innovator, not in the matter of form,
but in the spirit with which he filled forms already familiar. This may
be said to be the spirit of humor. Weitzmann[30] cites an interesting
passage in the _Musikalisches Handbuch_ for the year 1782 which speaks
of Haydn as ‘A musical joke-maker, but like Yorick, not for pathos
but for high comic; and this in music most exasperating (_verzweifelt
sehr_). Even his adagios, where the man should properly weep, have the
stamp of high comedy.’ And a most joyous humor fills the Haydn sonatas
full to overflowing. That is the secret of the charm they will exert
on any one who takes the time to study them today, a charm which has
little to do with formal perfection.
Let us look into a few of the sonatas. Most of them were written
between 1760 and 1790. The few written earlier than 1760 are so
obviously teaching pieces that, though they won him fame, we need not
trouble to study them. Take, however, a sonata from the set published
in 1774, known as opus 13, in C major (Peters No. 15). The whole first
movement is built upon two rhythmical phrases which by their lilt
and flow cannot fail to delight the dullest ear. There is the dotted
sixteenth figure of the first theme, a theme frankly melodious for all
its rhythmical vivacity; and later the same opening notes, with playful
triplets added. Nothing profound or serious about it, but yet a wealth
of vitality; and nearly all accomplished with but two voices.
The adagio seems not at all conspicuous, yet compare it with an adagio
of Clementi to see how much genuine life it has. Then the rapid little
last movement, with its rocking, tilting figures, all as sparkling as
sunlight. Here again, only two voices in most of the movement.
Another sonata in the same set in F major (Pet. 20) is a little more
developed. The quick falling arpeggio figures following the first theme
are a favorite, comical device of Haydn’s. The second theme, if so
it may be called, is only a series of scampering notes, with a saucy
octave skip at the end; the whole full of smiles and laughter. The fine
harp-like runs in the development section are reminiscent of Emanuel
Bach. Haydn is noticeably fond of sudden and abrupt changes of harmony.
There is one in the first section of this movement. But often he is
surprisingly chromatic, more subtle in harmony than the naïve character
of his music would lead one to expect him.
In the opus 14, published in 1776 by Artaria, there are some joyous
sonatas. The first theme of one in G major (Pet. 11) suggests Schubert
by its sweetness. There is a minuet instead of a slow movement, and
the final presto is a theme with lively variations. The Alberti bass on
which the fourth variation floats is irresistibly naïve. Another sonata
in E-flat seems richer. It is hardly less naïve and less humorous than
the others in the set, but there is a warmer coloring. The overlapping
imitations in the fourth, fifth, and sixth measures are strangely
poignant, especially as they appear later in the restatement. There is
a minuet instead of a slow movement, of which the trio is especially
beautiful. The way in which the first phrase seems to be prolonged into
five measures, once more suggests Schubert.
It is, of course, nearly impossible to characterize the sonatas in
words, or to distinguish any striking feature in one which may not be
found in another. There are two sonatas in E-flat (Pet. 1 and 3) among
the last he wrote. These appear at first sight more profound than the
earlier ones, but it is hard in studying them to find them so. They are
more fully scored, more fully developed, perhaps more moderately gay.
But it is still the Haydn which spoke in the earlier ones. Premonitions
of Schubert are again evident in the second of these sonatas (Pet. 3),
in the second section of the slow movement, and in the brief passage in
E-flat minor in the minuet. There are very fine moments in the first
movement, too. It will be observed that the second theme is very like
the first. This is frequently the case with Haydn, a feature which
points to his dependence on Emanuel Bach. Even in his symphonies it
shows itself, conspicuously in the great symphony in D major, No.
7, in Breitkopf and Härtel’s edition. In the sonata in question,
however, there is no lack of secondary material of varied and decided
character; for example, the transitional section between the first and
second themes; the broad closing theme of the first section, with its
alternate deep phrases and high answers; and the carefully wrought
measures which open the development section.
The effect of the measures which bring this section almost to a close
and then lead on into the recapitulation is almost magical. We approach
the romantic. The strange power of silence in music is nowhere better
employed, a power which the old convention of constant movement had
kept concealed, at least in instrumental music. Mention has been made
of the pauses in Emanuel Bach’s music and in Clementi’s; but here in
Haydn’s sonata is a passage of more than twenty measures in which
silence seems to reign. Something calls on high and there is silence.
Then from some deep down range there is a faint answer. And so the high
calls across silence to the deep, again and again, as if one without
the other might not prevail against some spirit of silence.
Such a passage as this, and many another in Haydn’s music, suggest
Beethoven. One is quick to exclaim, ‘Ah! this foreshadows the great man
to come!’ Almost as if the music had no merit but by comparison. Yet
Haydn’s music should be taken at its own value. Only in that way may
the charm of it, and the genuine beauty as well, be fully appreciated.
Surely it has a life and a spirit all its own, without which music
would be poorer.
Only one clavier work of special significance, apart from the sonatas,
remains to be mentioned. This is a very beautiful series of variations
on a theme in F minor. They present, of course, the familiar features
of Haydn’s style, clear and ‘economic’ part-writing, perfect balance
and lucidity in form, abrupt, unprepared chords, furnishing what Hadow
has aptly called ‘points of color’; and still, smooth, chromatic
progressions which are somehow naïve. The theme itself is in two
sections, with a ‘trio’ section in F major, full of ascending and
descending arpeggio figures which seem in Haydn’s music like the
warble of a bird’s song, odd little darts and flurries of sound. There
is over the whole a changing light of plaintive and gay which is rather
different from the perpetual sunshine of the sonatas.
It is needless to say that the theme undergoes no such metamorphosis
in the course of the variations as Bach’s theme in his Goldberg
Variations. The accompaniment may be said to remain practically
the same throughout the set. The first variation leads the melody
through half-steps, in syncopation, and numerous trills are brought
in to beautify the almost too ingenuous major section. In the second
variation the melody is dissolved, so to speak, into a clear stream of
rapid counterpoint which curves and frets above and below the familiar
accompaniment. The final restatement of the theme leads by abrupt soft
modulations into a long coda in which traces of the theme still linger.
The whole set makes up a masterpiece in pianoforte literature, and may
be ranked as one of the most beautiful pieces of music in the variation
form.
II
Mozart’s keyboard music is astonishingly different from Haydn’s.
Because both men have fallen into the obscurity of the same shadow,
one is likely to speak of them as if both were but a part of one
whole. The differences between them are not merely matters of detail.
In fact they may resemble each other more in detail than in general
qualities. The spirit of Mozart’s music is wholly different from the
spirit of Haydn’s. If with Haydn we may associate a frank good nature
and something of the peasant’s sturdiness, in Mozart’s music we have to
do with something far more subtle, far more graceful, and almost wholly
elusive. It has been said of Mozart’s music that its inherent vitality
is all-sufficient to a listener. In other words, there is neither any
need nor any desire to interpret it, either in terms of another art or
as an expression or a symbol of human emotion. It is perhaps unique in
being sheer sound and nothing else. It is the thinnest gossamer spun
between our ears and stillness. It is of all music the most ethereal,
the most spiritual, one might almost say the least audible.
His life was utterly different from Haydn’s. To begin with, he was
twenty-four years younger. He was most carefully and rigorously trained
in his art, from infancy, by his father and by the greatest musicians
in the world, whom he met on his triumphant tours over Europe. As a
child he was all but adored in Vienna, in all the great cities of
Italy, in London, in Paris, and in Brussels. As a youth fortune began
to forsake him. He was not so much neglected as unappreciated. He was
underpaid, harassed by debt. He was without an established position,
chiefly apparently because in the nature of things he could not be
but young. He died at last in Vienna, in more or less miserable
circumstances, at the age of thirty-five. Thus a life could end that in
early years had been the marvellous delight of nearly a whole world.
He was always a virtuoso as well as a composer. He played the violin
excellently; he played the piano as no man in his time could play it
and as perhaps no man has played it since. His playing was not so much
distinguished by brilliance as by beauty. The quality of his tone was
of that kind which once heard can never be forgotten. It haunted the
minds of men long after he was dead. Even the memory of it brought
tears.
His compositions give only a slight idea of what the range of his
playing was. He seems to have moved people most at times when he
improvised. This he would often do in public, according to the custom
of the day; but in private, too, he would often go to his piano and
pour his soul out hour after hour through the night in improvised
music of strange and unusual power. Something of the quality of these
outpourings seems to have been preserved in the fantasia in C minor.
The sonatas and rondos have little of it. Neither have the concertos.
Franz Niemetschek, one of his most devoted friends and author of the
first of his biographies, said, as an old man, that if he dared ask the
Almighty for one more earthly joy, it would be that he might once again
before he died hear Mozart improvise. The improvisations of Beethoven,
marvellous as they were, never took just the place of Mozart’s in the
minds of those who had been privileged to hear the younger man as well.
Mozart did not compose his piano music at the piano, as Schumann
and Chopin did. The improvisations were not remembered later and
put down in form upon paper. They seem to have been something apart
from his composing. He wrote music away from the piano, at his desk,
as most people write letters--in the words of his wife. Most of the
sonatas, too, were written for the benefit of pupils. Few of them
make actually trying demands upon technical brilliance. Their great
difficulty is more than technical, or than what is commonly regarded
as technical--strength, velocity, and endurance. Yet no music more
instantly lays bare any lack of evenness or any stiffness in the
fingers. Mozart cared little for a brilliant style. His opinion of
Clementi has already been mentioned. He preferred rather a moderate
than an extremely rapid tempo, condemned severely any inaccuracy or
carelessness, likewise any lack of clearness in rhythm. But, above all,
he laid emphasis on a beautiful and singing quality of tone.
His avoidance rather than cultivation of brilliancy alone makes
his music often suggest the harpsichord. There is an absence of
the technical devices then new, which have since become thoroughly
associated with the pianoforte style. Yet from 1777 Mozart devoted
himself to the pianoforte. An instrument made especially for him, which
he invariably used in his many concerts in Vienna, has been preserved.
The keyboard has a range of five octaves, from the F below the bass
staff to the F above the treble staff. The action is very light, the
tone rather sharp and strong. It can be damped, or softened, by means
of a stop which pulls a strip of felt into position between the strings
and the hammers.
Concerning the pianoforte sonatas it may be said again that few depart
from a normal, prevailing mood. Some are exceptional. Knowing his
great gift of improvising and how rich and varied his improvisations
were, it is perhaps a temptation to read into them more definite
emotions than are really implied. Yet it is easy to pick from the later
sonatas at least three which not only differ considerably from the
earlier sonatas, but differ likewise from each other. Nevertheless,
two or three traits are common to them all. They mark Mozart’s sonatas
distinctly from Haydn’s and, indeed, from all other sonatas.
First, there is rare melodiousness about them all. The quality of the
melodies is hard to analyze. There is little savor of the folk-song, as
there is in many of Haydn’s melodies. They are not so clearly cut, not,
in a way, of such solid stuff. Neither, on the other hand, have they a
peculiar germinating vigor which we associate with Beethoven. They seem
to spin themselves as the music moves along. The movements seem to flow
rather than grow. Mozart was none the less a great contrapuntist, one
of the greatest among composers. But his music seems strangely to _pass
through_ counterpoint, not to be built up of it. It has therefore a
quality of litheness or supple flexibility which distinguishes it from
that of other composers and gives it a preëminent grace. In this regard
it is akin only to the music of Couperin and Chopin.
In the second place, the harmonic coloring is subtle and suggestive.
His music seems to play about harmonies rather than with them. The
simplest chords and modulations have a sort of shimmer. An instance in
orchestral music comes to mind--the second themes in both the first
and last movements of the inspired symphony in G minor, particularly
the treatment of the second theme in the restatement section of the
last movement. The effect is due largely to the chromatic half-steps
through which his melodies glide, noticeably into cadences, and to
the same chromatic hovering about tonic, dominant and subdominant
chords. Oftener than not the fine thread of his melody only grazes
the notes proper to its harmony, touching just above or below them
in swift, light dissonances. Frequently the harmonic foundation is
of the simplest kind. Modulations to remote keys or vague drifting
of the whole harmonic fabric, such as one finds, for instance, in
the first pages of the Fantasia in C minor, are rare. Usually the
harmonic foundation is astonishingly simple. It is the wholly charming
unwillingness of the melodies to be flatly chained to it that gives the
whole such an elusive color.
There is a wealth of passing notes, of anticipations and suspensions,
of every device which may aid melody to belie its unavoidable relations
to harmony. These take from most of his pianoforte music all trace of
commonplaceness. Most of it has a graceful distinction which we may
call style. Take even the opening theme of the great sonata in A minor.
The nature of the theme is bold and declamatory; yet the very first
note avoids an unequivocal allegiance to the harmony by a D-sharp. Or
observe in the last movement of the sonata in C minor (K. 457) how
the short phrases of the melody not only anticipate the harmony in
beginning, but delay acknowledging it again and again.
In the third place, the scoring of Mozart’s sonatas is usually lighter
than that of Haydn’s. We have to do with a finer set of fingers, for
one thing, which are unexcelled in lightness and sweetness of touch,
fingers which prefer to suggest oftener than to declaim. The treatment
of inner voices is more airy. One thinks again of Couperin and even
more of Chopin. There is a better understanding of pianoforte effects,
not effects of brilliance but of delicate sonority combined with
grace. The last movement of the sonata in A minor just mentioned, is a
masterpiece of style, and yet for the most part is hardly more than a
whisper of sound. The passage work in the last movement of a beautiful
sonata in F major (K. 332), the chord figures of the _Piu allegro_
section of the Fantasia, even the F-sharp minor section of the familiar
_Alla Turca_ are the work of a man with an unusually fine sense of what
fitted the pianoforte. Mozart also expected more of the left hand than
Haydn expected. In all his pianoforte music there is more delicacy than
there is in Haydn’s, more sophistication, too, if you will. It is more
difficult to play.
Of the many sonatas, rondos and fantasias only a few may be discussed
in detail. Three sonatas written before Mozart settled in Vienna, in
1781, are very fine. These are in A minor (K. 310), in A major (K.
331) and in F major (K. 332). That in A minor was written in 1778.
The first movement is more stentorian than Mozart’s music usually is.
It is dominated by a strong rhythmical motive throughout, used with
fiery effect in the development section over a series of rumbling pedal
points. There is something assertive and martial about it, like the
ring of trumpets over a great confusion. The second theme seems to be
but an expression of energy in more civilian strain. It is perilously
near virtuoso stuff; but the movement as a whole is splendid by reason
of its force. It is Mozart in a very unusual mood, however.
The second movement is a picture in music, according to Mozart himself,
of a charming little girl, who has ‘a staid manner and a great deal
of sense for her age.’ Yet something of the boldness of the first
movement still lingers. The mood is beautifully lyrical and poetic, the
style, however, very free and broad. It lacks the intimate tenderness
of most of Mozart’s slow movements. The last movement is magical. The
fine, delicate scoring, the short phrases, as it were breathless, the
beautiful shifting of harmonies, the constantly restless unvaried
movement, weave a texture of music that must make us ever wonder at the
nature of the mysterious, elusive spirit that whispers all but unheard
behind so much of Mozart’s music.
The sonata in F major and that in A major were written the following
year, and are of strikingly different character, both speaking of
the Mozart whose playing was long remembered for its quality of
heart-melting tenderness. Unlike the first movement of the A minor
sonata, the first movement of the F major is full of a variety of
themes and motives. It is rather lyrical in character. The first theme
has a song-like nature; and a beautiful measure or two of folk-song
melody makes itself heard in the transition to the second theme, which
is again lyrical. The development section opens with still another
melody. There is an oft-repeated shifting from high register to low.
The whole is wrapped in a veil of poetry. The slow middle movement is
unexcelled among all slow movements for purity of style, for perfection
of form, for refinement, but also tenderness of sentiment; and the last
movement flows like a brook through Rondo Field. One cannot choose
one movement from the others as being more beautiful either in spirit
or workmanship; and the three together compose one of the flawless
sonatas of pianoforte literature.
The more familiar sonata in A major is more irregular. It has, by
the way, no movement in the triplex form. The first is an air and
variations. It has long been a favorite with amateur and connoisseur
alike. The naïve beauty of the air is irresistible. The variations
throw many traits of Mozart’s style into prominence, particularly
in the first and fifth, his love of entwining his harmonies, so to
speak, with shadows and passing notes. The scoring of the fourth is
wonderfully beautiful. The sixth is perhaps unworthy to follow the
fifth. After the almost inevitable monotony of the variation form,
it is perhaps to be regretted that the second movement, a minuet,
continues the key of the first. The movement itself is of great charm.
The trio is happily in D major. One would be glad to have it in any
key, so exquisite and perfect is its beauty. The last movement, a rondo
_alla Turca_, takes up the key of A again. That it is in minor, not
major, hardly suffices to break the monotony of tonality which may
threaten the interest of the sonata as a whole. The rondo is engagingly
jocund, but more ordinary than Mozart is elsewhere likely to allow
himself to be.
Two later sonatas have a more serious _allure_ than these earlier ones.
That in C minor (K. 457), composed in 1784, is commonly considered his
greatest sonata. Why such a distinction should be insisted upon, it is
difficult to see. The C minor sonata is more weighty than the others,
but is it for that reason greater? Must music to be great, hint of the
tragic struggles of the soul? Such is the merit often ascribed to this
sonata, as if there were no true greatness in a smile. Without setting
up a standard of the great and the trivial in music, we may grant that
the work has a compelling force. Let us not liken it to Beethoven. It
still has the charm of which only Mozart was the master, that charm
which remains one of the intangible, inexplicable things in music.
A sonata in F major (K. 533) was composed in 1788. The whole work is
characterized by a possibly too prominent contrapuntal ingenuity. There
is besides a boldness in harmonies, especially in the slow movement,
which makes one wonder into what strange lands Mozart strayed when he
sat improvising at the keyboard.
The sonatas as a whole rest, as we have said, upon a harmonic
foundation which is relatively simple. The great Fantasia in C minor
differs from them in this regard more than in any other. If, as Otto
Jahn suggested in his ‘Life of Mozart,’ this fantasia may offer us some
suggestion of what Mozart’s improvisations were like, we may be sure
that such outpourings wandered into harmonies rich and strange.
The fantasia was composed in 1785, the year after the C minor sonata,
to which it was at one time thought to have been intended as an
introductory movement. An earlier fantasia in D minor is fragmentary.
It ends abruptly and leaves an impression of incompleteness on the mind
of the listener. The C minor fantasia is without definite form, but the
return of the opening motive at the end gives it a logical balance. It
divides itself into five or six sections. The tempo is not very fast in
any one of them, but there is an uneasy current of unrest running under
the whole.
It would be foolish to attempt an analysis of what may be its emotional
content. It calls for no such analysis, but stands as another instance
of the strange power Mozart’s music has to satisfy of itself alone.
It must remain, like his other work, mysterious and of secret origin.
Only one section is given a key-signature. The others are without
harmonic limitation. Perhaps the opening section, and the brief part
of it repeated at the end, are the most impressive. The motive out of
which they are built is of unfathomable significance; their harmonies
rise and fall as slowly and mysteriously as the tide. Of the quality
of other more melodious sections, of the occasional charm and grace
that here and there rise, as it were, on the wings of light; of the
passionate harmonies that die away into silence before the slow opening
motive returns inexorably, nothing can be said. There comes over it in
memory the light that never was on land or sea. It is a poet’s dream.
III
We have now to consider the pianoforte concertos which as a whole
may be taken to be the finest of his works for the instrument. They
were written primarily for his own use, seventeen of them in Vienna
between 1783 and 1786, some earlier, however, and a few later. They
are concertos in the modern sense, not like the concertos of Sebastian
Bach. In the latter we find the clavier treated in much the same style
as the orchestra or the _tutti_, as it was, and still is, generally
called. In the Mozart concertos, on the other hand, the solo instrument
is given a rôle which will show off to the best its peculiar qualities.
The Vivaldi form of concerto, such as Bach used, was a modified rondo;
that is to say, there was one chief subject, usually announced at the
beginning by the tutti. This subject properly belonged to the tutti,
and the solo instrument was given various episodes of contrasting
material, between which the orchestra usually was introduced with
ritornelles based upon the chief subject. The whole was a sort of
dialogue between soloist and orchestra.
The form of the concerto which Mozart used was clearly as follows: an
expanded triplex form for the first movement, a slow movement in song
form, and a rondo of the French type for the finale. Moreover, he used
the solo instrument not only alone, but with the orchestra; in such
cases writing a brilliant sort of _fioritura_ for it, which added a
special and distinct color to the ensemble. Such a form of concerto was
apparently first employed by Christian Bach in London. From him Mozart
learned the use of it. He was not, therefore, as has often been stated,
the true ‘father’ of the modern concerto. Nevertheless it was he who
first used the form with enduring success, and it may be considered as
his special contribution to the standard musical forms.
A brief outline of the first movement of one of his concertos will
illustrate the manner in which the triplex form was used in all of
them, and in which, with few modifications, it has continued to be used
by most composers. Let us take the wonderfully delightful concerto
in A major (K. 488). The movement opens with a long section for the
orchestra. The first theme is announced at once. Later comes the
lovely second theme, in the _tonic_ key, be it noted. There is then
a short coda, and the orchestra comes to a full tonic cadence and
allows the piano to take up the music. The function of this orchestral
introduction is to introduce the two themes out of which the movement
now proceeds to build itself, conforming pretty closely to the triplex
model.
The piano has the first theme practically alone, the orchestra merely
suggesting an inner voice in the harmony from time to time. In the
transitional passage to the dominant key which follows, the piano
serves chiefly to spin a few figures over the chords carried by the
orchestra. Then the piano has the second theme, now in the dominant,
alone; after which it is repeated by the orchestra, the piano adding
a touch of ornamental color here and there. Pianoforte and orchestra
now play together, the piano taking the rôle of soloist in a series of
scales and figures. A full cadence in E major ends the first section.
The development section is not long. It will be noticed that the
pianist is really soloist through it all, the delicate figure work
which he has to perform being always evident above the harmonies or
themes of the orchestra.
The long opening section for orchestra at the beginning of the concerto
is cut down to a few measures in the restatement. The transitional
passage between first and second themes is very much shortened
likewise. Finally, after the music has progressed duly according to
the conventions governing the restatement section in the triplex form,
the orchestra makes a pause. Here the pianist is supposed to play
what is known as a _cadenza_--a long passage usually testing both him
and his instrument to the limit of their abilities. These cadenzas
were commonly improvised, and in them Mozart must have displayed the
greatness of his power both as a musician and as a player. The cadenza
came to an end with a long trill, after which the orchestra, usually
without the piano, added the completing coda.
The second and third movements were usually in some simpler form.
The second was most frequently an aria, the third a rondo. The
whole was primarily a piece for the virtuoso, while the orchestra,
save when announcing themes or playing ritornelles, served mainly
as an accompaniment to the brilliant soloist. It might well, be it
understood, carry on the thematic development of the music, thus
leaving the pianist free to weave every sort of arabesque; but from now
on the concerto was a form of music which was deliberately planned to
show off the special qualities of a solo instrument.
It was almost inevitable that in most concertos the genuinely musical
element should be regarded as of less and less importance. The public
expected, and indeed still expects, to hear or even to see a virtuoso
display the uttermost limits of his skill in such pieces. The
improvised cadenzas were in the hands of most players a nuisance which
marred the work as a whole beyond repair. But the Mozart concertos,
written as they were for occasions of his public appearance, have a
true musical value. We know enough of his improvising to be sure that
his cadenzas added and did not subtract from this.
Their chief beauty is here, as in his other music, the melodious
freshness of his themes, the delightful subtlety of his harmony. The
constant stream of arabesque which the piano adds to this intrinsically
beautiful foundation is in the main simple. It is surprising how little
Mozart added to the virtuoso style of pianoforte literature, even how
little he made use of what, through Clementi and Dussek, was already
common property. There are practically no octave passages, and no
passages in double notes. He uses only scales, arpeggios and trills.
But his art of combining these with the orchestra has never been
excelled. In this regard his concertos stand far above those of the
virtuosi like Hummel, Dussek, and John Field. Their tone-color is not
only that which the essentially colorless pianoforte can afford; it is
a beautiful interweaving of many colors. His treatment of the orchestra
is always distinguished, never haphazard or indifferent. Delicate as
the coloring may be to ears now accustomed to heavier and more sensuous
blendings, it is not watery and faded. It is still exquisitely clear
and suggestive. As the first of composers to make such effective use
of the cold yet brilliant tone of the pianoforte in combination with
the various warmer tones of the orchestra, he may be said to have set a
standard of excellence which subsequent concertos have oftener fallen
short of than attained. Hundreds have been written. The fingers of one
hand might perhaps count the number of those which as works of art are
comparable to Mozart’s.
It must be admitted that Mozart was not equally inspired in all his
concertos. That in D major (K. 537), composed in 1788 and known as the
‘Coronation Concerto,’ savors unpleasantly of the _pièce d’occasion_.
The themes of the first movement are almost ludicrously commonplace.
Those of the _Larghetto_ are hardly more distinguished, and the last
movement can be recommended for little more than brilliance. The
concertos in D minor (K. 466) and in C minor (K. 491) are, on the
contrary, inspired throughout. That in A major (K. 488) one might
well be tempted to call the most charming of Mozart’s pianoforte
compositions, but that such distinctions are gratuitous and unpleasant.
The second theme of the first movement is surely one of the loveliest
in all music. The last movement is irresistibly charming, with the
sparkle of sunshine on laughing water. The andante between the first
and last is of that sort of music which words cannot describe. Indeed
there is in all of Mozart’s music, as we have said, a self-sufficient
vitality which makes it a perfect satisfaction for the ear. One does
not feel stirred to seek a meaning beneath it. It is almost natural
music. There is nothing labored, nothing symbolic; and it is almost
uniquely beautiful. Surely, as far as pianoforte music is concerned
we shall wait nearly half a century before that abstract grace again
appears, this time in the works of Frédéric Chopin.
IV
The pianoforte sonatas of Beethoven hold an undisputed place in the
literature for that instrument. Whatever the future of music may
be, they can hardly be dethroned. They must always, it would seem,
represent the broadest, deepest and highest dimensions to which the
sonata can develop. Music which has since been written under the name
of sonata has been and will be compared with the sonatas of Beethoven,
has been and will be found wanting either in form, in content or in the
union of the two, by comparison with those of the great master of Bonn.
In the matter of musical value they may be equalled, in many matters
concerning the treatment of the pianoforte they have been excelled; but
as sonatas they will probably hold their high place for ever, scarcely
approached.
Improvements in the structure of the instrument itself have something
to do with their massiveness. The growth of the pianoforte to
serviceable maturity was a slow process, and not until Beethoven was
well advanced in years was he able to secure one which could carry the
burden that his powerful imagination would put upon it.
In the year 1711 Bartolomeo Cristofori, a Florentine, made the first
piano, that is to say, an instrument the strings of which were struck
by hammers operated by means of a keyboard. That the volume of sound
so produced would be soft or loud in accordance with the pressure
brought to bear on the keys by the player gave the instrument its
name--_Piano_(soft)-_forte_(loud). The harpsichord, it will be
remembered, did not offer the player such a chance for expression and
for the gradation of sound. The clavichord was inferior to the new
instrument in volume and resonance. However, sixty years of experiment
and invention were required to bring the pianoforte to the point at
which it began wholly to displace its predecessors in the favor of
composers and virtuosi.
Of the many difficulties which manufacturers had to overcome, only a
few need be mentioned. The most serious was the problem of making a
frame strong enough to resist the tension of the heavier wire strings.
This was met by tension bars, by metal braces, and finally by the
invention of a cast-iron frame, not, however, until after Beethoven
had ceased writing for the pianoforte. The problem of the action was
complicated by the necessity for the hammers to fall back instantly
from the strings as soon as they had struck them. This falling back is
known as the escapement, and it was chiefly by devices of escapement
that two great pianoforte actions came to be differentiated from each
other by the end of the eighteenth century. These actions are known as
the Viennese and the English.
With the former are associated the names of Stein and Streicher. It was
a light action and the tone of the Viennese pianos was correspondingly
light and fine. It had little volume and in melodies was sweet and
clear but not full. It was for such pianos that Haydn and Mozart wrote
their sonatas. Both men first acquired their keyboard technique on the
harpsichord, and later both naturally adopted a piano the light action
of which demanded approximately the same sort of touch as that which
they had already mastered. A style of music developed from the nature
of the instrument which was little different from harpsichord music.
Effects of fleetness and delicacy marked it.
In 1777 Mozart had visited the Stein factories, then in Augsburg,
and had been much pleased by a device with which Stein’s pianos were
equipped: a lever, worked by the knee, which lifted the dampers
from all the strings at once, allowing them a fuller and richer
vibration in loud passages than was necessary in softer ones. This
_genouillière_ soon gave way to the _pedal_ which had been invented
for the same purpose by the English manufacturers. Pedal effects
distinguish pianoforte music from harpsichord music perhaps more
than any other feature. These are chiefly effects of sonority, of
combining in one relatively sustained mass of sound notes which lie
far apart on the keyboard, outside the span of the hand. These notes,
of course, cannot be struck together, but, when struck one after the
other, can be blended and sustained by means of the pedal. There
must be supposed in the pianoforte a tone which unaided will vibrate
longer after its string has been struck than the dry, short tone of
the harpsichord. Such a sustained, rich tone the Viennese pianos did
not have. They suggested but few possibilities in pedal effects to
Haydn and Mozart. For them the close spacing of harpsichord music was
natural. They ventured little in wide combinations, in sonorous masses
of sound.
[Illustration]
Beethoven’s Broadwood Pianoforte.
_From a drawing made on the day after his funeral_.
The English action, on the other hand, was more resilient and more
powerful, the tone of the English pianos correspondingly fuller and
richer. The instruments at once suggested a range of effects quite
different from the harpsichord. Thus Clementi begins as early as 1770
to build up a new keyboard technique, demanding strength as well as
fleetness and lightness, using octaves, double notes, heavy chords
and wider and wider spacing. This becomes the new idea of playing the
piano. Mozart is judged by contemporaries who have heard Clementi and
his pupils, to have little technique, i.e. in the new style. He is
still a cembalist. Composers have a new power within their control,
the power to stir now by mere volume of sound, to do more than please
or amuse, to impress by power and breadth of style. The piano becomes
second in volume, in quick changing variety and multiplicity of effects
only to the orchestra. Sonatas approach the symphony in depth and
meaning. The ideas of the new style are spread over Europe by Clementi
and his disciples. The great maker of pianofortes in Paris, Sebastian
Érard, copies the English action.
Beethoven grew up with the new idea of pianoforte music. The pianoforte
presented to him in Bonn by Graf Waldstein was probably of the
light-toned Viennese make; but as early as 1796 he came in touch with
English pianos on a concert trip to Berlin and other cities. In 1803 he
came into possession of an Érard, through the generosity of one of his
Viennese patrons, Prince Lichnowsky. It never wholly pleased him. His
wish was for one of the heavy sonorous English pianos. In 1817 it was
fulfilled. Thomas Broadwood sent him an exceptionally powerful and fine
one from his establishment in London, in token of admiration. The Érard
was given away, the last colossal sonatas were composed. Even after
this piano had outworn its usefulness Beethoven kept it by him. Even
after he received a piano especially made for him by a Viennese maker
named Graf, strung with four strings to a note in consideration of his
deafness, he retained his Broadwood. Both were side by side in his room
at the Schwarzspanierhaus when he died.
III
Beethoven developed his technique with the aim of drawing the utmost
sonority and variety from the pianoforte. His demands on the instrument
were far beyond the capabilities of the Viennese pianos. Streicher,
who married Stein’s daughter and carried on the business of the firm
in Vienna, exerted his ingenuity constantly to improve his pianos
according to the demands of Beethoven, finally gave over the ideal of
lightness of action and of tone, largely through Beethoven’s influence.
Beethoven left the harpsichord far behind him. He conceived his sonatas
for an instrument of vastly greater possibilities. He filled them with
passages of chords, of double notes, of powerful arpeggio figures
surging from low registers to high, all combined by the pedal, in the
use of which he was a great innovator. He refused allegiance to the old
ideal of distinctness to which Hummel, Mozart’s pupil, was still loyal,
that he might be free when he chose to deal with great masses of sound.
The quality of his genius has, of course, much to do with this; but
the massiveness which, among other things, distinguishes his pianoforte
sonatas from those of Mozart and Haydn is in no little measure due to
a new idea of the instrument, which had been born of the possibilities
of the English pianofortes, not inherited from the harpsichord. He
concerned himself with a new range of effects beyond the powers of his
two great predecessors. He found in the pianoforte an instrument fit to
express huge ideas and powerful emotions. Of such, therefore, he was
free to compose his sonatas.
Such works were not, we may be sure, written for the practice of his
pupils, as so many of Haydn’s and Mozart’s sonatas had been. Most of
them contained some measure of the outpouring of his own heart and
soul, sometimes not less tremendous than the content of his symphonies.
Each was to him in the nature of a great poem, an epic; most have a
distinct life and spirit of their own. Into this poetic life must
one plunge who would understand. There is a great mood to be caught,
an emotion, sometimes an idea. Beethoven thought deeply about the
meaning of his art. Colors of sound, intervals, rhythms, qualities
of melody, keys, all had for him a symbolism, sometimes mysterious,
sometimes definite. He regarded himself as a poet, speaking a language
more suggestive than words. In those who listened to his music he
expected an imagination quick to feel the life in it, to respond to
it, to interpret it. Countless anecdotes reveal the close association
Beethoven felt to exist between his music and the world of nature, of
human life, of the spirit rising in spite of fate. Most are perhaps not
to be relied upon. But scarcely less numerous are the ‘interpretations’
of his music, written down for us by students, by historians, by
philosophic musicians; and all these, welcome or unwelcome, must be
taken as reactions to a poetic chemistry at work in the music itself.
The thing is there, and Beethoven was conscious of having put it there.
He was intensely conscious of his individuality. He was proud of his
skill to reveal in music his emotions or his ideals. Little of such
aristocracy, in a broad sense, is evident in Haydn or Mozart. They
may seem to have taken themselves far less seriously. Beethoven knew
himself the high priest of a great art. He demanded from others the
respect due to such an one. His spirit rises majestic from his music,
or from a great part of it. It speaks in an unmistakable voice. One
listens to great stories, great epics, great tragedies, all part of the
life of a man of enormous vitality, enormous force. One hardly listens
as to music, rather as to a poet and a prophet.
Correspondingly, his music undergoes a development noticeably parallel
to the course of his life. The pianoforte sonatas alone are nearly
a complete record of the various phases through which his character
passed from young manhood almost to the time of his death. They
compose, as it were, a great book in many chapters. At times one might
regard them as a diary. Beethoven confided himself to his piano.
He was a very great and an unusual player. His style was, as we have
inferred, wholly different from Mozart’s. To begin with, it was
much more varied. In the matter of runs alone one finds a deeper
appreciation of legato and staccato, and the shades between. Mozart’s
runs are oftenest of the ‘pearly’ variety, detached and sparkling.
Beethoven much more frequently than Mozart requires a close, legato
manner of playing. This, in the matter of scales, will give them a
sweep and curve, rather than a ripple, make them a rush of sound,
rather than a series of distinct notes; as, for example, the short
scale passages in the first movement of the sonata opus 7, those for
the left hand in the first movement of opus 78, and the long scale
passages at the end of the first movement of opus 53. In other sorts
of runs the legato execution which is required makes of them almost a
series of broken chords; as in the final movement of opus 26, in the
first movement of the concerto in G major. Even where the playing may
be slightly staccato in style the pedal is employed to give the runs
more significance as harmonies than as series of separated notes; as
in the third variation of the middle movement in the sonata opus 57,
or the figures which build up the transitional sections of the first
movement of opus 110.
It is hardly to be denied, paradoxical as it may seem, that in
many ways Mozart seems to demand a careful legato touch even more
than Beethoven. That is perhaps because of the lighter texture of
the fabric. The pedal is of less help, the fingers must do more of
themselves. But the light runs which add so much to the charm of his
music stand apart from this. They are intended to stand out distinctly
in their separate notes. So, of course, are many in the sonatas of
Beethoven, and the use of the pedal itself is an art of expression, not
a makeshift to hide the clumsiness of fingers. The point of difference
is that Beethoven often writes series of notes which are effective as a
series; Mozart more often runs, the separate notes of which each must
sparkle with its own light.
With Beethoven, too, legato series of chords are frequent; in Haydn and
Mozart they hardly exist. Beethoven’s use of double notes and chords
is ahead of his time. Take the finale of the sonata in C major, opus
3, No. 3, as a simple example. The staccato chord motive in the last
movement of opus 27, No. 2, the first movement of the G major concerto,
the first movement of opus 81, are but few examples out of many that
might be chosen.
But, above all, it is by the use of the pedal that Beethoven goes ahead
of his predecessors. The building up of great harmonies, either by
wide-ranging, rapid figures, or by massive chords piled one on top of
the other, was from the start characteristic of him. The trio of the
scherzo in the sonata in C major, number three of the first published
sonatas, offers a magnificent example, foreshadowing the colossal
effects of passages in the sonatas opus 53 and opus 57 and at the
beginning of the huge concerto in E-flat major.
The extent to which he mastered the difficulties of the keyboard in
nearly all directions and his truly great inventiveness in pianistic
effects, have filled his works with sheer technical difficulties
which must ever task the skill of even the most remarkable virtuosi.
He demands velocity and strength in the fingers, great endurance and
power, flexibility of the wrist both in its usual up and down movement
and in its movement from side to side, a sure free use of the arm.
Skill in thirds and sixths, in octaves, in trills, double trills and
even triple trills, in wide skips, in repeated notes, all this and
more he demands of the player. It is ludicrous to think that certain
contemporaries denied him distinction as a pianist, largely because he
played according to no recognized method. As if any method of that day
or even this could be expected to limit hands that could play, to say
nothing of devise, such music as his!
He practically exhausted the resources of the pianoforte of his day. Of
this he was aware, and his ear, growing ever finer in its appreciation
of orchestral color, was at times tired of the limited tones of this
single instrument. He is reported to have said of it that it is and
remains an unsatisfactory instrument. At times he seems to have written
for it as he would write for the orchestra. In the first movement
of the ‘Waldstein’ sonata (opus 53) he actually wrote the names of
instruments over phrases which they might be fancied playing. This one
instance, together with passages which do not seem quite suited to the
nature of the piano, must not mislead us, however, to judge the sonatas
as orchestral rather than pianistic music.
Beethoven was thoroughly familiar with his piano. The instrument has
been further improved since his day. Particularly the lower registers
have been given greater sonority, and the instrument as a whole has
gained much in sustaining power. Therefore it is inevitable that
certain passages which he conceived upon the Broadwood or the Érard of
1820 or earlier are not wholly fitting to the modern piano. This is
especially true of passages in the lower registers. The accompaniment
to the noble second theme in the first movement of the sonata opus 57
is, for example, unquestionably thick. It is too low and muddy for the
present-day piano. Many similar instances might be mentioned, most of
which, however, prove only that pianos have changed. His frequent use
of close accompaniment figures is perhaps intrinsically old-fashioned;
but, on the other hand, wider figures would have been less sonorous
on the piano he wrote for than those he used. It is, however, in such
matters that Beethoven’s pianoforte music is, from one point of view,
not entirely satisfactory to the pianist of today. If in other respects
it is at times seemingly orchestral, if successive repetitions of the
same phrase seem to tax the pianoforte too far, that does not take from
it all as a whole the honor of being one of the greatest contributions
to pure pianoforte literature.
It was natural that Beethoven’s conception of music as an art akin
to poetry, conveying a more or less definite expression, should have
great influence upon the forms in which he wrote. The sonata filled up
enormously from his inspiration. To begin with, the triplex form took
on more and more dramatic life. The development is to be noticed in
several ways, some slower to make their appearance than others. Almost
at once the contrasting natures of the first and second themes become
apparent. Haydn, it will be remembered, often used but a variant of the
first theme for the second, much as Emanuel Bach had done; but making
his setting of the second theme far clearer. Mozart used distinctly
different themes, but both were, as a rule, melodious, different in
line but not in nature. On the other hand, the first three sonatas of
Beethoven show a complete differentiation of the themes. The second and
third are conspicuous and show a procedure in the matter of themes from
which Beethoven rarely departed.
The first theme in the first movement of the sonata in A major, opus
2, No. 2, is positive in character, not lyric, not subtle, though in
this case humorous. It is assertive and not likely to undergo radical
change or development in the movement. That the first two measures are
squarely on notes of the tonic chord should not be unobserved. The
second theme is lyric, subtle, likely to change color and form as it
passes through the various phases in store for it. The first and second
themes of the next sonata may be characterized in almost the same
words. And this is likely to be the case in nearly all movements in the
triplex form which Beethoven will write. The first theme is likely to
be assertive and strong, the second to offer a fundamental contrast in
mood and style.
Both themes tend more and more to have a dramatic independence and
significance. The movement grows, as it were, out of the conflict or
the union of the two ideas which they express. A great vitality spreads
into the connecting passages between them. These passages may develop
from the nature of the first theme, as, for instance, in the sonatas
opus 13, opus 31, No. 2, and opus 53, or they may present wholly new
ideas often not less significant than the themes themselves, as in
opus 10, No. 3, and in opus 57. Similarly the closing measures of the
exposition take on a new meaning, as in the last movement of opus 27,
No. 2, and opus 31, No. 2.
In the early sonatas, where Beethoven is somewhat preoccupied with the
piano itself as a vehicle for the display of the pianist’s power, these
intermediate measures have little musical merit. Such passages will
be found in the first movements of opus 10, No. 3, and opus 22, both
rather ostensibly virtuoso music. In the later sonatas such objective
effectiveness is rare.
The development sections fill up with enormous vitality; and, finally,
there grows a coda at the end of the movement in which in many cases
the movement reaches its topmost height. In fact, Beethoven’s treatment
of the coda makes of the triplex form something almost new. Where in
classical form the movement might be expected to cease, in the sonatas
of Beethoven it will be found often to flow on into a wholly fresh
stanza, seeming at times the key or the fruition of the movement as a
whole. The wonderfully beautiful and long coda at the end of the first
movement of the sonata opus 81 is a superb case in point.
The remaining movements of the sonatas expanded under the same
powerful imagination. Let one compare the variations which form the
slow movement of opus 10, No. 2, with those in the slow movement of
opus 106, or those which constitute the second and last movement of
the last sonata. In these later variations we find something of the
same change of the theme into various metaphors as that found in the
Goldberg Variations of Bach. It is not so much an idea adorned as an
idea expanded into countless new ideas. The variations written for the
publisher Diabelli on a waltz theme are indeed exactly comparable to
those of Bach.
To slow movements in song form or in triplex form he appended the
codas in the nature of an epilogue which added so much to the first
movements. The adagio of opus 10, No. 3, offers a fine example.
Frequently the slow movement led without pause into the next, more
frequently than in the sonatas of his predecessors.
The rondo took on a weight and significance to which it was scarcely
considered sufficient by the older masters. The rondo which is the last
movement of opus 53 is of huge proportions.
Beethoven frequently composed his sonatas in four movements, following
in this the model offered by the symphonies of his predecessors. The
added movement was descended from the minuet. In some of the sonatas
it still bears the name and occupies its traditional place between the
slow movement and the last movement, notably in the sonatas opus 2,
No. 1, and opus 10, No. 3. In opus 2, No. 2, and opus 2, No. 3, the
movement is called a scherzo and has lost not its dance rhythm but its
dance character. In opus 31, No. 3, the scherzo has not even the triple
rhythm which usually distinguished it. It follows the first movement
and is itself followed by a minuet and a final rondo. In 106 it is
again the second movement, and in 110 can be recognized in spirit,
without a name, likewise as second movement. The scherzos introduce
into the later sonatas, as into the symphonies, a note of something
between irony and mystery, a strange development from the sunny dances
of Haydn; a sort of harsh echo of life in dense valleys from which
Beethoven has long since ascended.
And finally the fugue finds place in the scheme, sounding invariably a
note of triumph, as of the power of man’s will and the immutable law of
order in the universe.
Thus by extending the length of the various movements, by adding
distinct and significant themes in transitional and closing sections of
the triplex form, by incorporating additional movements in the sonata
group, by introducing forms like the scherzo and the fugue, which,
though they had been found in the suite, had been almost never employed
by the composers of sonatas, Beethoven enormously expanded the sonata
as a whole. But even more remarkable was the tendency which showed
itself relatively early to give a unity and coherence to the group.
This was an inevitable result of Beethoven’s attitude towards music.
He felt himself, as we have said, a poet. His music was consciously
the expression of almost definite emotions, definite ideals. These by
reason of the nature of the man were of heroic proportions, finding
an adequate vehicle of expression only in music of broad and varied
design. The sonata offered in pianoforte music the possibilities of
such expression. The various movements afforded a chance for the play,
the contrast and change of moods great in themselves. The length of
the work as a whole predicated the widest possible limits. It needed
but ideas strong enough to dominate and fill these limits to give
to the group an organic life, to establish a close connection, even
a fundamental interdependence between the erstwhile independent and
separate movements.
Such ideas Beethoven did not at once bring to the sonata. Only the last
sonatas, beginning with opus 101, are truly so firmly knit or welded
that the individual movements are incomplete apart from the whole, that
the demarcation between them fades or does not exist at all. In the
first sonatas he is clearly preoccupied with expanding the power of
expression of the instrument, with technical problems, with problems
of form in the separate movements. The organic life which is to mark
the last sonatas is not a matter of external structure, of thematic
relationship. M. Vincent d’Indy points to the resemblance between the
first notes of the first theme of the final movement in opus 13 and
the second theme in the first movement of the same sonata, as an
indication of the tendency thus early evident in Beethoven to give to
the sonata group a consolidation more real than a mere conventionally
accepted arrangement. Even earlier instances may be found of such
resemblances in the thematic material of the various movements. The
theme of the rondo of opus 10, No. 3, may well have come from the
second theme of the first movement. Indeed, it is not hard to believe
that in the very first of the published sonatas, opus 2, No. 1,
Beethoven employed a modification of the opening theme of the first
movement as basis for a contrasting episode in the last.
But do such devices succeed in giving to a whole sonata an indissoluble
unity? Hardly. They may make of one movement a sequel to a previous
movement. Analogies may be found in the work of the great novelists.
Beatrice Esmond plays a part in ‘The Virginians,’ but that does not
necessarily mean that ‘Henry Esmond’ is incomplete as a work of
art without the later novel. Brahms, it will be remembered, worked
studiously to construct a sequence of movements from somewhat the
same thematic material, notably in the F-sharp minor pianoforte
sonata and in his first symphony. But more than such reminiscences or
such recrudescences is necessary to give to a group of movements the
closely interdependent organic life that we find in the later Beethoven
sonatas. The movements of the popular _Sonata Pathétique_ have an
independent and a complete life of themselves. It is familiarity with
the sequence in which Beethoven arranged them that truly holds them
together, the still accepted ideal of a purely conventional arrangement.
Somewhat later Beethoven tried experiments which are more significant.
There are the two sonatas published as opus 27. Each is a sonata _quasi
una fantasia_,--in the manner of a fantasy. The first is conspicuous
by diversity or irregularity of form. It is not easy to decide upon
the limits of the various movements. A beautiful, long, slow section
is, as it were, engulfed by an impassioned short allegro in C major,
from which it emerges again almost unvaried. It comes to a definite
close, but the flash of the C major section across the progress of
the music has left an impression of incompleteness, has destroyed, as
it were, the equilibrium of the whole so far. The piece is obviously
still fragmentary, still indeterminate. More must come to give us a
satisfying sense of completeness. So we are propelled by restlessness
into another allegro, this time a much longer section, more or less
developed, in C minor, clearly a scherzo in character. It is wild.
We have been plunged into music that, far from fulfilling the need
of more that we felt after the opening sections, leaves us more than
ever unsatisfied. There follows a brief adagio, promising an ultimate
solution of all the mystery and uncertainty, seeming, by the long
trills and slowly descending single notes at the end, really to
introduce the satisfying order which must follow out of such chaos. The
final rondo is orderly and stable from the beginning. At the end comes
a repetition of phrases from the adagio, as to remind us of a promise
now fulfilled, and a lively little coda sends us away cheerful and
refreshed.
The nature of this music is such that up to the final rondo its various
sections must, if taken from the whole, affect us as being fragmentary
and unsatisfying. The work is more a fantasy than a sonata. The triplex
form is not to be found in it. But it is accepted as a sonata, as is
the previous one, opus 26, or Mozart’s sonata in A major, beginning
with a theme and variations; and the close interdependence of its
various sections, æsthetic if not thematic, points unmistakably to the
method of the last sonatas.
The movements of the sonata in C-sharp minor, opus 27, No. 2, are from
the point of view of form complete in themselves. Moreover, the first
and last movements are perfectly in triplex form. But this sonata, too,
is to be regarded, according to Beethoven himself, as in the nature
of a fantasy. This is because of the quality of improvisation which
pervades it all, which cannot be hidden even by the perfect finish
of the form. And the entire improvisation seems to be sprung of one
mood, the whole music related to one fundamental idea. Whether or not
it was inspired by the beautiful lady to whom it is dedicated, for
whom Beethoven had an apparently lasting though vain passion, need not
concern us. The music as it stands is full of the deepest and most
passionate feeling. The slow movement has a great deal the nature of a
prelude. Its lyric quality is passive; but it sings of emotions which
must assert themselves in active and more violent self-expression. And
so, passing under, as it were, the shadowy ephemeral second movement
which may veil but not suppress them, they burst out in the last
movement with the power of a great storm.
Is the unity here merely one which great familiarity with the work as
a whole may account for? One can point to no logical incompleteness in
any one of the movements. Is their union in our mind essentially one of
association? It is more than that. There is a single emotion underlying
the work as a whole, which must seek further and different utterance
than the first movement affords it; which the second movement may
belie but not extinguish; to which only the fantastic coda of the last
movement gives ultimate release.
In both these sonatas there is a unity which cannot be destroyed. In
both, however, it is artistic rather than organic, and this may be
said of the subsequent sonatas up to opus 101. This, and the three
succeeding sonatas, seem almost to be musical dramas, more than tone
poems. They are huge allegories in music. The form which they take is
one which is built up note by note out of the conflict of vast forces,
natural or spiritual powers, rather than human emotions. Three of them
work up to great fugues. The other two, opus 109 and opus 111, to
towering series of variations.
One may take the sonata in A-flat, opus 110, for analysis. The first
movement, in very simple triplex form, is seemingly complete in itself.
Yet there is something mystical and visionary about it. The two themes
out of which it is constructed seem to float in the air; but there
is suggestion in the transitional sections and in the development
sections of inchoate forces in the deep. The whole movement rather
whispers than speaks. It is a mystery. There follows immediately an
allegro in F minor, a harsh presentment, as it were, of human energy
spent for naught. There are snatches of a trivial, popular song; there
is a trio made up of one long, down-hill run, repeated over and over
again, coming down only to be tossed high again by a sharply accented
chord; a restless agitation throughout, ironical, even cynical. The end
comes suddenly with crashing chords out of time, and, finally, a quick
breathing out, as if the whole vanished in air. It is an extraordinary
movement, seeming instantaneous. One is amazed and bewildered after it.
Then comes a passage in the character of recitative. The whole mood
becomes intensely sorrowful, grief-stricken, tragic. A melody full of
anguish mounts up, the cry of bitter hopelessness, endless suffering.
It ceases and is followed by a silence. Out of this rises in single
notes, _pianissimo_, a voice, as it were, of hope and strength. It is
woven into a fugue as if in only such discipline were there promise of
victory, not for Beethoven alone, but for the human race.
The fugue rises to a climax, but only to be broken off by an abrupt
and boding modulation. Once again the anguished voice is heard, now
broken with weariness (_ermattend_, in Beethoven’s own expression).
The section is in G minor. When the melody ceases the music seems
to beat faintly on in single notes. Suddenly there is a soft chord
of G major. The effect is one of the most beautiful Beethoven ever
conceived. And then the chords follow each other, swelling to great
force. Hushed at first, the fugue speaks again. This time the melody is
inverted. Extraordinary mastery of the science of music is now brought
to bear upon weaving a fitting and glorious ending to the great work.
The fugue subject in its original intervals is employed in diminution
as a background of counterpoint against which the same subject, in
augmentation, rises into greater and greater prominence. The music
gains in strength. It mounts higher and higher; at last it seems to
blaze in triumph.
Here is a sonata which seems to have an organic life. The whole work is
not only expressive of varied and powerful emotions, it seems to build
itself out of the conflict that goes on between them. One is hardly
conscious in listening that it may be divided into movements. One hears
the unfolding of a single mighty work. And in this case, be it noted,
the effect has little to do with thematic relationships between the
various movements.
By thus filling a conventional group of movements with one and the
same life, Beethoven brought the sonata to a height beyond which it
can never go. It may, indeed, be asked whether these last works are
sonatas, whether they be not some new form. Yet the steps by which they
evolved are clear, and in them all there are manifold traces of their
origin. There is no other literature for the pianoforte comparable to
them in scope and power. The special quality of their inspiration each
must judge for himself, whether it move him, appeal to him, suit his
taste in beauty of sound. But to that inspiration no one can deny a
grandeur and nobility, a heroic proportion unique in pianoforte music.
V
The sonatas, from first to last, are Beethoven’s chief contribution
to this special branch of music. Two of the five concertos have held
their place beside these, the fourth in G major and the fifth in E-flat
major. The huge proportions of the latter will probably not impress so
much as they have in years past. It is commonly called the ‘Emperor’
concerto. In the first movement there are many measures which give
an impression of more or less perfunctory, intellectual working-out.
The middle movement is inspired throughout, and the modulation from B
major to the dominant harmony of E-flat major just before the final
rondo is wonderfully beautiful. The subject of the rondo has a gigantic
vigor. The G major concerto is of much more delicate workmanship and,
from the point of view of sheer beauty of sound, is more effective to
modern ears. The treatment of the solo instrument is more consistently
pianistic, adds more in special color, therefore, to the beauty of the
whole. The slow movement fulfills an ideal of the concerto which up to
that time and even later has been almost ignored. It is a dialogue,
a dramatic conversation between the orchestra and the piano, the one
seeming to typify some dark power of fate, the other man. Its beauty is
matchless. It is worthy of remark that both the G major and the E-flat
major concertos begin with passages for the solo instrument.
Besides the sonatas and the concertos Beethoven published several sets
of shorter pieces, rondos, dances, variations, and ‘Bagatelles.’ They
are hardly conspicuous, and, in comparison with the longer works, are
insignificant. The thirty-three variations on a waltz theme of A.
Diabelli, published in 1823 as opus 120, are marvellous as a _tour de
force_ of musical skill; second, however, to the Goldberg Variations
of Bach, to which they seem to owe several features. Is it possible
that a variation like the twenty-eighth owes something to Weber as well?
The pianoforte works of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven represent a fairly
distinct epoch in the development of music for the instrument. At the
beginning men belonging to a rather different period were still living,
some were still at work. At the end a new era was forming itself.
The insulation which seems to surround the three great composers
proves, as we have said, on close inspection to be imperfect. Still,
their work represents one phase of development. As such, it is easy
to trace the evolution of one definite form, the sonata, under the
influences which each brought to bear on it. Similarly one can trace
the constant expansion of the pianoforte technique from the time when,
adapted to instruments of light action and tone, it differed but little
from the harpsichord technique, to the time when, formed upon the
massive Broadwood pianos with their resonant tone, it brought from the
instrument powerful and varied effects second only to the orchestra.
The epoch has, on the other hand, more than an historical significance.
It brought into music the expression of three geniuses of the highest
order. Each has its own special charm, its own character, its own
power. One should not be valued by comparison with the others. What
Haydn gave, what Mozart gave, and what Beethoven gave, all are of
lasting beauty and of lasting worth. From Haydn the common joys and a
touch of the common sorrows of people here under the sun; from Mozart
a grace that is more of the fairies, a voice from other stars singing
a divine melody; from Beethoven the great emotions, great depths of
despair, great heights of exaltation, half man, half god, of that
heroic stuff of which Titans were made.
FOOTNOTES:
[30] _Geschichte des Klavierspiels und der Klavierlitteratur._
CHAPTER V
PIANOFORTE MUSIC AT THE TIME OF BEETHOVEN
The broadening of technical possibilities and its
consequences--Minor disciples of Mozart and Beethoven: J. N.
Hummel; J. B. Cramer; John Field; other contemporaries--The
pioneers in new forms: Weber and Schubert; technical
characteristics of Weber’s style; Weber’s sonatas, etc.; the
_Conzertstück_; qualities of Weber’s pianoforte music--Franz
Schubert as pianoforte composer; his sonatas; miscellaneous
works; the impromptus; the Moments musicaux--The
Weber-Schubert era and the dawn of the Romantic spirit.
Beethoven developed his own pianoforte technique to respond to his own
great need of self-expression. He not so much consulted the qualities
of the piano as demanded that it conform to his ideas. These ideas
were, in many cases, as grand as those which have later called upon
the full resources of the orchestra; and, therefore, as we have said,
he called upon the piano to do the full service of the orchestra. As
a result the instrument was taxed to its uttermost limits; but within
those limits lay many effects which were of no service to Beethoven.
Out of these effects a new race of musicians was to build a new style
of music. There grew up a technique, slave to the instrument, which
with well-nigh countless composers was an end in itself. With most
of these composers there was a dearth of ideas, but they rendered a
service to the art which must be acknowledged.
I
Among the most meritorious and the most influential of these musicians
was Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837). Hummel attracted the attention
of Mozart as a boy, and the latter took him as a pupil into his house
for two years. By the time he was eleven he was winning fame as a
virtuoso. The course of concert tours brought him to London, where he
settled for several years, to absorb what he could from the greatly
renowned Clementi. From then on he enjoyed a brilliant fame, not only
as a player, but as a composer as well. And for what was his playing
admired? For the remarkable clearness and evenness of his touch,
for one thing. So was the playing of Dussek, of Cramer, of Field,
of Moscheles, of Kalkbrenner, of Ferdinand Hiller, of any number of
others. Clearness and evenness of touch did not distinguish one great
player from another then, more than it does now. Yet they are qualities
endlessly bespoken by all biographers for their favorite pianists.
Hummel seems to have had in addition a grace of style not so common.
This may well have become part of him through the influence of Mozart.
And a certain grace characterizes his compositions. These comprise
caprices, dances, rondos, sets of variations, all manner of show
pieces, brilliant and graceful in their day, sonatas and concertos.
These pieces were popular, they were famous, they were in a way more
influential in shaping the growth of pianoforte technique than were the
sonatas of Beethoven. As a matter of fact, they present little in the
way of brilliance but scales and arpeggios. Yet even now they make the
piano sound with a captivating fluency.
One work may be signalized as marking a keen instinct for pianistic
effects, as really pointing to some such treatment of the keyboard as
Chopin, by reason of his immortal fancy, made unsurpassable, perfect.
This is the concerto in A minor. Here, as we should expect, he
indulged himself in weaving elaborate show-figures over an orchestral
groundwork of little or no musical value. But the show-figures are
often brilliantly effective. For example, after the piano has played
the second theme in the first movement, there follows a long quasi-solo
passage of mixed double and single notes, which, trivial as it may be
as music, gives what one might call a lot of jolly good fun. Notice the
wide spacing here and there, the frequent expeditions into the highest
registers, the marches from bottom to top and the oily trickling back
to middle again. Then in the development section there is good fun
too; and there is a coda which demands the wrist of a virtuoso such as
Chopin or Liszt, instantaneous skips of the arm, runs for both hands in
thirds, all remarkably fluent and all sprung right from the nature if
not the soul of the instrument.
The adagio is, of course, flaccid worthlessness; but the final rondo
has no little musical charm, and, as far as treatment of the pianoforte
goes, is not at all unworthy of Liszt. The triplet rhythm is in itself
brilliantly maintained; there are series of fourths and sixths, triplet
figures very widely spaced, and again single and double notes mixed
in the same group, runs in thirds, chromatic thirds, double trills,
a profusion, in fact, of most of the virtuoso’s stock in trade, all
gracefully and brilliantly displayed.
It will be noticed that the best of it is sheer figure work, without
pianoforte accompaniment, or lightly supported by the orchestra. And
this may point to one of the marks of its mediocrity as a whole, one of
the reasons why it sounds, after all, laughably old-fashioned in many
measures. This is no other than the lack of variety, of skill, and of
taste in accompaniment figures. In one of the unquestionably effective
passages already referred to--the first solo passages for the piano
in the first movement, after the second theme--the right-hand work
is modern; but the left hand has only the vapid, commonplace tum-tum
scheme of single note and chord. Not only is this formula repeated
flatly, without attempt at variety, in blissful ignorance of its
unworthiness; even the very notes are repeated as far as it is possible
to go without changing the harmony.
Here the question may arise as to whether this monotonous device is
more contemptible than the Alberti bass. The answer is that the Alberti
bass is essentially a harmonic formula. Its use makes a certain series
of harmonies vibrate under a melody. Its outline need not, should not,
be clear-cut, its notes must not be played evenly and unvaryingly.
Here, over this tum-tum figure, we have no melody, but a series of
effects; and the tum-tum figure does not serve primarily to furnish
harmony, but to keep up a commonplace rhythm to which the figures add
no diversion. And, whereas the Alberti bass is a flexible device,
this is rigid. It can be lightly played, but, even if unobtrusive, is
necessarily commonplace.
But Hummel on the whole contributed considerably to the technique that
belongs specially to the pianoforte, and most of his contributions have
a grace that makes them pleasant even while his inspiration is perhaps
often lower than mediocre. He was by many regarded as the equal of
Beethoven, a delightful proof of the power of pleasant, lively sound to
intoxicate.
A contemporary of Hummel highly praised by Beethoven was J. B. Cramer,
son of a well-known German musical family. He was another of Clementi’s
pupils. He, too, had the clear and even touch; but his compositions are
less effective than Hummel’s, probably because he had a more serious
ideal of music. Both as a pianist and as a composer he was famous in
his day; now he has but little fame left him except what still hangs
over the Studies he wrote. In the words of A. Marmontel,[31] we salute
in him the eldest son of Clementi, the direct representative, the
authorized furtherer of his school. He wrote, among other things,
one hundred and five sonatas. They are of the past; but the studies,
particularly the first sixteen, are still useful, not only in training
the fingers, but in inculcating some sense of good style into the brain
of the student.
John Field is still another pupil of Clementi, the favorite pupil
according to well-founded tradition. He was born in Dublin in 1782
and died in Moscow in 1837. His addiction to good wines and whiskey,
and a consequent corpulence, broke down his health and his art. But
he was at one time one of the most beloved of pianists. With him
it was not only clearness and evenness of touch; there was poetry,
tenderness, and warmth as well. He was, of course, of the sentimental
school, the foremost of the professional pianists of that day in power
of expression. On a concert tour to Italy, undertaken toward the end
of his life and culminating in a long, miserable illness, he met
with little success; but elsewhere in Europe he exerted a charm upon
audiences which was almost hypnotic. His playing was wholly unperturbed
by signs of violent emotion, dreamy and indolent, yet of most unusual
sweetness and delicacy. He had enormous success as a teacher,
especially in Russia, where a great part of his life was spent; and
the mark he left upon the art of playing and of composing for the
pianoforte has never been wholly obliterated.
Most of his compositions have been neglected, or forgotten. They
include seven concertos, four sonatas, numerous rondos, sets of
variations, dances, and twenty or more little pieces to which he gave
the title of Nocturnes. These nocturnes are a new and a conspicuous
appearance in music. By them he is still remembered, by them a fairly
distinct style and form of pianoforte music were introduced. They were
indolently composed, negligently published, scattered here and there
over Europe; but they made an indelible impression upon men and women
of that day, especially upon those who had heard him play them himself,
and must be recognized as the prototype of the countless ‘nocturnes,’
‘songs without words,’ ‘reveries,’ ‘eclogues,’ and ‘idylls’ which have
since been written.
Just what distinguishes them from earlier works for the pianoforte
it is not easy to say exactly. The form, for one thing, seems new.
They are for the most part short, often not more than two pages long.
They consist of three sections, a long flowing melody, a contrasting
section which is for the most part melodious too, and a return to the
opening melody, commonly elaborated. There is in most of them a little
coda as well. Most short pieces of the day, and even of an earlier
time, were in the well-known forms of rondos or simple dances, from
which these are obviously quite distinct. But as far as form goes
they are not very different from the aria, except in that the middle
section generally maintains the accompaniment figures of the first
section and essentially the same mood as well, so that there is little
appreciable sense of demarcation. Other short pieces to which one looks
for a possible origin, such as those of Couperin and the preludes of
Bach, are far more articulate and far less lyrical. The sonatas of D.
Scarlatti and the Bagatelles of Beethoven are mostly pieces in two
sections, each repeated. The same is true of the _Moments musicals_
of Schubert. In the nocturnes of Field no distinct feature of form is
obtrusive. The intellectual element is wanting. There is no attempt
at crispness of outline, or antithesis or balance. They seem to be an
emanation of mood or sentiment, not a presentation of them. Hence they
represent a new type in music, one which has little to do with emotions
or ideas, with their arrangement or development, but lets itself flow
idly upon a mood.
In style they are wholly lyrical. The accompaniment is usually
monotonous and unvaried, but always flexible. Here, then, one looks
to find the Alberti bass; and here it presents itself most clearly in
the second stage of its development. The harmonic stream on which the
melody floats along is a series of chords broken into their constituent
parts so that they may be kept in a constant and gentle vibration. But,
whereas the Alberti bass in its first stage was a device applied to
the harpsichord and for that reason was always close within the span
of the hand, here in its second stage, now adapted to the pianoforte,
it has been expanded. The pedal can now be counted upon to blend the
relatively wide figures into one harmonic whole. Therefore, instead of
the original close grouping, we now find this wider one:
[Illustration: Music score]
This is no original invention of Field’s. Beethoven, in the sonata opus
90, wrote figures like this:
[Illustration: Music score]
But this figure, as will be seen, is sustained by a powerful,
quick-changing harmony. The bass part has a rhythmical significance as
important as its harmonic. With Field the function of such figures is
purely harmonic, and in the appreciation of such wide spacing, and in a
gentle gracefulness in the arrangement of the notes, he stands beyond
all his early contemporaries and, of course, beyond his predecessors.
He is the first to give to his accompaniment the flowing, undulating
line which touches with nearly unfailing instinct upon those notes that
will give his harmony most richness.
A similar instinct for what sounds well on the piano marks the
ornamentation with which he adorned his melodies, or those figures
into which he allowed the melodies to dissolve. In this most clearly
he is the predecessor of Chopin. It is perhaps worthy of note that he
was accustomed to add such ornaments _ex tempore_ when playing before
audiences. Only a few are written out in the published editions of
his works. We may have occasion to refer to this in speaking later of
Chopin.
As for the nature of the simple melodies themselves, they are sweet
and graceful, sometimes lovely. They are, of course, sentimental. One
may hesitate to call them mawkish, for a certain naïve freshness and
spontaneity despite a touch of something that is not wholly healthy.
It is easy to understand the charm they exerted upon those who heard
him play them. The complete lack of any harshness, of any passion or
poignancy, of any ecstasy, is delightfully soothing. But beyond this
gentle charm they have little to reveal. Liszt’s preface to a German
edition of a few of the nocturnes, published in 1859, suggests the rose
that died in aromatic pain. It is more unhealthy than the nocturnes
themselves, be it added in justice to Field.
Other composers and virtuosi of the time of Beethoven need scarcely
more than mention. Gelinek (d. 1825) and Steibelt (d. 1823) are
remembered for their encounters with Beethoven. Ignaz Moscheles
(1794-1870) came into close touch with Beethoven, but, like Cramer,
is chiefly of note as a teacher. He was, however, more than Cramer a
virtuoso, and less than he of profound musical worth. Chopin was fond
of playing his duets. Beethoven’s pupil Carl Czerny (1791-1857) is
well-known for his Études. Another pupil of Beethoven’s, Ferdinand
Ries, was successful as a virtuoso; and a pupil of Hummel’s, Ferdinand
Hiller, became an intimate friend of Chopin. The assiduousness with
which most of these men cultivated the possibilities of the pianoforte
is equalled only by the vacuousness of their compositions. But it is
not what these men produced that is significant; rather what they
represent of the tendencies of the time. Their music furnishes the
background of musical taste against which a better and more significant
art, both of playing and composing for the piano, built itself. Only
Hummel and Field are distinct in their musical gifts; the one in the
matter of sheer brilliant and graceful effectiveness, the other in the
appreciation of veiled and shadowy accompaniments and lyric sentiment.
The best of their accomplishments served to prepare the way for the
true poet and artist of the piano, Chopin. They, in a way, mined the
metals with which he was to work.
[Illustration]
Pianoforte Classics. From top left to bottom right:
Czerny, Hummel, Moscheles, Field.
II
Meanwhile two truly great musicians availed themselves of what was
being everywhere around them brought to light. These are Carl Maria
von Weber and Franz Peter Schubert. Both are perhaps most closely
associated with developments outside the sphere of the pianoforte; the
one with the growth of the national, romantic German opera, the other
with the first glorious burst of artistic song. Yet the pianoforte
works of both were destined to exert a powerful influence upon the
subsequent work of the great German composers of later generations,
upon Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms; and besides these upon Franz
Liszt as well.
Weber died in London, whither he had gone to superintend the first
performances of his opera _Oberon_, in 1826, about forty years of age.
Schubert died in Vienna in 1828, only thirty-one years old. Both were
much younger than Beethoven, but both were his contemporaries, and
both, moreover, owed much to his influence. The expanded form and warm
feeling of their sonatas show this unmistakably. On the other hand,
neither was truly at his best in this long form. The cast of their
genius led them to new paths, put them in sympathy with other forms,
affiliated them more with the new than with the old. Their sonatas are
a breaking down, a crumbling; measures and pages in them, however,
stand out amid the ruins like foundation stones for the music to come.
Their shorter pieces seem not at all related to the classical music of
the Viennese period, to have nothing in common with the music of Haydn,
Mozart, and Beethoven.
Of the two, Weber is far more the virtuoso. There are many pages of
his music which are little more than effect. Furthermore, in his
combination of pianistic effect and genuine musical feeling, he
composed pieces which even today are in the repertory of most pianists,
and which this permanence of their worth has led historians and critics
to judge as the prototype of much of the pianoforte music of the
nineteenth century, chiefly of concert music. Yet in the expansion of
pianoforte technique Weber invented little. To him belongs the credit
of employing what was generally common property in his day for the
expression of fanciful and delightful ideas.
The list of his pianoforte works is not very long. It includes several
sets of variations, some dances, four big sonatas, two concertos, and
the still renowned _Konzertstück_ in F minor, and several pieces in
brilliant style, of which the _Polacca_ in E major, the _Polonaise_ in
E flat, and the famous ‘Invitation to the Dance’ are the best known.
Let us look over the variations. In such a form composers have usually
shown the limits and the variety of their technique. The resources
which Weber can call upon to vary his theme are not very numerous, not
very original. His plan is almost invariably to announce his theme
simply and then dress it up in a number of figures. The theme itself
undergoes no metamorphosis, as we have seen it do in the variations of
Bach and of Beethoven. It is unmistakable in all the variations. It
is always clearly a groundwork upon which garlands are hung, which is
never for long concealed.
Of the nature of these figures and garlands little need be said. Opus 6
is a set of variations on a theme from the opera ‘Castor and Pollux,’
written by his friend and teacher, the famous Abbé Vogler. The first
five variations are hardly in advance of the work of Handel. The sixth,
however, presents an interesting use of broken octaves and is very
difficult. The seventh presents the theme in octaves in the bass, and
the eighth is the theme unmistakable, in the form of a mazurka.
Opus 7 is a set of seven variations on a theme in C major. The fourth
of these presents some difficulties in wide chords for the left hand.
Weber’s fingers were very long and slender and broad stretches were
easy for him. The fifth is built up of sweeping figures that mount
from the low registers to the high in brilliant effect. This sort of
climbing _crescendo_ is to be found again and again in Weber’s work.
It is undoubtedly effective, but points to no intensive development of
pianoforte technique. The sixth variation presents the theme in form
of a chorale, a presentation which may still delight those who ever,
conversely, find something marvellous in the rendering of ‘Nearer, My
God, to Thee’ in rag-time. The seventh is a _Polacca_, very brilliant
and full of thirds and arpeggios in contrary motion.
Seven variations on a popular Romanza were published as opus 28. The
fifth has some interesting passages of broken sixths which are modern
enough in sound, but which can be found in other music of the time.
Then there is a Funeral March, in which upper and lower registers of
the instrument are contrasted in a series of imaginary orchestral
effects. The seventh demands a light, active wrist. It is a series
of rapid double notes, sometimes for both hands, in an excellent
‘étude’ manner, of which Weber had already made use in the delightful
_Caprice_, opus 12. In such work we have perhaps the model for most
studies in the special technique of the wrist, perhaps also of the
fifth number of Schumann’s ‘Symphonic Variations.’
There is, in addition, a set of variations on a Bohemian melody, opus
55, equally ordinary. A set published as opus 40 is perhaps the most
pretentious and likewise the most varied. Here we have in the first
variation some open, flowing counterpoint in which the theme is pretty
well disguised; in the second some effective whirring figures for
the left hand; in the third some brilliant broken octaves and double
notes. The fourth is in the style of a fugue, _pianissimo_. The fifth
furnishes sharp contrast. The eighth is very brilliant and the last is
in Spanish style, which seems to depend upon a lavish use of triplet
turns.
What one can hardly fail to observe is the great similarity in all his
passage work. Two styles of runs he uses in nearly all his pieces. One
is as follows:
[Illustration: Music score]
The other is what one might call an over-reaching figure, in this
manner:
[Illustration: Music score]
Sometimes, as well as over-reaching the chordal harmony at the top, he
anticipates it by a chromatic step at the beginning, thus:
[Illustration: Music score]
With such and similar figures, with scant variety, page after page of
his music is filled. His passage work seldom makes demands upon more
than the simplest harmonies. Long runs are generally clearly founded on
the simple scale. In rhythms he shows little subtlety.
This general stock in trade of pianoforte technique has become
hopelessly old-fashioned. Thus the once blindingly brilliant _Polacca_
in E major, the grand polonaise, the rondo, and such pieces, now sound
almost laughable. In the _Polacca_ one hears the thumping tum-tum
figures, this time heavy chords monotonously repeated, that we have
spoken of in the concerto of Hummel. However, the brief section in B
major must give us pause. There the genius Weber speaks, the composer
of _Der Freischütz_, the man who prepared the orchestra for Mendelssohn
and Wagner. The long _crescendo_ leading back to the main theme
foreshadows Schumann.
In the sonatas there is a great deal of very good music. The quality
of the ideas in them is often golden. Moreover, there are many passages
of startlingly good writing for the pianoforte. The first, in C major,
was published in 1812, as opus 42. The first theme is announced _mezza
voce_, after two preliminary measures of highly dramatic character.
The theme itself has something of the quality of a folk-song, a touch
of the martial, as well, a theme that at once endears itself to the
hearer as the melodies of _Der Freischütz_ endeared themselves to all
Germany. But, then, note the over-reaching figure which now appears in
the transitional section, and later, clamped to a definite harmonic
sequence, does for the second theme in G major. One cannot but enjoy
it, yet Hummel is not more mediocre. The theme and variations which
constitute the slow movement are not conspicuous; but the syncopations
in the minuet, the perverse avoidance of the measure accent, cast a
shadow forward upon Schumann and Brahms. The effect of the hushed
triplets in the trio is orchestral. The famous rondo, in perpetual
motion, scarcely calls for comment.
The second sonata, in A-flat major, must become precious to one who
troubles, in these days, to study it. The quality of the themes in the
first movement is rare and beautiful. The mysterious tremolo which
alone accompanies the announcement of the first theme, points to that
imagination in Weber which later developed the orchestra so richly.
There is something orchestral about the whole work, not only about
this sonata either. But his orchestral treatment of the piano is as
different from Beethoven’s as the scoring of his overtures is different
from that of Beethoven’s symphonies. There is a sensuous element in the
beauty of sounds which is lacking in Beethoven; a quality which stirs
the imagination to picture strange lands and countries, dim, mysterious
forests, strange moods of moonlight. It is romantic music, it is
picture music. The passage work at the end of the first section, which
really serves in place of a second theme, is superb. It is in the main
nothing but a series of arpeggios, sometimes with anticipatory notes
in his conventional and elsewhere often tiresome manner, sometimes
over-reaching; but the full chords in the left hand, a sort of rich
strumming, gives it all a buoyancy, an _essor_, which can hardly be
paralleled. The return to the first theme at the end of the development
is again orchestral. So is the whole treatment of the andante and
variations; orchestral in the sense that it suggests instruments of
various tone-colors, or rather that it almost brings the colors out of
the piano itself. The minuet is wonderfully gay, suggesting Schumann
again. The sonata may be taken as a whole as the best of Weber’s works
for the piano.
The last two sonatas, published in 1816 and 1822, contain very
beautiful passages. The final rondo of the former, in D major, is
astonishingly modern. The wide spacing of the figure work which
constitutes the main theme, its sharp accents, the broad sweep of its
plunges and soarings, the happy waltz swing of the second episode, the
irresistible charm with which two melodies are combined, above all,
the unflagging vigor of the whole movement, these must give joy to all
pianists and all listeners. The minuet of the last sonata must have
been well known to Brahms.
The four sonatas are all very long works. They all consist of four
movements, all but the last in the conventional order of allegro,
andante, minuet, and rondo. In the last the minuet follows the opening
allegro. It might well have been called a scherzo. The breadth of plan
suggests Beethoven. There have not been lacking critics who judged the
sonatas greater than those of Beethoven. No one today would be likely
to make such a misjudgment. They lack the splendid compactness, the
logical balance of the sonatas of Beethoven. The treatment of the
triplex form is rambling and loose. There is hardly a suggestion of
organic unity in the group. But there is splendid music in them, a
fine healthy vigor, an infusion of spontaneous, genuine folk-spirit.
And what they possess that is almost unique in pianoforte music is a
sort of narrative quality, difficult if not impossible to analyze.
They suggest romantic tales of chivalry, of love and adventure. To say
they are dramatic implies an organic life which they have not. They
are perhaps histrionic. They suggest the illusions of the stage. Yet
there is withal a free, out-of-doors spirit in them, something wholly
objective and healthy. They are not the outpourings of perfervid
emotions. They are not the lyrical outburst of a mood. They are like
brilliant tapestries, like ancient chronicles and cycles of romantic
legends.
For at least two of his most famous works in another field we have
been furnished tales. To be sure, there is not much to be said of the
popular ‘Invitation to the Dance.’ The introduction and the end alone
are program music; but they put the waltz into a frame which adds
much to its charm. Here is a romanticist at work, a teller of stories
in music. No composer for the pianoforte has had just his skill. The
old narrative stories of Kuhnau, Bach’s lively little _Capriccio_,
Beethoven’s sonata opus 81, afford no prototype. Neither do the little
pieces of Couperin. What Weber gives us is something different. It is
not a picture, not a representation, it is somehow the thing itself.
As for the waltz, it is too well known to need comment. The technical
art of which it makes use is surprisingly small. A few runs, a few
skips, a few variations in the steady waltz-accompaniment, these are
all. But the work has always been and always will be captivating, from
the charming, delicate conversational interchange between the gallant
and his selected partner, which forms the introduction, to the same
polite dialogue which tells us we have come to the end.
The _Konzertstück_ in F minor is a much bigger work. We quote from
Grove’s Dictionary the translation of the story which it tells: ‘The
Châtelaine sits all alone on her balcony, gazing far away into the
distance. Her knight has gone to the Holy Land. Years have passed by,
battles have been fought. Is he still alive--will she see him again?
Her excited imagination calls up a vision of her husband lying wounded
and forsaken on the battlefield. Can she not fly to him and die by his
side? She falls back unconscious. But Hark! what notes are those in the
distance? Over there in the forest, something flashes in the sunlight;
nearer and nearer, Knights and Squires with the cross of the Crusaders,
banners waving, acclamations of the people, and there--it is he! She
sinks into his arms. Love is triumphant. Happiness without end. The
very woods and waves sing the song of love. A thousand voices proclaim
his victory.’
Probably the music which Weber wrote to this story of olden days has
had as great a measure of popular admiration and acclaim as any piece
that has ever been written for the pianoforte. Much of it is beautiful.
The opening measures for the orchestra are equal to any of the pages
from _Der Freischütz_ or from _Euryanthe_; the solo passages for the
pianoforte which follow have a fine breadth; the march theme, which,
_pianissimo_, announces the return of the Crusaders is effective,
rather in the manner of Meyerbeer, a fellow-student with Weber at the
feet of the Abbé Vogler. On the other hand, much of the display work
given to the pianoforte is hopelessly old-fashioned. We have the Weber
staples again, the tum-tum bass, the close-rolling arpeggios repeated
endlessly, the busy little figure before mentioned, which here, as in
the famous Rondo in C, scampers from low to high. The final motives,
which represent universal joy, are trivial, banal. Even the _glissando_
octaves have now only the shine of tinsel, and much is sadly tarnished.
But on the whole there is a fresh spirit in the work, an enjoyment,
frank and manly, in the brilliancy of the pianoforte; an abandonment to
the story, that still may carry a listener along.
Weber’s pianoforte works have astonishing individuality in spite of
the commonplaceness of the stuff which he often brings in, either to
fill them up or to add brilliancy. There is an effusion in most of
them of manly vigor that never becomes weakened into sentimentality,
and there is a great deal of romance in the chivalric strain. His
harmonies are simple, though often richly scored, and he is a master of
the art of suggestion by silence. His melodies have the stamp of the
Teutonic folk-song. Though some years of his youth and manhood were
spent in Prague and in Vienna, he assimilated practically nothing of
the Slavic characteristics which can be found in the music of Haydn and
Schubert, even in that of Brahms. He made use of the entire keyboard in
relatively huge dynamic effects, and he had, as we have said, an almost
unique power to bring forth suggestions of orchestral coloring.
His compositions are not architectural as Beethoven’s are. They suggest
great canvases, full of color and movement. Thus the pianoforte sonatas
seem to manifest the same quality of imagination which was able to make
of the overtures to his operas brilliantly colored fantasies, after
which Mendelssohn and Wagner shaped their art. And it is worthy of note
that the same stereotyped figure work which plays such a part in his
keyboard music is abundantly evident in these overtures. The figures
out of which the allegro sections of the overture to _Oberon_ are made
are just such figures as one will find in the pianoforte sonatas,
variations and concertos.
No subsequent composer down to the present day has procured from the
pianoforte the special kind of mysterious, colorful effects which
Weber was able to procure therefrom; but both Schumann and Brahms are
clearly indebted to him for more general and more technical procedures.
In connection with this it may be mentioned that by comparison with
Chopin, the perfect, the pianoforte music of both Schumann and Brahms
often appears orchestral. And it may be added that Chopin was not
especially familiar with Weber’s work.
III
If the certain chivalric romanticism of Weber’s music is hard to
analyze, the special charm of Schubert’s is wholly elusive. We have to
do with an utterly different nature. Weber was an aristocrat, a rover
among wild companions, a hanger-on at the theatre for a while, if you
will, but none the less of distinguished birth, of polished manners
and of fine wit. Schubert was more than any other of the composers,
even more than Haydn, a man of the people. He was happy to mingle
with the peasants, happy to play hours at a time for their dancing.
Beethoven is said to have modelled the music of the country people’s
dance in the ‘Pastoral Symphony’ upon the music he heard played in a
certain country tavern to which at one time he delighted to go. Brahms
in his impoverished boyhood used to earn a few pence by playing for
the sailors’ dancing in the taverns along the waterfront of Hamburg.
But Beethoven regarded himself, as we have said, as the high priest of
an exalted art; and Brahms was hardly less imperious. Yet Schubert,
for all his ideals which rose ever and ever higher, for all the fact
that he numbered acquaintances in the same aristocratic families which
had seen Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven come and go, remained a man of
the people, a singer in the sway of his art, a loveable, reckless,
sentimental and affectionate boy.
All his music is lyrical. The song is never absent from his
pianoforte works, no matter how instrumental parts of them may be.
He is essentially a melodist. His rhythms have the lilt of a dance.
These two elements are not disguised. They undergo no intellectual
transformations. They are as obvious as in the folk-songs and dances of
the country people with whom he loved to associate. Hence the almost
complete lack of sophistication in his music, the naturalness which
distinguishes it from all other music.
His harmonies are strange and warm. They lack the subtlety of Mozart on
the one hand, the frankness of Weber on the other. They have not the
expressive significance of Beethoven. They seem rather to go beside
his music than to go under it. One listens through them, so to speak,
as one might look upon a procession through a colored mist that now
conceals, now discloses, that always plays magic tricks with the sight.
Two harmonic procedures appear more or less regularly in his music. One
is the interchange of major and minor, the other the bodily shifting
of the harmonic fabric up and down the scale. The latter are changes
rather than modulations. By reason of these unexpected, unaccountable
harmonies, his music sounds now near, now far. One moment it is with us
and familiar, the next it is aloof and strange.
Schubert’s hands were thick, his fingers short and fat. Though he was
not an elegant or a polished player, he had great beauty of touch and
a natural, easy fluency, especially in the rapid passages of his own
works. Richard Heuberger, in his excellent book on Schubert, points
to the fact that most of Schubert’s pianoforte music is written in
keys that require the use of many black notes on the keyboard; and
suggests, as one reason for this, that Schubert found it easier to
play in such keys. It is generally admitted that the key of G major is
the most difficult for the pianist.
Schubert’s pianoforte music comprises many long sonatas, two sets
of impromptus, a set of short pieces called ‘Musical Moments’ and
a number of waltzes and other dances. The sonatas are for the most
part unsatisfactory as such. In such extended forms there is need
of an intellectual command of the science of music, and a sense of
great proportions, both of which Schubert lacked. Hence the separate
movements, the first and even more often the last, are loose and
rambling in structure, and too long for the work as a whole. There
is so little cohesion in the group that one may in most cases take
the individual movements quite out of it and play them with perfect
satisfaction.
Not all the movements are over-long, and some of the sonatas can be
enjoyed in their entirety. Perhaps the most satisfactory from the
point of view of structure is that in A minor, opus 42. In this the
first movement is admirably constructed, firmly knit, full of distinct
contrast, and in the middle section well developed. The andante and
variations is undeniably long, but the formal preciseness of the
following movement and of the rondo succeeds in giving to the group a
definiteness and balance which will pass muster.
A sonata in D major, opus 120, is considerably shorter, but is even
from the point of view of form less satisfactory. The first movement
reveals one of Schubert’s great weaknesses. It happens here to be
almost inconsiderable, but it is none the less evident. This is the
lack of ideas in the treatment of the development section. There are
nine measures which give the impression that Schubert was content
to keep his music going with makeshifts. We have nothing of any
significance, a series of octaves in the left hand answered by a
series in the right, and a full chord at the beginning of each measure,
whereby a desired modulation from the key of C-sharp minor to that of A
major is accomplished.
This is bare music. The passage is so short that it hardly mars the
movement seriously, but unhappily other movements are nearly destroyed
by the weakness at which this one hints. For example, the first
movement of a sonata in A minor, opus 143, which contains themes
that are truly inspired, breaks hopelessly adrift in the development
section. The section is fatally long, too. And what does it offer to
hold our interest? Only measure after measure of an unvaried dotted
rhythm, for the most part in the right hand over chords which may be
beautiful but are seemingly without any aim. Schubert either does not
know what to do or he is utterly lost in dreaming.
This is real tragedy in music, the ruin of most beautiful ideas by a
fatal weakness. The opening theme promises even more than that of the
earlier sonata in the same key. It is most mysterious, most suggestive,
the very best of Schubert. And the second theme is of unearthly
beauty. But in this weak movement both are lost, both thrown away. The
whole sonata suffers in consequence. The andante is not especially
noteworthy, but the scherzo is a masterpiece, not only of expression,
but of workmanship; and so is the final rondo.
Similarly, the sonata in B-flat major, written not long before he died,
falls into a heap of ruins. The first theme of the first movement is
matchless in beauty. Schubert is loth to leave it, we are loth to have
it go. A strange melody in F-sharp minor does for a second theme, and
this simply rambles on through sudden changes of harmony until it
reaches the key of F major, only to give way to measure after measure
of equally aimless wandering, with only figures to save the music
from amorphousness. Note then a closing theme of perfect beauty! Play
it with all tenderness, with all the delicate suggestion you can put
into it, and still even this first section of the music is long and
overbalanced. There is a wealth of poetry in it, even a great depth of
feeling and a heart-moving sadness. It seems a sacrilege to decry it;
yet there it stands, frustrate.
The development section is what one would expect, weak in structure.
Yet the second part of it is strangely moving, from the establishment
of the key of D minor to the return of the first theme. The life of the
music seems held in suspense. There is only a steady hushed tapping of
triads, measure after measure, swaying from D minor to F major and ever
back again, with reminiscences of the rambling measures in F major of
the first section, floating here and there like mist in a dull rain.
Strains of the first theme drift by, there are low muffled trills on D.
Finally, the tapping ceases, as rain might cease; a quiet scale, like
drops from the branches of some wet tree, falls to a low trill, and,
after a silence, the first theme comes back into the music.
One can hardly find sadder or more beautiful music than these measures,
or than the lovely first theme; and yet the movement is strangely
without form and void. The andante which follows it is overdrawn. The
repetitions of the sections in A major might have been omitted to
better effect; but there is no looseness of structure. The music is
unspeakably sad, with the sadness of the songs of the _Winterreise_.
The scherzo is flawless, the final rondo long but well sustained. Yet,
by reason of the aimlessness of long measures in the first movement,
the sonata as a whole is like a condemned building. And in this sonata,
too, there is an intensity of mood that, except for the last movement,
should succeed in welding the whole group together. Even the last
movement is not entirely independent.
What is most lamentable in all this is that Schubert poured much of
his most inspired music into the sonatas. Little of his music presents
more intrinsically beautiful material. In no other of his pianoforte
pieces did he show such a wide and varied control of the technical
possibilities of the instrument. Yet all would seem to be of little or
no avail. Many of the most precious of his poetic fancies lie buried in
these imperfect works.
Though Schubert was not a virtuoso, he displayed instinct for and
ingenuity in devising pianoforte effects. In the huge ‘Wanderer
Fantasy,’ opus 15, he seems to have set himself the task of awakening
the greatest possible resonance of the instrument. The big chords
and arpeggios in the first movement are not, however, overpoweringly
effective. The variations in the second are more successful. They
certainly look impressive on the printed page, and the sound of the
climax is gigantic. But the stupendous is not natural to Schubert on
the whole. He is more of a poet than a virtuoso. The first movement and
the scherzo of the sonata in D major, opus 53, are big in effect. The
spacing and rhythm in the _piu lento_ section of the first movement
has been pointed out by Heuberger as significant. The vigorous first
subject of the scherzo can make the piano ring. But in general Schubert
shows at his best as regards pianoforte writing in more delicate
measures, and in brilliant rather than massive and sonorous effects.
The last movement of the sonata in A major, opus 120, is a good example
of a piquant style of which he was master. Here the long scales
terminating in chords high up on the keyboard are quite dazzling.
He was not especially original in accompaniment figures. One finds a
great deal of mediocre Alberti-bass stuff. On the other hand, he is a
master in weaving a more subtle sort of arabesque about his melodies,
or over or below them. One sees this not far from the beginning of
the adagio movement of the big fantasy opus 15, in the ornamentation
of the Fantasia, opus 27, and in the Trio of the Scherzo in opus 147.
The closing measures of the first section of the first movement of
this sonata are very like Chopin. There are many passages of excellent
free writing for the instrument, such as the C major section of the
allegretto in opus 164. This, and, in another way, the second section
of the minuet in opus 122, are very like passages in the Schumann
_Carnaval_. On the whole his treatment of the pianoforte is more
delicate and more distinguished than Weber’s.
Dr. Oskar Bie has remarked wisely in his history of pianoforte music
that to one who has not a soft touch the beauties of Schubert’s music
will not be revealed. It is particularly in lovely, veiled passages
that he excels. Except for the final rondo almost all of the sonata
in B-flat major to which we have referred is to be played very nearly
_pianissimo_. The poetic and generous Schumann felt that in certain
parts of the andante of the great C major symphony, a spirit from
heaven might be walking through the orchestra, to which the instruments
would seem to be listening. There are many passages in the pianoforte
music which suggest such ghostly visitations, which whisper far more
than speak. And in such places Schubert’s scoring will be found to be
matchless, as delicate as Chopin’s, though less complicated.
In spite of the many inspired themes in the sonatas, and of the variety
and richness of pianoforte effects with which they are often presented,
the works are, as we have already said, too faulty or too weak in
structure to hold a secure and honored place in pianoforte literature.
It is vain to speculate on what Schubert might have done with the form
had he lived longer. The last sonata is discouraging.
But in shorter forms there is no doubt that he was a supreme and
perfect artist. The two sets of impromptus and the set of shorter
pieces called the _Moments Musicals_ are masterpieces. It is hardly an
exaggeration to say that in them lie concealed the root and flower of
the finest pianoforte literature produced during the next half century
or more in Germany. Mendelssohn, Schumann, and Brahms owe immensely to
them.
Each set of Impromptus consists of four pieces. The title was not
given to them by Schubert, but was added by the publishers of the
first editions, the Haslingers of Vienna. Schumann suggested that the
first, second, and fourth of the second set might be taken as three
movements of a sonata in F minor. The first of these is very much after
the manner of the first movements of Schubert’s sonatas; but the first
section is not repeated, and the section which at first might suggest a
real development section is repeated entirely at the end of the piece.
The first impromptu of the first set is built on a single phrase. The
quality of the music is legendary. A sharp preliminary G claims our
attention, and then the story begins, _pianissimo_, a single voice,
answered, as it were, by a chorus; and what this voice sings, or rather
chants, is the burden of the rest. One might fancy the piece a series
of variations but that there seems to be some story progressing with
it. At times the theme is smooth and serene, as in the A-flat major
section near the beginning, where it floats along over a rolling
accompaniment. Later on it is passing through dark, wild forests. The
agitated triplet octaves, inexorably on G, suggest the ‘Erl King.’ And
so ever on, the same phrase, as if it were a lone soldier on his way
through a land now wild and dreary, now sunny. During the last two
pages the restless triplet figures are never still, and always they
come back to beat on G. Just before the end the agitation stops, but
still the G persists, in long octaves, and still the tramp of the
soldier keeps on. What it may mean no one can tell. The impression is
that the strange music continues on, long after our ears have heard it
die away.
The second impromptu is for the most part in a light and happy vein.
There is a constant flow of triplet figures, wonderfully graceful and
sinuous, over the simplest of accompaniments. A sudden change of mood,
an abrupt modulation, usher in a section in the nature of a trio. There
is a bold melody, greatly impassioned, very much after the manner of
Schumann; a breadth of style and a power wholly different from the
light figure-work which has preceded it. But back to the lighter mood
the music comes again, back to the flow of exquisite, light sound, only
to be brought once more to a sudden check. There is a short coda of
greatest vehemence and brilliance.
Here is salon music of a wholly new variety. It has nothing in common
with the showy polonaises and rondos of Weber, nor yet with the
sentimental nocturnes of Field. In fact, one would find it difficult to
find its parallel elsewhere in the literature of pianoforte music, its
strange combination of ingenuousness and grace and wild passion.
The third is in G-flat major, though it is perhaps better known in the
key of G, to which Haslinger took the liberty of transposing it, much
to the harm of its effect. It is in the nature of a reverie, akin to
the nocturnes of Field in spirit, but far broader in plan and more
healthy in sentiment.
Something of the airiness of the second impromptu is to be found in
the fourth; but here the runs have an harmonic significance rather
than a melodic. They are flowing chords, successive light showers of
harmonies. The very sameness of the figuration adds to the charm, and
does not, it may be added, take away from the difficulty. Only twice is
the gentle vibration so produced interrupted for long; once to give way
to a short melody, once during the long, impassioned middle-section in
C-sharp minor.
What stands out in this group of pieces as a whole is the restraint
in form, so lacking in the sonatas, and the fineness of pianoforte
style. There is a great economy of writing. The piano is left to speak
for itself; it is not often taxed to make music grand enough for the
orchestra. In the second and fourth of the series an accompaniment is
hardly more than suggested, except in the impassioned middle sections;
yet the passage work is in no way of the virtuoso type. It has a
refinement that is, apart from Bach, Mozart, and Chopin, unusual in
pianoforte music. And what is ever worthy of notice in all the work of
Schubert is the prevalent _pianissimo_. The spiritual visitor is ever
present. One feels that Schubert was wholly lost in his music, that he
surrendered himself utterly to the delight of sound, of softest sound.
The four works are equally inspired. They are full of ecstasy, full of
rapture.
The impromptus of the second set are not so invariably fine, yet as a
whole they are a momentous contribution. The first and the fourth are
longer and more elaborate than any in the first set, and consequently
one feels in them the lack of proportion and control which weakened the
sonatas. The third is, as a matter of fact, a series of variations;
and they can hardly be said to suffer from any weakness. Rather they
are exceedingly well done. However, better variations have been
written--not, it may be remarked, by Weber--and the form is dangerously
likely to prove stupid except in the hands of a man who has a special
skill in it. There is necessarily lacking a chance for that spontaneity
and freedom which one associates more with Schubert than with any other
composer.
The last impromptu is conspicuous for a gay brilliance, perhaps a
better brilliance than Weber revealed, but a less effective one.
It suggests Liszt. Passages remind one of the _Gnomenreigen_. There
can be no mistaking the Hungarian quality of the melodies, the mad,
rhapsodical, Gypsy style.
The first impromptu contains more of the quality of the extraordinary
Schubert; is perhaps too long, but is full of fine inspiration and
romantic fancy. The opening theme is in ballade style, with a rather
incongruous touch of conventionality here and there. The second theme
is purely lyrical, though the persistent eighth-note rhythm in which
it is presented gives it a spirit of restlessness. It is thrice
repeated, and the figure-work in the high registers which adorns the
third statement of it is effective and beautiful. The theme itself
is silenced unexpectedly and the figure-work leads down again into
the deep registers, where it flows in a hushed arpeggio figure. Over
this a third theme is suggested, which, with its answer woven in the
accompaniment, constitutes a distinct second section of the piece,
releases a different mood. It is for the most part soft, yet it is
strangely impassioned. It leads back again to the first theme and the
whole is repeated, with a change only of key. At the end, the first
theme once more adds a touch of the ballade. The two measures before
the final chords have all the strange power of suggestion which one
associates with Schubert, leaving one with the impression that the
music has rather passed on than ended, as if the song, like that of the
‘Solitary Reaper,’ could have no ending.
There is no contemporary music with which one may compare these
impromptus. They are not sentimental idylls like the nocturnes of
Field, nor show pieces like the shorter works of Weber. They have
nothing in common with the music of the contemporary virtuosi, nor
with that of any virtuosi. They are extraordinarily rich in genuine
musical worth, and, like all of Schubert’s music, in form or out of
form, inspired. Even more remarkable are the six short pieces called
‘Musical Moments.’ Three of these are but two pages long; only one more
than four. Each is wholly different from the others in mood. In all of
them the _pianissimo_ prevails. Schubert is whispering, not speaking.
They are essentially pianoforte music, too. Though there is nothing
elaborate in the style of them, not the slightest trace of a striving
for new effects, yet it may be questioned if any German pianoforte
music shows greater understanding of what one might call the secret and
intimate qualities of the instrument.
There is practically no thickness of scoring. Only the trio sections of
the first and last are open to even suspicion in this regard. There is
no commonplaceness or makeshift in the accompaniments. The monotonous
tum-tum of the third is necessary in the expression of the mood of
dance and song which the piece embodies, of wild dancing and intensely
emotional song, more than half sad. The workmanship of all is delicate,
whether it be deliberate or instinctive. There is in all a great
appreciation of effects of contrast, of loud and soft, which are the
very first of the peculiarities of the instrument; an appreciation of
the sonority, rich but not noisy, which the pedal allows; of the charm
of soft and distinct passage notes, of vigorous, percussive rhythm. All
is perhaps in miniature; but the six pieces are the essence of German
pianoforte music, both in quality and style; the very root and stock of
the short pieces of Schumann and Brahms by which they are distinguished.
As to the nature of the separate pieces, little need be said. They are
pure music, perfect art. In the sound of them are their completeness
and their justification. The first may suggest dreams. The figure
out of which it is made is of the woodland. It suggests the horns of
elf-land faintly blowing. It is now near, now far. As the notes of the
bugle will blend in echoes till the air is full of a soft chord, so
does this phrase weave a harmony out of its own echo that, like the
sounds of a harp blown by the wind, is more of spirit than of flesh.
Even in the trio something of this echo persists.
The remaining five keep us closer to earth, are of more substantial
and more human stuff. Yet note in the second, in the second statement
of the first theme after the first episode, how a persistent E-flat
suggests again the ghostly visitor to which the music itself seems
to listen. The third is, as has been suggested, a dance, soft yet
half barbaric. Is the melody sad or gay? It is blended of both, like
the folk-songs of the Slavs and the Celts, the character of which it
breathes. One is tempted to ask if there ever was _softer_ music than
Schubert’s. The music enters its coda here thrice _piano_, and twice on
its way to the end it grows still softer.
The fourth suggests a prelude of Bach, except for the trio, which again
has the character of a folk-song and again is softer than soft. The
fifth is a study in grotesque. Even here there are fine effects, such
as the echo of the first phrases; but the general impression is of
almost savage accents and harsh dissonances. The last has a touch of
Beethoven, though the melodies are of the kind that Schubert alone has
ever heard, and the harmonies here and there rise, as it were, like
shifting, colored mist across the line of the music.
It cannot be said that the melodies and harmonies of either the
Impromptus or the ‘Musical Moments’ are more inspired than those of
the sonatas. Indeed, there are passages in the latter of more profound
and more intense emotion than finds expression in the shorter pieces.
But most of the sonatas are in ruins. Their beauties are fragmentary
and isolated; whereas nearly all the Impromptus and all the ‘Musical
Moments’ have a beauty and firmness of line and design as well as of
content. For this reason they stand as the best of his pianoforte
works; and of their kind they are unexcelled in music. They are
genuinely beautiful music; they are perfectly suited to the piano,
drawing upon its various qualities without showing them off; they are
finished in detail, balanced and well-knit in structure. A new epoch in
the art begins with them.
It should be mentioned that Schubert’s waltzes and other dances bear
very clearly the stamp of his great genius. They are not elaborate.
Much of their beauty is in their naïve simplicity. They gain nothing by
being dressed up in the gaudy raiment which Liszt chose to hang upon
many of them. They should be known and played as Schubert wrote them,
not as profound or as brilliant music, but as spontaneous melodies in
undisguised dance rhythms. They are, in fact, dance music, full of the
spirit of merry-making, not in the least elegant or sophisticated. To
our knowledge there is no other music of equal merit and charm composed
in this spirit expressly for the piano. Schubert is unique among the
great composers in having treated dance forms and rhythms thus strictly
as dances.
V
All the work of Weber and most of that of Schubert fall within the
lifetime of Beethoven. The three great men constitute the foundation
of the pianoforte music of the great German composers of the next
generation. But Beethoven’s influence is largely spiritual, as Bach’s.
There was nothing more to be done with the sonata after he finished,
and long before his death the progress of pianoforte music had taken
a new turn. It is not inconceivable that before very long Beethoven’s
sonatas will be regarded as the culmination and end of a period of
growth, just as the music of Bach is already regarded; that he will
appear materially related only to what came before him, and to have
died without musical heir. The last sonatas rested many years generally
unknown. His peculiar and varied treatment of the pianoforte in them
found few or no imitators. The technique of the instrument that
Schumann and Chopin employed was not descended from him; rather from
Weber on the one hand and from Mozart and Hummel on the other.
Even in the matter of form he exercised hardly more than a spiritual
influence, as regards pianoforte music alone. Schumann and Chopin both
wrote sonatas, but the sonatas of neither show kinship to those of
Beethoven. The Brahms sonatas are more closely related to Weber than
to Beethoven. The Liszt sonata in B minor and the Liszt concertos are
constructed on a wholly new plan that was suggested by Berlioz; and the
two long works of César Franck are not even called sonatas. The sonata
in pianoforte music alone had had its day. The form remained but the
spirit had fled. If music came back to it at all, it came back to sit
as it were among ruins.
The change which came over music was but the counterpart of the change
which came over men and over society. It was evident in literature
long before it affected music. It might in many ways be said to have
reached music through literature. The whole movement of change and
reformation has been given the name Romantic. It was accompanied in
society by violent revolutions, prolonged restlessness, the awakening
of national and popular feeling. It is marked in literature and in
music by intensely self-conscious emotion, by an appeal to the senses
rather than to the intellect, by a proud and undisguised assertion of
individuality.
Most great music is romantic music. The preludes of Bach, the little
pieces of Couperin, a great deal of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven have
a personal warmth which is essentially romantic. Music draws its life
more directly from emotions than the other arts. But there are signs
in the music of these men of an objective, an external ideal, to which
they have conformed the expression of their emotions. They do not work
upon the spur of emotional excitement alone. That is but the germ from
which their music starts. They have a power to sustain. They work with
music; and the ideas which they choose to work with are chosen from a
thousand others for the possibilities they contain of expansion, of
alteration, of adaptability to the need of the work as a whole. Within
the limits of this work emotional inspiration plays its part, adding
here and there a bit of harmony, a new phrase. These are romantic
touches. These reveal the quick or the inert nature back of the music.
But back of it all the architectural brain presides, building a
structure of broad design, or of exquisite proportions. The ideal is
commonly known as classical; and these composers are properly called
classical.
The Romantic composers, on the other hand, treasure their moods.
They enshrine their separate inspirations. It is the manner of their
time. They are, as we have said, emotionally self-conscious. This is
one of the marks by which we may know them. The architectural ideal
loses their devotion. They lack, in the first place, the prime desire
to sustain, in the second place, the power. The change shows itself
distinctly in the works of Weber and Schubert, both of whom are
recognized as the first of the Romantic composers.
Take, for example, the sonatas of Weber. The movements are, as we have
ventured to suggest, like broad pictures. They are a series of figures,
of colors and shadows, like tapestries. They conform to the rules of
form, but they have little or nothing of the spirit of it. They seem
to cover the outlines of a story. They suggest the theatre. So little
is their form all-sufficing that we are tempted to fit each with a
chronicle taken from olden days of knighthood. At last Weber does so
himself--gives us stories for two of his compositions.
And the sonatas of Schubert, what a ruin are they! Moments of hot
inspiration, of matchless beauty; well-nigh hours of fatal indifference
and ignorance. On the other hand, he has left us short pieces which
the publishers must needs call impromptus for lack of any other name;
‘Musical Moments,’ each the full and perfect expression of a single,
swift inspiration. His muse whispers in his ear and before she has
flown away he has written down what she prompted. She makes short
visits, this muse. So much the worse for him if she starts him upon a
sonata. He is soon left with nothing but a pen in his hand.
Weber with his stories, Schubert with his short forms, are the
prototypes of most of the Romantic composers to come. We shall find
everywhere signs of the supremacy of the transient mood. Stories will
be lacking, at least in pianoforte music; but there will be titles,
both vague and specific, labelling the mood so that the music may
exert an added charm. There will be something feverish, something not
entirely healthy in it all. As we shall see, composers will expend
their all in a single page. Yet there will come a warmth and a now sad,
now wild poetry.
The virtuosi, and Weber among them with his showy polaccas and
rondos, speak of the change. They appeal to the general public. They
are sensationalists. The aristocratic amateurs will no longer hold
musicians in dependence. There is a mass of people waking into life.
The crowd makes money, it buys pianos; it will pay to hear a man, or
a woman, perform on the household instrument. It will submit to the
intoxicating, swift fingers, to the display of technique. Not that
the aristocratic amateurs were always less open to such oratorical
persuasion; but the public now holds the money bags, and it will pay
to hear fingers, to see flying arms and streaming hair. Who will care
to hear a man improvise a fugue in five parts? How will they judge
virtue but by virtuosity?
On the other hand, men will begin to write about their art, to defend
their new ideals, to criticize and appreciate the outpourings of each
genius as he comes along, to denounce the virtuosi who have nothing
to show but empty show. A musician holds a place now as a man, a man
of the world and of affairs. He makes a name for himself as a poet, a
critic, a satirist. And on the verge of all this new development stand
Weber and Schubert; the brilliant, witty patriot, the man who spent
his energy that a national opera might be established in the land of
his birth; and the man who had no thoughts but the joy of his art, the
warmth of music, no love but the love of song, the singer of his race
and his companions.
FOOTNOTES:
[31] _Les pianistes célèbres._ 2d edition, Paris, 1878.
CHAPTER VI
MENDELSSOHN, SCHUMANN AND BRAHMS
Influence of musical romanticism on pianoforte
literature--Mendelssohn’s pianoforte music, its merits and
demerits; the ‘Songs without Words’; Prelude and Fugue in
D minor; _Variations Sérieuses_; Mendelssohn’s influence,
Bennett, Henselt--Robert Schumann, ultra-romanticist and
pioneer; peculiarities of his style; miscellaneous series
of piano pieces; the ‘cycles’: _Carnaval_, etc.--The
_Papillons_, _Davidsbündler_, and _Faschingsschwank_;
the Symphonic Études; _Kreisleriana_, etc., the Sonatas,
Fantasy and Concerto--Johannes Brahms; qualities of his
piano music; his style; the sonatas, ‘Paganini Variations,’
‘Handel Variations,’ Capriccios, Rhapsodies, Intermezzi; the
Concertos; conclusion.
The progress of German pianoforte music is consistent and unbroken from
the death of Schubert down to the end of the nineteenth century. All
composers, both great and small, with the exception of a few who would
have had music remain in the forms of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven,
even at the price of stagnation little better than death, submitted
themselves and their art to the influences of the Romantic movement
which had placed so distinct a mark on the music of Weber and Schubert.
We meet with relatively few long works. The best of these are frankly
called Fantasies, claiming little relation to the sonata. Hundreds of
sets of short pieces make their appearance. Rarely have the separate
pieces in a set any conventional or any structural relation. The set
as a whole is given a name, simple and generic, or fantastical. We
meet ‘Songs Without Words,’ ‘Fantasy Pieces,’ ‘Melodies for Piano,’
‘Nocturnes,’ ‘Ballads,’ ‘Novelettes,’ ‘Romances,’ ‘Night Poems,’ ‘Love
Dreams,’ ‘Rhapsodies,’ ‘Diaries,’ and ‘Sketch-books.’ There are Flower,
Fruit, and Thorn pieces, Flying Leaves, Autumn Leaves, and Album
Leaves, even the ‘Walks of a Lonely Man’ and _Nuits Blanches_.
Most of these short pieces conform to one of three types. Either they
are moods in music, in which case they have no distinctive features;
or they are _genre_ pieces, a diluted, watery (usually watery) picture
music; or, by reason of the constant employment of a definite technical
figure, they are _études_ or studies. Most of them are mild and
inoffensive. Few of them show marked originality, genuine fervor or
intensity of feeling. They are evaporations rather than outpourings;
and as such most of them have been blown from memory. A cry against
this vigorous wind of Time, harsh and indiscriminating as in many cases
it may appear to be, is hopeless. Not refinement of style nor careful
workmanship can alone save music from the obliterating cyclone. One
may as well face the fact that only a few men’s moods and reveries are
of interest to the world, that sentimentality must ever dress in a new
fashion to win fresh tears and sighs.
I
The sweetest singer of songs without words was Felix
Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. He sang the sweetest stories ever told. He
was thoroughly prosperous in his day; he was even more than that, he
was admirable and worshipful. The whole of his life reads much like
the accounts of Mozart’s early tours. He was the glass of fashion
and the mold of form in music; not only in pianoforte music, but in
orchestral and vocal music as well. One might continue the quotation,
and remark how the observed of all observers is now quite, quite
down; but one may never say that his music is out of tune and harsh.
Its very mellifluousness is what has condemned it. It is all honey,
without spice. For this reason it has become the fashion now to slight
Mendelssohn, as it once was to revere him.
This is unjust. His pianoforte music is such an easy mark for epigrams
that truth has been sacrificed to wit. There is much in it that is
admirable. Some of it will probably come to life again. Indeed, it has
not all the appearance of death now, choked as it may seem to be in its
own honey. A few of the ‘Songs Without Words,’ the Prelude and Fugue
in E minor, opus 35, some of the short capriccios and the _Variations
sérieuses_ still hold a high place in pianoforte literature.
The mass of his music, however, has fallen into disgrace. This is not
wholly because the world ate too much of it and sickened. One does not
look askance at it as one looks at sweets once immoderately devoured
and henceforth distressful even to the eye. One sees weakness and
defects to which its fate may be attributed.
At the basis lies a monotony. His melodies and harmonies are too
unvaryingly alike. He is a slave to milky mannerisms. The curves of his
melodies are endlessly alike; there is a profusion of feminine endings,
dwellings in commonplaceness, suspensions that have no weight. His
harmonies are seldom poignant. His agitation leads no further in most
cases than the diminished seventh. To this he comes again and again,
as regularly or as inevitably as most Romanticists went to tombstones
for their heroics. The sameness of melody, the threadbare scheme of his
harmonies, these mark a composer with little great creative force.
In the pianoforte music one finds even a lack of ingenuity. He has
nothing to add to the resources of the instrument. He knew himself
to be sterile in pianoforte figures. The ‘Songs without Words’ show
but two or three types of accompaniment, and these are flat and
monotonous. There are the unbroken chords, usually without a trace
of subtlety in line, such as we find in the first, the fifteenth,
the twenty-first, the thirty-seventh, and numerous others. There are
plain chords, usually triads, monotonously repeated, as in the tenth,
twentieth, twenty-second, and thirty-ninth, flat with the melody, or in
syncopation as in the fourteenth and seventeenth. There are the rocking
figures such as one finds in all the ‘Gondola’ songs, in the so-called
‘Spring Song,’ and in the thirty-sixth. Only rarely does he give to
these figures some contrapuntal flexibility, as in the fifth and in the
thirty-fourth, known as the ‘Spinning Song,’ and in the eleventh.
There are many songs which have no running accompaniment, which are in
the simple harmonic style of the hymn tune. These are usually extremely
saccharine. The few measures of preludizing with which they begin are
monotonously alike--an arpeggio or two, as if he were sweeping the
strings of his harp, as in the ninth and the sixteenth. Some, however,
are vigorous and exciting, like the ‘Hunting Song’ (the third), and the
twenty-third, in style of a folk-song.
It is the lack of variety, of ingenuity and surprise which makes the
‘Songs without Words’ so extraordinarily sentimental and inanimate as
a whole, both to the musician and to the pianist. The workmanship is
always flawless, but there is little strain to pull it out of perfect
line. Mendelssohn had considerable skill in picture music. The overture
to ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ and the overture suggested to him by his
visit to Fingal’s Cave are successful in this direction. It is worthy
of note that at least two of the best of the ‘Songs without Words’ are
in the nature of picture music--the so-called ‘Hunting’ and ‘Spinning’
songs. The gondolier songs likewise stand out a little from the rest
in something like active charm. These offer him an external idea to
work on and he brings to his task a very neat and sensitive, though
unvaried, technique.
He had also a gift, rather special, for light and tripping effects.
It does not often show itself in the ‘Songs without Words.’ There is
one in C major, published after his death, which shows him to advantage
in this vein, and the light ‘Spring Song’ has a touch of it. Among his
other pieces the _Rondo Capriccioso_ in E major and the little scherzo
in E minor stand out by virtue of it.
Of the longer pieces we need touch upon only two. These are the Prelude
and Fugue in E minor and the _Variations sérieuses_. The former is the
first of six such works published in 1837 as opus 35. The prelude is
the best part of it. Though here as elsewhere he seems to have no new
or interesting means to set the piano in vibration, though he holds
without change to close arpeggio figures throughout, yet there is a
breadth of style and a sweep which approaches real power of utterance.
The fugue is excellently put together. The theme itself recalls Bach,
for whom, be it mentioned, Mendelssohn had profound and constant
admiration, and whose works his untiring labor resurrected and brought
to public performance. Still it need hardly be added that this fugue
is a work of art, more than of expression. The inversion of the theme
is clever, and there is a certain pompous grandeur in the sound of the
chorale just before the end. The other preludes and fugues in the set
are relatively uninteresting.
The Variations are worthy of study and are by no means lacking in
musical value. The theme itself was happily chosen. There is a
respectable sadness and melancholy in it far more dignified and genuine
than the sentimentalities of the ‘Songs without Words.’ The harmonies
which underlie it are hardly bold enough to dash beyond the diminished
seventh; but a number of chromatic passing notes give the whole
something like poignancy and considerable warmth. Moreover, it suggests
chromatic treatment in the subsequent variations.
The variations themselves are full of change and offer a range of
contrast of which Mendelssohn was not often master. The effect of the
series as a whole is therefore stimulating and rather brilliant.
The first variation adds a counterpoint to the theme in groups of
four sixteenths. The counterpoint in the second is of groups of six
sixteenths. The first two variations thus seem to set the piece
gradually into a free motion, which throughout the next two grows more
vigorous and more nervous. The fifth is typical of Mendelssohnian
agitation; but it serves as an excellent introduction to the chords
of the sixth and seventh. The eighth and ninth work up to a frenzy of
quick motion. Then follow two in a suppressed and quiet style, the
first a little fugue, the second a brief and exquisite _cantilena_.
The twelfth is the most vigorous of the lot, a movement as near the
virtuoso style as Mendelssohn ever was able to produce. The thirteenth
is interesting by reason of the contrast between the legato melody
in the left hand and the excellent staccato counterpoint. A short
adagio, rather superior to most of the songs in a similar style, forms
the fourteenth. The fifteenth is transitional, the sixteenth and
seventeenth merely lead up to the presto at the end. The entire group
presents nothing in the treatment of the piano in advance of Weber, if,
indeed, it anywhere equals him; but it is both in quality and in style
a very fine piece of pianoforte music, which can hardly fall under the
censure to which most of his music for the instrument is open.
There are two concertos and a concert piece for piano and orchestra.
The latter owes its form and style very clearly to Weber’s concert
piece in F minor. Both the concertos are fluent and plausible enough;
the orchestra is handled with Mendelssohn’s customary good taste and
sensitiveness; but the writing for the pianoforte is wholly commonplace
and the themes themselves of little or no distinction.
The ‘Songs without Words’ were published in six groups of six pieces
each during his life. After his death in 1847 two more sets appeared.
The influence of all these was widely felt, particularly among
composers of mediocre gifts. Chopin had no liking for them. In fact,
Mendelssohn’s music was more than ordinarily distasteful to him; and he
is said to have declared that Mendelssohn never wrote anything better
than the first song without words. In some respects this is true.
Schumann had a great admiration for Mendelssohn; admired his orderly
style and manner. But Schumann’s individuality was far too pronounced,
especially in pianoforte predilections, to submit to the milky sway of
Mendelssohn.
In pianoforte music, William Sterndale Bennett (1816-1875) carried on
the Mendelssohn tradition quite undefiled. Bennett was more than a
pupil of Mendelssohn; he was a devoted and unqualified admirer. His
own pianoforte works are numerous, but they have suffered something
of the same malice of Fate that still preserves the ‘Songs without
Words’ chiefly for fun. They include four concertos, and many short
pieces, studies, diversions, impromptus. They have the merits of their
prototypes, clear, faultless writing and melodiousness.
A contemporary of Mendelssohn whose life led him finally to Petrograd,
is still remembered by one or two of his studies. This is Adolf Henselt
(b. 1814-89). Henselt’s work is really independent of Mendelssohn.
His style was founded upon a close acquaintance with Weber’s. In 1836
he gave private recitals in Berlin and was especially prized for
his playing of the Weber sonatas. Two sets of concert studies were
published as opus 2; and in them is the still famous and delightful
_Si oiseau j’étais_. Besides these he composed numbers of Rhapsodies,
Ballades, and other short pieces in the romantic style; all of which
together show distinctly more originality in the treatment of the
piano than Mendelssohn showed.
II
Meanwhile Robert Schumann was composing sets of pieces which have been
and long will be regarded as one of the most precious contributions
of the Romantic movement to pianoforte literature. Schumann was an
enthusiast and an innovator. He was a poet and a warm-hearted critic.
He was the champion of the new and the fresh, of self-expression and
noble sentiment. In his early manhood a strained finger resulted from
over-enthusiastic and unwise efforts to make his hand limber, and cut
short his career as a concert pianist, for which he had given up his
study of the law, not without some opposition. He turned, therefore,
with all fervor to composing music for the pianoforte, and before his
long-delayed marriage with Clara Wieck, daughter of his teacher, had
published the sets of pieces on which a great part of his fame now
rests.
Schumann was steeped in romantic literature, particularly in the works
of Jean Paul Richter and E. T. A. Hoffmann; and most of his works show
the influence of these favorite writers upon him. One finds symbolical
sequences of notes, acrostics in music, expressions of double and even
triple personalities; but these things are of minor importance in his
music. The music itself is remarkably warm and poetic, remarkably
sincere and vigorous whatever the inspiration may have been. It is
happily sufficiently beautiful in itself without explanation of the
cryptograms which oftener than not lie underneath it.
He was, as we have said, an explorer and an innovator by nature; and
his music is full of signs of it. Though his treatment of the piano
lacks the unfailing and unique instinct of Chopin, nevertheless his
compositions opened up a new field of effects. Not all of these
are successful. Experiments with overtones such as one finds, for
instance, at the end of the Paganini piece in the _Carnaval_ can hardly
be said to be worth while. The result is too palpably an isolated
effect and nothing more. It is too self-conscious. But he was of great
significance in expanding the sonority of the instrument, in the use of
the pedal, in the blending of harmonies, in several finer touches of
technique. The combination of two distinct themes in the last movement
of the _Papillons_, the fluent and sonorous use of double notes in the
_Toccata_, the wide skips in the ‛_Arlequin_’ and the ‛_Paganini_’
numbers of the _Carnaval_, the latter with its cross-accents; the
_Reconnaissance_ in the same series, with its repeated notes; the
rolling figures in the first movement of the _Kreisleriana_; these,
among other signs of his originality, are new in pianoforte music.
His compositions demand from the pianist an unlimited and a powerful
technique, yet it cannot be said of any that it is virtuoso music. He
employed his skill not so much to display as to express his ideas.
Nowhere does the pianoforte seem more the instrument of intimate and
highly romantic sentiment. Of figure work and ornamentation there is
very little. His music is not at all dazzling. Much of it is veiled. At
the most he is boisterous, as in parts of the _Faschingsschwank_ and
the last movements of the _Études Symphoniques_. He rather avoids the
high, brilliant registers of the keyboard, stays nearly constantly in
the middle of things, deals in solid stuff, not tracery.
Perhaps the most distinctive feature of his style is his frequent use
of syncopated rhythms. This becomes at times an obsession with him;
and there are many passages in his music so continuously off the beat,
that the original measure is quite lost, and the syncopation is to all
practical purpose without effect. In such passages it seems hardly
possible that Schumann intended the original beat to be kept in mind
by the accentuation of notes that are of secondary importance; unless,
of course, the interest of the music is chiefly rhythmical. Yet in
some passages of purely melodic significance this may be done without
awkwardness, producing an effect of dissociation of melody and harmony
which may be what Schumann heard in his mind.
These are problems for the pianist, but a few of them may be suggested
here. The last movement of the very beautiful concerto is in 3/4 time.
There is no change of time signature for the second theme. This, as
first announced by the orchestra in E major and later taken up by
the piano solo in B major, is none the less in 3/2 time. Such must
be the effect of it, because the passage is long and distinct enough
to force the 3/4 beat out of the mind, since no note falls in such
a way as to accent it. But when the orchestra takes up this theme,
again in E major, the piano contributes a steadily flowing stream of
counterpoint. In this it is possible to bring out the original measure
beat, throwing the whole piano part into a rhythm counter to the rhythm
of the orchestra. Such an accentuation is likewise out of line with the
natural flow of the counterpoint; yet it may be what Schumann desired
here, as well as in the following section, where, though the orchestra
is playing in 3/2 time, the pianist may go against the natural line of
his own part and bring out a measure of three-quarter notes.
The middle section of the second movement of the great Fantasy in C
major presents the same problem. Here we have a melody in long phrases.
The notes of it are off the beat, the chords which furnish its harmony
are _on_ the beat. Every eight measures the natural rhythm asserts
itself; yet even these periodic reminiscences of the measure cannot
serve to throw the whole melody into syncopation. The melody is too
strong and its phrases too long. More than the occasional measures, it
must, if allowed fully to sing, determine the rhythm of the passage.
So it is usually played; so, without special effort to the contrary,
it will impress the ear. Now is it possible that Schumann intended
the accompanying chords to be distinctly accented? Such an accent,
delicately applied, with the skillful use of the pedal, will create a
wholly new effect, which can be drawn from all the succeeding passages
as well.
Other passages offer no alternative. There is no way to suggest the
original beat except by movement of the body, or by grunting; both of
which are properly discountenanced. Examples may be found in the first
movement of the _Faschingsschwank_ and elsewhere.
Most of Schumann’s pianoforte music is made up of short pieces. Such
are the _Papillons_, the _Carnaval_, the _Davidsbündler_ Dances, the
_Faschingsschwank_, the ‘Symphonic Studies,’ and the _Kreisleriana_.
Each of these is a cycle of pieces, and is at best only loosely held
together by one device or another. The _Papillons_ are scenes at a
fancy dress ball. The return of the first piece at the end gives a
definite boundary, as it were, to the whole. The _Faschingsschwank_
are pictures of a fête in Vienna. There is no structural unity to the
work as a whole. The fanciful idea upon which it rests alone holds the
pieces loosely together.
The _Carnaval_, likewise a scene at a fair, representations in music
of various people, sights, and sounds, is built on three series of
notes which Schumann called ‘Sphinxes’ and which he had published
with the music. It is very doubtful whether the employment of these
sequences in one form or another gives to the whole series an organic
interdependence. Only with care can the student himself trace them, in
such varied guises do they appear; and to be left in entire ignorance
of them would hardly interfere in the least with an emotional
appreciation of the music. The return at the end of some of the
movements and passages heard at the beginning, however, rounds off the
work and makes an impression of proportions. Moreover, within the work
many of the pieces lead without pause into the next, or are without an
end at all, like the _Florestan_, which is left fulminating in the air.
In the _Davidsbündler_ there is again the return at the end of familiar
phrases, but the _Kreisleriana_ is like the _Faschingsschwank_ without
structural unity. Yet perhaps none of the Schumann cycles is less
friable than the _Kreisleriana_. It is long and it is varied; but here,
perhaps more than in any other similar works of the composer, there is
a continuous excellence of workmanship and intensity of expression.
Besides these cycles there are sets of short pieces which are
independent of each other. Such are the ‘Fantasy Pieces,’ the
_Novelettes_, the ‘Romances,’ and the _Bunte Blätter_, among others.
These may be fairly compared with the ‘Songs without Words’ of
Mendelssohn. How utterly different they prove to be, how virile and how
genuinely romantic! They are not only the work of a creative genius of
the highest order, they show an ever venturesome spirit at work on the
keyboard. Take, for example, the ‘Fantasy Pieces.’ The first, called
_Des Abends_, is as properly a song as any of Mendelssohn’s short
pieces which are so designated. The very melody is inspired and new,
rising and falling in the long smooth phrases which are the gift of
the great artist, not the mere music-maker. The accompaniment appears
simple enough; but the wide spacing, the interlocking of the hands,
above all, its rhythm, which is not the rhythm of the melody, these are
all signs of fresh life in music. The interweaving of answering phrases
of the melody in the accompaniment figures, the contrast of registers,
the exquisite points of harmonic color which the accompaniment
touches in the short coda, these are signs of the great artist. It
is remarkable how little Mendelssohn’s skill prompted him to such
beautiful involutions; how, master as he was of the technique of sound,
he could amble for ever in the commonplace. And Schumann, with far less
grasp of the science, could venture far, far beyond him.
The second of the ‘Fantasy Pieces,’ _Aufschwung_, calls imperiously
upon the great resources of the pianoforte. There is power and
breadth of style, passion and fancy at work. It is a wholly different
and greater art than Mendelssohn’s. It is effective, it speaks, it
proclaims with the voice of genius. And in the little _Warum?_ which
follows it, skill is used for expression. There is perhaps more
appreciation of the pianoforte in this piece, which by nature is
not pianistic, than there is in all the ‘Songs without Words,’ an
appreciation of the contrasting qualities of high and low sounds, of
the entwining of two melodies, of the suggestive possibilities of
harmony.
Take them piece by piece, the _Grillen_ with its brusque rhythms, its
syncopations, its rapidly changing moods; the _In der Nacht_, with its
agitated accompaniment, its broken melodies, and the soaring melody of
the middle section, not to mention the brief canonic passages which
lead from this section back to the wild first mood; the delicate
_Fabel_, the _Traumes Wirren_ with its fantastic, restless, vaporish
figures and the strange, hushed, shadows of the middle section; and the
_Ende vom Lied_, so full for the most part of good humor and at the end
so soft and mysteriously sad; these are all visions, all prophecies,
all treasure brought back from strange and distant beautiful lands in
which a fervid imagination has been wandering. Into such a land as this
Mendelssohn never ventured, never even glanced. For Schumann it was all
but more real than the earth upon which he trod, such was the force of
his imagination.
The imagination is nowhere more finely used than in the short pieces
called the _Kinderscenen_. Each of these pieces gives proof of
Schumann’s power to become a part, as it were, of the essence of
things, to make himself the thing he thought or even the thing he
saw. They are not picture music, nor wholly program music. They are
more a music of the imagination than of fact. Schumann has himself
become a child in spirit and has expressed in music something of the
unbound rapture of the child’s mind. So, even in a little piece like
the ‘Rocking Horse,’ we have less the picture of the ‘galumphing’
wooden beast, than the ecstasy of the child astride it. In the _Curiose
Geschichte_ there is less of a story than of the reaction of the child
who hears it. In the _Bittendes Kind_ and the _Fürchtenmachen_ this
quality of imagination shows itself with almost unparalleled intensity.
The latter is not the agency of fear, it is the fear itself, suspense,
breathless agitation. The former does not beg a piece of cake; it is
the anguished mood of desire. Only in the last two pieces does Schumann
dissociate himself from the moods which he has been expressing. The
former, if it is not the picture of the child falling asleep, is the
process itself; the latter is, as it were, the poet’s benediction,
tender and heartfelt.
The whole set presents an epitome of that imagination which gave to
Schumann’s music its peculiar, intimate, and absorbing charm. His might
well be considered the most subjective of all pianoforte music. It is
for that reason dull to practice. The separate notes of which it is
composed give little objective satisfaction. The labor of mastering
them routs utterly in most cases the spirit which inspired them. Fine
as the craftsman’s skill may prove to be in many of the pieces, it is
peculiarly without significance, without vitality, until the whole is
set in motion, or set afire by the imagination.
The most imaginative and the most fantastic of the works as a whole
is the series of twenty short pieces which make up the _Carnaval_,
opus 9. Here there is a kaleidoscopic mixture of pictures, characters,
moods, ideas, and personalities; the blazonry of spectacle, the noise
and tumult, the quiet absorption that may come over one in the midst
of such animation, the cool shadows beyond the edge of it wherein
lovers may wander and converse; strange flashes of thought, sudden
darting figures, apparitions and reminiscences. All is presented with
unrelaxing intensity. One cannot pick out a piece from the twenty
which does not show Schumann’s imagination at fever heat. There is a
wealth of symbolism; the Sphinxes, mysterious sequences of notes that
are common to all the pieces, and dancing letters which spell the
birthplace of one of Schumann’s early loves.
As to the Sphinxes it may be said, as before, that the coherence which
they may add can hardly exist outside the mind of the player, or of the
student who has made himself thoroughly familiar with the work. The
average listener may hear the whole work a hundred times, learn to know
it and to love it, without ever realizing that the first intervals of
the _Arlequin_, the _Florestan_, of the _Papillons_ and others are the
same; those of the _Chiarina_, the _Reconnaissances_, and the _Aveux_
likewise, note for note identical. Such hidden relationships in music
are vaguely felt if felt at all. Just as two words spelled the same may
have different meanings, so may two musical phrases made up of the same
intervals be radically different in effect.
The _Carnaval_ opens with a magnificent prelude. The first section
of it suggests trumpeters and banners, the splendid announcement and
regalia of a great fête. After this we are plunged at once into the
whirr of merry-making. Schumann’s cross-accents and syncopations
create a fine confusion; there is hurly-burly and din, a press of
figures, measures of dance, light and tripping, an ever-onward rush,
_animato_, _vivo_, _presto_! There is a splendid effect in the last
section, the _presto_. The measure beat is highly syncopated. It
will be observed that in the first eight measures the first notes of
every other measure, which are in all dance music the strongest, are
single notes. These alone keep up a semblance of order in the rhythm.
By the extension of one measure to four beats, the sequence of notes
is so changed that in the repetition of this first phrase the strong
accent falls upon a full chord, thus greatly re-enforcing the intended
_crescendo_.
The next two numbers in the scene are pictures of two figures common
to nearly every fair, the Pierrot and the Harlequin. The distinction
between them is exquisite. In Pierrot we have the clown, now
mock-mournful and pathetic, only to change in a second and startle with
some abrupt antic. Harlequin, on the other hand, is nimble and quick,
full of hops and leaps. At the end of the _Pierrot_, by the way, there
is the chance to experiment with the pedal in overtones. The sharp
_fortissimo_ dominant seventh, just before the end, will set the notes
of the following chord, all but the fundamental E-flat, in vibration
if the pedal is pressed down; so that the keys of this second chord
need hardly to be struck but only to be pressed. And when the pedal is
lifted, this second chord will be left still sounding, by reason of the
sympathetic vibration which was set about in its strings by the loud
chord preceding.
Pierrot and Arlequin are professional functionaries at the fair.
We are next introduced to a few of the visitors. There is a _Valse
noble_ and then _Eusebius_. Schumann imagined within himself at least
three distinct personalities of which two often play a rôle in his
music. One is active and assertive. He is Florestan. The other is
Eusebius, reflective and dreamy. Here, then, is Eusebius at the fair,
wrapped about in a mantle of gentle musing. His page of music in the
_Carnaval_ is one of the loveliest Schumann ever wrote. Elsewhere,
too, the contemplative young fellow speaks always in gentlest and most
appealing tones; as in the second, seventh, and fourteenth of the
_Davidsbündler_ Dances, all three of which are subscribed with a letter
E.
In the _Carnaval_, as in the Dances, Florestan breaks roughly into
the meditations of Eusebius. He works himself into a very whirlwind
of energy; and then Schumann, by a delicious sense of humor, lets
the artful _Coquette_ slide into his eye and put an end to his
vociferations. To her there is no reply but the gentle, short
_Replique_. Are the _Papillons_ which follow masqueraders? The horn
figures of the accompaniment bring in a new group to the fair, fresh
from the outer world. They are gone in a flash, and their place is
taken by three dancing letters, ‛_As_,’ C, and H; _As_ being German for
A-flat, and H for B. And these letters spell the birthplace, as we have
said, of one of Schumann’s early loves.
The love of his whole life follows--_Chiarina_, his beloved Clara;
and, as if with her were associated the loveliest and most poetic of
pianoforte music, he calls Chopin to mind. Chopin at this fair! It is a
fantastic touch. More than when Eusebius speaks, the background of gay
dancers and masqueraders fades from sight. For a moment Chopin is in
our midst. Then he has vanished. And at once another thought of Clara,
this time as _Estrella_; then an acquaintance in the throng. He has
seen a face he knew, it is a friend. It is the Sphinx of _Chiarina_ in
the music. Is it she he recognized? Are the lovely interchanges in the
middle section conversations with her? If so, their mood is light. They
have met at a fair. They are in the merry-making.
Two more professionals, masquers this time--the world-favorites,
_Pantalon_ and _Colombine_; and at the end of their piece an exquisite
thought of Schumann’s. Then the German waltz, simplicity itself; and
in the midst of it none other than the wizard, _Paganini_! Surely,
there was never a stranger trick of thought than that which thus placed
Paganini in the midst of a simple, tender German waltz. He vanishes in
a puff of smoke, as conjured devils are supposed to do; and the waltz
goes on, as if all this intermission had been but a flash in the air
above the heads of dancers too absorbed in their pastime to note such
infernal phenomena.
After the waltz, a lover’s confession, hesitating but enraptured;
and then a _Promenade_. There is full feeling, there is delight and
ecstasy. Our lover whirls his maiden from the fair. Farther and farther
they go, hand in hand, into the shadowy, calm night. Fainter and
fainter the sounds of revelry, till all is silence.
There is a pause. The lovers are dispatched. Away with dreaming, away
with sentiment! Back into the hurly-burly and the din. Here comes the
band of David down the plaisance, hats in air, banners flying, loudly
cheering. These are the sons of the new music. These are the champions
of the new era of freedom, these the singers of young blood. More and
more reckless, madder and more gay! Spread consternation abroad among
the Philistines, put the learned doctors to rout, send them flying with
their stale old tunes and laws! So the _Carnaval_ ends, with the flight
of the old and dusty, and the triumph of the enthusiasm of youth.
Here is a phantasmagoria unmatched elsewhere in music. It is very
long. It is too long; and, judged as a whole, the work suffers in
consequence. It is overcrowded with figures, too full of symbolism; and
the ear tires, the attention wearies. Yet there is not a piece in it
which one would be willing to discard. All are beautiful and new and
full of life. Many present something peculiar to Schumann, the fruit
of his imagination, which is in advance of most of the music of his
time. It must occupy an important place in the history of pianoforte
music, as representing one of the finest accomplishments directly due
to the influence of the Romantic movement.
III
The other cycles of Schumann comparable to it are the _Papillons_,
opus 2, the _Davidsbündler Tänze_, opus 6, and the _Faschingsschwank
aus Wien_, opus 26. The first of these is short and slight, but
of singularly faultless workmanship and rare charm. The last must
be cherished for the _Romanza_, the _Scherzo_, and the splendid
_Intermezzo_; but the first movement is rather out of proportion, and
parts of the last are perfunctory and uninteresting.
Most of the Dances of the _Davidsbündler_ are beautiful. The series
is, however, much too long and too loose to be regarded as a whole.
There are passages of unsuccessful workmanship, notably in the third;
some of the dances are rambling, some rather commonplace. On the other
hand, many may be ranked among the best of Schumann’s compositions.
The second, seventh, and fourteenth have been mentioned as among the
beautiful utterances of Eusebius; the fifth is less distinguished but
is delightful pianoforte music. Florestan does not make quite such a
good impression, except possibly in the fourth and the twelfth. The
fifteenth speaks for both Florestan and Eusebius; and the E-flat major
section is splendidly rich and full-throated music. The last dance of
all is like a happy, wayward elf waltzing along in the wake of more
substantial dancers. The series may properly end with the seventeenth;
but, as Schumann said, though Eusebius knew well that the eighteenth
was quite superfluous, yet one could see by his eyes that he was
blissful over it.[32]
Both the ‘Symphonic Studies’ and the _Kreisleriana_ stand apart from
the works previously discussed. The former, opus 13, was written in
1834, the latter, opus 16, in 1838. A brief glance at opus 1, the
‘Abegg’ variations, written in 1830, will serve to make clear the
immense progress Schumann made in the art of composition in the brief
space of four years. The early work is by no means lacking in interest.
Schumann reveals himself in nearly every page. The theme itself is
made up of the notes a, b, e, g, g, spelling the name of the honorable
lady to whom the variations were dedicated. In the middle of the last
movement he experiments with a new style of diminuendo, allowing a
chord to die away by separate notes, till only one note of it is left
sounding. He tried the same effect again at the end of the _Papillons_.
But the workmanship, though clever, is for the most part conventional.
The statement of the theme is laughably simple, particularly the
‘echoes,’ _pianissimo_, in broken octaves. Such a device recalls the
‘Maiden’s Prayer’ and fountain curls. The variations show a fine ear
for pianoforte effects. The first especially is in virtuoso style and
makes more use of the upper registers of the keyboard than is common
in the later works. But the harmonies, though richly altered, are
conventional, and so are the figures. The third, fourth, and fifth
might have been written by Hummel.
The ‘Symphonic Études’ are immeasurably broader and more original.
They are written as variations; but Schumann confines himself very
little to the conventional scheme; and the third and ninth are not
variations at all, but études made up of wholly extraneous ideas. The
theme itself is dignified and rich, and its statement in the sonorous
middle registers of the piano is impressive. In the first measures of
the first variation there is little or no suggestion of the theme save
in harmony. The opening phrase is given low down, repeated in higher
registers, till the music has climbed nearly four octaves; at which
point a phrase of the theme makes its appearance. Toward the end of the
variation the same phrase is heard again; but the whole is distinctly
dominated by the figure announced in the first measure.
In the second variation the theme is carried throughout in the bass;
but a beautiful new melody is imposed upon it which carries the burden
of the music. The third of the series is unrelated to the theme except
in key. It is a study in light, wide, staccato figures for the right
hand; under which the left hand carries a suave and expressive melody.
In the next movement, the theme is treated consistently as a canon at
the octave. The next is at once a study in a capricious dotted rhythm
and a subtle variation of the theme. And in the following, the sixth,
the theme is wholly prominent in both hands, the left anticipating the
right by the fraction of a beat. The seventh is a magnificent study
for the movement of the arm from one group of notes to another. It
is in E major, and the theme makes but an occasional and fragmentary
appearance. The eighth is a study in sharp cross-accents, the theme
again wholly concealed, except for its harmonies; the ninth a study
in double notes and octaves for the wrist. The tenth, eleventh, and
twelfth are high-water marks in Schumann’s treatment of the pianoforte,
both in brilliant and poetic effects. Particularly worthy of study are
the accompaniment figure in the latter, with its rich shimmering of
harmony, and the skillful interweaving of two melodies in the fashion
not long before employed in the short _Warum?_. The finale, which,
with the repeats Schumann incorporated into it, is far too long,
practically exhausts the power of the piano in big chordal effects.
There is but little trace of the composer of the Abegg variations in
these imposing and wholly beautiful studies. Schumann shows himself
in them such a master of the pianoforte as has no need to display
his wares, but may let their intrinsic richness and splendor speak
for them. Only in the last of them does he lay himself open to the
criticism of having treated the piano in a style too nearly orchestral,
which expects from the instrument a little more than it can furnish.
Elsewhere in the series the very spirit of the piano speaks, a noble
and moving language, full of imagery and of color. The obvious virtuoso
trappings of Weber are left far behind. We are on one of the great
heights of pianoforte literature.
Schumann considered the _Kreisleriana_ to be his best work for the
piano alone. It was inspired by the character of Johannes Kreisler,
an eccentric, highly gifted kapellmeister who figured in the tales
and musical papers of E. T. A. Hoffmann.[33] Just what it means few
will venture to suggest. The last movement may recall the account of
the last appearance of Kreisler on this earth, as he was seen hopping
along the road beyond the town, with a red hat on the side of his head
and a wooden sword by his side. Dr. Oskar Bie quotes from Hoffmann in
connection with the second movement, the tale of the young girl who was
lured to a magic oak by the sound of a lute, and there killed; whose
heart grew into a twining rose-bush.[34] In the main, however, the
music eludes analysis. It is eccentric. Though full of the mannerisms
of Schumann, much of it presents an unfamiliar mood of the composer.
The moods of it are different from the moods of the ‘Carnival,’ the
‘Symphonic Études,’ the ‘Fantasy,’ the ‘Scenes of Childhood.’ On the
whole, it lacks the warmth of his other works. It is fantastic, and not
unfrequently grotesque; parts of it strangely deliberate. Many pages of
it are out of the usual and consequently baffling. It is more involved,
too, in workmanship, and the separate movements full of contrasts that
seem to be vagaries. Schumann has, of course, here as elsewhere put
himself into the person of his inspiration; and the result is a tribute
to the power of his imagination. Never was music more fantastic, less
consequential.
It is, on the other hand, superb. The opening movement alone, with
its figures like short waves in a windy sea, its sharp cross-accents,
its filmy, elusive trio, is a masterpiece. The second movement is
unbalanced, yet at times most wondrously beautiful. The opening theme
in itself is inspired, though it is perhaps overworked. But what is the
meaning of the harsh chords which interrupt it and shatter the mood
which it might else instill? The style is polyphonic in places; there
are inner melodies that slide long distances up and down the keyboard,
oftenest in tenths. The two intermezzi furnish a welcome contrast
to the intense subjectivity of most of this second movement. After
the second there comes one of the loveliest pages in all Schumann’s
pianoforte music.
The third movement is built on a restless, jerky figure, in ceaseless
movement. There are strong accents and unusual harmonies. A middle
section offers yet another happy instance of Schumann’s skill in
dialogue between two melodies, such as we have already noticed in
_Warum?_ and the eleventh of the ‘Symphonic Études.’ The movement is
somewhat slower than the main body of the piece, but a strange sort
of half-accompaniment does not allow the restlessness to subside
altogether.
The fourth and sixth movements are slow. In both there is some
thickness of scoring, a sinking too deep into the lower registers.
Both are about the same length and both are constructed on the same
plan; consisting of an incompleted, or broken, melody of the most
intimately expressive character, a few measures of recitative, the
melodious phrases again--in the one wandering down alone into the bass,
disappearing rather than ending, in the other not completing itself,
but developing into a contrasting section. In both there are these
contrasting sections of more articulate and more animated music; and in
both there is a return of the opening melody. There is wonderful music
in these two short movements; but it is mysterious, fragmentary and
incomplete, visionary, as it were, and without definite line.
The remaining movements escape language. The fifth is full of changing
moods; the seventh more than the others, consistent, this time in
a vein of something like fury. The eighth and last is delicate and
whimsical. The right hand keeps to a light, hopping figure most of
the time; the left hand has little more than long single notes, which
pursue a course of their own, without regular rhythm.
There is a lack of titles, there is no motto, there is even no mark
of Florestan and Eusebius. This most whimsical, most subjective,
and, in many ways, most beautiful and most complicated of Schumann’s
creations, stands before us, then, with no clue to its meaning
except its title. This, as we have said, refers us to a half-crazy,
fantastical musician. There is more in the music than lunacy, full
of vagaries as it is. There is much poetry, a clearness and sanity
in diction, inconsequential as the thought may be, a mastery of the
science of music. Yet it is not surprising if some, bearing in mind
the preternatural activity of Schumann’s imagination even in early
manhood, and the breaking-down of his mind toward the end of his life,
will hear in this music a note of something more tragic than whimsical
fancies, will feel that Schumann has strayed perilously far afield from
the world of orderly nature and warm blood.
A few short pieces that Schumann published, like the _Novelletten_,
are not held together in a cycle. In these the humor is prevailingly
happy and active, the workmanship clear, and the form well-balanced.
Fine as they are, in listening to them separately one misses something
of Schumann. The man was a dreamer. He sank himself deep into moods.
He lived in complete worlds, created by his fancy. A single piece like
one of the ‘Novelettes’ hardly initiates the listener into these wide
domains. Fully to put ourselves in touch with Schumann we must wander
with him, and in the course of our wandering, drift farther and farther
into his land of phantoms.
Four works in broad form must be reckoned among his greatest
compositions. These are two sonatas: one in F-sharp minor, opus 11,
one in G minor, opus 22; the great ‘Fantasy’ in C major, opus 17; and
the concerto for pianoforte and orchestra in A minor, opus 54. It is
hard to estimate the worth of the sonatas. That in F-sharp minor is
rambling in structure, and too long; yet there are pages of splendid
music in it. The introduction is full of a noble passion and strength;
the first theme of the first movement has a vitality which, better
ordered, would have made of the whole movement a great masterpiece; and
the second theme is undeniably beautiful. But transitional sections
and the development are monotonous and too little restrained. The
second movement, making fuller use of the themes hinted at in the
introduction, is wholly satisfying; the scherzo, likewise, with its
grotesque Intermezzo and mock-heroic recitatives. But in the last
movement again there is far too much music, far too little art; and,
despite the healthy vigor of the chief theme, the piece staggers rather
than walks.
The sonata in G minor is more concise, is, indeed, perfect and
clear-cut in form. All of it is lovely, particularly so the _Andantino_
and the _Rondo_. There is perhaps too much restlessness in the first
movement and, consequently, too little variety. It is all flame and no
embers.
The Fantasy is colossal. It is said that Schumann intended the first
movement to represent ruins, the second a triumphal arch, the last a
starry crown. Subsequently he changed his intention; but something of
these original characteristics still remains. The first movement is a
strange mixture of stark power, tenderness, and romantic legend. It
is not hard to find in it the groundwork of the triplex form. There
is a first theme, the dominant theme of the movement, strangely gaunt
and bare; and a contrasting theme beautifully melodious which Schumann
associated with his beloved Clara. These two themes are presented
fairly regularly in the first section of the movement; and the last
section brings them back again, as in the triplex form. But there is a
broad middle section, in legendary character, which presents a wealth
of different material, some of which has been freely used between the
first and second themes in the first section. The whole is greatly
expanded, full of pauses, passages of unrestrained modulation. The
effect is truly magnificent.
The second movement exceeds the finale of the ‘Symphonic Études’ in
triumphant vigor. The last movement is long, richly scored, exalted in
sentiment. The endings of the three movements, especially of the first
and last, are inspired, wholly without trace of the commonplace. It is
one of the truly big works for the piano, lacking perhaps in subtlety
and refinement of technique, sometimes a little awkward and out of
proportion, but full of such a richness of harmony and melody, of such
passion, strength, and romance, of such poetry and inspiration, as to
defy criticism. It is, as we have said, colossal.
The concerto stands as a flawless masterpiece. The themes are inspired.
There is no trace of sentimentality or morbidness. The form is ruled
by an unerring and fine sense of proportion and line. It is neither
too long nor too short. There is no awkwardness, no tentativeness, no
striving for effect. No note is unwisely placed. The treatment of both
pianoforte and orchestra leaves nothing to be desired, either when
the one is set against the other or when both are intimately blended.
Though it in no way suggests the virtuoso, it is perfectly suited to
the piano, bringing out unfailingly the very best the instrument is
capable of. Thus it stands unique among Schumann’s compositions. There
must be many to whom it stands for an ideal realized. To them it will
be unique among concertos, the most excellent, the perfect type.
With this masterpiece we may take leave of Robert Schumann, for whom
most pianists will ever have a special love. The first movement was
composed in 1841, the Intermezzo and Finale in 1845, all after his
marriage in the fall of 1840. After this happy termination to long and
troubled years, his attention turned to other branches of music, to
songs, to oratorios and symphonies; and, though he never forsook the
piano entirely, the best of his work for it, with few exceptions, was
left behind him. The ten years between 1830 and 1840 saw its creation.
In this relatively brief period all the works we have mentioned, except
the concerto, were composed. They were the flower of his early manhood,
and they bear witness in every page to the romantic eagerness and fire
of youth. In many a measure they show a lack of skill, an excess of
zeal, an over-reaching that is awkward; but what are these in the
fire of his poetic imagination? The spirit of Schumann rises far, far
above them, one of the most ardent, soaring spirits that ever sought
expression in music. It was destined to fall back, ruined, charred, and
blackened by its own fire; but happily we have left to us in pianoforte
music its song at the height of its flight.
IV
The only worthy successor to Schumann in the realm of German pianoforte
music is Johannes Brahms. Into the hands of Brahms Schumann may be
said to have given over the standard which he had carried so staunchly
forward. In September, 1853, Brahms came with a letter from the great
violinist Joachim, to visit Schumann and his family at Düsseldorf on
the Rhine. He was at that time little over twenty years of age, but
he brought with him two sonatas for the piano and a set of songs, in
which Schumann at once recognized the touch of great genius. There
followed the now famous article in Schumann’s paper, to which he had
lately contributed little or nothing at all; an article hailing the
advent of the successor of Beethoven, the man fit to carry German music
yet another stage forward on its way. This prophecy roused skeptical
opposition, made enemies for Brahms, reacted upon the young man
himself, perhaps not wholly for the best. He found himself put into a
place before he was free to choose it; and a strain of obstinacy in the
man kept him there for the rest of his life, almost like a pillar of
stone in the midst of a tumultuous river.
He was a man of powerful intellect and deep emotions, exceptional
among composers in technical mastery of his art, of iron will. He
was conservative, perhaps more by choice than by nature. All this is
inevitably reflected in his music; which, therefore, speaks a
language very different for the most part from Schumann’s. Schumann was
open, enthusiastic, and free; Brahms was suspicious, outwardly hard and
despotic. Schumann’s fancies were brilliantly colored, his music full
of spontaneous warmth; Brahms inclined more and more to be gloomy and
taciturn, his music came forth in sober colors.
[Illustration]
Johannes Brahms on his way to the ‘Red Porcupine’.
_Silhouette (contemporary) by Dr. Otto Böhler._
But Brahms’ pianoforte music is still none the less romantic music.
By far the great part of his works for pianoforte are short pieces,
expressive of a mood. Few have the intensity of Schumann’s; there are
but one or two descriptive titles, no bindings together in a round of
fantastic thought. The enthusiasm of the younger romantics has cooled.
Reason has come with calm step. Yet the quality of these short pieces
is intensely romantic, suggestive of the north, of northern legends,
of moorlands and the sea. There is not a whirr of many persons from
strange lands, of sad and gay personalities, of Pierrot and Harlequin;
the music is of lonely and wide places. It is, moreover, essentially
masculine music. If it seems to wander into the life of towns, it
seeks out groups of men. There is little feminine tenderness. There
is little of sentiment in the pianoforte music, such as we associate
with the romance of love. It has more of the heroic quality. It all
demands profound thought and study; partly because of its intellectual
complexity, partly because of its lack of superficial charm. One must
make oneself familiar with it; one must learn its peculiar idiom; one
must go far beneath the surface.
There is little to be said of it in words. The moods it expresses and
the moods which it conveys are not of the kind that seek a quick and
enraptured utterance. It is impersonal; it suggests the nature of
sea and space, not human nature. Thus, though we can throw ourselves
with delight into the music of Schumann and come forth from it with a
thousand pictures and fancies in our minds, from the music of Brahms
we more often come away thoughtful and silent.
Brahms’ style is very distinct. His pianoforte music calls for a
special technique, quite outside the ordinary. Nothing of the style
of Chopin or Liszt is evident, even in a work like the Paganini
variations, which is essentially virtuoso music. These peculiarities
are already evident in the first two sonatas, the works in which
Schumann saw such great promise. The sonatas are worth study, not only
from the historical point of view, but as unusual and beautiful music.
There are three sonatas, the first in C major, opus 1; the second in
F-sharp minor, opus 2; the third in F minor, opus 5. The Scherzo in
E-flat minor, opus 4, belongs to the same period. In the very first
Brahms reveals himself; by the bare statement of the first part of the
second theme; by the double thirds of the second part which conceal the
sixths of which he was so fond; by the strangely hollow effect of the
chromatic scale, not long before the end of the first section, with
the sustained A below and the thin spacing of the whole; by the wide
accompaniment figures at the end of the first movement. The octaves
and sixths at the beginning of the Scherzo, the hollowness later on
in the movement, the extraordinary distance between the hands in the
thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh measures of the second part, these are
characteristic of Brahms’ way of writing for the pianoforte. The trio
of this Scherzo, by the way, might alone have accounted for Schumann’s
enthusiasm. The broad sweep of its melody, the intense harmonies, the
magnificent climax, have the unmistakable ring of great genius. At the
end of it may be noted a procedure Brahms often employed: the gradual
cessation of the movement of the music by changing the value of the
notes, more than by retard. The last movement is splendidly vigorous.
The chief theme may have been taken from the theme of the first
movement. It gallops on over mountain and hill, full of exultation
and sheer physical spirits. The coda is a very whirlwind. Brahms
told Albert Dietrich that he had the Scotch song ‘My Heart’s in the
Highlands’ in his head while he was writing this finale; and the spirit
of the song is there.
The second sonata is as a whole less interesting than the first. The
first theme is not particularly well suited to the sonata form; there
is a great deal of conventionality about the passages which follow
it. Yet the transitional passage is interesting, and the deep, bass
phrases, so isolated from their high counterpoint, are very typical.
One theme serves for andante and Scherzo. In the latter movement the
trio is especially beautiful. It might easily be mistaken for Schubert.
The third sonata shows a great advance over the first and second. The
passage beginning in the eighth measure of the first movement is in
a favorite rhythmical style of Brahms. The right hand is playing in
3/4 time, the left hand seems to be rather in 2/4. This is because
the figure of which it consists proceeds independently of the measure
beat. So later on one finds groups of six notes in 3/4 time arranged
very frequently in figures of three notes. In fact, the mixture of
double and triple rhythm is a favorite device of Brahms throughout all
his work. Two of the Paganini Variations are distinctly studies in
this rhythmical complexity--the fifth in the first set, the seventh in
the second set, in both cases the complexity being made all the more
confusing by odd phrasing.
The _Andante_, especially the last part of it, and the _Scherzo_ of the
third sonata are among the most beautiful of Brahms’ compositions. What
the sonatas chiefly lack is not ideas nor skill to handle them, but
success in many parts in the treatment of the instrument. The scoring
is often far too thin. No relaxation is offered by passages of any
sensuous charm. One follows with the mind an ingenious contrapuntal
working-out that sounds itself empty, or leads to hollow spaces.
Except in the last movement of the second concerto, Brahms showed
himself unwilling to make use of those subtle and delicate figures
which succeed in giving to pianoforte music a certain warmth and
blending of color. There is little or no passage work in his music.
The Alberti bass which Schumann and Chopin varied and expanded, he
intellectualized more and more, till it lost all semblance to the
serviceable original and took on almost a polyphonic significance.
There is an attendant sacrifice of delicacy for which only the nobility
and strength of his ideas offer some recompense.
The Ballades, opus 10, for example, tread heavily on the keyboard. The
first B major section of the second, with its appoggiaturas, its widely
separated outer parts now in contrary motion, now moving together, and
the mysterious single long notes between them, is marred by the low,
thick registration of the whole. There is a similar thickness in the
second section of the last ballade; an opposite thinness in the middle
section of the little intermezzo. Yet it would be hard to find more
romantic music than these Ballades, anything more grim and awful than
the first, more legendary in character than the second, more gloomily
sad than the last. There is a touch of sun in the first melody of the
second. Elsewhere we are in a gray twilight.
‘The sedge has withered from the lake
And no birds sing.’
After all, a delicate warmth, a subtle grace of movement are not in
place in such music. The style is fitting to the thought.
The variations on a theme of Paganini are, on the other hand,
remarkably brilliant as a whole. They show the uttermost limits of the
Brahms pianoforte technique and style, and are, of course, extremely
difficult. The first two are studies in thirds and sixths, and in
the second especially the upper registers of the piano are used with
striking effect. In the fourth there are brilliant trills over wide
figures in violin style. The eighth in the second set is in imitation
of the passages in harmonies in the Paganini _Caprice_ from which
the theme is taken. Particularly effective on the pianoforte are
the eleventh and thirteenth in the first set, the former with its
shadowy overtonesin the right hand, the latter with the sparkling
_glissando_ octaves. The twelfth in this set is like others that have
been mentioned, a study in complex rhythms, but is remarkably clear
and bell-like in sound as well. The sixth, ninth, and tenth are less
effective and less interesting. The second, fourth, and twelfth in the
second set are conspicuous for a less scintillating but more expressive
beauty. The sets as a whole are more in the style of Paganini than
the études of Schumann and Liszt, which owe their being to the same
source. There is more of wizardry in them, more variety and more that
is wholly unusual. They give proof of enormous thought and ingenuity
applied to the task of producing effects from the piano that have the
quality of eeriness, which, in the playing of Paganini, suggested to
the superstitious the coöperation of infernal powers.
In the ‘Variations on a Theme of Handel,’ opus 24, the same powerful
intellect may be seen at work in more orthodox efforts. The results are
often of more scientific than musical interest. The set is extremely
long in performance, and the cumbersome fugue at the end is hardly
welcome. Some of the movements are heavily or thickly scored, like
the mournful thirteenth and the twentieth. Others are intellectual or
uninspired, like the sixth and the ninth. But others, like the second,
the fifth, the eleventh, and the nineteenth, are truly beautiful, and
many are brilliant or vivacious.
There are three earlier sets of variations, opus 9, opus 21, Nos. 1
and 2, which are small beside the two later sets just discussed. As far
as pianoforte music is concerned, the variations on a theme of Handel,
and the subsequent variations on a theme of Paganini, represent the
culmination of Brahms’ conscious technical development, the one in
the direction of intellectual mastery, the other in the direction of
keyboard effects. Behind them lie the sonatas, the scherzo, and the
ballades, all in a measure inspired, yet all likewise tentative. After
them come numerous sets of short pieces which constitute one of the
most beautiful and one of the perfect contributions to pianoforte music.
These sets are opus 76, Nos. 1 and 2; the two Rhapsodies, opus 79,
and the last works for the instrument, opus 117, opus 118, and opus
119. There are few pieces among them which are unworthy of the highest
genius matched with consummate mastery of the science of music. The two
earlier collections, opus 76 and 79, differ from the later in something
the same way that Beethoven’s opus 57 differs from his opus 110. They
are impassioned, fully scored, dramatic, and warm. The two Capriccios,
Nos. 1 and 5 in opus 76, are distinguished from his other pieces by a
fiery agitation. The keys of F-sharp minor and C-sharp minor on the
pianoforte lend themselves to intense and restless expression. In the
former of these two pieces more is suggested than fully revealed.
The introduction, beginning in deep and ominous gloom, mounts up like
waves tossed high in a storm. But the rush of the great C-sharps up
from the depths is broken, as it were, upon the sharpest dissonance;
the storm dies away suddenly, and over the wild confusion, now
suppressed, a voice sings out a sad yet impassioned melody. This melody
dominates the piece. The wild introduction returns in the middle part,
but only to be suppressed once more.
The second of these Capriccios, No. 5, is more varied, more agitated,
yet perhaps less intense. There is an almost constant complexity of
rhythm, uniquely typical of Brahms, the combination of two with three
beats; and at the end most complicated syncopations, the left hand, by
reason of definite phrasing, seeming to play nearly four measures in
5/8 time. The Capriccio No. 8 and the Intermezzo No. 6 are similarly
involved. The scoring of both is rich and full; and, though neither
is agitated in mood, both have a quality of intensity. The Capriccio
in B minor in the first set is justly a favorite with pianist and
concert-goer alike. The two intermezzi which follow it are rather in
the later style, and the former is conspicuous in Brahms’ music by a
light grace. Even here, however, the composer cannot give himself over
utterly to airy fancy. There are measures of involved workmanship and
profound meaning.
The two ‘Rhapsodies,’ opus 79, are among the best known of Brahms’
pianoforte works. Both are involved and difficult; but the form and
the ideas are broad and consequently more easily grasped than in the
shorter pieces. Moreover, they are frankly vigorous and passionate;
and the B major section of the former, with its bell-like effects, and
the broad middle section of the latter, like the gallop of a regiment
across the steppes, are relatively conventional.
In most of the pieces of the three last sets there is a touch
of mysticism, often of asceticism. The style is transparent; the
accompaniments, if one may speak of accompaniment in music that is so
polyphonic, are lightly touched upon, barely sketched. They have no
fixed line, but seem like flowing draperies about a figure in free,
calm movement. Witness particularly the second piece in opus 117 and
the sixth in opus 118. The latter is surely one of the most romantic of
all Brahms’ pieces. Does it speak of some ancient ruin in the northern
twilight? Is it some vision in a bleak, windswept place? Is not the
opening phrase like the voice of the spirit of Time and Mortality? How
the winds sweep it up, how it echoes and reëchoes through the night.
And there comes a strain of martial music. The splendors that were
rise like mist out of the ground. The shades of strong heroes pass by.
Through the vision still rings the inexorable cry, till the spirits
have vanished and the wind once more blows over a deserted place. It is
all a strange, wailing invocation to the past.
All are unusual music, all masterpieces. There is the utmost skill,
as in the canonic figures in the first intermezzo of opus 117, in the
middle section of opus 118, No. 2, and all through opus 118, No. 4.
There is a legendary quality in both opus 117, No. 1, and opus 117,
No. 3. In the latter the A major section is extraordinarily beautiful
and without a parallel in music. The last set is perhaps as a whole
the most remarkable. There are three intermezzos and one rhapsody. In
many measures of the first intermezzo the harmonies seem to unfold from
a single note, to be shed downward like light from a star. The music
drifts to a melody full of human yearning, rises again in floating
harmonies, drifts slowly downward, too heavy with sadness. In the
second and third the mood is happier, cool in the second, smiling
in the third. The final rhapsody is without a trace of sentiment,
healthy, sane, and enormously vigorous. Something stands in the way
of its effectiveness, however. It is coldly triumphant. If there is
any phase in human feeling which is wholly strange to music, it is
the sense of perfect physical condition, entailing an unruffled mind
and the flawless working of the muscles, without excess, with only
the enthusiasm of physical well-being, and this entirely equable. The
rhapsody in E-flat, opus 119, No. 4, is thus normal.
The features of Brahms’ style are clearly marked. There are the wide
spacing of accompaniment figures demanding a large hand and the free
movement of the arm, the complicated rhythms, the frequent use of
octaves with the sixth included, the generally deliberate treatment
of material, the employment of low and high registers at once with
little or nothing between, the lack of passage work to relieve the
usual sombre coloring. The enthusiast will have little difficulty in
imitating him. Yet it is doubtful if Brahms will have a successor in
pianoforte music. What makes his work tolerable is the greatness of his
ideas, and this greatness makes them sublime. His procedures in the
employment of another will be cold and dull. It is safer to imitate the
virtuoso style of Liszt, for that has an intrinsic charm.
There are two concertos, one in D minor, opus 15, and one in B-flat
major, opus 83. Brahms performed the first himself in Leipzig and was
actually hissed from the stage. Yet it is a very great work, one of
the few great concertos written for the pianoforte. A certain gloomy
seriousness in the character of the themes stands in the way of its
popular acceptance, and there are passages, notably in the middle
movement, the ungainliness of which not even the most impassioned fancy
or the deepest seriousness can disguise. The second concerto is longer
and more brilliant. This, too, must be ranked with the earlier one,
as one of the few great concertos, but chiefly by reason of the noble
quality of the ideas, the mastery of art and form. Brahms’ treatment of
the piano is nowhere conventionally pianistic. This second concerto is
more than exceedingly difficult; but those qualities in the instrument
which add a variety of color and light to the ensemble are for the
most part not revealed in it. There is consequently a monotony that
in so long a work is likely to prove tedious. A few figures and a few
effects are peculiar to the pianoforte. These should rightfully be
brought into prominence in a concerto. Mozart, Beethoven, and Schumann
were able to do this, not in the least subtracting from the genuine
value of their work, but rather adding to it. Brahms was less able to
combine beauty and conventionality. Yet such a passage as the return
to the first theme in the first movement of the second concerto shows
a great appreciation of color; and there is a grandeur and dignity in
both concertos, a wealth of romance in the first and of vitality in the
second, as well, in the presence of which criticism may well be silent.
It is a long way in music from the simple _Moments musicals_ of
Schubert to the B minor and E-flat minor _Intermezzi_ of Brahms.
One sings of the dawn of the new era of enthusiasm, one is of the
twilight at the end. Midway, in the full flush of noonday, stands
Schumann. Yet all are manifestations of the same growth. In the
department of pianoforte music Brahms is of the romantic. It is not
only that his best work was in short pieces; it is the nature of these
pieces themselves. They are the sound in music of moods, they are
fantastical and lyrical. Furthermore, more than the music of Schubert
or Schumann, Brahms is national; not so much German as northern.
Strains of Hungarian melodies and echoes of Schubert are not sufficient
to dispel the gloom which is characteristic of his race. He speaks
a profound language that will claim universal attention, but it is
unmistakably colored and thoroughly permeated with the ideals and the
imaginings of a northern, seacoast people. It has not the perennial
warmth of Schubert and Schumann. There are no quick-changing moods, no
interchanges of smiles and tears, no flashes of merriment and wit. It
is cold, it is still and serious. And who will say that it is not the
more romantic for being so? Deep underneath there is mysterious fervor
and passion.
To one of two ends the Romantic movement was bound to come from its
confident stage of self-conscious emotionalism: on the one hand, to the
glorification of the senses, on the other, to the distrust of them. In
the music of Liszt the one goal is reached; unmistakably in this music
of Brahms the other. The sober coloring of his pianoforte music, its
intellectual complexity, its moderation, all speak of that development
which in the world of philosophy and society was year by year
intensifying the struggle between individualism and its arch-enemy,
the natural sciences. In the music of Brahms the power of Reason has
asserted itself. His music conforms first and always to law. And it is
one of the paradoxes in the history of music that this composer, who,
more than any other in modern times, acquired an objective mastery of
his art, remained the slave of his intense personality.
FOOTNOTES:
[32] The following remark is prefixed to the eighteenth dance: _Ganz
zum Überfluss meinte Eusebius noch Folgendes; dabei sprach aber viel
Seligkeit aus seinen Augen_.
[33] According to C. F. Weitzmann, the original of Johannes Kreisler
was Ludwig Böhner (1787-1860), a wandering, half-mad pianist.
[34] Part of the quotation is given in our ‘Narrative History,’ II,
pp. 308f.
CHAPTER VII
CHOPIN
Chopin’s music and its relative value in musical
value; racial and personal characteristics; influences
and preferences; Chopin’s playing--His instinct for
form; the form of his sonatas and concertos; the
_Polonaise-Fantaisie_; the preludes--Chopin as a harmonist;
Chopin’s style analyzed: accompaniment figures, inner
melodies, polyphonic suggestions, passages, melodies and
ornaments--His works in general: salon music; waltzes;
nocturnes; mazurkas; polonaises; conclusion.
I
No music for the pianoforte is more widely known than that of
Chopin. None has been more generally accepted. None has been exposed
so mercilessly to the mauling of sentimentality and ignorance; nor
has any other suffered to such an extent the ignominy of an affable
patronage. Yet it has not faded nor shown signs of decay. Rather year
by year the question rises clearer: is any music more irreproachably
beautiful? Less and less timidly, thoughtful men and women now demand
that Chopin be recognized truly as equal of the greatest, even of Bach,
of Mozart, of Beethoven. There are no fixed standards by which to
measure the greatness of music. We adore the sacredness of forms and
names. At the best we have a sort of tenacity of faith, supported by
a wholly personal enthusiasm. To many this demand on behalf of Chopin
will appear to be based on an enthusiasm that is not justifiable; but
by what shall enthusiasm be justified? It is an emotion, something
more powerful in music than reason. One must grant that no pianoforte
music has shown a greater force than Chopin’s to rouse the emotions
of the general world. That it moves the callow heart to sighs or that
the ignorant will fawn upon it is no proof of weakness in it. Your
ignoramus will dote on Beethoven almost as much. Chopin’s music has
depth upon depth of beauty into which the student and the artist may
penetrate. It can never be fully comprehended and then thrown aside. To
study it year after year is to come ever upon new wonders.
It is urged against Chopin that he wrote only for the pianoforte. But
this cannot have any weight in estimating the value of his music. It
is generally acknowledged that the pianoforte is of all instruments
the most difficult to write for. Chopin was absolute master of these
difficulties, just as Wagner was master of the orchestra. He was
therefore in a position to give perfect expression to his ideas, as
far as color of sound is concerned. Mr. Edgar Stillman Kelley in his
recent book on Chopin[35] brings forward the interesting point that
at the time Chopin was composing--roughly between 1830 and 1845--the
orchestra would have been quite inadequate to the expression of his
ideas; both because of the imperfections of many of the instruments and
because of the lack of virtuoso skill among the players. For Chopin’s
music is above all things intricate. There is a ceaseless interweaving
of countless strands of harmony, a subtle chromaticism of which the
brass instruments would have been incapable, and elaborate figures
and passages which violinists would not have been able to play. The
pianoforte on the other hand was relatively perfect. To it Chopin
turned, as to a medium that would not restrict his expression. And
so accurately and minutely did he shape his music in accordance with
the instrument, that the many attempts by clever and skillful men to
arrange it for the orchestra have almost entirely failed.
At any rate we have Chopin’s ideas perfectly expressed, almost without
a blemish, thanks to the piano. It is by the nature and quality of
these ideas that he must be judged. In beauty of melody, in wealth of
harmony, in variety, force, and delicacy of rhythm, he has not been
excelled. As to the quality of emotion back of these ideas, it has been
said that it is perfervid, sickly or effeminate; but such a statement
would hardly be borne out by the facts that his music remains fresh
in expressiveness and that it is generally acceptable. Delicate most
of it is, and it is all marked by a perhaps unique fineness of taste.
This, however, rarely if ever belittles the genuine and lasting emotion
which it modifies. Chopin’s character was undoubtedly one that wins
the love and sympathy of some men, and wholly antagonizes others. The
last years of his life he was weak and ailing and he was never robust.
Still it cannot be fairly said that his physical weakness has affected
his music. It should be remembered that Beethoven and Schumann were
sick men, the one sick in body, the other sick in mind. The wonder is
but greater when we think that such works as the Ballade in F minor and
the Barcarolle were written by a man so feeble that he had always to be
carried up flights of stairs.
Several points in Chopin’s character are more than usually interesting
in connection with his music. To begin with he was half Polish in blood
and wholly Polish in sympathies. It was his ambition to be for Poland
in music what the poet Uhland had been for Germany in literature.[36]
This does not by any means signify that many of the startling
originalities in his music are due to racial influences. Only in the
Polonaises and in the Mazurkas, both national dances of Poland, does
Chopin make use of Polish forms. Even in the Polonaises there is more
of universal than of national spirit, though in the Mazurkas, rhythms,
melodies, and harmonies have for the most part a distinctly Polish
stamp. Elsewhere in his music there are but rarely suggestions of a
tonality not common to the music of Western Europe, or of melodies more
Slavic than Latin or Teutonic.
It is in spirit that his music hints of another race, by its passionate
intensity, by its glowing color, and perhaps most of all by its
restraint. This may seem strange when we think of the almost barbaric
abandon of other Slavic composers. But Liszt in his book on Chopin
speaks at length of the peculiar reserve, not to say secretiveness,
of the Polish people in general and of Chopin in particular. He is
emphatic in his statement that only Poles came near the inner nature of
this musician; that others felt themselves delicately but surely held
at a distance. So in no small measure the meaning of his music, its
true beauty, eludes the player. There is a secret in it which perhaps
no player has the skill fully to reveal. It is not often explicit; it
is nearly always suggestive. We need not think that only a Pole can
penetrate the mystery. Perhaps only Poles can play the Polonaises and
the Mazurkas with full sympathy; but the Preludes, the Ballades and
Études and Scherzos, to speak of but a few of his works, are music for
the whole world. That they elude the efforts of most players is due
to no peculiar tricks of rhythm or of melody; but to the quality of
secretiveness which has somehow been transfused from the composer into
his music. Even in the most splendid of his compositions, as in the
most intimate, there is a touch of personal aristocracy, of reserve.
He was by nature the most selective of all musicians. In matters of
music he accepted only what was pleasing to his fine taste. Therefore
the music of Beethoven seemed to him often rough and noisy; that of
Schubert a mixture of sublime and commonplace; for that of Schumann
he seems to have had little or no appreciation. This has often been
held to signalize a fault in his musical understanding; and those who
so regard it have been pleased to take his love of Italian opera,
particularly of Bellini, as further proof of their point. One must not
forget, however, that a group of some of the greatest singers the world
has ever known were engaged at the Italian opera in Paris, among them
Malibran-Garcia, Pasta, Rubini, Lablache; and that such performances as
they gave must have been distinguished by consummate artistry. Chopin
often advised his pupils to hear great singers, that they might give
to their playing something of the grace of song. At the Italian opera
there was perfect singing; and there, very likely more than elsewhere,
Chopin’s exquisite, artistic nature found satisfaction.
His delight in the music of Hummel, like his pleasure in that of Field,
is easy to understand. In neither is there distortion of line, nor
harshness. More than any other music of that time it was intimately
suited to the piano. As delicate, fluent sound it must even today be
granted excellent; and for Chopin no fury or power of emotion could
justify sound that was unpleasant. His understanding of and love for
the piano were so perfect and exacting that one can easily imagine
him more willing to forgive triviality of emotion, for the sake of a
delicate expression, than to tolerate a harsh or clumsy treatment of
the instrument, for the sake of any emotional stress whatsoever.
But neither the Italian opera nor the music of Hummel and Field was
the favorite music of Chopin. The two composers whose works he accepted
unqualifiedly were Sebastian Bach and Mozart. Here he found a rich
emotion and a flawless beauty of style. Here there was no distortion,
no struggle of ideas, no harshness. Here was for him perfection of form
and, what is perhaps rarest in any art, a just proportion between form
and content, an unblemished union of all the elements which make music
not only great but wholly beautiful.
As a player he aimed first and always for beauty of tone and fineness
of shading. He was not often successful before a large public. This
was due in part to the weakness of his body, but probably more to the
nature of his temperament. On account of the first he was unable to
‘thunder,’ and therefore, in his own words, to overwhelm his audience
if he could not win them. But on account of his extremely sensitive
nature a large audience, full of strange faces, was frightful to him.
He shrank from displaying his art before a crowd. This was no doubt
bitter to him. The triumphant general fame of a Liszt or a Thalberg was
denied him. Yet in many respects he was the most remarkable pianist
the world has been privileged to enjoy. Among friends in his rooms
his playing had more than an earthly charm. It seems to have been
distinguished not only by rare delicacy of touch, but by a skill with
the pedal, with both the sustaining pedal and the soft pedal. He was
master of blending his harmonies in a way that raised those who heard
him at his best into a veritable ecstasy. Under his fingers the piano
seemed to breathe out a music that floated in air. Though he was not,
as we have implied, a powerful player, he was capable of flashes of
extraordinary vigor; but it was less by sharp contrasts and extremes
that he got his effects, than by infinite nuances. And he was above all
else a poet of sound, a man of swift fancies, of infinite moods and
changes.
Chopin spent the years of his boyhood and youth in Warsaw. In the
summer of 1829 he spent some weeks in Vienna, and played there twice in
public. In the list of those who were present at these concerts--which,
by the way, were wholly successful--one reads the names of men and
women who had known Beethoven and Schubert, even friends of Mozart. He
went again to Vienna in the fall of 1830 and remained there, more or
less idling, until uncertain political conditions and an outbreak of
cholera drove him in July, 1831, to seek Paris. Here he arrived about
the end of September, and here with few exceptions he lived the rest of
his life.
He found himself at once in the midst of a society made up of people
who were enthusiasts, and were in favor of, or actually apostles of,
some radical reform in society or in the arts. Thus at their gatherings
there was a great deal of animated and even polemical conversation.
It was largely self-conscious. Each talker felt himself the oracle of
a new doctrine. But Chopin was silent at most of these reunions. He
talked little or not at all about himself and his work. His conduct
seems an advocacy of conservatism; but as a matter of fact his music
proves him to have been one of the great innovators in the art.
II
It is evident that in many respects Chopin’s innovations sprang from
instinct. They are not the conscious putting to test of a theory of
reform, as are, in a small way, the _Carnaval_ of Schumann, and in
a more grandiose one, the B minor sonata of Liszt. As regards form,
for example, he was in many cases not in the least dependent upon
past or contemporary standards. Such pieces as the _Ballades_ and the
_Barcarolle_ are without precedent. But they are the spontaneous growth
of his genius; not the product of an experimental intelligence. The
intellectually formal element which Berlioz, Schumann, and Liszt made
bold with, Chopin quite ignored.
The theories of those of his contemporaries just mentioned have been
made convenient apologies by many of their subsequent critics. Though
the present day is beginning to show a wisdom free of controversy, it
is still difficult to judge Liszt’s sonata solely from the standpoint
of musical vitality. If one is left by it cold or suspicious, one
cannot wholly disregard, in estimating its worth, the scheme upon
which it is devised. In perhaps no music is there less need of such an
intellectual justification than in Chopin’s. The man’s instinct was
his only guide, and in most cases the results of it were singularly
faultless.
Therefore, attempts to reduce such pieces as the _Ballades_ and the
_Barcarolles_ to one of the few orthodox formal schemes are gratuitous.
In the first place the music is positively in no need of such a
justification as many still believe the respectable names of sonata
or fugue or rondo provide. In the second place, though a work like
the Ballade in F minor can be forced into the mold of the triplex or
sonata-form, it can be so forced only by distorting the lovely features
which make it the thing of beauty that it is. It is only fair to
recognize that Chopin has created something new, in forms of a graceful
and subtle proportion that speaks of a higher force than theory. The
mind of man has yet to understand the logic of their beauty. Chopin is
still unique.
The very elusiveness of the formal element in Chopin’s music
persistently raises a question as to the extent of his mental grasp
on the materials of his art. It is foolish to discuss how much of
great genius is intellectual, how much emotional. It would seem as if
the great emotion gave the spark of life to any work of art, that the
powerful mind gave it shape. But in the music of Chopin an instinct
rather than a thought gives shape. It is interesting to observe the
working of this instinct in forms to the grasp of which an intellectual
power has generally been considered essential; namely, in the
sonatas. Of these there are three: an early one in C minor, published
posthumously; one in B-flat minor, opus 35; and one in B minor, opus 58.
The first of these is almost in no way representative of the composer.
It was completed by 1828 and sent to Vienna for publication; but it
did not appear in print until two years after Chopin’s death. Neither
in melodiousness nor in harmonic richness does it show the mark of his
genius. It is ordinary in treatment of the piano. One can hardly attach
even an historical significance to it, since works composed at or about
the same time give more than a suggestion of his future greatness.
For example, it was in connection with the contemporary variations on
Mozart’s aria, _La ci darem la mano_, that Schumann wrote, ‘Hats off,
gentlemen: a genius!’ It is true that the return of the first theme,
at the beginning of the last section of the first movement, in B-flat
minor instead of C minor, is at variance with conventional usage; but
this was by no means unprecedented. The 5/4 rhythm of the Largo is
evidently an attempt at originality; but it is self-conscious, not
spontaneous. In spite of these features the work goes to prove only one
thing: that in such a familiar and well-established form as the sonata,
Chopin at that time either dared not or felt he should not trust to his
own instinct, even as to the treatment of the instrument.
But the other two sonatas are worthy of his full maturity, and
they show, like the _Études_, the _Scherzi_ and the _Ballades_,
the perfection and sureness of his art of self-expression. And in
thus revealing himself he could not but be an innovator. He brought
something new to the sonata. Consequently the opinion that he is ill at
ease in the form, which may be interpreted to mean (or generally is so
interpreted) that he had not the intellectual grasp of music necessary
to the composing of a great sonata. This, it is to be feared, is one of
the ready-made opinions in music. There are many such at hand. A few
great critics have given the hint. Liszt, in writing of the concertos,
ventured to say that they showed _plus de volonté que d’inspiration_.
The remark has been applied to explain the uneasiness of the two great
sonatas. Mr. J. S. Shedlock in his book on the pianoforte sonata wrote
that ‘the real Chopin is to be found in his nocturnes, mazurkas, and
ballads, not in his sonatas.’ But, though it is nearly absurd to pick
from many supremely great works one that is superior to the others,
and we do not in the least wish to infer that Chopin’s B-flat minor
sonata is his masterpiece, we think it may be fairly questioned whether
he ever wrote anything greater. It is thoroughly impregnated with his
unique spirit. There is not a note of it that is not of the ‘real’
Chopin. Furthermore, the B minor sonata is not less thoroughly Chopin.
It may be reserved to the trained critical mind to decide what is
great art of any kind; but the decision as to what is great music must
ultimately rest with time and its changing voice of expression--the
general world. Upon no sonatas, except some of those of Beethoven, does
the public set such store as upon these two of Chopin. The sonatas of
Weber, Schubert, Schumann and Brahms hold no such place in the general
favor. In the case of the first three of these men a looseness in the
grasp of form is responsible for the gradual degradation of their long
works. It is logical to infer, then, that a similar looseness is not
evident in the sonatas of Chopin. At any rate it has not yet become
palpable to the public, whatever critics may have said. And the sonatas
have undergone and are still undergoing a tremendous test. Therefore,
however much men may declare the intellectual weakness in Chopin’s
music, one must conclude that his instinct gave sufficient vitality
even to his sonatas to enable them, alone among sonatas, to hold their
public place with those of Beethoven. And it would seem that the
undisputed intellectual power of Brahms failed where the instinct of
Chopin succeeded.
Of course it will be urged in explanation of the popular acceptance
of the sonatas of Chopin, that they are eminently gratifying to the
pianist, suitable to the instrument, and consequently delicious to the
public. At the most this is but a grace which no other sonatas have
in so great measure. It is not a virtue by which alone music endures.
Music cannot last without a positive strength of form; and this, no
matter what the source of it, the Chopin sonatas have.
So then, what do men mean when they state, in the face of the enduring
strength and beauty of these works, that Chopin has shown himself ill
at ease in them? Chiefly that these sonatas are different from those
of Beethoven. For the most part they choose to condemn the difference,
rather than to understand and appreciate it. But if the verdict of time
is worthy of consideration, this difference is not condemnable, and an
analysis of it will bring us face to face with Chopin the innovator,
not Chopin the insufficient.
It is usually in the first movement of a sonata that a composer either
proves his skill or discloses his weakness. It is the first movements
of these two sonatas that are brought into question before the courts
of theory. They will be found to differ in at least two distinct if not
radical features from movements of similar form by Beethoven. First, in
the self-sufficient breadth and splendor of the second themes. Through
these themes the composer speaks with his most intense meaning; on them
the music soars to its highest, flaming pinnacle of beauty. This is
obviously at variance with what we may call the classical procedure.
Early in the evolution of the triplex form, a powerful tendency became
evident to give to the first theme a vigorous, declarative character,
and to the second a softer, more songful one. The first theme usually
dominated the movement, and the development of its significance was
the life and flow of the music. Generally the second theme, by reason
of its contrasting character, served to accentuate the meanings of
the first. Chopin handled his material otherwise. Though he preserved
in a measure the conventional character of the two themes, the first
undergoes no logical development, but whirls here and there in a
sort of tempestuous chaos for which the second theme offers sublime
justification. Except in the opening measures, the first theme is given
no definite shape. Neither in the B-flat minor sonata nor in the B
minor sonata does it reappear at the beginning of the third section.
In the development section of both sonatas it is but a fragment tossed
here and there on stormy harmonies.
The result is of course a lack of logical coherence. But one may well
ask if the hot intensity of utterance has not welded the notes and
parts of these movements into a complete fusion, if there is need of
logic in such molten music.
In the second place, the Chopin sonatas owe not a little of their
unique appearance to the composer’s great gift of harmony. The
foundation of the classical sonata form was harmonic, and, be it
said with due regard to exceptions, was rigid. Nothing was more
characteristic of it, both in the early and late stages of its use,
than the harmonic clearness of what one may call the approach to
themes, episodes, or sections, and the sharp definition of these
sections by what were fundamentally conventional cadences. Chopin in
his sonatas obliterated at least one of these sectional lines. It is
impossible to decide in the first movements where the middle section
ends and the last section begins. It is not only that the first
theme fails to make its reappearance. The harmonies surge on from
the development section into the last section with no trace of break
in their current. Even the cadences at the end of the first sections
are incomplete, and the modulations by which they progress sudden and
remote. Such procedures foretell unmistakably the endless harmonies
of Wagner. So does the treatment of the development section in both
sonatas, with the scattering of motives over never-ending progressions
of chords.
No sonatas, not even those of Beethoven, present such radical
variations from the accepted form; and naturally the question arises
whether such movements as these of Chopin’s are properly in sonata form
at all. One can only answer that Chopin named them sonatas, and that
they represent at least what he felt a sonata should be. Mr. Shedlock
has said of Beethoven that in aiming at a higher organization, he
actually became a disorganizer. One cannot attribute such a conscious
aim to Chopin; yet it is plain that his instinct led him to the
complete demolition of one or two of the conventional restrictions of
the sonata form.
Before leaving the sonatas there is a word to be said of Chopin’s
comprehension of the group of four movements as a whole. It is such a
comprehension on the part of a Beethoven that makes many of his later
sonatas and a few of his earlier ones indisputably grand. In his case
the successive dependence of the various movements on each other is
often made plain either by the actual merging of one into the other,
or by the employment of the same or cognate thematic materials in all.
Of such structural unity there is no trace in the two great sonatas of
Chopin. The separate movements are formally complete in themselves, and
not materially related. Any other union between the separate movements
of suite, sonata, or symphony, if, indeed, it is not a matter of
familiarity with the whole work, or of respect for the composer, exists
only in the mind of the hearer according to his or her sensibilities.
Of the Chopin sonatas that in B-flat minor will probably impress most
people as an impassioned and powerful whole; that in B minor as less
unified.
The Funeral March of the former has a double existence, one within
and one without the sonata. It is known that it was completed perhaps
before the sonata was thought of; and that certainly the other
movements were written in some sort of relation to it. The finale which
follows it cannot possibly be dissociated from the sonata; and the
first and second movements share a common intensity of passion. Organic
unity the series may not have, but its phases of emotion lead, and
almost blend, one into the other.
The two concertos, written as Chopin was on the verge of manhood, have
evidently not held, if ever they won, so high a place in pianoforte
literature as the two great sonatas. For one thing, Chopin’s treatment
of the orchestra is, according to most critics, uninspired and
unsatisfactory. But for another thing, their form is conventional, and
in submitting to a conventional ideal Chopin is unquestionably ill at
ease. Ten years later when he wrote the B-flat minor sonata he was
all past his age of submission, and made of the form something new,
shaped it fearlessly to his need of self-expression. The _Fantasia_
in F minor, written about this time (1840), is longer than any single
movements in the sonatas. Though unconventional in structure it is none
the less faultless.
There still remains a profoundly moving work of Chopin’s, which,
from the point of view of form, is astonishing. This is the
_Polonaise-Fantaisie_, opus 61, seemingly his last work for the piano
in large proportions. The _Barcarolle_, opus 60, was written probably
about the same time; and it is worthy of note that this perfect piece
escapes the grasp of most who would play it--i.e., interpret it in the
only way that music can be truly interpreted. The difficulty is usually
ascribed to its apparently rambling structure. But here, as in most
cases where the composer may seem to be at fault, the imperfection
exists in the player, not in the music. The right touch and the right
quality of fervid yet delicate poetic imagination will reveal in the
_Barcarolle_ a poem in music of the most exquisite proportions. It is a
work of matchless beauty. But the _Polonaise-Fantaisie_ is not lyrical;
it is intensely dramatic. It builds itself out of the strength, the
weakness, the despair of unnamed forces in conflict. It is the cry of
Poland in her agony, the pride of her people, crushed and tormented, in
a broken voice.
The clashing moods of the piece are not of the sort that can be
regulated and made orderly within even the expanded forms of
conventional art. The grief and despair, the wrath, the pity, the
unconquerable pride and hope of Chopin, shuddering like a great harp
in the wind of destruction that has swept over his country, here
demand and take on unfettered freedom of expression. The result is
a work which reaches over Liszt to the symphonic poems of modern
writers. It is probably not of historical importance; but it is of
great significance as testimony to Chopin’s constructive originality.
Liszt said of it that because of its ‘pathological contents,’ it must
be excluded from the realm of art. If Chopin had chosen to supplement
the piece with a few words as to its meaning, a program, as the phrase
goes, Liszt would have had to judge differently, or else by the same
token exclude other great works from the hallowed aristocracy to which
he denied this one entrance.
At the other extreme of Chopin’s achievements stand the twenty-four
_Préludes_. Some of these, like the eighth, fifteenth, sixteenth,
nineteenth, for example, are well-rounded and completed pieces, which
have not more of the spirit of improvisation which one associates
with the term ‘prelude’ than his longer works. But many others are
hardly more than fragments, or sketches, or instantaneous impressions.
In pieces of such length, form is of no importance. What is perhaps
unparalleled is their vividness. They seem now like a veiled glow,
fading into darkness, now like a momentary flash from that region of
secret fire in the light of which Chopin ever lived.
So Chopin’s power of expression showed itself new, fine, and broad.
He is a master of presentation. There are but three or four of his
considerable works of which one may say that they show uncertainty
in judgment, an awkwardness in line, a clumsiness in balance. The
vast majority of his compositions are perfect in shape and form, and
flawlessly put together. If only we at this day might hear them unfold
through his magic fingers! For, no doubt, what seems weak or unstable
to the cautious judgment that relies upon standards of more rational
genius, seems so only because the key is lost that will open to view
the delicate machinery in all its perfect assemblage.
III
Chopin is second to no composer as a harmonist. In this respect,
it now seems he stands directly in line with Bach and Mozart. The
fabric of the music of all three is chromatic; but it is usually so
delicately woven that its richness is accepted almost unconsciously by
the listener. Like Bach, Chopin wanders where he will in the harmonic
field. Like Mozart, he is ineffably graceful and subtle. The foundation
of his music is a series of widely varied, yet blending chords. He is
rarely startling. His modulations are swift and flashing; but they
seldom if ever seem abrupt.
On the whole his music has few conspicuously unusual chords. The
crashing dissonances just before the end of the Scherzo in B minor are
exceptional. So are the wild bursts in the prelude in D minor. But
there are sequences of chords which, when analyzed, show an amazing
boldness. For example, the opening measures of the scherzo in the
B-flat minor sonata; the middle section of the study in C minor; the
swirl of chords before the coda in the F minor Ballade; the long
modulating passage between the A major and E-flat major portions of the
G minor Ballade; the whole of the study in broken chords; and countless
others.
He is fond of shifting the harmony down through chromatic steps, as
in the prelude in E minor and the mazurka, opus 17, No. 4. Rushes of
chromatic sixths and fourths, such as are in the E minor concerto, at
the beginning of the great polonaise in A-flat major, and the scherzo
of the B-flat minor sonata, are effects of color more than of harmony.
But he gets magnificent harmonic effects by sending wide, whirring
chords through half-steps down or up the scale, as in the first _meno
mosso_ section of the scherzo in C-sharp minor, or in the cadenza-style
passage of the study, opus 10, No. 3. Yet again, before the return of
the first motives in the study, opus 25, No. 6, there is a long cascade
of diminished seventh chords. Sometimes he leads his music through
broader progressions, which are in effect diatonic. The dropping of
the music from its dramatic height in the C-sharp minor portion of the
ballade in A-flat major, the long descending play with the triplet
motive in the middle section of the second scherzo, and all the second
part of the scherzo in the B-flat minor sonata offer examples of this
bold harmonic stride.
One may take up a handful of Chopin’s music almost at random and find
signs of his harmonic boldness, and there is hardly a line of it which
does not reveal his ever subtle power over chromatic alterations. This
is so fine and really so ever present as almost to defy analysis. Yet
one or two pages in which it is unusually suggestive may be cited.
All the first part of the scherzo in B minor, particularly the second
section of it, is but a play with chords which, but for the unpleasant
connotation of the word, might almost be said to writhe, so are they
twisted and interwoven by a ceaseless alteration of their fundamental
notes. By reason of this same chromatic litheness, both the study in
C major, opus 10, No. 7, and the coda of the second ballade take on a
shimmer of harmonic light.
The chromatic scale has often been used for a sort of windy or surging
effectiveness in pianoforte music. Witness the first movement of
Beethoven’s concerto in G major, Weber’s Rondo in C major. But rarely
in any music has it been used so melodiously as in Chopin’s. Sometimes
it is but a strand over which other strands are woven, as in the
colossal Étude in A minor; but even more remarkable are those cases in
which he contented himself with the unadorned scale. The studies in A
minor, opus 10, No. 2, and G-sharp minor, opus 25, No. 6, rest upon the
ordinary familiar chromatic scale, perhaps the gaudiest of the virtuoso
trappings; yet even the first of these, in its frankly étude manner,
has an uncommon beauty, and the second has more than an earthly charm.
Neither study depends upon a vague, windy effect. Both demand rather a
distinct touch. We have then a chromatic scale in which the separate
notes are constantly audible throughout the entire piece, a chromatic
scale, turned by some alchemy of which Chopin alone possessed the
secret, into graceful melody.
It is in a sense this power in Chopin to turn every note to melody
that is the secret of the perfection of his style. We may pass over
his characteristics in the broader melody. These, like the qualities
of Bach’s, Mozart’s and Schubert’s melodies, are of an essence that
escapes words. The metaphor is perhaps sickly--but one may as well
attempt to catch firmly in words the fragrance of flowers. But
the power over a more subtle melody, what one might call an inner
melodiousness, is so striking in Chopin that it may not be passed
at least without special comment. Bach and Couperin possessed the
same kind of skill; and this, though manifested in almost radically
different forms, and applied upon a wholly different instrument, makes
their music unqualifiedly welcome upon the modern pianoforte. In the
case of Chopin, it was brought to bear upon our own instrument, and
wrought the perfect style for pianoforte music, a style which conforms
to the special qualities in the instrument of which we have elsewhere
spoken at length. (See Introduction.)
In Chopin accompaniment figures for the piano are brought to their
highest perfection. It may be fundamentally his choice of harmonies
that gives them a richness not to be found so generally in any other
music for the instrument. Here must lie the secret of the beauty of
certain passages, like that of the melodious second theme in the
scherzo in B-flat minor, where the accompaniment is only a series of
chords, the movement or rolling of which is not at all unusual. But
in the formation of figures there is often a distinction peculiar to
Chopin alone.
First one notices the wide spacing of the notes, the avoidance of
all thickness such as often makes the pianoforte music of Brahms
unsatisfactory from the point of view of the pianist. By means of these
widely spaced figures he obtains a sonority of after-sounds from the
piano in which the overtones and sympathetic vibrations play a great
part. It is never muddy or thick. There are many pages of his music
which show group after group of these figures employed to give only a
shimmering, not a distinct harmonic background to the melody which he
wishes to set forth. One remembers the nocturnes in C-sharp minor and
D-flat major, the study in A-flat major, opus 25, No. 1, and countless
passages in other works.
[Illustration]
Frédéric Chopin.
_After the portrait by Ary Scheffler._
These undulating figures are no more than the Alberti bass,
developed to suit the piano. To the student they offer little more than
an example of wholly satisfactory spacing of notes on the keyboard. But
Chopin is rarely so simple. In almost all his accompaniments based on
broken chords he introduces something of an independent spirit. This
shows itself either in the suggestion of an inner melody which here
and there joins richly with the chief subject; or in the accentuation
of certain notes of harmonic significance. In neither case does the
accompaniment take on a definite line, as it so often does in the music
of Brahms. Particularly in the latter case, the accompaniment is still
vaguely sonorous, the separate notes not more distinct than they must
be to preserve a sense of gentle or vigorous movement.
It must not be supposed that these notes, which accentuate harmonic
coloring, are literally to be emphasized. They are rarely marked with
accent signs. But Chopin has so placed them at the height of the figure
that they must stand out, even if played more lightly than the notes
with which they are associated. The accompaniment of the second theme
in the sonata in B minor, especially the later portions of it where it
is broken into groups of sixteenth notes, offers proof of a subtlety in
awakening a sensuous volume of sound out of the piano which is at once
vague and distinct, that can hardly be matched.
As for the flashes of counter-melodies, of hidden strands of music
which enrich his accompaniments, we approach here into one of the
mysteries of Chopin’s genius. It is in suggesting these that the
technique of the pianist frequently fails. There is need of a touch
at once pointed and yet often as gentle as a breath. Sometimes these
magical notes are at the extremity of a wide space. Chopin has
written a study--opus 10, No. 9--which deals almost wholly with this
difficulty. Again they are concealed in the very middle of the figure,
as in parts of the accompaniment of the nocturne in D-flat major.
Finally there are accompaniments which are all elusive melody. How many
melodies are there, for example, within the accompaniment, if so it may
be called, of the nineteenth prelude; in the magnificent passages of
the fourth ballade, before the coda; in the first E-flat major section
of the first ballade? Even where figures have given way in passages of
utmost sonority to chords, there is a full melodic life here and there.
The accompanying chords in the big passages of the Barcarolle, just
before the end, have indeed almost a polyphonic significance.
Here then is that inner melodiousness of Chopin’s music which goes
far towards making it the great work of art that it is. It is so
little explicit, often hardly more than suggested, so delicate and so
infinitely varied that one must for ever question just what the nature
of it is. Yet if one tries to analyze Chopin’s style, his treatment
of the keyboard, his unmatched grace and elegance and fervor, it is
precisely against this inner musical life that one must ultimately come
to pause. There are conceptions of emotion expressed in pianoforte
music which are perhaps grander than his because less personal; there
are other works for the piano that are more abstract and seemingly
therefore less capricious; but there is perhaps no music which quite
like his has called forth the full spirit of the most mechanical of the
string instruments.
Is it essentially polyphonic music? The first canon of the pianoforte
style is _movement_. That is a mechanical necessity. The strings must
be kept in vibration, constantly touched. In music so fine as Chopin’s
this movement must be found to have a beauty in itself. It must be
ever varied. It must take on an independent character of its own. So
far, in studying accompaniment figures, one finds in them an almost
never-absent suggestion of such a life. Perhaps one of the greatest
proofs of Chopin’s skill is that he rarely attempted more than to
suggest it. For he knew above all things his piano. He knew its great
power over chords and harmony, that music for it must first of all
bring out this richness of vibration of which it was capable. He knew
that the logical, consecutive movement of the polyphonic style left
his piano more than half dumb. Polyphony was no outlandish book to
him. Many an anecdote testifies to his worship of the ‘Well-Tempered
Clavichord’; many to his ability to reveal as few, perhaps no others,
have been able to do, the beauty of the preludes and fugues in it. But
in his own music he submerged polyphony, so to speak, just beneath the
sea of moving harmonies. Over and through the fine silver network his
harmonies swirl and flow like waters. Only now and then a strand of it
shines clear; but always its presence may be seen, though its lines
quiver and break.
Now and again one comes across measures in his music which do more
than hint at the sterling imitative style of the old masters, or that
show a grasp of that sort of logical technique which is able to weave a
single motive or two into various shapes, a highly concentrated sort of
music. These are neither more nor less beautiful than other measures,
and surely their value is the value of all his music, not enhanced by
the evidence of a highly respected technical skill. The fourth ballade
gives surprising examples of this intensive art. The few measures in
canonic style which bring back the principal subject are worthy of
study; but even more remarkable is the page of music which precedes
them. Here, following an episode in which the steady rhythm of the
whole great work takes on almost the gaiety of a dance, we come upon
music of the most profound character, fully and sonorously scored, rich
in harmony, expressive of passion. The bass part is one variant of the
chief subject, the treble part is another. Here is skill of the sort
that brings praise to Brahms; but in the music of Chopin to mention it
is hardly worth while, so little, rather so entirely not at all, is it
an end in itself.
Finally there are pages of his music in which the movement of his
accompaniment are so free and extended, or so interwoven with what
seems the chief idea, that one is at loss to classify them as to style.
These it seems to us are the result of his finest art of writing for
the piano. In some cases it is easy to speak of the accompaniment
as an arabesque, with the implied meaning that, delicately and
carefully as it has been shaped and perfected, it remains of secondary
importance. So, for instance, with the little prelude in G major,
and, to a somewhat greater extent, the study in C minor, opus 10,
No. 12. But the prelude in D major is a net of sounds from which
nothing but shimmering harmony shines out, though there are two
voices for ever entwining about each other. Which is melody and which
accompaniment in the prelude in F major? What is going on within the
prelude in F-sharp minor, that outwardly seems but a broad melody with
whirring accompaniment? At last, in the later works, one comes across
accompaniments running from top to bottom of the keyboard, every note
of which is but part of a melody. Take as examples of this art the
following passages from the fourth scherzo:
[Illustration: Music score]
These few measures are typical of the essence of the keyboard,
rather the pianoforte, style of Chopin, a style showing a grace and
flexibility highly characteristic of his music in general. One finds
such art only very rarely in the works of other composers since the
time of Bach and Couperin, as, for example, in the second Intermezzo
in the second number of the _Kreisleriana_ and at the end of Brahms’
Caprice in F-sharp minor, opus 76, No. 1. It is the sort of music which
sounds best on the pianoforte, which cannot give the same effect on any
other instrument nor by any combination of instruments. There are the
constant movement which is necessary to keep the piano vibrating, and
the richness of harmony which belongs to no other single instrument
except the organ. The homogeneous nature of the scale gives to the runs
a continuity of line and of color that is almost uniquely proper to the
piano. The single notes of the runs drop with the bell-like quality
which likewise belongs only to this instrument. At last it must be
noted how the sound of it all floats and changes. This is strikingly a
sonority of after-sounds.
In the case of the above selection from the Scherzo this is obtained
by the arrangement of chords with the broad melody of the left hand.
Of the six chords that are struck four are left to vibrate during two
measures; that is to say, that five-sixths of their value is given
only in after-sounds. Against this tonal background are arranged the
rapidly moving notes of the right hand, which a careful study will show
accentuates in varying fashion the floating harmonies of the left. So
that the whole passage has not only a vague shimmer but a sparkling
radiance as well.
In the following selection from the same piece it will be noticed
that this sonority is built up by the movement of the accompanying
figures which at the same time sprinkle their own mist with sparks. It
is like the passage of a faint comet through the sky, leaving a trail
of apparently substantial light. And here this drifting light of sound
resolves itself into definite harmonies, in the third, fifth, seventh,
ninth, fourteenth and fifteenth measures. The substantial harmonies of
the passage are very obviously established by the chords in the left
hand part; but it is the movement of the right hand that makes them
glow and darken as it were. In those measures not mentioned above,
this movement seems to weave a mist about these harmonies, which, in
the measures we have numbered, clears for an instant and lets the
light through. And that the notes in this movement which have such an
harmonic clarity may be not so much emphasized as retained is one of
the fine points in the playing of Chopin which the unskilled player is
likely wholly to miss, and with it the elusive subtlety of Chopin.
[Illustration: Music score]
The ordinary pianoforte style of running figuration generally is made
up of simple arpeggios or scales. Liszt does not often show himself
master of more than such. It is only Chopin who envelopes his harmonies
in such an exquisitely spun thread of melody. The last measures of the
Barcarolle show such a thread of pure gold, woven and twisted as no
other composer for the piano has been able to spin.
[Illustration: Music score]
In such passages as these three we find a movement which entered
the pianoforte style as a necessity (to keep harmonies in vibration)
metamorphosed into a line of melody which still retains the power to
suggest harmonies. It demands the virtuoso but is in no sense virtuoso
music. For virtuoso music is a music in listening to which one hardly
knows whether it is sound itself or the rapid movement of sound that
thrills. Figures have little musical significance in it. Notice how
in the music of the two greatest virtuoso composers for the piano,
D. Scarlatti and Liszt, a few figures are repeated endlessly with no
variation. The necessity of movement has become a luxury, oftenest not
truly beautiful, nor of any but a gymnastic worth.
It was Chopin who entirely appreciated the true value of movement on
the keyboard; who where it was necessary made it beautiful, and never
made it an end in itself. Hence it may be questioned if there is figure
work, mere display, in Chopin’s music. There is hardly a passage of
rapid notes in his music which has not a pure melodic significance and
which does not weave itself about harmonies that are constantly varied.
He delighted in rapid notes. The coda of the waltz in A-flat major,
op. 34, No. 2, the study in F minor, op. 25, No. 2, the scherzo of the
sonata in B minor, the variation of the chief subject in the third
part of the fourth ballade, these come to mind among a host of other
examples of his inimitable grace and musical worth in such music. And
when he combined such a fleet melodiousness with broader themes and
harmonies did he not prove himself a master of the science of music in
a new light? Not without a reason are the preludes and fugues of the
‘Well-Tempered Clavichord’ a masterpiece of everlasting and inimitable
worth. We may call it concentration, intensity, economy of musical
means which gives them their enduring firmness. And much of this
firmness is in the music of Chopin, because there are no empty notes,
none without two and even threefold significance. This complication of
movement with melody, this ever-whispering inner melodiousness, these
spring from Bach, the greatest of masters.
Other essentials of the pianoforte style may be found in the work of
other masters as well as in that of Chopin. Such are the contrast of
registers and the variety of rhythm. One more feature of his style,
however, is pronounced enough to demand attention. This will be
observed in his treatment of many melodies. Here any composer will
find himself face to face with one of the most difficult problems the
piano presents; for, as we have said, he must if possible arrange his
melody in such a way that one will not feel it would have been more
suitable to the voice or the violin. Movement is again necessary.
Without belittling the value of an accepted masterpiece one may call
attention to the long pause of the melody at the end of the first
phrase of Schumann’s _Warum?_, which barely escapes destroying the
piece as a work for the piano. There must be not only a pronounced
but a secondary melodic movement in such pauses in pianoforte music,
as Schumann himself introduced subsequently in _Warum?_ In many cases
the composer contents himself with giving a touch of melodic life to
the accompaniment, as Chopin does, for example, in the pauses of the
second theme in the first movement of the B-flat minor sonata. But most
remarkable in Chopin’s treatment of melodies, noticeably in his later
and broader style, is his fondness for secondary melodies that have
almost the consecutive movement of an obbligato part. This is one step
in organization beyond the inner melodiousness of his accompaniments.
Without selecting examples from a number of his works, one may call
attention to the study in C-sharp minor, opus 25, No. 7, to the various
treatments of the melodic material in the fourth ballade, to the whole
Barcarolle, especially to the imitations in the middle section and in
the coda. By means of this the piano speaks with a voice made sonorous
by its own peculiar abilities, and Chopin’s melodies stand apart from
melodies for violin or voice.
What has been said of his ability to give to rapid notes a genuinely
musical significance applies in general to the ornaments which now
and again are brought into his music. Of the older standardized
ornaments which were thickly sprinkled through the music of Couperin
and Emanuel Bach, only a few survived the harpsichord, to which they
were appropriate. The turn, the trill and the grace-note are the chief
of these, all of which, it will be noted, are used as frequently in
music for other instruments as in music for the pianoforte. The others
were expanded into much greater form or gave way entirely to a new
sort of ornament which covered wide intervals and a wide range, and
was intended less to add grace to the melodic line than to introduce a
variety of sonority into the music.
These more pretentious frills were added _ex tempore_ by men like
Hummel, Field, and even Liszt, not only to their own music but to
that of other composers. Liszt, in his remarks prefatory to an
edition of Field’s ‘Nocturnes,’ said that the little pieces as they
appeared on the engraved page hardly gave more than a suggestion
of the richness which their composer gave to them by means of his
improvised adornments. Whatever may have been the practice of Chopin
in playing, he angrily resented the addition of extemporized ornaments
to his own music by any player whatsoever, even one so brilliant as
Liszt. It seems likely that such ornaments _d’occasion_ were pretty
conventional stuff. Liszt has filled up his music with a great deal
of them, laboriously written out. Chopin’s ornaments rarely lack the
distinction which is characteristic of his style in general; that is to
say they are rarely a series of figures, oftenest a tracery of melody.
Those such as we find in the nocturne in F-sharp major, the impromptu
in the same key, and even in the first polonaise, are finely and
carefully drawn, and their effect in the piece, like the effect of the
piece as a whole, calculated down to the smallest note. Even in this
regard Chopin’s music is perfected, and the addition of extra notes,
especially of the breathless, virtuoso kind, cannot, as Chopin himself
well knew, but distort its proportions. There is practically none of
these passages which is massive, which has not a value in detail that
the pianist must reveal.
Excepting always the music of Bach, there is almost no keyboard
music save Chopin’s in which every note is thus fraught with meaning
and delight. Therein lies the secret of his style, its clearness,
flexibility and charm. As a work of art it is flawless, and in that may
well rest its best assurance of an immortal life.
IV
There is little to be said of the quality of Chopin’s music in
general, and that little has often been fervidly spoken, now in
praise, now in blame. His music may be variously classified. There are
works of his young manhood, works of more mature stamp, finally works
written in the last years of his relatively short life which are very
noticeably more profound and more involved than earlier ones. To study
his music in the order of its creation is to trace the deepening and
the sobering of his emotional life. An intensity is common to it all, a
fervor which a long and painful illness had not the power to assuage.
Neither the Ballade in F minor nor the _Polonaise-Fantaisie_ is less
impassioned than the study in C minor, opus 10, No. 12. Outwardly they
all show the same restlessness and tumultuousness. But the passion of
the later works is deeper if not more calm than that of the earlier,
and the expression of it is more varied and full of contrasts. Works
like the fourth Scherzo, the fourth Ballade, and the Barcarolle have
an under meaning so hard to grasp that perhaps the majority of those
who study them or hear them find fault with the structure and say they
are rambling. There is in all his music a reserve which puts it beyond
the touch of most who would play it. In these last great pieces one
discerns vaguely something of the holiness of that inner life of his
which no one ever heard him speak of, of the intense, yearning idealism
that tortured him. His was a spirit that underwent the chastening
brought upon us by suffering in body and mind in silence, this
fastidious, dainty, malicious, little man, for ever suffering, for ever
unconquerable in pride.
But the compositions may be more definitely classified than by the
signs they show of Chopin’s general development. There are, for
example, three distinct groups: salon pieces, such as the Waltzes and
Nocturnes; pieces in which he speaks as it were his native Polish
language, such as the Mazurkas and the Polonaises, and finally works
which seem the unrestricted expression of his emotions: the Ballades,
Scherzos, Sonatas, Preludes, and Études.
All the salon pieces are characterized by elegance. In addition,
the Waltzes have in most cases a sparkle, the Nocturnes a discrete
melancholy. Yet Chopin is full of surprises, and there are waltzes
like that in A minor and that in C-sharp minor which pass out of the
category of elegant salon music based on dance rhythms, and may be
treated as among the most thoughtful and the sad expressions of his
experience. The first two waltzes, and the great waltz in A-flat major,
opus 42, reveal him delighting in poignant and lively rhythms, in a
grace from which a certain chivalric gallantry is not lacking, and
above all in the captivating qualities of his instrument.
Perhaps the majority of the Nocturnes show a sentiment a little too
much perfumed for the salon. They are commonly considered the weakest
of his compositions; and it can hardly be denied that some of them lack
virility and health. On the other hand, one like that in C minor is
fit to stand among the most impassioned and noble of his compositions;
and those in G major and in D-flat major must long be redeemed from
commonplaceness by the perfection of their style as pianoforte music.
In the Mazurkas, harmonies, rhythm, and melodies have a distinctly
Polish character. In the Polonaises only the rhythm is national; and
this has been so long in the favor of the international world of music
that it carries with it little of Polish spirit. Most of the Mazurkas
and the Polonaises never shake off an under mood of deep sadness,
and there is none of them, however gracious, which does not sing of
a national pride. Pride and sorrow are the keynote to them, sorrow
that is often hopeless, pride that rises to anger and defiance. There
are among the Mazurkas many which have an elegiac sadness, which are
poems of meditation and lamentation, as if by the ruins of his beloved
country he, like the great prophet, sat down and wept. They are often
as short as the short preludes, but share with them a vividness and
intenseness that place them among the most remarkable of compositions
for the instrument.
The Polonaises are in broad form. Those in A major, A-flat major,
and F-sharp minor are truly colossal works, ringing, clashing,
marching music, without a touch of bombast. It is astonishing how all
polonaises, polaccas, and even marches by other composers lose their
light beside them. Those in C minor and in E-flat minor are sombre
and gloomy, the former full of heaviness, the latter of mysterious
agitation as of a band of conspirators, in the apt phrase of Professor
Niecks. That in C-sharp minor lacks the dignity of its companion
pieces. The first part is fretful and nervous. The Trio section in
D-flat has, however, a more measured, though an effeminate speech.
Of his other great works one would be glad to say nothing. We have
already attempted to analyze the perfection of their style, the
richness of their harmonies, the firm proportions of their form. To
the discovery of their particular beauties each lover must be led by
his own enthusiasm. The rapture they may charm him to is his own joy.
Chopin the artist may be held up to the critical inspection of the
whole world, and in such an inspection few will pass with higher praise
than his.
But Chopin the musician speaks to each ear apart. His music is a
fervid, aristocratic, essentially noble soul made audible, if so we
may translate Balzac’s remark that he was _une âme qui se rendait
sensible_. Illness held him in an inexorable grip during those years
of his life when he wrote many of his greatest works. His pride, which
no one may measure, made his life one agony with that of his broken
country. Yet there was the saving streak of iron in him, and that is in
his music behind all the vehemence, the fever, and the passion.
And what may not be overlooked is his love of gaiety. His wit was
malicious and keen, but he had a pleasing humor as well, one that
overflowed in mimicry and an almost childish love of fun. This too
is constantly coming to the surface in his music. It would be wholly
mistaken to think of Chopin as a composer of only sad or turbulent
music. A whole list of masterpieces could be chosen from those of his
compositions which are gay without _arrière-pensée_, which are witty
and vivacious, and clear as happy laughter. It is perhaps this very
spirit which saves his music always from heaviness, which makes it
in the last analysis more healthy and more sane than much of that of
Schumann or Brahms. Never are his moods heavy, stagnant, or inert.
Intense as they may be they are swift-changing and vivid.
Are they not thus in their nature suited to the piano more than to all
other instruments? To the piano, the sounds of which are no sooner
struck than they float away, the very breath of whose being is in
constant movement?
The mass of Chopin’s compositions remains unique in the literature of
pianoforte music as an expression of emotion that is without alloy.
There is no trace in it of experiment, of theory, or of symbolism.
Its idealism is the idealism of beauty of sound, both in form and
detail. If we call it poetical it is because it seems a fire of the
imagination. Yet here is a faculty in Chopin which deals only with
sound. His music is most decidedly abstract and absolute. Poetical as
it may be, there is no meaning in it but the meaning of sound. Not only
does it not call for supplementary explanations in terms of another art
or of definite, emotional activities in life; it defies the effort that
would so relate it to a world of perceptions. Like fire it burns the
thought that would frame it.
FOOTNOTES:
[35] ‘Chopin the Composer.’ New York, 1914.
[36] Professor Frederick Niecks in his ‘Frederic Chopin’ (1888) has
presented practically all that is known of Chopin to the public, in a
manner that is no less accurate than it is wholly just and impartial.
Needless to say that we are greatly indebted for this chapter to that
excellent and wise book, especially in the matter of biographical and
personal details.
CHAPTER VIII
HERZ, THALBERG, AND LISZT
The career of Henri Herz, his compositions and his style;
virtuosity and sensationalism; means of effect--Sigismund
Thalberg: his playing; the ‘Moses’ fantasia, etc.;
relation of Herz and Thalberg to the public--Franz Liszt:
his personality and its influence; his playing; his
expansion of pianoforte technique; difficulties of his
music estimated--Liszt’s compositions: transcriptions;
fantasia on _Don Giovanni_--Realistic pieces, Années de
pèlerinage--Absolute music: sonata in B minor; Hungarian
Rhapsodies; Conclusion.
There is no doubt that Chopin was one of the greatest players of his
day. In some respects he was probably the greatest, for it is hard to
believe that he could have been matched in delicacy, in beauties of
veiled harmony and melody, and in poetry. Yet as far as playing was
concerned his life was spent virtually in retirement; and this was,
as we have hinted in the preceding chapter, bitter to him. It was not
easy for him, we may be sure, to hear from the outer world the echoes
of uproarious applause raised to greet one battling virtuoso after
another. These men strode like conquering heroes over the earth. The
years Chopin spent in Paris were the very hey-day of the virtuosi. He
was excluded from such public triumphs as they enjoyed, partly because
he was too nervous and too sensitive to endure contact with great
audiences, partly because he lacked physical strength, and partly,
also, because to the general taste at that time his style of playing
and his music were too fine to be palatable. Mendelssohn wondered
whether or not Herz was prejudiced when he said that the Parisians
could understand and appreciate nothing but variations.
HENRI HERZ
I
This Henri Herz was, between the years 1830 and 1835, the most
celebrated pianist in Europe. He was Austrian by birth but in his youth
was taken to Paris to study at the Conservatoire, and thereafter made
Paris his home, and himself a Parisian.
Everywhere he played he was tremendously successful, whether in
France, Germany, or playing duets with Moscheles or Cramer in London,
or wandering over the continent of North America, and the islands
near it. He had _terriblement voyagé_, as he himself said in the
introduction to his most amusing book on his travels in America, _Mes
voyages_. His technique was, of course, quite out of the ordinary;
but so far as we may judge by his programs and by his compositions,
he put it to no exalted purpose. It was the day of variations and of
fantasias. Any time might serve for the former, and the virtuoso who
was also a keen man of business, with an eye on the public before
which he displayed himself and another on the publishers, generally
made use of airs popular in whatever land he might chance to be making
a present success. For example, among the publications of Henri Herz
one finds variations on the favorite air, _Le petit tambour_, on the
famous Irish air, ‘The Last Rose of Summer,’ on the Scotch air, ‘We’re
a’ noddin’,’ on the old song beloved of our grandmothers in this
country, ‘Gaily the Troubadour’; and _La Parisienne, marche nationale,
avec variations charactéristiques_. He published an arrangement of the
Marseillaise, an Austrian march, General Harrison’s quick-step, Empress
Henrietta’s waltz, numerous sets of quadrilles and other dances.
Perhaps we may never be sure how many of these publications he would
have acknowledged. In _Mes voyages_ he recounted how he found upon a
piano in a music shop a certain ‘Mlle. Sontag’s Waltz’ published as one
of his compositions. This was in the United States. The dealer in the
shop told Herz that this of all his compositions had made him famous in
the new country. Herz was about to protest that the music was none of
his, but was prevented by the counsel of his manager Ulmann, a man very
nearly as wily as the immortal P. T. Barnum, of whom, perhaps at bottom
a congenial soul, Herz had much to tell.
Fantasias were usually constructed on airs from the favorite operas of
the day. These, in the case of Herz, rarely amounted to more than a
series of variations, preceded by an introduction, and concluded with a
finale. Few showed much thought in structure, and indeed, such men as
Herz, Thalberg, and Liszt, could, and were expected to, improvise such
fantasias before the public.
But it would be a mistake to suppose that Herz’s elaborate
fantasias and variations lack cleverness and a very genuine
brilliance. An examination of many of them will prove to one even
at this day, when all are nearly or quite forgotten, that Herz
knew his piano astonishingly well. Let us look for a moment at
the _Variations brillantes_, opus 105, on a favorite motive from
Bellini’s _Sonnambula_. There is first an introduction. This is
withal desperately commonplace. It suggests posturings, meaningless
formalities, a whole technique of specious oratory. Yet it is a
technique. The weakness in such music is that it is ready-made. There
is no originality in it, nor any vitality. The eye discerns the stock
figures of the virtuoso laid one after the other across the page.
First, there are three measures of the chromatic scale, each measure
running through the octave, so that the second repeats the first, and
the third the second, with only the change of register. Moreover,
each measure is phrased by itself, and at the beginning of each there
is placed a mark of emphasis; so that there is not even an effect of
rushing or roaring from bottom to top, but only one of movement from
one point to another, like the leaping of the frog up the steep sides
of the well of our algebra problems. The final leap to the pinnacle of
high F, is worthy of the mountain goat.
This figure jumps its stages across our ears and out of sound. Then
follows a welling up of emotion. The orator condescends. He is affably
sentimental, will take us into his confidence, not without dignity,
however. Listen to the strains of this immortal melody! Here a heart
sings. What if it were Bellini’s heart, we now add upon our instrument
a long tremulous sigh of our own.
Once more the opening phrases. Here again the directions read,
_capriccioso_; and again the goat leaps up the scale from low F to
high. But here follows a passage of trills, long trills on F, on G, on
A, on B-flat, and so on, up and up to the highest of all F’s on the
keyboard; while the left hand surges and falls back in broken chords of
changing harmonies. Nothing could be more brilliantly effective. The
concluding measures of the introduction play with long, light scales
over a phrase or two of melody; and a long-drawn half-cadence, and a
fermata, announce at last that the piece is about to begin.
The statement of the theme itself is perfectly simple. One notices
the practically unvaried bass, the tum-tum of Hummel and Weber, and of
the lesser virtuosi. The first variation is, however, a masterpiece in
pianoforte style as far as the right hand is concerned. The mixture of
double and single notes is technically almost worthy of Chopin. But the
tum-tum bass perseveres and blights the whole. Still this variation
has a bright sparkle, the line of the upper part has a flowing grace,
and there is necessarily little of that repetition of one or two
stereotyped figures which in longer works almost strangles the life in
most music of the virtuoso type.
The second variation is hopelessly commonplace. The melody, scarcely
varied, is in octaves for the right hand, and the tum-tum for the left
is changed to a rat-a-tat-tat-a-ta-tat. The _raison d’être_ of the
variation is the crossing of the right hand over the left in the second
half of the first beat of _every_ measure, in order to dive, as it
were, into the deep accented note of the second beat. One cannot but
think of the leap of children from some upper loft to a hay-filled mow
beneath. Herz makes the right hand take such a flight here, over and
over again. One laughs with the delight of a child, yet wherein lies
the joy? Is it in the taking flight? The movement through the air? The
ultimate shock of landing?
The virtuoso is not a child. He is a clever man who plays upon what
is and ever will be the child in man,--his bump of wonder. And he does
not strike it with music, but with movement. It is not the notes of
his scales or of his runs, but the speed with which he accomplishes
them. Here in this second variation is proof of the case in point. If
in every measure the right hand, instead of taking its bold flight,
were to glide only one half as far and quietly relieve the left hand
of its accompanying chords of the second beat; and if the left hand,
so set free, were to play that resounding low note which was the
hay-mow to the right, but to the left is only a step downstairs, the
musical effect and the musical value of the piece would remain quite
unchanged. But Herz would not have played it so; for the reason that
he wrote this variation merely to show his right hand and arm in free,
sweeping movement through the air. Mark you, then: the great effect of
this second variation is wholly one of movement. Not only is there no
question of music; there is not even one of sound.
The third variation gives the theme to the left hand, and the right
flies up the keyboard in arpeggios and down in scales, at a high rate
of speed. From here the music expands freely into a sort of fantasia.
Fundamentally there are still variations, but they are not cut off
definitely from each other. Notice from here on, likewise, some
excellent writing for the keyboard, something of an independent and
melodious part for the left hand, brilliant chromatics, trills, and
runs that drop in whirling circles, tremolos, filigree scales over
smooth basses _à la_ John Field. Then there is a _Final_ in which the
theme is broken up into a lilting, extremely rapid waltz, and in which
the pianist is called upon to surmount difficulties of no trivial kind.
The series comes to an end in a coda, which, like many a classical
coda, swells big as the frog in the fable till it bursts.
These variations and all other variations of Herz are dead as the
facile hand that wrote them. There is nothing of musical life in them,
and consequently they never had a chance to prove themselves immortal.
But the point is not the lack of musical value in these pieces, but
the very striking presence of high technical skill. This, as found not
only here but in his concertos and other compositions, is the gauge of
his skill as a player, which by these signs was extraordinary. As a
musician he may very well have been a charlatan, but as a virtuoso he
was an adept. His universal success is, finally, proof that such a man
was the man that the public most wanted to hear.
Another indication of the public taste at that time, which, be it
remembered, was the time of Schumann and Chopin, is the fact that such
variations and fantasias as Herz now composed on familiar airs from
operas or household songs were, perhaps above all else, acceptable.
This again must mean that the general audience was interested not in
what we know as music, but in a movement of hands, arms, fingers, and
incidentally sounds, upon a musical structure with which they had not
to bother themselves. In other words one went to hear or to see what
the player could do, not to listen to what he could express of his own
emotion, or reveal of the emotional content of pianoforte music.
The pianoforte was, after all, a relatively new instrument. Though
Clementi, Mozart and Beethoven had written for it, they had not
forgotten that in the houses whither their music would find its way,
there were likelier to be harpsichords than pianofortes. It was not
until the time of Herz that the pianoforte had become familiar to
the household touch of prosperous tradesmen and artisans. Here was
created a new public, one which wished to relish its new possession,
to prune itself beside the blazing glory in which it might now boast
part-ownership.
There is an amusing passage in Von Lenz’s book[37] on the great
virtuosos. It was written in connection with Tausig, almost twenty
years after the death of Chopin. ‘His [Tausig’s] distinguishing
characteristic was,’ he wrote, ‘that he never played for _effect_,
but was always absorbed in the piece itself and its artistic
interpretation. This objectivity the general public never understood;
whenever serpents are strangled, it always wants to know just how big
and dangerous they are, and judges of this by the performer’s behavior.
The general public thinks that whatever appears easily surmounted, is
not really difficult, and that son or daughter at home might do it just
as well!’ The opera fantasias and variations of Herz, of Thalberg, and
even of Liszt had the advantage, from the manager’s point of view,
of making self-evident the bigness and dangerousness of the serpent;
for, that which was added to the familiar tune was no less than fangs,
coils, and fiery breath of the beast itself, which the knight of the
piano both created and destroyed.
II
As there were soldiers of fortune who, like Herz, made up by an
abundance of shrewd and witty sense, what they lacked in refinement,
there were others, like Sigismund Thalberg, whose outstanding quality
was elegance. Von Lenz called Thalberg the ‘only correct “gentleman
rider” of the piano.’ This may be taken to refer to his playing rather
than to his compositions. It was most beautiful playing, according to
all testimony, perfectly smooth, clear, sonorous, liquid, singing,
enriched by every quality, in fact, which may be derived from a perfect
and delicate mechanism governed by a fine ear. As a player he was by
many preferred to Liszt. This was a purely sensuous preference, based
entirely upon the qualities of sound which the two men were able to win
from the piano. In this regard Liszt and Thalberg may be considered
rivals of an equal endowment.
We must, however, limit ourselves to the quality of Thalberg’s
compositions, for astride of these he rode into the general
pianistic fray. He published eighty-three pieces or sets of pieces.
Three-quarters of these are variations or fantasias. As in the list
of Herz’s compositions, we find in that of Thalberg’s variations
on popular songs of many nations: on ‘God Save the King’ and ‘Rule
Britannia,’ on Viennese airs, and Styrian melodies, on ‘Home, Sweet
Home,’ ‘The Last Rose of Summer,’ and ‘Lily Dale.’ Then there are
fantasias and grand fantasias on two dozen or more operas: _Norma_,
_Sonnambula_, _La Muette de Portici_, _Oberon_, _Der Freischütz_,
_Guillaume Tell_, _Robert le Diable_, _Don Pasquale_, _La Fille du
régiment_, _Un Ballo in Maschero_ and many others. The original works
are of no particular merit except that of being amiable and pleasingly
written for the piano. The most successful of the grand fantasias seems
to have been that on airs from Rossini’s _Moïse_, over which we may
pause to find evidence of his purposes and his style.
This was indeed one of the grand pieces of the century. A glance
through the pages is enough to show that Thalberg was a master of the
stupendous. Herz had nothing to show like the colossal climax and close
of this fantasia on ‘Moses.’ On the other hand, it seems that nowhere
in this grandiose composition is there any writing so fine as that of
the first variation of Herz’s we have just discussed.
But Thalberg is much more of a musician, or is more willing to show
himself one, than Herz. There are touches of good part-writing, of
skillful imitation, and of the combining of two melodies. There is an
introduction, beginning as quietly as Moses slept in the rushes, which
Thalberg builds up more solidly, if not more effectively, than Herz
built up his. The accompaniment to the first theme, simple enough as it
is, shows a touch of flesh--is not the skin and bones of the ‘tum-tum.’
On the whole the left hand part is more varied throughout. There is an
episode in D-minor in which the left hand figures are flexible, and
upon the taking up again of reminiscences of the first broad theme in
the right hand, the left hand plays with phrases of the theme of the
section to come.
There is little unity in the piece, hardly a perceptible architecture.
We have now a section in B-flat minor, and here we have many a
tum-tum-tum in the left hand. Rossini’s melody in the right, however,
is interesting enough in itself to carry the music along. This section
is extended by variants of the theme and a great deal of rapid finger
work--single notes for the most part. The last section begins after a
_fermata_ with a few ponderous introductory measures in broken chords,
rather thickly scored, but portentous. The stalwart melody is played
by the right hand, crossed over the left or mixed in with it. And now
watch Thalberg, and see how the man can ride.
This is a march theme, simply started at first, then played with the
thumb of the right hand, which has time between its separate notes to
scamper up and down the keyboard. Notice, too, that when the right hand
is soaring too high to be brought back in time for the thumb to perch
again on its melody, the thumb of the left hand jumps into the breach
and saves the line. Right thumb, left thumb, left thumb, right thumb,
either will do. And so the hands are free to jump and run and fly. This
emancipation was said to be Thalberg’s accomplishment; but instances
of dividing the melody between the two hands may be found in the work
of Beethoven, Schubert, and Weber. It were needless to mention Bach in
this connection. However, it is just the sort of thing Thalberg needs,
and he uses it skillfully and successfully.
Meanwhile, the accompaniment grows apace. There are runs of thirds
for the right hand, which can thus indulge itself, knowing it need
not be home before dark, so to speak, that the left hand thumb can
wind the clock and keep the fire burning. There is next a suggestion
of pounding chords, but this gives way to a strange shivering run
of repeated notes--one remembers how Kuhnau told the story of the
frightened Israelites two hundred and fifty years before, there are
growing agitation, shrieks of the rising wind, dreadfully raucous
repeated octaves, now on E and, with a flash, on F, and a pounding
left hand that marches and rushes. It is like the shriek of the
approaching locomotive above the roar of its thundering speed. And just
as it should crash into view, or into something, there is the sudden
stillness of infinite night, and then our march theme, spun like a
thread of silver through flying runs. From thumb to thumb it winds, and
always pianissimo. The effect must have been one to make a listener
breathless with amazement. Little by little crescendo, a change from
B-flat major to G-major, a substitution of full chords or octaves for
the single thumb notes, and an extension of the runs into the clouds,
these bring about the close, a last page where left and right hand
together pound out the theme in repeated solid chords, with _tutta la
forza_. Sheer noise it is, here; and with all this overpowering bombast
the fantasia on ‘Moses’ comes to an end.
Such a work is well worth considering. We may not flatter ourselves
that even at this day we could resist its power under the hands of a
virtuoso. It would not by any means sound flat. But the instinctive
response to such sonority would perhaps be a cause for shame to those
who were conscious of even a little musical learning. The word trash
comes quickly to the lips, and the more readily when we know our
sensational heart has beat a trifle faster in spite of our better
reason. It is not, then, that the music is feeble or unsuccessful, but
that we distrust sensationalism and cherish a professional shame of it.
The paraphernalia of the sensationalist composer is necessarily
limited, and Thalberg’s fantasias and variations suffer principally
because of these limitations. He has a great knowledge and control of
the pianoforte, but can find only scant variety of use for them. He
must depend most upon speed and upon noise, and both are what we may
call cumulative effects. In other and less elegant words, he must use
lots of speed and lots of noise. His runs are masses of notes, very
frequently no more than arpeggios or chromatic scales. He throws a run
up from a melody note as you throw a ball into the air. It covers its
distance and drops. It is no more the style of Chopin than your ball is
like the flight of a bird. But the very fact that it goes up and down
with no more freedom of movement than the ball that is thrown in the
air, is what makes it purely sensational, purely a matter of speed in a
mass of sound. If it went otherwise than upon its automatic way, your
ears would be pricked from feeling into listening.
In the matter of noise the effect must still be massive. The
sensationalist composer must always write for the feeling, not the
listening ear, and he can best overpower the former by repeating chords
rapidly; for in doing this he not only makes a very mountain of noise
but adds the mountain of movement upon it. Of all the tricks of the
pianist this is the most vulgarly sensational; and yet, when it comes
to a matter of noise how else can he accomplish his purpose? In no
other way can he make such a din, and if he tries any other he shocks
the ear into listening.
So in many a way Thalberg is a slave to his purpose. The ear that has
been trained to listen cannot but be wearied or outraged; but forget
our recently acquired habit of listening (for even among many of the
exalted it is only half acquired) and Thalberg may still today become
what Schumann called him more than half a century ago,--a god--at the
piano. Rubinstein, by the way, was hardly the man to call him a grocer,
even though he dealt, as we have had to admit, with masses of notes.
There was a splendor about him, something fine and grand as well; but
like gods in general he was not to be, or may not now be approached,
else he loses his godhead, which resolves into an agitation of the ear.
There is no splendor in his music but the splendor of sensation.
If we examine the fabric of his music with a more technical eye
we shall find that he makes relatively little use of double notes,
relatively little demand upon the left hand as far as broad figures are
concerned, but much upon the lightness and freedom of the wrist in both
hands. There is, besides, the dividing of the melody between the thumbs
of both hands, already mentioned.
He had a very unusual power over melody on the piano. For this we have
the word of his none too amiable rival, Liszt, that Thalberg alone
could make the piano sing like the violin. He was invited to publish
an instruction book on _L’art du chant, appliqué au piano_. This is
composed of a few introductory paragraphs, and a dozen transcriptions
of melodies upon which the student was expected to work out the
precepts he had just read. The remarks may still be of some interest to
the pianist, but surely the transcriptions will be more so. The day for
that sort of music has gone by, but one may still delight in the skill
with which Thalberg was able to write melody, originally conceived
for voices or violin, with orchestral accompaniment, upon the piano.
None of these is so pretentious as some of the big transcriptions of
symphonies and overtures made by Liszt; but from the point of view of
workmanship all are quite equal to Liszt. The eighth--on a scene from
Meyerbeer’s _Il Crociato_--is tremendously effective in places. The
ninth--on a ballade from _Preciosa_--is exceedingly well done. The
tenth is a wholly charming transcription of one of the _Müller-Lieder_.
We may speak, in passing, of a nocturne in E major, opus 28, as
representative of the best of his original compositions. It is by no
means great music either in the sense of inspired emotion or of richly
varied workmanship; but it is well adapted to the piano, sweet in
melody, and not too sweet in mood. The obbligato treatment of the left
hand in the middle section is worthy of note as a sign of considerable
technical ability, the development of which probably atrophied under
the close pressure of a constant adulation. This Nocturne seems on
the whole rather above the average of Mendelssohn’s ‘Songs without
Words,’ by virtue of the treatment of the piano in it; and may, with
other of his original works, be gently slid into the company of Liszt’s
‘Consolations’ and ‘Love Dreams.’
Most of the music of Herz and Thalberg has been forgotten, and that
which might still be successfully played, is now banished from the
concert stage as trash. It is true not only that one finds a great
sameness in it, but also that in the light of a longer familiarity
with the instrument and of strides in executive skill on the keyboard
little of it presents what may seem to us today even ingenuity. Yet
to estimate its value as well as its significance in the world of
pianoforte music one must not forget the purpose for which it was
written; namely, to display the composer’s skill as a performer, and
the brilliant and powerful resources of the instrument, and at the same
time to win a livelihood from the world by stirring its inhabitants to
a frenzied delight. The aim to succeed with the public, no matter what
the means, has something of the heroic in it, and in music which has
been the means of such success there must be some element of bigness.
This bears no relation to the greatness of service to an ideal which
is sacred. It is in every way profane. Yet it is at the same time a
force always to be reckoned with, the more so as the development of
society gives the power to the mass of people to assert its own tastes
and demand its own enjoyments. To such a development the universal
success of Herz and Thalberg is related. It is because of still further
development that their wonders have become commonplaces, not because
either their purpose or their music is intrinsically contemptible. Both
these are respectable as manifestations of energy and great labor; and
that the two great players achieved a victory which won the applause of
the whole world, indicates a streak of the hero in the cosmos of both.
III
We may conceive Herz and Thalberg each to be an infant Hercules,
strangling serpents in his cradle, if we compare them with Franz Liszt,
who, above all else, represents virtuosity grown to fully heroic
proportions. He was the great and universal hero in the history of
music. He cannot be dissociated from the public, the general world
over which he established his supremacy by feats of sheer muscular
or technical skill. Even the activity of his mind was essentially
empirical. Especially in the realm of pianoforte music he won his
unique place by colossal energy put to test or to experiment upon the
public through the instrument. The majority of his compositions in this
branch of music are _tours de force_.
His manifold activities in music all reveal the truly great virtuoso,
whom we may here define as an agent of highest efficiency between
a created art and the public to which it must be related. We will
presently analyze some of his compositions for the pianoforte, but
without presuming to draw from features of them so discovered any
conclusions as to their musical vitality or their æsthetic value.
These conclusions must be left to the wisdom and sense of posterity;
whatever they may prove to be, one cannot at present but recognize in
Liszt first and foremost the intermediary. He so conducted himself
in all his musical activities, which, taken in the inverse order
of their importance, show him as a writer upon subjects related to
music, as a conductor, as a composer, and as a pianist. He worked
in an indissoluble relation with the public, and by virtue of this
relation appears to us a hero of human and comprehensible shape, though
enormous, whose feet walked in the paths of men and women, and whose
head was not above the clouds in a hidden and secret communion which we
can neither define nor understand.
Many qualities in his character and in his person, which, of course,
are of no importance in estimating the value of his compositions,
made his peculiar relation with the public secure. His face was very
handsome, brilliantly so; he had a social charm which won for him a
host of friends in all the capitals of Europe; he was fascinating
to men and women in private, and in public exercised a seemingly
irresistible personal magnetism over his audiences. He was, moreover,
exceedingly generous and charitable, quick to befriend all musicians,
especially men younger than he, and to lend his aid in, movements of
public benefaction. He was an accomplished linguist, and cosmopolitan,
indeed international in his sympathies. As a teacher he inspired his
many pupils with an almost passionate affection and feeling of loyal
devotion. All these qualities set him quite apart from the wizard
Paganini, with whom alone his technical mastery of his instrument was
comparable. Paganini was wrapped in mystery, whether he wove the veil
himself or not; Liszt was thoroughly a man of the world.
Liszt’s playing was stupendous. At least two influences fired him not
only to develop a technique which was limited only by the physically
impossible, but to establish himself as the unequalled player of the
age. Already as a youth when he first came to Paris this technique
was extraordinary, though probably not unmatched. It was the wizardry
of Paganini, whom he heard in Paris, that determined him to seek an
attainment hitherto undreamed of in skill with the keyboard. This
he achieved before he left Paris to journey away from the world in
Switzerland and Italy. During his absence Thalberg came to Paris and
took it by storm. Back came Liszt post-haste to vanquish his rival and
establish more firmly his threatened position. The struggle was long
and hotly fought, but the victory remained with Liszt, who, though he
had not that skill in a kind of melody playing which was peculiar to
Thalberg, towered far above his rival in virility, in fire, and in
variety.
We may thus imagine him established by force of arms as king of all
pianists. He never relinquished his royal prerogatives nor could he
tolerate a challenge of his power; but he proved himself most a hero
in the use to which he put this enormous power. He chose the master’s
highest privilege and made himself a public benefactor. It is true that
he never wholly discarded the outward trappings of royal splendor. He
played operatic fantasias like the rest; made, of his own, fabrics
which were of a splendor that was blinding. But the true glory of his
reign was the tribute he paid to men who had been greater than kings
in music and the service he rendered to his own subjects in making
known to them the masterpieces of these men, the fugues of Bach, the
last sonatas of Beethoven, the works of Chopin. It was largely owing to
Liszt that the general public was educated to an appreciation of these
treasures, even that it became aware of its possession of them. It may
be added that the pupils of this man, who was the most outstanding and
overpowering of all the pianoforte virtuosi, made wholly familiar to
the world a nobler practice of virtuosity in service to great music.
Here, however, must be mentioned one great contemporary of Liszt’s,
Clara Schumann, who, possessed of greatest skill, made her playing, in
even greater degree than Liszt, the interpreter of great music. It is
one of the richest tributes to Liszt as a pianist that he may in some
respects be compared with that noble woman.
It seems to have been above all else the fire in Liszt’s playing which
made it what it was, a fire which showed itself in great flames of
sound, spreading with incredible rapidity up and down the keyboard,
which, like lightning, was followed by a prodigious thunder. Yet it was
a playing which might rival all the elements, furious winds, tumultuous
waters, very phenomena of sounds. Caricatures show him in all sorts of
amazing attitudes, and many draw him with more than two hands, or more
than five fingers to a hand. At the piano he was like Jupiter with the
thunder-bolts, Æolus with the winds of heaven, Neptune with the oceans
of the earth in his control. And at the piano he made his way to the
throne which perhaps no other will ever occupy again.
Just what was the effect of Liszt’s accomplishments upon pianoforte
technique must be carefully considered, and such a consideration will
bring us to problems which we may venture to assert are of profound
interest to the pianist and to the musician. Broadly speaking he
expanded the range of technique enormously, which is to say that he
discovered many new effects and developed others which had previously
been but partially understood. The _Douze Études d’exécution
transcendante_ may be taken to constitute a registry of his technical
innovations.
First, in these, and in all his music, he makes a free and almost
constant use of all the registers of the keyboard, the very low and
the very high more than they had been used before, and the middle with
somewhat more powerful scoring than was usual with any other composers
excepting Schumann. Particularly his use of the low registers spread
through the piano an orchestral thunder.
The ceaseless and rapid weaving together of the deepest and the
highest notes made necessary a wide, free movement of both arms, and
more remarkably of the left arm, because such rapid flights had hardly
been demanded of it before. The fourth étude, a musical reproduction
of the ride of Mazeppa, is almost entirely a study in the movement of
the arms, demanding of them, especially in the playing of the inner
accompaniment, an activity and control hardly less rapid or less
accurate than what a great part of pianoforte music had demanded of the
fingers.
It is in fact by recognizing the possibilities of movement in the arm
that Liszt did most to expand pianoforte technique. One finds not only
such an interplaying of the arms as that in ‘Mazeppa’ and other of his
compositions, but a playing of the arms together in octave passages
which leap over broadest distances at lightning speed. Sometimes these
passages are centred, or rather based, so to speak, on a fixed point,
from and to which the arms shoot out and back, touching a series of
notes even more remote from the base, often being expected to cover
the distance of nearly two octaves, as in the beginning of the first
concerto. There are samples of this difficulty in ‘Mazeppa’; and also
of other runs in octaves for both hands, which are full of irregular
and wide skips.
In the long and extremely rapid tremolos with which his music is
filled, it is again the arm which is exerted to new efforts. The last
of the études is a study in tremolo for the arm, and so is the first of
the Paganini transcriptions. The tremolo, it need hardly be said, is no
invention of Liszt’s, but no composer before him demanded either such
rapidity in executing it, or such a flexibility of the arm. The tremolo
divided between the two hands, as here in this last study, and the
rapid alternation of the two hands in the second study, depend still
further on the freedom of the arm. It is the arm that is called upon
almost ceaselessly in the tenth study; and the famous _Campanella_ in
the Paganini series is only a _tour de force_ in a lateral movement of
the arm, swinging on the wrist.
The series, usually chromatic, of free chords which one finds surging
up and down the keyboard, often for both hands, may well paralyze the
unpracticed arm; the somewhat bombastic climaxes, in which, _à la_
Thalberg, he makes a huge noise by pounding chords, are a task for
the arm. All of the last part of the eleventh étude, _Harmonies du
soir_, is a study for the arm. Indeed even the wide arpeggios, running
from top to bottom of the keyboard in bolder flight than Thalberg
often ventured upon, the rushing scales, in double or single notes,
the countless cadenzas and runs for both hands, all of these, which
depend upon velocity for their effect, are possible only through the
unmodified liberation of the arm.
All this movement of the arm over wide distances and at high speed
makes possible the broad and sonorous effects which may be said
to distinguish his music from that of his predecessors and his
contemporaries. It makes possible his thunders and his winds, his
lightnings and his rains. Thus he created a sort of grand style which
every one must admit to be imposing.
Beyond these effects it is difficult to discover anything further so
uniquely and so generally characteristic in his pianoforte style. He
demands an absolutely equal skill in both hands, frequently throughout
an entire piece. He calls for the most extreme velocity in runs of
great length, sometimes in whole pages; and for as great speed in
executing runs of double notes as in those of single. A study like the
_Feux-Follets_ deals with a complex mixture of single and double notes.
All these things, however, can be found in the works of Schumann, or
Chopin, or even Beethoven. Yet it must be said that no composer ever
made such an extended use of them, nor exacted from the player quite
so much physical endurance and sustained effort. Moreover, against the
background of his effects of the arm, they take on a new light, no
matter how often they had a share in the works of other composers.
It can hardly be denied, furthermore, that this new light which they
seem to give his music, by which it appears so different from that of
Schumann and even more from that of Chopin, is also due to the use
to which he puts them. With Liszt these things are indisputably used
wholly as effects. Liszt follows Thalberg, or represents a further
development of the idea of pianoforte music which Thalberg represents.
He deals with effects,--with, as we have said elsewhere of Thalberg,
masses of sound. Very few of his compositions for the pianoforte offer
a considerable exception, and with these we shall have to do presently.
The great mass of études, concert or salon pieces, and transcriptions,
those works in which he displays this technique, are virtuoso music. He
shows himself in them a sensationalist composer. Therefore the music
suffers by the necessary limitations mentioned in connection with Herz
and Thalberg, with the difference that within these limitations Liszt
has crowded the utmost possible to the human hand.
His great resources still remain speed and noise. He can do no more
than electrify or stupefy. It must not be forgotten that in these
limitations lies the glory of his music, its quality that is heroic
because it wins its battles in the world of men and women. It is superb
in its physical accomplishment. It shows the mighty Hercules in a
struggle with no ordinary serpent, but with the hundred-headed Hydra.
Yet if he will electrify he must do so with speed that is reckless,
and if he will overpower with noise he must be brutal. Hence the great
sameness in his material, trills, arpeggios, scales, and chromatic
scales, which are no more than these trills, arpeggios, scales, etc.,
even if they be filled up with all the notes the hand can grasp. Hence
also the passages of rapidly repeated chords in places where he wishes
to be imposing to the uttermost.
It would be an interesting experiment to take from Liszt’s pianoforte
music all these numerous effects and put them together in a volume;
then to classify them, and, having mastered three or four of the
formulas, to try to find any further difficulties. It is doubtful
if, having so mastered the few types, one would need to make great
effort to play the whole volume from cover to cover. And these effects
constitute the great substance of Liszt’s music. He fills piece
after piece with solid blocks of them. The page on which they are
printed terrifies the eye, yet they demand of the player only speed
and strength. Inasmuch as these may be presupposed in a theoretical
technique, the music is, theoretically, not technically difficult.
The higher difficulties of pianoforte playing are not to be met in
music that conforms to technical types, but in music the notes of
which appear in ever changing combinations and yet are of separate and
individual importance. Such music presents a new difficulty almost
in every measure. In playing it the mind must control each finger
in its every move, and may not attend in general but must attend in
particular. The player who can play the twelve études of Liszt will
find the Well-tempered Clavichord and the Preludes of Chopin more
difficult to play. In the _tours de force_ of Liszt his technique is of
itself effective; in the music of Bach or Chopin it must be effectual.
Having a colossal technique he can play Liszt, but he must ever
practise Bach and Chopin.
IV
Liszt wrote a vast amount of music for the pianoforte. There is not
space to discuss it in detail, and, in view of the nature of it and the
great sameness of his procedures, such a discussion is not profitable.
For a study of its general characteristics it may be conveniently and
properly divided into three groups. These are made up respectively of
transcriptions, of a sort of realistic music heavily overlaid with
titles, and of a small amount of music which we may call absolute,
including a sonata and two concertos.
The transcriptions are well-nigh innumerable. Some he seems to have
made with the idea of introducing great orchestral masterpieces into
the family circle by means of the pianoforte. So we may consider the
transcriptions, or rather the reductions of the nine symphonies of
Beethoven, of the septet by the same composer, and of the _Symphonie
Fantastique_ and the ‘Harold in Italy’ of Berlioz. He has succeeded in
making these works playable by ten fingers; but he did not pretend to
make them pianoforte music. He had an astonishing skill in reading from
full score at sight, and in these reductions he put this skill at the
service of the public.
In rearranging smaller works for the piano, such as songs of
Schumann, Chopin, Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Franz, he worked far
more for the pianist. He saw clearly the great problem which such a
rearrangement involved, that qualities in the human voice for which
these songs were conceived were wholly lacking in the pianoforte, and
that he must make up for this lack by an infusion of new material
which brought out qualities peculiar to the instrument. In so far as
possible he took the clue to these infusions from the accompaniment
to the songs he worked on. In some songs the accompaniment was the
most characteristic feature, or the most predominant element. There
his task was light. The transcription of the Erl King, for example,
meant hardly more than a division of the accompaniment as Schubert
wrote it between the two hands in such a way that the right would be
able to add the melody. There is practically nothing of Liszt in the
result. Schubert’s accompaniment was a pianoforte piece in itself.
Again, the accompaniment of ‘Hark, Hark, the Lark’ was originally
highly pianistic. But here the piano could sing but a dry imitation of
the melody; and Liszt therefore enriched the accompaniment, preserving
always its characteristic motive, but expanding its range and adding
little runs here and there, which by awakening the harmonious sonority
of the piano concealed its lack of expressive power in singing melody.
The result was a masterpiece of pianoforte style in which the melody
and graceful spirit of the song were held fast.
Those songs the accompaniments of which were effective on the
pianoforte seemed to blossom again under his hand into a new
freshness. His skill was delicate and sure. Even in the case where
the accompaniment was without distinction he was often able so to add
arabesques in pianoforte style as to make the transcription wholly
pleasing to the ear. The arrangement of Chopin’s song, ‘The Maiden’s
Wish,’ offers an excellent example. Here, having little but a charming
melody and varied harmonies to work on, he made a little piece of the
whole by adding variations in piquant style. But often where he had no
accompaniment to suggest ideas to him, he was either unsuccessful, as
in the transcription of Wolfram’s air from _Tannhäuser_, or overshot
the mark in adding pianistic figuration, as in that of Mendelssohn’s
_Auf Flügeln des Gesanges_. He touched the Schumann and Franz songs,
too, only to mar their beauty.
It may be that these transcriptions served a good end by making at
least the names and the melodies of a number of immortal songs familiar
to the public, but there can be no doubt that these masterpieces
have proved more acceptable in their original form. Most of Liszt’s
transcriptions have fallen from the public stage. Amateurs who have the
skill to play them have the knowledge that, for all their cleverness,
they are not the songs themselves. And those which have been kept alive
owe their present state of being to the favor of the pianist, who
conceives them to be only pieces for his own instrument.
The number of Liszt’s transcriptions in the style of fantasias is very
great. Like his predecessors and his contemporaries he made use of
any and every tune, and the airs or scenes from most of the favorite
operas. There are fantasias on ‘God Save the King’ and _Le Carnaval de
Venise_, on _Rigoletto_, _Trovatore_, and _Don Giovanni_. The name of
the rest is legion. The frequency with which a few of them are still
heard, would seem to prove that they at least have some virtue above
those compositions of Herz and Thalberg in a similar vein; but most of
them are essentially neither a better nor a worthier addition to the
literature of the instrument and have been discarded from it. Those who
admire Liszt unqualifiedly have said of these fantasias that they are
great in having reproduced the spirit of the original works on which
they were founded, that Liszt not only took a certain melody upon which
to work, but that he so worked upon it as to intensify the original
meaning which it took from its setting in the opera. The _Don Giovanni_
fantasia is considered a masterpiece in thus expanding and intensifying
at once.
But what, after all, is this long fantasia but a show piece of the
showiest and the emptiest kind? How is it more respectable than
Thalberg’s fantasia on themes from ‘Moses,’ except that it contains
fifty times as many notes and is perhaps fifty times louder and
faster? It is a grand, a superb _tour de force_; but the pianist who
plays it--and he must wield the power of the elements--reveals only
what he can do, and what Liszt could do. It can be only sensational.
There is no true fineness in it. It is massive, almost orchestral.
The only originality there is in it is in making a cyclone roar from
the strings, or thunder rumble in the distance and crash overhead. On
the whole the meretricious fantasia on _Rigoletto_ is more admirable,
because it is more naïve and less pretentious.
This _Reminiscenses de Don Juan par Franz Liszt_, dedicated to his
Majesty Christian Frederick VIII of Denmark with _respectueux et
reconnaissant hommage_, begins with a long and stormy introduction,
the predominant characteristic of which is the chromatic scale. This
one finds blowing a hurricane; and there are tremolos like thunder and
sharp accents like lightning. The storm, however, having accomplished
its purpose of awe, is allowed to die away, and in its calm wake comes
the duet _La ci darem la mano_, which, if it needed more beauty than
that which Mozart gave it, may here claim that of being excellently
scored for the keyboard. Liszt has interpolated long passages of
pianistic fiorituri between the sections of it, at which one cannot but
smile. Then follow two variations of these themes, amid which there is
a sort of cadenza loosing the furious winds again, and at the end of
which there is a veritable typhoon of chromatic scales, here divided
between the two hands in octaves, there in thirds for the right hand.
The variations are rich in sound, but commonplace in texture. Finally
there is a _Presto_, which may be taken as a coda, founded upon Don
Giovanni’s air, _Finch’ han dal vino_, an exuberant drinking song. The
scoring of this is so lacking in ingenuity as well as in any imposing
feature as to be something of an anti-climax. It trips along in an
almost trivial manner, with a lot of tum-tum and a lot of speed. Toward
the end there is many a word of hair-raising import: _sotto voce_,
_martellato_, _rinforzando_, _velocissimo precipitato_, _appassionato
energico, arcatissimo_, _strepitoso_, and a few others, all within the
space of little over three pages. There is also another blast or two
of wind. In the very last measures there is nothing left but to pound
out heavy, full chords with a last exertion of a battle-scarred but
victorious gladiator. And in spite of all this the last section of
the work is wanting in weight to balance the whole, and it seems like
a skeleton of virtuosity with all its flesh gone. It must be granted
that the recurrence of the opening motives at moments in the middle of
the fray, and at the end, gives a theoretical unity of structure which
similar fantasias by Herz and Thalberg did not have; but on the whole
it might well be dispensed with from the work, which, in spite of such
a sop to the dogs of form, remains nothing but a pot-pourri from a
favorite opera.
This huge transcription, as well as the delicate arrangements of
songs, the transcriptions of the overtures to ‘William Tell’ and
_Tannhäuser_, and of Mendelssohn’s ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ music, as
well as the elaborations of Schubert’s Waltzes and other short pieces
may, if you will, be taken as an instance of a professional courtesy
or public benefaction on the part of Liszt; but they stand out none
the less most conspicuously as virtuoso music. What Liszt really
did in them was to exploit the piano. They effect but one purpose:
that of showing what the piano can do. At the present day, when the
possibilities of the instrument are commonly better known, they are a
sort of punching bag for the pianist. Surely no one hears a pianist
play Liszt’s arrangement of the overture to _Tannhäuser_ with any sense
of gratitude for a concert presentation of Wagner’s music. Nor does one
feel that the winds and thunders in the _Don Giovanni_ fantasia may
cause Mozart to turn in his grave with gratitude. One sees the pianist
gather his forces, figuratively hitch up his sleeves, and if one is
not wholly weary of admiring the prowess of man, one wets one’s lips
and attends with bated breath. Something is to be butchered to make a
holiday in many ways quite Roman.
V
The second group of music to be observed consists of original pieces
of a more or less realistic type. Nearly all have titles. There are
_Impressions et Poésies_, _Fleurs mélodiques des Alpes_, _Harmonies
poétiques et réligieuses_, _Apparitions_, _Consolations_, _Légendes
and Années de pèlerinage_. There are even portraits in music of the
national heroes of Hungary. In the case of some the title is an
after-thought. It indicates not what suggested the music but what
the music suggested. There are two charming studies, for example,
called _Waldesrauschen_ and _Gnomenreigen_, which are pure music
of captivating character. They are no more program music than
Schumann’s ‘Fantasy Pieces,’ nor do they suffer in the slightest from
the limitations which a certain sort of program is held to impose
upon music. First of all one notices an admirable treatment of the
instrument. There is no forcing, no reckless speed nor brutal pounding.
Then the quality of the music is fresh and pleasing, quite spontaneous;
and both are delightful in detail.
Others are decidedly more realistic than most good music for the
pianoforte which had been written up to that time. Take, for example,
the two Legends, ‘The Sermon of the Birds to St. Francis of Assisi,’
and ‘St. Francis of Paule Walking on the Waves.’ These are picture
music. In the one there is the constant twitter and flight of birds, in
the other the surging of waters. Both are highly acceptable to the ear,
but perhaps more as sound than as music. They depend upon effects, and
the effects are those of imitation and representation. The pieces lose
half their charm if one does not know what they are about.
There seems to be no end of the discussion which has raged over the
relative merits of so-called program music and absolute music. It
has little relation to the beauty of sound in both kinds; else the
triumphant beauty of much program music would have long since put an
end to it. The Liszt Legends are as delightful to the ear as any other
of his pieces which have no relation to external things. What we have
to observe is that they deal with effects, that is with masses of
sound--trills, scales and other cumulative figures; that, finely as
these may be wrought, they have no beauty of detail nor any detailed
significance. Here is no trace of that art of music which Chopin
practised, an art of weaving many strands of sound in such a way that
every minute twist of them had a special beauty, a music in which
every note had an individual and a relative significance. The texture
of the ‘Legends’ is perhaps brilliantly colored, but it is solid or
even coarse in substance, relatively unvaried, and only generally
significant. But it serves its purpose admirably.
In the _Années de pèlerinage_ one finds a great deal of Liszt in
a nut-shell. The three years of wandering through Switzerland and
Italy netted twenty-three relatively short pieces, to which were
later added three more, of Venetian and Neapolitan coloring, a
_gondoliera_, a _canzona_, and a _tarantella_. All these pieces bear
titles which are of greater or lesser importance to the music itself.
It must be admitted that only a title may explain such poor music
as _Orage_, _Vallée d’Obermann_ and _Marche funèbre_ (in memory of
Emperor Maximilian of Mexico). These pieces are inexcusable bombast.
The _Vallée d’Obermann_, which may claim to be the most respectable
of them, is not only dank, saturated with sentimentality, but lacks
spontaneous harmony and melody, and toward the end becomes a mountain
of commonplace noise to which one can find a parallel only in such
songs as ‘Palm Branches’ (_Les Rameaux_). The ‘Chapel of William Tell,’
the ‘Fantasia written after a reading of Dante,’ the three pieces
which claim a relation to three sonnets of Petrarch, and the two _Aux
cyprès de la villa d’Este_, are hardly better. There is an _Éclogue_, a
piece on homesickness, one on the Bells of Geneva, an ‘Angelus’ and a
_Sursum Corda_ as well. Three, however, that deal with water in which
there is no trace of tears--_Au lac du Wallenstedt_, _Au bord d’une
source_, and _Les jeux d’eaux à la Villa d’Este_--are wholly pleasing
and even delightful pianoforte music. Especially the second of these is
a valuable addition to the literature of the instrument. The suggested
melody is spontaneous, the harmonies richly though not subtly colored,
the scoring exquisite.
Yet, though in looking over the _Années de pèlerinage_ one may find but
a very few pieces of genuine worth, though most are pretentious, there
is in all a certain sort of fire which one cannot approach without
being warmed. It is the glorious spirit of Byron in music. There is the
facility of Byron, the posturing of Byron, the oratory of Byron; but
there is his superb self-confidence too, showing him tricking himself
as well as the public, yet at times a hero, and Byron’s unquenchable
enthusiasm and irrepressible passionateness.
Finally we come to the small group of big pieces in which we find the
sonata in B minor, the two concertos, several études, polonaises and
concert pieces. Among the études, the great twelve have been already
touched upon. Besides these the two best known are those in D-flat
major and in F minor. The former is wholly satisfactory. The latter
is at once more difficult and less spontaneous. The two polonaises,
one in C minor and one in E major, have the virtues which belong to
concert pieces in the style of Weber’s _Polacca_, the chief of which is
enormous brilliance. In addition to this that in C minor is not lacking
in a certain nobility; but that in E major is all of outward show.
The two concertos are perfect works of their kind, unexcelled in
brilliancy of treatment of both the orchestra and the piano, and that
in E-flat major full of musical beauty. Both are free in form and
rhapsodical in character, effusions of music at once passionate and
poetical. That in A major loses by somewhat too free a looseness of
form. Even after careful study it cannot but seem rambling.
The sonata in B minor is perhaps Liszt’s boldest experiment in
original music for the pianoforte alone. One says experiment quite
intentionally, because the work shows as a whole more ingenuity than
inspiration, is rather an invention than a creation. There are measures
of great beauty, pages of factitious development. At times one finds a
nobility of utterance, at others a paucity of ideas.
As to the themes, most of them are cleverly devised from three
motives, given in the introduction. One of these is a heavy, descending
scale (_lento assai_); another a sort of volplane of declamatory
octaves which plunge downward the distance of a diminished seventh,
rise a third, and down a minor seventh again through a triplet; the
third a sort of drum figure (_forte marcato_). The initial statement
of these motives is impressive; but it is followed by a sort of
uninteresting music building which is, unhappily, to be found in
great quantity throughout the whole piece. This is no more than a
meaningless repetition of a short phrase or figure, on successive
degrees of the scale or on successive notes of harmonic importance.
Here in the introduction, for example, is a figure which consists
of a chord of the diminished seventh on an off beat of the measure,
followed by the downward arpeggio of a triad. This figure is repeated
five times without any change but one of pitch; and it is so short and
the repetitions so palpable that one feels something of the irritation
stirred by the reiterated boasting of the man who is always about to do
something.
The long work spins itself out page after page with the motives of
the introduction in various forms and this sort of sparring for time.
There is no division into separate movements, yet there are clear
sections. These may be briefly touched upon. Immediately after the
introduction there is a fine-sounding phrase in which one notices the
volplane motive (right hand) and the drum motive (left hand). It is
only two measures long, yet is at once repeated three times, once in B
minor, twice in E minor. Then follow measures of the most trite music
building. The phrases are short and without the slightest distinction,
and the ceaseless repetition is continued so inexorably that one may
almost hear in the music a desperate asthmatic struggle for breath. One
is relieved of it after two or three pages by a page of the falling
scale motive under repeated octaves and chords.
There is next a new theme, which seems to be handled like the second
theme in the classical sonata form, but leads into a long section of
recitative character, in which the second and third motives carry the
music along to a singing theme, literally an augmentation of the drum
motive. This is later hung with garlands of the ready-made variety, and
then gives way to a treatment of the volplane motive in another passage
of short breathing. The succeeding pages continue with this motive,
brilliantly but by no means unusually varied, and there is a sort of
stamping towards a climax, beginning _incalzando_. But this growth of
noise is coarse-grained, even though the admirer may rightly say that
it springs from one of the chief motives of the piece. It leads to a
passage made up of the pompous second theme and a deal of recitative;
but after this there comes a section in F-sharp major of very great
beauty, and the _quasi adagio_ is hauntingly tender and intimate. These
two pages in the midst of all the noise and so much that must be judged
commonplace will surely seem to many the only ones worthy of a great
creative musician.
After them comes more grandiose material, with that pounding of chords
for noise one remembers at the end of Thalberg’s fantasia on ‘Moses,’
then a sort of dying away of the music which again has beauty. A double
fugue brings us back to a sort of restatement of the first sections
after the introduction, with a great deal of repetition, scantness of
breath, pompousness, and brilliant scoring. Just before the end there
is another mention of the lovely measures in F-sharp major. There is a
short epilogue, built on the three motives of the introduction.
This sonata is a big work. It is broadly planned, sonorous and heavy.
It has the fire of Byron, too, and there is something indisputably
imposing about it. But like a big sailing vessel with little cargo it
carries a heavy ballast; and though this ballast is necessary to the
balance and safety of the ship, it is without intrinsic value.
* * * * *
In view of Liszt’s great personal influence, of his service rendered
to the public both as player and conductor, of his vast musical
knowledge, his enthusiasms and his prodigious skill with the keyboard,
one must respect his compositions, especially those for the pianoforte
with which we have been dealing. Therefore, though when measured
by the standards of Bach, Mozart and Chopin they cannot but fall
grievously short, one must admit that such a standard is only one of
many, and furthermore that perhaps Liszt’s music may have itself set
a new standard. Certainly in many ways it is superlative. It is in
part the loudest and the fastest music that has been written for the
piano, and as such stands as an achievement in virtuosity which was not
before, and has not since been, paralleled. Also it is in part the most
fiery and the most overpowering of pianoforte music. It is the most
sensational, as well, with all the virtues that sensationalism may hold.
These are, indeed, its proved greatness, and chief of them is a direct
and forceful appeal to the general public. It needs no training of
the ear to enjoy or to appreciate Liszt’s music. Merely to hear it is
to undergo its forceful attraction. Back of it there stands Liszt,
the pianist and the virtuoso, asserting his power in the world of men
and women. However much or little he may be an artist, he is ever the
hero of pianoforte music. So it seems fitting to regard him last as
composer of nineteen Hungarian Rhapsodies, veritably epics in music
from the life of a fiery, impetuous people. Rhythms, melodies, and
even harmonies are the growth of the soil of Hungary. They belonged to
the peasant before Liszt took them and made them thunderous by his own
power. What he added to them, like what he added to airs from favorite
operas, may well seem of stuff as elemental as the old folk-songs
themselves: torrents and hurricanes of sound, phenomena of noise. The
results are stupendous, and in a way majestic.
As far as pianoforte music is concerned Liszt revealed a new power
of sound in the instrument by means of the free movement of the arms,
and created and exhausted effects due to the utmost possible speed.
These are the chief contributions of his many compositions to the
literature of the piano. His music is more distinguished by them than
by any other qualities. In melody he is inventive rather than inspired.
His rhythms lack subtlety and variety. Of this there can be no better
proof than the endless short-windedness already observed in the sonata
in B minor, which is to be observed, moreover, in the Symphonic Poems
for orchestra. As a harmonist he lacks not so much originality as
spontaneity. He is oftener bold than convincing. One finds on nearly
every page signs of the experimentalist of heroic calibre. He is the
inventor rather than the prophet, the man of action rather than the
inspired rhapsodist. He is a converter into music oftener than a
creator of music.
Hence we find him translating caprices of Paganini into caprices for
the pianoforte; and when by so doing he has, so to speak, enlarged
his vocabulary enormously, he gives us, in the _Douze Études_, a sort
of translation of the pianoforte itself into a cycle of actions.
Again he translates a great part of the literature of his day into
terms of music: _Consolations_, _Harmonies poétiques et réligieuses_,
_Légendes_, _Eclogues_ and other things. Even Dante and Petrarch are so
converted, not to mention Sénancourt, Lamartine, Victor Hugo, Byron,
and Lenau, with other contemporaries. The Chapel of William Tell,
the Lake of Wallenstadt, the cypresses and fountains at the Villa
d’Este, even the very Alps themselves pass through his mind and out
his fingers. In this process details are necessarily obscured if not
obliterated, and the result is a sort of general reproduction in sound
that is not characterized by the detailed specialities of the art of
music, that is, of the art of Bach, Mozart, and Chopin. And even of
Schumann, it may be added, for Schumann’s music runs independently
beside poetry, not with it, so closely associated, as Liszt’s runs.
The question arises as to how this generalization of music will appear
to the world fifty years hence. Is Liszt a radical or a reactionary,
after all? Did he open a new life to music, a further development of
the pianoforte, or did he, having mastered utterly all the technical
difficulties of the pianoforte, throw music back a stage? Internally
his music has far less independent and highly organized life than
Chopin’s. But by being less delicate is it perhaps more robust, more
procreative? At present such hardly seems to be the case. A great part
of the pianoforte music of Liszt is sinking out of sight in company
with that of Herz and Thalberg--evidently for the same reason; namely,
that it is sensationalist music. Its relations to poetry, romanticism,
nature or landscape will not preserve it in the favor of a public whose
ear little by little prefers rather to listen than to be overpowered.
Yet, be his music what it may, he himself will always remain one of the
great, outstanding figures in the history of music, the revealer of
great treasures long ignored. Whatever the value of his compositions,
he himself, the greatest of all pianoforte virtuosi, set the standard
of the new virtuosity which, thanks to his abiding example, becomes
less and less a skill of display, more and more an art of revelation.
FOOTNOTES:
[37] W. von Lenz: ‘The Great Piano Virtuosos of Our Time.’ Translated
from the German by Madeline R. Baker, New York, 1899.
CHAPTER IX
IMITATORS AND NATIONALISTS
Inevitable results of Schumann, Chopin and Liszt--Heller,
Raff, Jensen, Scharwenka, Moszkowski, and other German
composers--The influence of national characteristics: Grieg,
his style and his compositions; Christian Sinding--The
Russians: Balakireff, Rubinstein, Tschaikowsky, Arensky,
Glazounoff, Rachmaninoff, Scriabin, and others--Spanish
traits; I. Albéniz; pianoforte composers in England and the
United States.
It is scarcely to be wondered at that the work of Chopin, Schumann,
and Liszt has eclipsed that of most of their contemporaries, nor
that three such remarkable composers should have left a standard for
pianoforte music by which little else for the piano since that day can
afford to be measured. One feels that the German Romantic spirit could
find no expression more complete than that which Schumann gave it; that
the beauties of sound in the pianoforte could not be again put into
such emotional form as Chopin put them; that the instrument itself
could not be made to do more than Liszt had made it do. These things
are nearly true. One cannot therefore expect to find in the music of
their obscure contemporaries such superlative greatness as has made
theirs known to the whole world. One expects to find, and does find,
in the music of their successors imitations of their method, style, or
technique. The literature for the piano has been stuffed to overflowing
with music of this kind. Only now and then may a little of it be
distinguished by a touch of originality, either of personal, or, more
frequently, of national or local idiom.
STEPHEN HELLER AND JOACHIM RAFF
I
In Germany the romanticism of Schumann, combined with the technique
of Liszt, has about run its course. With the exception of Brahms, no
composer of high order has there given his attention to the pianoforte.
Starting with Stephen Heller (1814-88), the most lovable contemporary
and friend of Chopin, the list of composers for the pianoforte touches
upon Joachim Raff (1822-82), Adolf Jensen (1837-79), Philipp and Xaver
Scharwenka, Maurice Moszkowski, Friedrich Gernsheim, for an instant on
Richard Strauss and longer upon Max Reger.
One protests against the obscurity into which Stephen Heller’s music
is rapidly falling. It is too charming to be let go. Yet it has too
little strength to stand much longer against the fate that has already
pushed Mendelssohn aside. Heller published over one hundred and fifty
pieces or rather sets of pieces for the piano. Nearly all of these are
in short forms; many of them are not more than a page long. Many of the
sets are given fanciful titles. One finds several sets--opus 86, opus
128, and opus 136--of Woodland Sketches (_Im Walde_); two _Promenades
d’un solitaire_, _Nuits Blanches_, _Reise um mein Zimmer_, and Thorn,
Fruit and Flower pieces, after Jean Paul Richter. Besides these there
are many sets of short studies, the most melodious simple studies that
have ever been written, for which both student and teacher should still
feel grateful; and there are numerous Preludes, Tarantelles and Dances.
Heller’s thoughts are fresh and winning, his style is remarkably clear
and well adapted to the keyboard. Among the preludes in all keys, opus
81, the second, third, fifteenth, eighteenth, and twenty-second are
far more effective than the majority of Mendelssohn’s ‘Songs Without
Words.’ The Tarantelles, and one or two of the _Promenades_, are
even brilliant. We mention these because they are before us. But on
the whole Heller’s pianoforte style is not distinguished by anything
except clearness. The parts for the left hand are monotonous, the
accompaniment figures rarely more than commonplace. Perhaps these
things are evident only by comparison of his music with Chopin or
Schumann.
Unhappily there is another weakness besides these. His rhythms are
unvaried, and his structures of phrases desperately regular. Here, we
think, lies the secret of its softness, its lack of virility and power
to stand against time. Heller repeats himself. He cannot take one step
without (in most cases) going back to take it over again. The process
is all the more distressing to the listener because Heller’s steps, or
his strides, are so invariably of the same length, and so inexorably
deliberate. His harmonies are very like Mendelssohn’s, and his melodies
are often sweet.
In a way the world has dealt more hardly with Joachim Raff than with
Heller; because not more than twenty-five years ago Raff was one of
the most played of all composers. Not only his pianoforte works. His
symphonies, especially _Im Walde_ and _Leonore_, held quite as high and
strong a place in the public favor as the symphonies of Tschaikowsky do
at the present day. And now even his pianoforte works are discarded.
There is a great number of them, including all sorts of salon music,
a concerto, and numberless transcriptions. His style is exceedingly
brilliant, showing markedly the influence of Liszt, with whom Raff was
on various occasions closely associated; but his ideas are almost never
more than commonplace. Oskar Bie speaks of the unfortunate _Polka de
la reine_. It is perhaps typical of Raff at his worst, yet there is
elsewhere in his music suggestion enough of what this worst can be. It
is hard to believe that the man who wrote eleven symphonies could have
written the romance opus 126, No. 2.
On the other hand, a piece like that called _La fileuse_ is in every
way acceptable. It is beautifully scored for the piano, worthy of Liszt
himself in that regard; and the treatment of the short motive which
lies at the base of it all, like the harmonies and modulations, is all
fresh and welcome to the ear. Among the shorter pieces there are many
that are clean-cut in style and that have a sort of sturdy charm even
today. Parts of a minuet in opus 126, and the gavotte in opus 125,
prove that he could write rhythmical music much better than the _Polka
de la reine_. On the whole one thinks of Raff as writing too easily for
his own good. Of this sort of vain facility Heller’s music is quite
free, and also of the false shine which in Raff’s music is so often the
result.
Adolf Jensen was a man of far more sensitive cast than Raff. His
music is finer, especially his songs. As a melodist he stands between
Schumann and Robert Franz, and indeed must be considered as one of
the best results of German romanticism in music. The influence of
Schumann is perhaps strongest in his work; but that of Chopin, and even
more that of Wagner in the later songs, can be detected. His style is
not distinctive, but it is expressive. It is strange to read in the
dedication prefixed to the _Romantische Studien_, a plea for fantastic,
emotional and mysterious life in pianoforte music. The best of his
keyboard music is the Wedding Music, opus 45, written for four hands.
Other works are the _Wanderbilder_, opus 17, the _Idyllen_, opus 43,
and the _Eroticon_, opus 44. There are besides these a sonata, opus 25,
and a German suite, opus 36.
Xaver Scharwenka and Maurice Moszkowski are among the successful
composers for the pianoforte of the last fifteen years or more.
Scharwenka’s first concerto, opus 35, in B-flat minor has been highly
praised. The second, third, and fourth have not made quite so good
an impression. Moszkowski is master of a most brilliant and facile
style on the keyboard. His waltzes, especially those in E major and
that in A major, his concert-studies, especially the _Etincelles_, and
the finished and brilliant Barcarolle have been played far and wide
with delight to both pianist and audience. Yet neither Scharwenka nor
Moszkowski has advanced pianoforte technique, nor has either of them
been the discoverer of new effects. There are some charming pieces by
Friedrich Gernsheim. One series, called _Symbole_, has just a touch of
that impressionism which has given the music of the French composers
its great charm.
The celebrated pianist Eugen d’Albert has composed pieces in almost
severely classic style, which have a manly, vigorous ring. A few early
works of Richard Strauss for the piano are hardly sufficient to suggest
that he might have done for that instrument what he came to do for the
orchestra. One looks in vain through the many pianoforte works of Max
Reger for any new treatment of the instrument. His pieces are descended
from Bach and Brahms, descended thence and passed through the shaping
medium of a remarkable mathematical mind.
Here, perhaps, among the Germans mention may be made of Arnold
Schönberg. He has written two sets of pianoforte pieces, the second of
which is the more remarkable. His genius is polyphonic, therefore his
music of this kind does not bring out the subtle qualities of the piano
which appealed to Chopin and which Debussy has further revealed. His
pianoforte compositions may be considered as a household arrangement
and presentation of his extraordinary theories, hardly as music
suggested by the instrument itself.
Evidently the Romantic movement in Germany, having expressed itself
almost thoroughly in pianoforte music through Schumann, passed on to a
new expression through Wagner, whose powerful genius, flying wide of
the keyboard, has since presided over and shaped the future of German
music. Only with Brahms, then, has the piano spoken a new word in its
own tongue.
II
After the middle of the nineteenth century an effort becomes noticeable
in many nations to inject some freshness or newness into music by
employing harmonies, turns of melodies and odd rhythms of a distinctly
local or national flavor. Awaiting the advent of a new genius of
international significance who should revolutionize music, or resurrect
it from a stagnation little better than death, such an effort toward
national expression was the most successful safeguard against imitation
and subservience. Moreover, it was productive of enthusiasm, which is a
quality of youth in music. Accepting forms and technique as matters of
course, composers threw themselves with joy into the expression of the
spirit of their beloved land.
Naturally in those countries which had inherited from the ages a store
of folk-music the new movement was the most striking. Scandinavia and
Russia were especially rich in such an endowment. Their folk-songs were
strongly marked and individual, and in so far as their composers drew
upon them the new music was differentiated from music founded upon the
classical German examples. In both Scandinavia and Russia composers
were divided. Some regarded this folk-material with disdain and adhered
to a faith in the inexhaustibleness of traditional inspiration. Others
threw themselves heart and soul into the music of their nation, with a
flaming ambition to reveal its unique beauties and power to the world.
Among the Scandinavians Niels Gade (1817-1890) first claims
attention as a composer for the pianoforte. And yet only for a
moment. His pianoforte pieces, including several sets of short
pieces--_Frühlingsblumen_, opus 2, _Aquarellen_, opus 19, and
_Volkstänze_, opus 31, one _Arabesque_, opus 27, and a sonata, opus
28--have but the faintest touch of the music of Denmark. Even the
_Volkstänze_ are urbane and refined. It was against this subservience
to Mendelssohn that Edvard Grieg rebelled. Grieg, therefore, who had
no more skill than Gade, and perhaps was fundamentally no more richly
gifted, stands out somewhat brilliantly among the composers for the
pianoforte since the time of Schumann, Chopin, and Liszt. His music
is sharply defined by national idioms. Whatever the value of his own
personality may be, his music is thus given a definite shape and an
independence, those signs of character which are unfortunately but very
feebly displayed in the music of most of the German post-romanticists.
The proof that this definiteness was acceptable to the world is to be
found in the persistent popularity of Grieg’s pianoforte compositions.
Most of these are in short forms and are relatively easy to play;
which facts must also be held in some measure responsible for their
popularity. There are several sets of ‘Lyrical Pieces,’ the best of
which are _opera_ 12, 38, 43, and 47. The later sets, _opera_ 54,
57, 62, 65, and 68, show a falling off which is noticeable in all of
Grieg’s work after middle life. There is a set of ‘Humoresques,’ some
Northern Dances, and some ‘Album Leaves.’
It may be said of these in general that they are neatly composed,
clearly phrased and balanced, sometimes polished; and that they are
well-written for the keyboard. The spice of all is in the national
idiosyncrasies of Norwegian music: the peculiar melodic avoidance of
the sixth and second notes of the scale and the harmonies which result
from such omissions; persistent rhythms emphasized by empty fifths in
the bass, or by repetitions of short phrases with almost a barbaric
effect; an interchanging of groups of two and three notes; finally a
general harmonic boldness in which the bodily shifting of the music
from one degree of the scale to another is prominent, and a host of odd
accents.
There are several longer works in which these national characteristics
are not less obvious, but in which they are so expanded and interwoven
as to make less strikingly folk-music. Among these must be mentioned
the sonata in E minor, opus 7, the concerto in A minor, opus 16, the
Ballade, opus 24, and the suite, _Aus Holberg’s Zeit_, opus 40. The
sonata is well written, and the classical form is well sustained in
the first movement. One does not find organic development, but, on
the other hand, one finds no empty service music. The themes and the
transitional passages are full of life, and strongly Norwegian. There
is, unhappily, a dreary passage in 6/8 time in the development section
which makes a dull use in the bass of the second phrase of the first
theme. The coda is in brilliant pianoforte style. The poetic slow
movement is also well-scored. The minuet is a Norwegian dance and the
finale is stormy.
The concerto may be taken as the finest of Grieg’s pianoforte works.
It is a treasured addition to the stock of concertos, valued not
only for the piquancy of Norwegian rhythms and harmonies, but for
a successful handling of the form, a brilliant and yet a poetical
treatment of both pianoforte and orchestra. Norway speaks in all the
themes and in very nearly all the figures as well, but she speaks
through a man who shows himself here a sensitive poet and a skillful
artist. There seems to be a touch of Schumann in the first part of the
first movement.
The Ballade is in the form of variations on a Norwegian theme. It
is in many respects the best of his works for the piano, though the
treatment of the keyboard nowhere shows originality. The influence
of the _Variations sérieuses_ of Mendelssohn is strikingly evident.
The theme itself, for all its plaintive Norwegian character, is so
near the type of the theme in the Mendelssohn variations as perhaps
to suggest to Grieg the same treatment of it. The sixth, seventh,
eighth and ninth variations are especially _à la_ Mendelssohn, as
far as treatment is concerned. After these, however, he seems to
have forsaken the _Variations sérieuses_ for Schumann’s ‘Symphonic
Variations.’ Nevertheless, the work as a whole is Grieg, and only the
external features suggest the home from which some of its glory may
have trailed. The last variations are broad in style and fiery, hardly
suggestive of the miniature perfection of the earlier shorter pieces.
From the Holberg suite one picks out the prelude as a fine piece of
pianoforte music. The other movements are effective and pleasing, but
the prelude is worthiest of Holberg. The suite as a whole reminds one
of a classic temple, flying the flag of Norway.
No other Norwegian composer has been so widely popular as Grieg. It is
true that already amateur and professional alike have discovered the
sameness of his mannerisms and his procedure; but such compositions as
the concerto and the ballade are strong enough to bear the music above
these heavy shackles. They are fairly to be considered as contributions
to the literature of the instrument of unusual worth.
Christian Sinding enjoys a popularity second among Norwegian composers
only to that of Grieg. He has more cosmopolitan predilections, and
he has worked in broader forms. Perhaps for those reasons he is less
distinctive. However, most of his pianoforte music has been cast in
short forms--usually a little more developed than those of Grieg. There
are numerous sets of three or of six pieces, of studies, of interludes,
of odd little caprices, dances and scherzos. The set opus 32 contains
the _Marche grotesque_ and the _Frühlingsrauschen_, among the best
known of his compositions. All the _Mélodies mignonnes_, opus 52, and
several of the caprices among the fifteen published as opus 54, are
interesting. He shows an understanding of keyboard effects, usually in
the broad style, with sharp accents, wide-flowing runs, and chords;
but there is a sameness about his music which seems to spring from a
lack of ingenuity in rhythm and in phrase building. He is technically
far more skillful than Grieg, but his pianoforte music lacks the
individuality which Grieg’s invariably has. Sinding’s concerto in
D-flat, opus 6, is a big and brilliant work, ingeniously wrought upon a
single idea, but it lacks the highly colored spirit and life of Grieg’s.
III
The Russian composers of the last half century have almost without
exception written something for the pianoforte; but their national
characteristics have found a more vivid expression in orchestral music
and music for the theatre than in keyboard music. Their technique has
been the technique of Liszt and Chopin, and a great part of them have
written in the style of Schumann. The national fervor did not kindle
all to the same intensity. Rubinstein and Tschaikowsky represent almost
two nationalities, and yet even Tschaikowsky held himself aloof from
the enthusiasms of the great Five.
From the pen of Glinka, the leader of the Russians, their first
pioneer, there was no pianoforte music. But his friend, the equally
famous Dargomyzhsky, wrote a Tarantella, for three hands,[38] which
Liszt transcribed. Thus enter the Russians into the history of
pianoforte music, at a time when Schumann, Chopin, and Liszt had about
exhausted the possibilities of expression on the keyboard in terms of
music as it was then, and was for fifty years more to be understood.
Nevertheless each of the great five, Balakireff, Borodine, Moussorgsky,
Rimsky-Korsakoff, and César Cui, has contributed more or less to the
keyboard. The ‘Islamey Fantasy’ of Balakireff is perhaps the most
brilliant and the most significant work of the lot. The themes are
original, but they have the strong Oriental coloring which has given to
much of Russian music its splendor. This fantasy has a sort of barbaric
power. The first section is built up out of countless repetitions of a
short motive, most brilliantly scored, which whirls and whirls like the
dervishes until we are mad as they. And this is resumed again, after a
somewhat more tranquil section, and whirled more and more madly, until
the time seems to break, and give way to a stamping. It is the work of
a lover of folk-music as well as a man who knew the piano almost as
well as Liszt did.
Balakireff’s pianoforte transcription of Glinka’s ‘A Life for the Czar’
is a masterpiece of its kind, and there are transcriptions of Glinka’s
songs as well. There are two scherzos, of which the second--in B-flat
minor--is remarkable; a Concert Waltz dedicated to d’Albert, and a
wonderful ‘Dumka.’
The others of this group were far less able pianists, and their
contribution to the literature of the instrument was small. There is
a set of variations by Rimsky-Korsakoff, and also a group of short
pieces, opus 11, in the style of Schumann; and Moussorgsky wrote a
_Kinderscherz_ and an _Intermezzo_. There is a touch of Russian in
these. The works of César Cui are even more cosmopolitan. They include
a set of preludes, two suites, one dedicated to Liszt, the other
to Leschetizsky, and a number of simple pieces, among them twelve
_Miniatures_. But the _Dumka_ and the _Islamey_ of Balakireff stand far
above all the other pianoforte music written by the five, not only from
the point of view of style, but as an expression of national spirit.
Anton Rubinstein (1830-1894) desired to be known as a composer rather
than as a virtuoso, but his once often-heard compositions, works for
the pianoforte, overtures, symphonies, and operas, are rapidly losing
their hold on the public, and it seems likely that they will not be
remembered even so long as his playing will. The distinctively Russian
element in them is well-nigh concealed beneath the many strands of
western influence, and indeed he was himself so much in doubt and so
easily influenced that hardly his own personality finds a consistent
or thorough expression in his music. Some of the études in opus 23 may
continue to be cherished by the pianist as excellent practice pieces.
The concert music of other kinds, even the once greatly popular suite
of dance pieces, _Le Bal_, with its brilliant polka, mazurka, waltz,
and galop, is already less and less performed. The two Barcarolles,
opus 30, No. 1, and opus 50, No. 3, still enjoy some favor. The
_Kammenoi-Ostrow_ and the Melody in F will keep his memory green in
many a family circle so long as they are included in family music
books. Of the five concertos, that in D minor, No. 4, is by general
consent by far the best, and seems at present the only one of his
works, excepting one or two of the songs, that will be able to retain
much longer the respect of musicians or pianists.
It is far different with Tschaikowsky. He wrote only moderately
well for the keyboard, but the emotional fire of his music is of
the kind that burns long. The short pieces, of which there are some
half dozen sets, are not of any great significance, though many of
them, specifically the vigorous _Troïka_, op. 37, No. 11, and the
_Humoresque_ in G, op. 10, No. 2, are full of charm. The sonata in
G major, opus 37, is a difficult and a fiery work. There are three
concertos for pianoforte and orchestra: one in B-flat minor, opus 23,
one in G major, opus 44, and one in E-flat major, opus 75. Of these the
first is by far the best, and is indeed the most significant of all his
compositions for the instrument.
The form of the concerto is classical, but the spirit is
Russian in spite of it. One feels it in the character of the themes,
particularly of the chief theme of the last movement, with its barbaric
rhythm and its savage repetitions of short motives. The piano is
handled in a more or less grandiose way, yet never in some respects
was it handled more grandly. The chords of the introduction are almost
unique in their splendor. There are bold and difficult passages in
octaves, and great climaxes which demand unusual physical endurance. On
the other hand, there are passages of extremely effective finger work,
even though the figuration as a whole can hardly be called original or
distinguished. The cadenza in the first movement, the variations and
trills in the slow movement, and, most of all perhaps, the fleet runs
just before the coda of the last movement, these are all remarkable
accomplishments for a composer who called himself no pianist. The
whole was a favorite of von Bülow’s, who played it for the first
time in public, by the way, at a concert in Boston. Among other of
Tschaikowsky’s pianoforte compositions von Bülow had also an admiration
for the Theme and Variations, which is the sixth of the six pieces,
opus 19. The second and third concertos are weakly constructed and
ineffective; but by reason of the first, Tschaikowsky’s name will live
for long in pianoforte music.
[Illustration]
Anton Rubinstein’s Hand.
_Photographed from a plaster cast_.
The compositions of the younger school of Russian composers are far
too numerous to be passed in review. In no country has there been a
more active or a more fruitful musical life; and nearly all of the
many composers have written sometimes much, sometimes little, for the
pianoforte. In general these composers may be divided into two groups,
one of which is clearly still guided by the musical ideals of Western
Europe, still more or less dependent on Schumann and Chopin; the other
drawing its enthusiasm and its inspiration from the great Five.
The most prominent in the former group is Anton Arensky (b. 1861), who
is master of a smooth, flowing pianoforte style, and who has the art
of writing melody for the pianoforte. Among his short pieces Walter
Niemann[39] mentions three published as opus 42, the Esquisses, opus
24, twenty-four pieces, opus 36, and the well-known _Basso ostinato_ in
which he finds no trace of German influence. To these may be added the
little piece, _Près de la mer_, from opus 52, and the effect concert
study, opus 36, No. 13. With Arensky Niemann also reckons Genari
Karganoff and Paul Juon.
Alexander Glazounoff (b. 1865) has more fire than Arensky, but in
spite of his pronounced loyalty to Russian ideals in music, the
influences of Schumann and Chopin are evident in his pianoforte style.
Apart from several short pieces, he has written a Theme and Variations,
opus 72, and two sonatas, one in B-flat, opus 74, and one in E, opus
75, both of which are more distinguished by fluent writing than by
characteristically Russian ideas. The Prelude and Fugue, opus 62, is
the most unusual and the most profound of his works for pianoforte.
The pianoforte works of Serge Rachmaninoff are essentially Russian, in
many ways a fulfillment of the promise given by Balakireff’s. The style
is brilliant and always effective. Melodies, harmonies are unusual, and
his rhythms are bold and full of at times a savage life. He may be said
to have won attention as a composer for the pianoforte by the Prelude
in C-sharp minor; of which it must be said that endlessly as it has
been played it still remains a piece of profound meaning and effect.
He has published at least twenty-three preludes, of which this still
remains the best-known, with the possible exception of that in G minor.
Here again there is a spirit not common to Western Europe; one hears
it in the steady powerful rhythm, the outbursts of sound, the strange
intensity of the melody of the middle section.
The two sonatas, opus 28 in D minor, and opus 36 in B-flat minor, seem
on the whole less powerful and vigorous than the three concertos, of
which the third, opus 30, in D minor, is truly a gorgeous work. There
are, besides these big works and the preludes, some études, opus 33,
some variations on a theme of Chopin, opus 22, and a few salon pieces,
mostly in brilliant style.
Anatole Liadoff (b. 1855) and Nicholas de Stcherbatcheff (b. 1853)
also draw generously upon their native music. The former is more of
a painter in music, fond of color; the latter is fond of short forms
and is master of a dainty style. More intensely national than these,
though, strictly speaking, not Russian, is the Lett Joseph Wihtol (b.
1863). He has interested himself deeply in the folk-songs of his own
province, which are more like Swedish than Russian folk-songs; and his
most considerable work is a set of variations, opus 6, on a Lettish
theme. Niemann[40] likens them to the Ballade of Grieg.
Finally, among the most interesting of all the Russian composers,
although in some respects the least Russian among them, is to be
reckoned the late Alexander Scriabin. His works for the pianoforte
comprise a great many sets of short pieces, some études, a concerto,
and ten sonatas. On the whole they give a very distinct impression that
Scriabin is not a creative genius of the highest order; and he has
given over the fresh, albeit humble, life of the music of his native
land only at first to imitate Chopin, Schumann, and Brahms; and later
to devise a sort of music which is unusual without wholly justifying
itself.
Most of these works are brilliantly written for the keyboard, but
until in the later works he has begun to develop a new harmonic system
they offer no difficulties but those of Chopin and Liszt. The études,
opus 12 and opus 42, are an epitome of his technical equipment. His
many experiments in rhythms and in harmonies never seem to ring quite
true; and almost instinctively one takes them to be a substitute for
musical expression. The first set--opus 12--is not very startling.
Already in these pieces he shows the influence of Brahms. The second
deals with triplet groups of octaves and single notes for both hands,
one group containing two octaves with a single note between, the next
two single notes with an octave between, thus progressing alternately
through the piece. The complexity is in many ways a rhythmical one,
for two groups in sequence will seem to be divided into three beats,
each accented by an octave. The third is a study in the movement of
the arm such as is required in many of Brahms’ pieces. The sixth, a
study in sixths, is perhaps more after the manner of Chopin, though it
lacks entirely the grace and inner melodiousness which is above all
else characteristic of Chopin’s music. The tenth is by all means the
most difficult, a truly brilliant study in double notes for the right
hand. One finds in several of the studies of this set that the initial
direction of the left hand accompaniment figures is downward. This is a
characteristic feature in Scriabin’s style, and in part accounts for a
strange ethereal, not to say pale, quality in his pianoforte music. His
harmonies instead of being solidly founded in the bass, seem to drift
downward from the upper part.
The difficulties of the second set of studies, opus 42, are almost
exclusively rhythmical, and may be taken as a further development or
an expansion of the rhythmical processes to be found in many of the
Brahms variations on a theme of Paganini. In the first study the left
hand is phrased into five groups against triplets in the right, and in
the eighth there is a combination of a rhythm of five beats with one of
nine. There is no doubt that the rhythmical systems of European music
are restricted and unvaried, and that there is a vast field in the
future of music for the development of more subtle and complex systems.
Therefore Scriabin’s experiments point forward. If only he had a
little more spontaneous sense of melody and harmony to make of these
rhythmical studies something more than experiments! In this series the
falling of the accompaniment figures is even more noticeable than in
the earlier one.
The harmonies in both series tend to be most unusual without being
self-sufficient. They run parallel to the system of earlier masters
without seeming related to it. The meaning of this statement will
perhaps be clear by a reference to two of the short studies in opus 65.
In the first of these the right hand plays continuously in ninths, in
the second it plays in sevenths--major, not minor. The effect of both
is presumably melodic; that is, we are to listen to a melody, played
not in octaves, but in ninths or sevenths, the latter of which may be
said to be almost the harshest interval in music. Now this is not so
much an expansion of harmony as it is a concentration on a particular
interval, which is, as it were, extracted from all relation to our
harmonic system and given an isolated independence. Then it is made
to stalk alongside the general progression of the music. This is no
hour to speak of forced effects in music. Music is expanding about us
and touching notes we never dreamed of, and we may hardly venture to
criticize without running the risk of finding in the end that we had a
cloddish ear, insensitive to a nascent beauty since grown resplendent.
Yet in all open-mindedness it is hard not to find Scriabin’s harmonic
procedures arbitrary and often dry as dust.
Few of his short pieces are genial. There is a sort of stiffness in
them and they are strangely barren. Leaving aside the early ones
which are close to Schumann and Chopin, one comes upon a _Satanische
Dichtung_, opus 36, which is lineally descended from Liszt’s Mephisto
waltz, then upon two short pieces, opus 57, the one called _Désir_, the
other _Caresse dansée_; a Poem and a Prelude, opus 59; and Two Poems,
opus 63, the first called _Masque_, the second _Etrangeté_. These last
seem to us the best.
There are ten sonatas, of which we have examined the fifth, seventh,
ninth, and tenth. The fifth seems to owe its origin to that _Poëme
de l’extase_ which inspired one of his orchestral pieces. There is
enormous dramatic fire, but it is a fire that has little heat. The
seventh shows throughout that arbitrary selection of the harsh seventh
we have noted in the study opus 65, No. 2; but the second theme has
a rich beauty. Scriabin has directed that it be played now with a
celestial voluptuousness, now very purely, with profound tenderness
(_douceur_). The ninth and tenth seem very fine music. The former is
touched with morbidness. Scriabin intended it to be expressive of
some most extraordinary shades of mood or feeling, if we may judge by
his indications here and there. We may well ask what is a _langueur
naissante_, or again how we may express in music _une douceur de
plus en plus caressante et empoisonée_. In the tenth we have to do
with a _volupté douloureuse_, and many other remarkable phrases of
intellectualized emotion; but the sonata is a powerful and a moving
work, suggesting kinship with the symphonic poems of Richard Strauss.
Scriabin’s style is always finished. In general he demands more
of the pianist than the piano, that is he has not called forth the
intimate and finest qualities of the instrument but has treated it
as an orchestra. There are pronounced mannerisms, such as a fondness
for descending chromatic motives, and that downward dropping of
accompaniment figures before noticed. All in all, his pianoforte music
is likely to shine more and more brilliantly, as a highly specialized
but isolated achievement.
IV
The Russian and Scandinavian composers, especially Balakireff and
Rachmaninoff, and Edvard Grieg, have been the most successful in
introducing some freshness and youth into pianoforte music by means of
national idioms of melody, harmony, and rhythm. Among the Poles, Ignace
Paderewski has shown himself, on the whole, too cosmopolitan in manner,
though many of his works, especially the brilliant concerto in A minor,
contain Polish matter. Dvořák was too little a pianist to enrich the
literature of pianoforte music with more than a few slight dances
and Humoresques of Bohemian character. Recently Ernst von Dohnányi,
a most brilliant pianist, has done more. Two concertos in splendidly
brilliant style and two sonatas are among the most significant of
his publications. The Italian Giovanni Sgambati (b. 1843) has shown
himself wholly classical in his interests and natural tendencies,
drawing his technique, however, considerably from Chopin. From Spain,
however, a breath of freshness has come into pianoforte music. The
works of Isaac Albéniz are among the most brilliant and most effective
of all compositions for the instrument. The most considerable are
the four sets of pieces called _Iberia_, and of these the second and
third contain the best. All are so thoroughly saturated with Spanish
harmonies, rhythms and melodies that taken as a whole this brilliant
collection suffers from too much sameness. Yet there is some variety
of mood. There is melancholy in the lovely melodies of the _Almeria_,
a certain fineness in both the _Triana_ and the _El Albaicin_, an
incredible coarseness in _Lavapies_. Albéniz’s treatment of the piano
is astonishing, considering the directness with which his music appeals
to the senses. One would not believe, to hear the music played, into
what desperate intricacies the pianist has had to cut his way. And
all to hang a garland on a tune, but a tune that heats with the very
heart of Spain, and a garland that is a cloak of all the colors ever
seen at a bull-fight. Grieg is an expatriate beside Albéniz. Never has
such intensity of national life, joy, passion, pride, and melancholy
threatened to burst the very limits of sound.
Composers in England have not written a great deal for the pianoforte.
Sir A. C. Mackenzie’s Scottish Concerto is an outstanding work, and
recently Cyril Scott and Percy Grainger have added works to piano
literature which have charm and interest. Scott experiments with modern
systems of harmony, but Grainger has chosen to make use of the uniquely
beautiful songs and dances of England, Scotland, and Ireland. His
arrangements of many of these are effective; and as music they have the
perennial freshness of the melodies about which they are woven.
In the United States but one name stands out prominently among the
composers for the pianoforte. This is Edward MacDowell, who wrote
numerous short pieces, études and concert pieces, as well as three big
sonatas and two concertos. MacDowell’s treatment of the keyboard can
hardly be said to be original, but the concertos, and among the shorter
pieces the _Hexentanz_ prove to be highly effective. Many of the short
pieces, which are grouped together in sets, are charming. On the whole
there is little suggestion of a new spirit in the work of this composer
of a new land. Now and then he uses negro rhythms, as in the ‘Uncle
Remus,’ sometimes he uses Indian motives, as in the ‘Indian Lodge’ of
the ‘Woodland Sketches.’ His forms and his style are perhaps more akin
to those of Grieg, with whom, indeed, his music will be often compared,
than to the earlier Romantics. Unfortunately, however, instead of in a
national idiom, he speaks in an intensely personal one. Short phrases
and rhythms which are seldom varied seem almost to hamper his music,
almost to clog its movement. On the other hand, as in some of the ‘Sea
Pieces,’ he writes sometimes in a broad and open style, seeming to
shake off the fetters of too intense a mannerism.
Ethelbert Nevin wrote several sets of short pieces, ‘In Arcady,’
‘Venezia,’ and others, which have at least the charm of simple, sweet
melody.
Mr. Arthur Foote and Mrs. H. H. A. Beach have shown themselves masters
of an effective pianoforte style, a mastery that has on the whole been
rare in this country.[41]
FOOTNOTES:
[38] The third hand part was written for one who did not know how to
play the piano, and has but one and the same note throughout the piece.
[39] _Die Neurussische Klaviermusik._ In _Die Musik_, 1903, No. 8.
[40] _Op. cit._
[41] For a detailed discussion of American composers the reader is
referred to Volume IV of this series.
CHAPTER X
MODERN FRENCH PIANOFORTE MUSIC
Classical traditions: Saint-Saëns, and others; C.
V. Alkan--César Franck: his compositions and his
style--Vincent d’Indy--Fauré--The new movement: Debussy
and Ravel--Debussy’s innovations: new harmonies, scales,
overtones, pianoforte technique; his compositions--Ravel
differentiated; his compositions; Florent Schmitt and Eric
Satie--Conclusion.
I
By far the most interesting and generally the most significant
developments in pianoforte music since the time of Schumann, Chopin,
and Liszt are those which have taken place in France. Not only have the
French composers greatly enriched the literature for the instrument
with compositions that have a value beyond that which fashion
temporarily lends them; they have refreshed it as well with new ideas
of harmony, and effects, which if they are not essentially new, are
newly extended and applied.
There is still to be observed in France, it is true, a very
considerable loyalty in a group of composers to the style of Chopin,
or even more, to that of Liszt, and a general dependence upon German
ideas of music which have for a century past been so preponderant in
the world as to be considered international. The admirable works of
Camille Saint-Saëns are the result of such a loyalty. He is a great
master of the pianoforte style, endowed, moreover, with a fine sense of
form and a fine imagination. Everything he has written is finished with
care, clear-cut and indisputably effective. There is no piece of music
more grateful from the point of view of the pianist than the second
of his five concertos, that in G minor. This is not only because the
treatment of the solo instrument is clear and brilliant, but because
the themes are worthy of the treatment and of the broad form which they
are made to fill. The writing for the orchestra, moreover, is not less
perfect than that for the pianoforte. But inasmuch as the harmonies are
a familiar inheritance from the past, and the style an adaptation of an
inherited technique, the work signalizes not an advance in music, but
the successful maintenance of an already high standard. The spirit of
it is less emotional and sentimental than that of other concertos, and
more witty and epigrammatic. Hence it holds a special place as well as
a high one, from which it is hard to think that any change of fashion
will ever remove it.
The short pieces of Cécile Chaminade, Paul Lacombe, François Thomé,
Benjamin Godard, and Paul Wachs may be mentioned in passing as having
won a measure of success.
But the works of another group or two of French composers show an
originality that was at first so startling as to enrage conservative
critics. It is owing to them that pianoforte music seems to have
entered upon a new course of life. One finds the stirring of new
movements in Paris even before the time of Chopin’s arrival there, due
very clearly to the French spirit. Berlioz is growing more and more to
a huge stature in the eyes of historians. The figure of his countryman
and acquaintance, Charles-Valentin Alkan, is more obscure, but he
represents the same spirit at work in the special branch of pianoforte
music. If his compositions have not had great influence, they none the
less give an early example of the working towards independence of a
French pianoforte music.
Alkan (1813-88) was admired as a player and as a composer by both
Chopin and Liszt, and Bülow still later held him in high esteem. An
effort is now under way, encouraged by Isadore Philip, and others, to
draw his compositions from the obscurity into which they have fallen.
They are surprisingly numerous and in many ways astonishing. They
include a great number of transcriptions, of études and of pieces of
extraordinary realism. His harmonies and melodies suggest Berlioz, with
whom he is being more and more compared. They have often a quality
that is in a sense bare. They are unusual without connoting a rich
world of the unexplored. They hint rather at a deliberate attack upon
the old than at the youth of a new system. The general flow of his
harmonies, for example, is familiar. Only now and then does something
unusual obtrude itself with a sort of harshness. Notice, for example,
the chromatic movement of the doubled inner voice in the _cantabile_
section of the short piece ‛_Le tambour bat aux champs_.’ Notice, too,
the strange starkness of harmonies in the paraphrase _Super flumina
Babylonis_.
Technically Alkan stands between Chopin and Liszt, and in this regard
his music is very exacting. He demands an equal skill in both hands.
Of the three studies published as opus 76, the first is for the left
hand alone, with long passages of rapid tremolo like that one finds in
the first of Liszt’s Paganini transcriptions. The second is for the
right hand alone, demanding an unrestricted movement of the arm in long
arpeggios and extremely wide chords. Finally the third is a long piece
in unison from beginning to end, far more awkward and more difficult
than the last movement of Chopin’s sonata in B-flat minor. The three
studies opus 15, _Dans le genre pathétique_, are veritably huge works.
Of these the second, _Le vent_, is already well known as one of the
effective concert pieces of the new era. The first and last have the
strange titles of _Aime-moi_ and _Morte_. Twelve études in minor keys
were published as opus 39. One finds again extraordinary titles, such
as _Rythme molossique_, _Scherzo diabolico_, and _Le festin d’Europe_.
All are exceedingly difficult. Some, like the first, are both startling
and interesting as music. There is a more or less famous study in
perpetual motion for the right hand which was given the title _Le
chemin de fer_, extremely rapid, difficult, and effective.
The titles throughout all his music are original. Some are easily
understood. ‘The Wind’ and the ‘Railroad’ for instance are fully
explained by the music. In fact the realism of the latter does not
stop with movement. There is to be heard even the pounding of wheels,
the puffing and the whistle of the engine. But what is the meaning
of others, of _Neige et lave_, _Ma chère liberté_ and _Ma chère
servitude_, _Salut, cendre du pauvre_, _Fais dodo_ and _J’étais
endormie, mais mon cœur reveillait?_ On the whole these fantastic
titles suggest less the union of music with poetry or self-conscious
sentiment than a sort of rational, positive realism. There is little
in the music that is vague or sensuous. Most of it is objective rather
than imaginative. He has neither the fire of Liszt, nor the emotion
of Chopin, and his compositions are both spiritually and technically
independent of theirs. He was a terrific worker and he lived apart from
men. Marmontel wrote of him with great respect and some affection.
Oskar Bie thinks of him as a misanthrope. One can hardly speak of
misanthropic music; yet the quality which distinguishes Alkan’s music
is something the quality of an implacable irony. It is strong stuff,
and is likely to prove more logical in itself than any appreciation or
disparagement of it can be made.
CËSAR FRANCK
II
But Alkan’s music must be taken as the manifestation of an independent
spirit, French in its directness, rather than as a source of
stimulation or strength to a further development of a distinctly French
school of pianoforte music. Such a school first centres about César
Franck, who, though he, too, lived in retirement and in an obscurity
which the general public did not attempt to penetrate, exercised a
powerful influence on music in Paris. His compositions are relatively
few in number. There are but two considerable works for pianoforte
alone, and only three more for pianoforte and orchestra. These,
however, are of great beauty and two at least are masterpieces in
music. These are the ‘Prelude, Chorale and Fugue’ for pianoforte alone,
and the _Variations Symphoniques_ for pianoforte and orchestra. The
other three, which have elements of greatness but seem to fall short of
absolute perfection, are the ‘Prelude, Aria, and Finale’ for pianoforte
alone, and two symphonic poems for pianoforte and orchestra suggested
by poems of Victor Hugo, _Les Eloïdes_ and _Les Djinns_.
The ‘Prelude, Chorale and Fugue,’ and the ‘Symphonic Variations’ may
be ranked with the symphony, the violin sonata, the string quartet and
the pianoforte quintet, and are no less a perfect and in some respects
a complete expression of his genius than they. One finds in them the
same ceaseless chromatic shiftings and involutions of harmony, the same
polyphonic treatment of short phrases, the same structural unity, the
same exalted and mystical spirit. In fact this spiritual quality is
perhaps nowhere so gloriously expressed as in the Chorale movement for
the pianoforte.
As a whole the ‘Prelude, Chorale and Fugue’ is flawless in structure.
There is the greatest economy in the use of musical material. The
unusual scoring of the opening measures, with the melody note slightly
off the beat and the harp-like ornamentation, is the scoring which
characterizes the final, tremendous pages of the Fugue. The sections
of the Prelude which offer contrast to this opening melody are based
upon the subject which later forms the basis of the Fugue. And the
magnificent theme and spirit of the following movement, the Chorale, is
projected, as it were, into the whole last section of the Fugue. Never,
perhaps, was a fugue more splendidly and more fully developed, nor was
the force of a work ever so made to grow and to culminate in pages of
such majestic and triumphant music.
There is a similar use of material in the ‘Prelude, Aria, and Finale,’
but the result is not quite so flawless. The Prelude, here, in spite
of the suave beauty of its chief theme, is loose and episodic in
effect. And it cannot be said that the scoring for the pianoforte is
distinguished or animated. The style is either massive or awkward. The
most beautiful part of the whole work is perhaps the concluding section
of the Aria. The earlier parts of the Aria are skillfully devised, but
the scoring is rather heavy and seems more suited to the organ than to
the piano. But the melody of this concluding section is of inspired
beauty; and as if Franck himself were well aware of its rare and
significant worth, the last pages of the stormy Finale bring it back,
woven with the chief theme of the Prelude.
Technically both works are extremely difficult. The general breadth
of effect, the demand for power and for freedom of the arm, and the
use of octaves--these as well as the use of the very high and very low
registers of the keyboard--all make evident the rather orchestral idea
of the pianoforte which Liszt introduced. Liszt, by the way, was one
of the first to recognize the greatness of Franck. But, though Franck
was at one time a brilliant pianist and was intended by his father
to electrify Europe from the concert stage, he was above all else an
organist. His pianoforte style is most evidently very closely allied
to the organ style. This is particularly noticeable in the treatment
of bass parts, which not only suggest the pedals of the organ but are
often impossible for the small hand to play. The octaves for the left
hand in the Aria, and even more remarkably those in the Chorale, need
not only the independent movement which the organ pedals can add in
polyphony, but seem to call for the tone color of the low notes on the
organ. Frequently, moreover, as in the second section of the Prelude
in the ‘Prelude, Aria, and Finale,’ such wide stretches as the music
demands of the hands, as well as the general freedom of polyphonic
movement, almost require an instrument with two keyboards.
On the other hand, there are many effects which are brilliantly
pianistic. The flowing figures in the Prelude of the ‘Prelude, Chorale
and Fugue’ are purely pianistic. The tremendous octave passages in the
Finale need the distinct, percussive sound of the pianoforte. And the
upper notes of the Chorale melody, both when it is given alone and when
it is combined with the fugue theme, must have a ringing, bell-like
quality which only the pianoforte can produce.
The treatment of the pianoforte in those works in which it is
supported by the orchestra shows less the influence of the organ
style. Generally Franck had in mind the sonority of the organ and
the movement of music proper to that instrument. In these works the
function of the organ, so to speak, is given to the orchestra; and
hence the pianoforte is free of all responsibility but that of adding
its own special effects to the mass of sound. These are essentially
simple. In the _Djinns_ there is some brilliant rapid work, a few solo
passages of agitated character with wide rolling but not elaborate
accompaniment figures. In the ‘Symphonic Variations,’ very noticeably
a bigger and a finer work, there are solo passages of great breadth,
and nearly all the variations make the piano prominent by means of
its own effects. There are the passages of detached chords and double
notes which seem to tinkle over the first variation, the remarkably
wide spacing in the passage which follows, with the suggested movement
of inner voices and the occasional touch upon high notes; the flowing
figures, with again a suggested richness of inner voices, which pursue
their smooth course over the 'cello solo; finally the more brilliant
effects towards the end, especially those of the tossing chords, and of
the difficult, leaping triplet figures. The pianoforte and orchestra
were never more ingeniously combined than in those passages which the
pianoforte introduces with a sort of double waltz movement and in which
the orchestra subsequently joins with the theme in a decidedly cross
rhythm, leaving the solo instrument free to add delicately melodious
runs.
The structure of the whole work, moreover, is musically interesting.
Though the theme in F-sharp minor, announced simply by the pianoforte
after several pages that are more or less introductory, may be regarded
as the chief theme, there is another distinct and highly characterized
theme--first given fully by the pianoforte in the magnificent solo
passage (C-sharp minor) so prominent in these introductory pages.
This, as well as the chief theme, is elaborately varied, and is ever
and again throughout the work so cleverly combined with the chief
theme, that one must regard the whole ultimately as a series of double
variations.
These few works of César Franck are architecturally the most imposing
for the pianoforte since the last sonatas of Beethoven; and the
‘Prelude, Chorale and Fugue’ and the ‘Symphonic Variations’ are surely
to be numbered among the most valuable compositions from which the
pianist may draw his delight. They are very nearly unique in plan
and style. The ceaseless shifting of harmonies and interweaving of
short phrases will doubtless seem to many manneristic and a little
irritating. Then, too, they are, in spite of their breadth and power,
mystical, and in that sense, elusive or even baffling. The weight of
the organ style rests on them, and they are awkwardly difficult and
taxing. Yet in spite of these peculiarities they remain pianoforte
music of great dignity, beauty, and nobility.
III
At the basis of the two greatest pianoforte works of César Franck,
one discerns a classical foundation. The harmonies, it is true, are
Romantic and strange; but the ideals are traditional. In the matter
of form there is less a departure from old principles than a further
development of them. They present a few new complications of structure;
but as far as the pianoforte is concerned they have little new to
show in the matter of effect. Their peculiar sonority is that of the
organ, and remains not wholly proper to the pianoforte. On the whole,
then, the music is easily related to that of Beethoven, of Liszt, and
of Wagner. There is no striking departure from that road to which
Beethoven may be said to have pointed.
Nor does one find, on the whole, less traditional loyalty in the
pianoforte compositions of Franck’s pupil, Vincent d’Indy. These
are not numerous. There are only a few sets of short pieces, and
but two works of length. The little sonata, opus 9, is in classical
form. There are three short waltzes in a set called _Helvetia_, opus
9; a _Serenade_, _Choral grave_, _Scherzetto_, and _Agitato_, opus
16, one or two pieces in classical dance forms, and three little
romances in the style of Schumann, opus 30. Of the last the third is
a most successful imitation of Schumann, resembling passages from the
_Kreisleriana_ in spirit and in technique. None of these short pieces,
however, calls for more than mention, except as they all show a clear
but not distinguished traditional and simple treatment of the keyboard.
There is hardly the harmonic freedom of either Wagner or Franck in them.
The two long pieces are far more distinctly original. The first of
these is a set of three fanciful pieces called _Poëmes des Montagnes_.
The first of these--_Le chant des bruyères_--is divided into five
parts: the song of the heather, or the heath, mists, a touch of
Weber, a theme which is to be found in all three movements called _La
bien-aimée_, and finally the song of the heath again, this time in
the distance. The second movement is again subdivided, this time into
dances amid which _la bien-aimée_ makes a momentary appearance; and
in the last movement--_Plein-air_--one finds a promenade, thoughts
of great trees (_hêtres et pins_) on the side of the mountain, _la
bien-aimée_, a bit of calm before a burst of wind, finally a pair of
lovers united. At the beginning and at the end of the series there are
a few broken chords, vaguely styled _Harmonies_, and at the very end
again there is a reminiscence of the theme of _la bien-aimée_.
One cannot but find the whole series closely akin to Schumann. The
romanticism is the romanticism of Schumann, carried a step into the
open air and among the mountains, of his devotion to which d’Indy has
left many a proof in music. The fleeting touch of Weber, and especially
that d’Indy should have written Weber’s name over the measure in which
it falls, is again characteristic of the composer who introduced
Paganini and Chopin into his _Carnaval_. The identification of a theme
with a beloved one is another instance. But even more definite than
these tokens of a certain romanticism is the treatment of the piano,
and even the nature of much of the thematic material. _Le chant des
bruyères_ and _La bien-aimée_ are in the mold of Schumann. The _Valse
grotesque_ recalls in rhythm some of the _Davidsbündler_ and the
first of these _Danses rhythmiques_ is like parts of the Pantalon and
Colombine of the _Carnaval_.
On the other hand, there is something original and new in the section
called _Brouillard_. The general mistiness of the harmonies, the
long holding of the pedals with consequent vague obscurity of sound,
and the irregular line of clear points in a sort of melody that is
drawn against this inarticulate accompanying murmur, these indicate
new ventures in pianoforte style. The rhythmical irregularity of the
first of the dances and the irregularity in the form and recurrence
of sections are further signs of the advent of something rich and
strange. In fact the whole work loses somewhat by the frequent
suggestion of bold experiment, and is hardly to be considered equal
to the traditional standard of music, as represented by Schumann,
nor sufficiently successful to establish a new one. Barring the
_Brouillard_, the treatment of the keyboard lacks distinction.
Far, far different must be the verdict on the Sonata in E, opus 63.
Here, though one still finds a classical ideal of form, there are bold,
clashing harmonies, and endless complexities of rhythm. The scoring
is tremendous, the effect big as an orchestra. The sonata is in three
movements, all of which represent the development of one central idea.
The first movement, which is preceded by a long and fiery introduction,
is made up of a series of variations on this central idea. A subsidiary
idea, which, as in the ‘Symphonic Variations’ of Franck, was suggested
in the introduction, is woven into the music here and there. The
complicated second movement, in 5/4 time, constantly suggests the
subsidiary motives of the first; and in the last, which shows the broad
plan of the classical sonata form, the theme of the first movement
finds a full and glorious expression.
Technically the sonata is extremely difficult. Some of the variations
of the first movement, with their trills, recall the pianoforte style
of the last Beethoven sonatas, however. The interlocking of the hands
in the second movement is in a measure new in effect, though not new in
principle. The scoring of the last movement is not free of commonplaces.
On the whole, the sonata may be considered modern in harmonies,
melodies, and rhythms, though a more or less classical harmonic
foundation may be detected. The form is obviously a further development
of the principles so clearly exemplified in the works of César Franck,
which were drawn from Bach and Beethoven. It does not seem unfair to
say that the scoring is rather orchestral than distinctively pianistic;
so that the sonata may be considered more significant as a contribution
to music in general than as one to pianoforte music in particular.
IV
None of the French composers has written more for the pianoforte
than Gabriel Fauré. In his music, too, there is a strong element of
tradition, though as a harmonist he is perhaps more spontaneously
original than d’Indy. He prefers to work in short forms, and he avoids
titles of detailed significance. He has written eleven Barcarolles, ten
or more Nocturnes, nearly as many Impromptus, a set of eight Preludes,
published as opus 103, and a few pieces of nondescript character
including dances and romances. The impression made by a glance over the
pages of this considerable amount of music is one of great sameness.
Fauré’s style is delicate and well adjusted to the keyboard but there
is little to observe in it that is strikingly original. Nor do the
pieces give proof of much development in technique or in means of
expression. There is little trace of the exquisite impressionism of the
songs. The pianoforte music is hardly more than pleasing, and is only
rarely brilliant.
The well-known second impromptu, in F minor, is perhaps the most
interesting and the most original of all his pianoforte pieces. Here is
genuine vivacity, piquancy of style, originality of harmony. But the
other impromptus and the nocturnes have, in spite of certain modern
touches of harmony, a style that is now Mendelssohn, now Schumann.
The eleven _Barcarolles_ rock gently over the keyboard, the _Valses
caprices_ dance lightly along. All is facile and pleasing salon music,
one piece much like the others. The Theme and Variations, opus 73, is
interesting and is well known at the Conservatoire, and the second of
the preludes, opus 103, is decidedly effective. The fourth Nocturne is
full of poetry. In fact there is poetry in much of his music, but it is
on the whole too much in the same vein.
Finally, after mentioning Pierné, for the sake of a set of short pieces
in delicate style, _Pour mes petits amis_, and Emanuel Chabrier for
the sake of the _Bourrée fantastique_, we come to the two men whose
work for the piano has enchanted the world: Claude Debussy and Maurice
Ravel. So far as the pianoforte is concerned, theirs is the music which
has created a new epoch since the time of Liszt and Chopin, which has
signalized the leadership of France in the art of music.
V
For a discussion of the general musical art of Debussy the reader is
referred to the third volume of this series. His system of harmony and
scales has there been explained. Here we will regard him as a composer
for the pianoforte and attempt only a brief analysis of his pianoforte
style and an appreciation of a few of his compositions. His pianoforte
style has been no little influenced by his conception of harmony which
admits chords of the seventh and ninth among the consonances. The
pianoforte being essentially a harmonic instrument, composers have
spent a great part of their skill in devising rapidly moving figures
which would keep its harmonies in vibration. Such harmonies have
either constituted a music in themselves, or have furnished a vibrant
background behind a melody or an interweaving of several melodies. The
shape of the figures has been determined by harmony and the figures
have been blended into a general effect by the use of the pedal.
One of the most prominent characteristics of Chopin’s style was the
intrinsically melodious conformation of many of such figures. Hence
there is a suggestion of polyphony in his music; and hence, too, the
pedalling of his music must be most delicately and skillfully done.
With Liszt, on the other hand, such figures rarely had this melodious
significance. They were founded rather flatly on the notes of chords or
on the scale. Hence a mass of notes with little or no individuality.
Such we shall find many of Debussy’s figures to be, and it is indeed
easy to say that there would have been no Debussy had there been no
Liszt. Not only this density, which in the case of Debussy may be more
properly called opaqueness, of figures; but also the free use of the
arms over the keyboard point to a relation of the style of the one to
that of the other. But Debussy’s style is in two features at least
sharply differentiated from that of Liszt.
The first of these is owing to his different conception of harmony.
Liszt’s harmonies are clearly defined, Debussy’s, by contrast, vague.
There are few instances of harmonies in Liszt’s music which are not
related to a tonic scale; Debussy’s whole-tone scale has destroyed
the relation of major and minor keys, even their definitions. With
Liszt the various degrees of the scale suggest their proper harmonies;
and as his melody or his bass moves from one to the other of them,
the harmonies must change to follow it. The harmonic figures must be
constantly moved here and there. Sometimes, as in the first phrase
of the _Waldesrauschen_, they do not change to follow the melody, it
is true; but in such a case the melody is so conceived as really to
accentuate the notes of the chord on which the accompaniment figure
plays. But with Debussy the progress of the melody entails no such
change of harmony, or at least no such frequent change. Even if he
chooses to conceive a passage as in a clearly defined key, his fondness
for the chord of the ninth plays him in good stead. He can keep a ninth
chord running up and down the keyboard and still enjoy the proper
use of five notes of the scale in melody. And in the case where he
is using the whole-tone scale and has consequently thrown his music
out of all relation to the traditional system of keys, he is even
more free. Therefore, the fingers, not having to find a new position
every measure or so, or even twice in a measure, are let free, without
hindrance, over a wide range of the keyboard. Furthermore, since
having once struck the desired notes within this range the use of the
pedal will sustain the vibration a long time, they have not to repeat
them over and over again with the distinctness necessary to establish
a new harmony, but touch them lightly, or graze them unevenly. With
the result that the sparkle which even in the dense runs of Liszt was
created by the more or less distinct sound of indispensable notes, is
veiled, and the general effect is one of fluid color.
A second feature which distinguishes the style of Debussy from that
of Liszt is the relative absence in it of the sensationalism of speed.
The sort of run we have been discussing, which may be studied in the
_Reflets dans l’eau_, or in _Pagodes_, is as rapid as Liszt’s runs.
But the monotony of it, the lack of change and therefore of emphasized
points, reduces the effect of speed. For speed is chiefly appreciable
between definite points. In fact the background of Debussy’s music may
be compared to mist, while that of Liszt’s is, we might say, more like
a curtain of chain mail.
The effect of this prolongation of harmonies by means of the pedal,
lightly aided by the fingers, and of this lack of sharp contours is
to take from a great part of his music a certain hard substantiality.
In other words, recalling what we said of the qualities of sound in
the pianoforte in the chapter on Chopin, the sonority of his music
is one of after-sounds. Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel, more than
any composers before them, have consciously made use of this peculiar
quality of the pianoforte.
It is not only their treatment of runs which makes it audible, nor do
they depend only upon the after-sounds of notes which have been struck.
Holding the dampers off the strings for relatively long spaces allows
an almost distinct vibration of overtones or of sympathetic tones to
enter into the mass of sound. Both Debussy and Ravel count upon this.
The notes they write upon the page are but the starting point of their
effects. It is what floats up and away from them that constitutes the
background of their music. One finds in the later pieces of Debussy
not the old-fashioned indication of the pedal, but such directions
as _quittez_, _en laissant vibrer_, or _laissez vibrer_ (let the
vibrations continue), which must be intended to attract the ear to
after-sounds. He has even invented a notation of such un-substantial
sound. Here is an example, from _Les collines d’Anacapri_:
[Illustration: Music score]
He will fill up a whole measure with notes that find their reason only
in the vague sound of the next measure, as here in _La cathédrale
engloutie_:
[Illustration: Music score]
Note also that his spacing of chords, and particularly his strange
doubling of parts, brings overtones into prominence. One hears not so
much a doubling of parts on the keyboard as an accompanying shadow of
sound which is, as it were, cast by them. Witness the choral passages
in _La cathédrale engloutie_, and the treatment of chords in _Et la
lune descend sur le temple qui fut_. Here, at the beginning, one
notices too the inclusion within the chord itself of notes which may
properly be considered overtones.
It is true that Schumann experimented with sympathetic vibrations and
overtones, that the player who would give to Chopin its special charm
must have an ear tuned to after-sounds, and that Liszt experimented
with many similar effects and really opened the way for a treatment
of the pianoforte such as that Debussy and Ravel have perfected. But
all earlier experiments were limited by a clear perception of certain
harmonic proprieties. A chord was defined by the notes struck in it.
But in this music of Debussy and Ravel a chord is not such a restricted
thing. It is a potentiality rather than an actuality. It spreads and
grows in after-sounds so that its boundaries become vague and merge
with other boundaries or cross them. So they have created a pianoforte
music that seems almost to have no dependence upon the mechanical
levers and hammers, a sort of music liberated from the box, and yet
the most subtly and intimately related to the instrument that has been
written.
Debussy’s music is by no means all compact of these vague effects. It
is often as clear-cut as crystal, having a _netteté_ hard to match in
other music for the instrument. Witness for example _Les jardins sous
la pluie_ and _La sérénade interrompue_. In these cases it is plain
to see that he is no less aware of the charm latent in the percussive
quality of tone in the pianoforte than of that in its peculiar
after-sounds. He can be incisive, also, and sharply rhythmical as in
_La puerta del Vino_, or sparkling as in the _Feux d’artifice_.
Technically, then, Debussy’s pianoforte style seems to have been
influenced by a clear perception of the two qualities of sound of which
the instrument is capable, and so remarkable has been his revelation
of them that one cannot but feel that they come to our ears as fresh
discoveries. His ingenuity seems inexhaustible and always successful.
He can be rapid without being sensational, forceful without pounding.
Except that an occasional use of chords suggests the organ or some new
mysterious wind instrument, his music never departs from the piano,
to the spirit of which it gives a new expression. It is extremely
difficult to play. It requires the utmost fleetness and lightness
of fingers; and also a perfect freedom of the arm, for he seems at
times to ask the player to touch all parts of the piano at once. In a
measure, however, it may be said of some of his music that it conforms
to types as Liszt’s does, and that consequently, compared with Bach and
Chopin, it is not so difficult. Nevertheless, by all tokens the music
of Debussy, though technically it springs from Liszt, is going to elude
the grasp of most fingers even as that of Chopin does. Perhaps it is a
spiritual rather than a technical difficulty that stands in the way.
His compositions show signs of a very great development both in
his ideals and his means of expression. An early group comprises a
Nocturne, a _Suite Bergamasque_, and another suite called _Pour le
piano_ which consists of a Prelude, Sarabande and Toccata. There are
signs in nearly all these pieces of originality and some attempted
departure from traditional commonplaces. The nocturne is hardly
distinguished either in sentiment or in treatment of the piano. Only
the section in 7/8 time is interesting. But in the _Suite Bergamasque_
one finds a Passepied and the well-known _Clair de lune_ which hint
at the works to come, the former in its piquant scoring and rhythm,
the latter in its harmonies and its employment of the lower and higher
registers. The Toccata is original in harmony also, and well-scored for
the pianoforte. But except in the _Clair de lune_ there is no trace of
the delicate impressionism which has made his better known music unique.
This comes out strongly in a second group of pieces in which one may
include the _L’isle joyeuse_, the _Estampes_ and the first series of
_Images_ including the _Reflets dans l’eau_ in which he seems to us
to reach the height of this middle achievement. _L’isle joyeuse_ is a
strange, wild piece, full of his characteristic harmonies, especially
those founded upon the whole-tone scale. It is the longest of his
pieces for the pianoforte, and is rather unsatisfactory in structure.
Perhaps the monotony of key is to blame--for in spite of passages in
whole-tone scales, the whole is very clearly in A major. Yet it must be
said that this very sameness of key intensifies the early languor and
the later Bacchanalian fury--is intoxicating in itself.
The _Estampes_ (‘Engravings’) are among the best of these middle
pieces. A comparison of them with works of an early period, with the
two arabesques or even the _Suite Bergamasque_, shows an extraordinary
development in Debussy’s art and a change or a more marked independence
in his ideals. There is hardly a trace in the earlier works of the
new expansion in pianoforte technique which marks the _Pagodes_, _La
soirée dans Grenade_, and _Jardins sous la pluie_. Especially in the
first of these pieces the whole range of the keyboard is blended into
effects of a new sonority of sevenths and ninths. The second is a study
in impressionism, in the combination of a few fragments of melody,
harmony and rhythm into a whole of new poetic intensity. In the former
his technique, in the latter his procedure, are strange and unfamiliar
in pianoforte music, yet wholly successful. Their effectiveness is no
doubt largely due to the nature of his material. The motives of the
_Pagodes_ are Oriental, those in _La soirée_ both Spanish and Moorish.
Perhaps for this reason they sound more exotic than the _Jardins sous
la pluie_, which, in spite of odd blendings of harmony, is essentially
more conventional than its two companions in the set. Certainly the
_Jardins_ is a wholly poetic and effective piece of keyboard music;
but it lacks the originality and the elusive suggestiveness of the
_Pagodes_ and of _La soirée_.
The _Reflets dans l’eau_ is superior to the _Hommage à Rameau_ and
the _Mouvement_, with which it is combined in the first series of
_Images_. Technically it is a masterpiece, and both by the quality of
its themes and its perfection of form is fitted to stand as a piece
of absolute music of rare beauty. The plan of it is logical rather
than impressionistic. It is the development of a single idea, not
the combination of suggestive fragments. Hence it seems to stand as
the most complete result of the art of which the _Pagodes_ and _Les
Jardins_ are representative. In the second series of _Images_ the
strange piece, _Et la lune descend sur le temple qui fut_, is a further
experiment in the kind of music of which _La soirée_ is an example.
Here as there the music is fragmentary. Here as there there is but an
occasional touch of vividness against a background of misty night. In
both pieces pictures, words, almost sounds are only suggested to the
ear, not completely represented.
On the other hand, the _Cloches à travers les feuilles_, and the
_Poissons d’or_, respectively the first and last pieces in this
second set of _Images_, are what we might call consistently motivated
throughout, in the manner of the _Reflets dans l’eau_. There is always
the rustling of leaves and the faint jangle of bells in the former,
always a quiver of water and a darting, irregular movement in the
latter; whereas in neither _La soirée_ nor in _Et la lune_ is there
the persistence of an idea that is thus predominant and more or less
clearly presented.
The last two series of _Préludes_ show us his art yet more finely
polished and concentrated. In general these twenty-four pieces are
shorter and more concise than the _Estampes_ and the _Images_,
certainly than the representative pieces in them--_Pagodes_, _Les
jardins_, and _Reflets dans l’eau_. Most of them, moreover, are in his
suggestive rather than his explicit manner. He accomplishes his end
with a few strokes, and usually in a short space. The placing of the
titles at the end rather than at the beginning of the pieces is an
interesting point, too; for one cannot believe that such a finished
artist as Debussy shows himself in these pieces to be would have sent
his work before the public without a consciousness of the significance
of such an arrangement. He does not, as it were, announce to his
auditors his purpose, saying, imagine now this sound which you are
about to hear as representing in music a picture of gardens through a
steadily falling rain. He rather draws a line here upon his canvas and
adds a point of color there, all in a moment, and then, having shown
you first this strange beauty of combinations, says at the end you
may now imagine a meaning in the west wind, a church sunk beneath the
surface of the sea, a tribute to Mr. Pickwick, dead leaves, or what not
in the way of exquisite and incomplete ideas.
Many of these postscripts are significantly vague: _Voiles_, _Les
sons et les parfums tournent dans l’air du soir_, _Des pas sur la
neige_ (Alkan called a piece of his _Neige et lave_), _La terrasse des
audiences du clair de lune_, etc.
Yet, however vague the subject or the suggestion, there is a sort
of epigrammatic clearness in the music. The rhythms are especially
lithe and endlessly varied, the phrase-building concise yet never
commonplace. There is a glitter of wit in nearly all, an unfailing
sense of light and proportion. This, not the strange harmonies nor the
imagery, seems to us the quality of his music that is typically French.
There is infinite grace and subtlety; sensuousness in color, too,
though it is spiritualized; but there is little that is sentimental.
The delicacy and yet the sharpness with which he has reproduced
qualities in outlandish music must be noticed. In earlier music he gave
proof of his insight into the essentials of other systems of music than
the French, or the German which has been considered the international.
The _Suite Bergamasque_ has a local color. There is Oriental stuff in
_Pagodes_, Spanish and Moorish in _La soirée dans Grenade_, Egyptian in
_Et la lune_. Traces of Greek or of ecclesiastical modes are abundant.
Here, in the _Préludes_ all this and more too has he caught. Greece in
_Danseuses de Delphes_, Italy in _Les collines d’Anacapri_, the old
church in _La cathédrale_, Spain in _La puerta del Vino_, cake-walks in
_General Lavine_, England in _Pickwick_, and Egypt in _Canope_. There
seems a touch of the North, too, in the exquisite little pieces, _La
fille aux cheveux de lin_. In this way alone Debussy has rejuvenated
music, doing more than others had done.
Finally, it would be hard to find more essence of comedy and wit in
music than one finds in Debussy’s _Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum_ in the
‘Children’s Corner,’ with its ludicrous play on the erstwhile sacred
formulas of technical study. This alone should place him among the
wits of a century. The _Sérénade interrompue_ and ‘Puck’s Dance’ are
both full of mockery. Then there is the eccentric General Lavine, and,
perhaps most laughable of all, the merry homage to Pickwick, made up of
‘God Save the King’ and a jig in the English style.
No one can say what the future of his music will be, nor how it will
be related to the general development in music by students a hundred
years hence. Yet it is certain that it recommends itself to pianists
at present because it has expanded the technique of the instrument.
It is made up in part of effects which, as we have said, if they are
not new in principle, are newly applied and expanded. He has developed
resources in the instrument which had not before been more than
suggested. His pieces bring into striking prominence the qualities
of after-sound and sympathetic vibrations or overtones in the piano,
which are as much its possession and as uniquely so as the bell-like
qualities it had before been chiefly called upon to produce. Therefore
though his accomplishments in harmony and form, in the possibilities of
music in general, may be regarded with a changed eye in the years to
come, and though he may even some day appear in many ways reactionary,
because he has once more associated music with ideas and weakened the
independence of its life; yet as far as the pianoforte is concerned he
is the greatest innovator since Chopin and Liszt.
VI
The pianoforte music of Maurice Ravel is in many ways similar to
that of his great contemporary. His conception of harmony is, like
Debussy’s, expanded. Sevenths and ninths are used as consonances in his
music as well; and consequently one finds there the free use of the
sustaining pedal, the playing with after-sounds and overtones.
His works are not so numerous. The most representative are the
_Miroirs_, containing five pieces: _Noctuelles_, _Oiseaux tristes_,
_Une barque sur l’océan_, _Alborado del gracioso_ and _La vallée des
cloches_; and a recent set, _Gaspard de la nuit_, containing _Ondine_,
_Scarbo_, and _Le Gibet_, three poems for the piano after Aloysius
Bertrand. A set of _Valses nobles et sentimentales_ are only moderately
interesting on account of the harmonies. The rhythms are not unusually
varied, and the treatment of the pianoforte is relatively simple. There
is a well-known _Pavane pour une infante défunte_ of great charm, and a
concert piece of great brilliance called _Jeux d’eau_.
Though Ravel, like Debussy, makes use of a misty background,
his music is on the whole more brilliant and more clear-cut. One
is likelier to find in it passages that are sensational as well as
effective. His effects, too, are more broadly planned, more salient
and less suggestive. The _Jeux d’eau_ is a very good example, with its
regular progressions and unvaried style, its sustained use of high
registers rather than an occasional flash into them, its repetitions of
rather conventional figures.
[Illustration]
Famous Pianists. From top left to bottom right:
Ferruccio Busoni, Ignace Paderewski, Ossip Gabrilowitch, Eugen d’Albert.
Yet it is not in technical treatment of the piano that Ravel is most
clearly to be differentiated from Debussy, but rather in the matter of
structure. Most of his pieces are relatively long, and few of them are
written in the fragmentary, suggestive way characteristic of Debussy,
but are consistently sustained and developed. This in general. In
particular one will notice not only a regularity in the structure of
phrases but a frequent repetition of phrases in the well-balanced
manner we associate with his predecessors, sequences that except in
harmony are quite classical. The _Jeux d’eau_ will offer numerous
examples; and the same regularity is noticeable in the _Ondine_
and _Le Gibet_. The phrases are long and smooth. They have not the
epigrammatic terseness of Debussy, who, even in passages of melodious
character, always avoids an obvious symmetry. Nor is Ravel’s music
so parti-colored as Debussy’s. It does not touch upon such exotic or
such foreign scales and harmonies. Ravel shows himself a lover of the
Oriental in his string quartet, especially of the Oriental mannerism
of repetition; but one does not find in his pianoforte music, as in
Debussy’s, hints of ancient Greece, of Italy, of North America, of
England. Even the _Alborada del gracioso_, for all its length and
brilliance, is not Spanish as Debussy’s _Soirée dans Grenade_ or
_Puerta del Vino_. The impressions one receives from hearing works
of the two men performed one after the other are really not similar.
Debussy’s music is subtle and instantaneous, so to speak; Ravel’s is
rather deliberate and prolonged.
Other French composers have hardly made themselves felt with such
distinctness as these two men. The most prominent of them is Florent
Schmitt whose _Pièces romantiques_, _Humoresques_, and _Nuits romaines_
are worthy of study. Within the last year or two several sets of pieces
by Eric Satie have appeared which must give one pause. These are
almost as simple as Mozart; indeed many of them are written in but two
parts. They are not lacking in charm, whether or not one may take them
seriously. Satie shows himself in many of them a parodist. He plays
strains from the Funeral March in Chopin’s sonata, twisting them out of
shape, and writes slyly over the music that they are from a well-known
mazurka of Schubert’s. He parodies Chabrier’s _España_ and Puccini’s
operas.
Finally he writes directions and indications over measures in the
score which cannot but be a malicious though delightful mockery of
modern music in general. Remembering Scriabin’s _Avec une céleste
volupté_, or _une volupté radieuse_, _extatique_ or _douloureuse_, one
is not surprised to find Satie telling one to play _sur du velours
jaunie, sec comme un coucou, léger comme un œuf_, though at this
last one may well suspect a tongue in the cheek. But Satie goes much
further than this. There is among the _Descriptions automatiques_ one
on a lantern, in which we are here told to withhold from lighting it,
there to light, there to blow it out, next to put our hands in our
pockets. And throughout the absurd, unless they be wholly ironical,
pieces inspired by _Embryons désechés_, there is almost a running text
which cannot but stir to hearty laughter. Think of being directed to
play a certain passage like a nightingale with the toothache--_comme
un rossignol qui aurait mal aux dents_; or of being reminded as you
play that the sun has gone out in the rain and may not come back again,
or that you have no tobacco but happily you do not smoke. Such are
the remarks which Satie intends shall illumine your comprehension of
his music; and his humor is the more delightful because as a matter
of fact Mozart’s first minuet is hardly more simple than this music
to dried-up sea-urchins. Such naughty playfulness may well offend
the conservatories; but even if it is only nonsense, surely it is a
felicitous sign in these days, when high foreheads and bald pates
ponderously try to further the gestation of a new art of music.
* * * * *
If we leave our study of pianoforte music with a laugh it is only
because we may be supremely happy in the possession of so much music
that need not be hidden before the raillery of any wit, no matter
how sacrilegious. Into the hands of Claude Debussy we give the art
of writing for the pianoforte. His is the wisest and most sensitive
touch to mold it since the day of Chopin. Whatever the music he writes
may be, it has conferred upon the instrument once more the infinite
blessing of a proper speech. He has once more saved it from a confusion
of thumps and roars.
Bach, Chopin, Debussy: it is a strange trio, set apart from other
composers because to them the pianoforte made audible its secret voice,
a voice of fading after-sounds. Let us not take Bach from among them.
It was after all the same voice that spoke to him from his clavichord,
more faint perhaps yet even more sensitive. Music whispered to Mozart
that she would sing sweetly for him through his light pianoforte. The
powers of destiny made themselves music at the call of Beethoven, and
they swept up the piano in their force. Through Schubert the hand of
a spirit touched the keys. For Weber the keys danced together and
made strange pantomimes of sound. Schumann, as it were, spoke to his
pianoforte apart, and it opened a door for him into a fanciful world.
To Brahms the keys were colleagues, not friends, and Liszt drove them
in a chariot race, worthy of Rome and the emperors, or converted them
like a magician into a thousand shapes with a thousand spells. But to
Bach, Chopin and Debussy this instrument revealed itself and showed a
secret beauty that is all its own.
CHAPTER XI
EARLY VIOLIN MUSIC AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF VIOLIN TECHNIQUE
The origin of stringed instruments; ancestors of the
violin--Perfection of the violin and advance in violin
technique; use of the violin in the sixteenth century;
early violin compositions in the vocal style; Florentino
Maschera and Monteverdi--Beginnings of violin music: Biagio
Marini; Quagliati; Farina; Fontana and Mont’ Albano; Merula;
Ucellino and Neri; Legrenzi; Walther and his advance in
technique, experiments in tone painting--Giov. Battista
Vitali; Tommaso Vitali and Torelli; Bassani; Veracini
and others--Biber and other Germans; English and French
composers for the violin; early publications of text-books
and collections.
I
The origin of string instruments of the violin family is
involved in much obscurity and it would be impossible to discuss
here the various theories concerning it which have been stated with
more or less plausibility by musical historians.[42] A preponderance
of authoritative opinion seems to favor the theory that the direct
ancestor of the violin was the Welsh _crwth_, a sort of harp, which
seems to have been played with a bow. Venantius Fortunatus (570
A.D.) mentions this instrument in the much quoted lines: _Romanusque
lyra plaudit tibi, barbara harpa, Græcus Achillaica, chrotta Britana
canat_. (‘The Roman praises thee with the lyre, the barbarian sings
to thee with the harp, the Greek with the cither, the Briton with
the _crwth_.’) The fact that the old English name for the fiddle was
_crowd_ furnishes an etymological argument in favor of the _crwth_. It
is, of course, possible that the idea of using a bow with the small
harp was first suggested by some instrument already in existence. The
Arabs and other peoples had instruments roughly approximating the
violin type. One is inclined, however, to the assumption that the
violin was not developed directly from any particular instrument, but
came into being rather through the evolution of an idea with which
various races experimented independently and simultaneously.
[Illustration]
Ignace Paderewski.
_After a photo from life (1915)._
The immediate forerunner of the violin seems to have been the rebec,
of which there is a drawing in an extant manuscript of the ninth
century. The Benedictine monk Ofried, in his _Liber Evangeliorum_ of
about the same period, mentions the fidula as one of the two bowed
instruments then in use, though to what extent the fidula differed
from the rebec we are unable to ascertain. In the psalm-book of Notker
(d. 1022) there is also a figure of a rebec and a bow. Drawings,
written references and bas-reliefs enable us to follow the development
of the violin clearly enough from this time on. In the abbey of St.
Georges de Boscherville, Normandy, there is preserved a bas-relief
which shows a girl dancing on her head to the accompaniment of a
band which includes two instruments of the violin type, played with
the bow. The _Nibelungen Lied_ speaks of a fiddler who ‘wielded a
fiddle-bow, broad and long like a sword,’ and although this epic was
completed in the twelfth century it is probably safe to antedate the
reference considerably. There is in the cathedral of Notre Dame in
Paris a crowned figure with a four-stringed violin, and in the Abbey
of St. Germain des Près there is a similar relic showing a man with a
five-stringed violin and a bow. Both date from the eleventh century.
From these and similar evidences it is plain that a violin of a
rudimentary type was used extensively in the eleventh century. Its
musical possibilities must have been very slight, and probably it was
used chiefly to accompany the song or the dance.
As we may deduce from many contemporary references, the troubadours,
jongleurs, and minnesingers[43] of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
played a very important part in the development of the violin type
of instrument. There is extant, for instance, a manuscript of the
period, containing an illustration of a _jongleur_ playing upon a
three-stringed instrument very nearly resembling the modern violin.
Jerome of Moravia, a Dominican monk of Paris in the thirteenth century,
informs us in his _Speculum Musices_ that the two strings of the violin
then in use were tuned as follows: [Illustration: Music score]. His
_Speculum_, which is probably the earliest approach to an instruction
book for the violin, also contains this very definite indication of the
fingering:
[Illustration: Music score]
Under the influence of the troubadours and minnesingers the popularity
of the violin spread rapidly both among professionals and amateur
musicians. It was especially popular as an accompaniment to dances. In
the _Brunswick Chronicle_ (1203) we read of a clergyman who had his arm
struck by lightning while playing for dancers. We may infer from this
that it was considered quite a respectable recreation. The _Chronicle_
has the words _veddelte_ (fiddled) and _Veddelbogen_ (fiddle-bow)
without any comment, so that they must have been quite familiar
terms. A stained glass window, a Parisian manuscript and a miniature
painting from a manuscript called _Mater Verborum_ (1202-12) show that
the instrument then in use resembled in shape the modern violin. In
Ulrich von Lichtenstein’s _Frauendienst_ we read of an orchestra which
included two fiddles and which played a lively walking-tune or march
for the purpose of charming away the fatigues of the journey. We may
gather some idea of the vogue of violin playing during this period
from the character of a decree, issued in the year 1261 and now in the
archives of Bologna, which forbade the playing of the viol at night in
the streets of that city. Despite its great popularity it held a place
beside the harp as an instrument worthy of the dignity of a minstrel,
as we may gather from an allusion of a French poet about the year 1230:
‘When the cloth was ta’en away
Minstrels strait began to play,
And while harps and viols join
Raptured bards in strains divine,
Loud the trembling arches rung
With the noble deed we sung.’
By this time professional instrumentalists had become a strong class
and in various cities had begun the formation of fraternities which did
not differ much in essence from our modern musical unions. The first
of these, as far as we can discover, was the St. Nicholas Brüderschaft
which existed in Vienna as early as 1288.
The many and varied forms and sizes of viols illustrated in manuscripts
and elsewhere suggest that the instrument was used in the music of the
church. Certainly instruments of some kind (apart from the organ) must
have been taken into the church service, else Thomas Aquinas would
not have argued against their employment. The church was not very
sympathetic toward musicians and its attitude was reflected to a great
extent by the world at large. Synods and councils frequently issued
decrees against wandering minstrels and in the city of Worms they were
even refused the privilege of lodging in or frequenting public houses.
The fourteenth century brought much greater recognition for
instrumental art, which grew in popularity and in the favor and
patronage of those in high places. When the French _jongleurs_ united
in 1321 into the _Confrérie de St. Julien des Ménestriers_ they
obtained a charter which called their leaders _Rois des ménestriers_
(later _Rois des violins_). The same charter alludes to ‘high and low’
instruments, apparently treble and bass rebecs or viols which were
played in octaves to each other or perhaps in a primitive sort of
counterpoint. Technique must have been very inferior, for musicians in
Alsace were required to study only one or two years before taking up
music as a profession. Their incomes, on the other hand, were probably
substantial, as it is recorded that they were obliged to pay taxes.
It is interesting to note at this early period that the city of Basle
employed a violinist to play in a public place for the entertainment of
the citizens.
So far we have endeavored to trace the progress of violin music through
paintings, monuments and fugitive references in manuscripts, decrees
and other documents. These references are not on the whole very clear
and the nomenclature of early instruments of the violin family is
very loose and confused. We know practically nothing about the music
composed for these instruments. Their imperfect shape does not suggest
music of an advanced kind, nor does it mean that the technique of the
time was equal to very exacting demands. The famous blind organist,
Conrad Paumann (1410-73), who could play on every instrument, including
the violin, has left us in his _Orgelbuch_ several transcriptions
of songs which he may have played on the violin as well as on other
instruments, and the dances and other pieces of free invention composed
for other instruments may also have served as musical material for
violinists. But all this is mere surmise.
[Illustration]
Relatives of the Violin.
Top: Viola de braccia, Pochette, Viola bastarda.
Bottom: Viola da gamba, Violone, Viola d’amore.
Regarding the combination of the violin with other instruments we
know that at the end of the fifteenth century there existed in Louvain
an ‘orchestra’ composed of a harp, a flute, a _viol_, and a trumpet.
There is recorded an account of another ‘orchestra’ belonging to Duke
Hercules in Ferrara, who employed a great number of musicians. It
included flutes, trumpets, lutes, trombones, harps, viols and rebecs.
We should not assume, however, that all of these instruments were
played simultaneously. Each class of instrument had its own part and
if all of them played together they must have made noise rather than
music. We are also informed that previous to the year 1450 popes and
princes employed ‘orchestras’ which combined ‘the voices, organ, and
_other_ instruments into the loveliest harmony.’ In spite of the almost
entire lack of music for the violin we know that it was a favorite
instrument and consequently that the players must have produced on it
pleasing music of some kind. Indication of its popularity is found in
the works of Fra Angelico (1387-1455), whose famous angel holds a viol
in her hands, and in Boccaccio’s novels, where we learn that violin
music formed a considerable part of the entertainment of all classes.
II
The sixteenth century brought the violin to a perfection that was
still far in advance of the technique of the players. At the same time
there was a distinct advancement in the recognition of instrumental
music, although vocal music continued to maintain its preeminence. This
was due partly to the limited technique of the instrumentalists and
partly to the greater appeal of music wedded to words. Violin players
then knew nothing about changing of positions and therefore could play
only in the first position.[44] Thus the tone register of the violin
was small. Some players, however, attempted to reach higher tones on
the first string through the stretching of the fourth finger. Simple
melodic phrases or figures were lacking in even quality of tone, in
smoothness and in fluency. The art of legato playing was unknown and
violinists could not play two or more notes with ‘one bow.’ Neither did
they endeavor to conquer the technical difficulties of playing on the G
string. They made practically no use of the fourth string until the end
of the century. In addition, the instruments were badly constructed,
equipped with strings of inferior quality and tuned in a low pitch, all
of which militated strongly against purity and accuracy of intonation.
Hans Gerle (a flute player of Nuremberg), in his ‛_Musica Teutsch, auf
die Instrument der grossen und kleinen Geigen_’ (1532), advised that
intonation marks be placed on the fingerboard, and this naïve advice
was in use as late as the middle of the eighteenth century.[45]
The same writer points out that instrumentalists in improvising their
parts were prone to vie with each other in demonstrating their ability
as contrapuntists, a perfectly comprehensible habit, which must have
affected instrumental music in the sixteenth century as badly as
the vagaries of coloratura singers affected operatic music in the
eighteenth.
Gerle’s book, incidentally, contained a number of German, Welsh, and
French songs, and a fugue for four violins. Among other early books on
the violin mention may be made of these:
S. Virdung: _Musica getuscht_, 1511.
Judenkönig: A truly artistic instruction * * * of learning upon the
lute and violin, 1523. (Contains 25 numbers for violin and flute.)
Agricola: _Musica Instrumentalis_, 1528. (Here the author refers to the
vibrato as a device that ‘makes the playing more sweet.’)
La Franco: _Scintille di Musica_, 1533.
Silvestro Ganassi: _Regola Rubertina che insegna suon di Viola d’arco_,
1543.
Ludovico Zacconi: _Prattica di Musica_, 1592 (Zacconi stated here that
the compass of the violin was g-ciii).
M. Prätorius: _Syntagma Musicum_, 1619.
Touching upon the use of the violin in the sixteenth century there
is extant a wealth of historical references. From one of these, for
example, we gather that at a public festival in 1520 viols were used
to accompany songs. We may assume their popularity in England from the
fact that they were used in the family of Sir Thomas More (1530), an
ardent music lover, and that during the reign of Edward VI the royal
musical establishment increased the number of its viols to eight.
Violins were used at public performances in Rouen in 1558; at a fête
in Bayonne for dance music in 1565, and in a performance of a Mass at
Verona in 1580. In the year 1572 Charles XI of France purchased violins
from Cremona and a little later ordered the famous twenty-four violins
from Andrea Amati. In 1579, at the marriage of the Duke of Joyeuse,
violins were used to play for dances, and Montaigne in his _Journal_
(1580) refers to a marriage ceremony in Bavaria, where ‘as a newly
married couple went out of church, the violinists accompanied them.’
From this passage of Montaigne we may infer that, in Germany at least,
the popularity of violin music was not confined to the upper classes.
It must be remembered, however, that the terms ‘viola,’ ‘violin,’
‘viol,’ etc., were often applied indifferently to stringed instruments
of various kinds, and in view of this inaccurate nomenclature
historical references must be accepted with a certain amount of reserve.
We know little of the music that was played on the violin before the
last decade of the sixteenth century. Violins, we are aware, were
employed in ensembles, in orchestras, and in unison with voices,
and in looking for violin music we have not necessarily to consider
compositions written especially for violin. By way of illustration
we may cite a collection of French Dances (1617), published for
‘instruments,’ presumably for all kinds of instruments, and a
collection of ‘Songs’ edited in Venice (1539) bearing the remark ‘to
sing and play,’ and indicating no special instruments. Probably much
of this sort of music was played by violin. Among examples of specific
writing for the violin there has come down to us previous to 1539 a
_Fugue_ (Fugato rather) for four violins, composed by Gerle. It is in
four parts: Discant (first violin), Alto (second violin), Tenor (viola)
and Bass ('cello), perhaps the earliest specimen of a composition for
string quartet. The style is purely vocal, as we may see from the theme:
[Illustration: Music score]
There is no suggestion of the violin idiom in the piece and it throws
no light on the development of violin music. Cortecci and Striggio
in 1565 scored their intermezzi for two gravecembali, _violins_,
flutes, cornets, trombones, and several other instruments. D’Etrée,
an oboe player, wrote down the common lively tunes which had been
previously learned by ear and published them in 1564. As a practical
musician he undoubtedly considered also the violin. In the performance
of Beaulieu’s _Circe_ (1581) ten bands were used and in the first
act ten violin players in costumes appeared. The famous violinist,
Beaujoyeaulx (an Italian in the service of Henry III whose real name
was Baltasarini), wrote ballets (1584), dances, festival music, and
other compositions, which were very successful at the court. Doubtless
he played them himself. Castiglione in his _Cortigiano_ mentions a
composition as being written for ‛_quattro viole da arco_’ which almost
seems to indicate another specimen of early string quartet. Toward
the end of the century we meet with the _Balletti_ of Gastoldi and of
Thomas Morley, some of which are printed without words and may have
been intended for instrumental performances. Still, they are vocal in
character and do not exceed the compass of the human voice. Besides
these, there are other compositions and collections of dances, etc.,
that may be considered musical material for violinists of the time.
Most of them, however, deserve no detailed notice.
Up to 1587 the leading instrument of the orchestra was the Cornetto
(German ‘Zinke,’ an instrument of wood, not of metal). The earliest
instance where the Cornetto alternates with the violins in taking the
lead and where a part was inserted especially for _violino_ is to be
found in _Concerto di Andrea e Giovanni Gabrieli--per voci e strumenti
musicali_, 1587. Some of G. Gabrieli’s compositions, however, are still
in vocal style, but some are decidedly instrumental in character, as we
may see from the following illustrations.
[Illustration: Music score]
and
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
From a Sonata à 3 (1615).
and
[Illustration: Music score]]
(Note the last example, where the intentional contrast between _piano_
and _forte_ is distinctly indicated.)
In 1593 Florentino Maschera, one of the celebrated organists of his
time, published a book of ‘Songs to play’ (_Canzoni a sonar_). The
work consisted of seventy-one pieces which had family names for their
titles, a custom that was often repeated in the first half of the
sixteenth century. It is important to note that these pieces were
printed in separate parts, so that they may be considered as the first
specimens of independent though not direct writing for the violin.
These _canzoni_ were vocal in character and there was little that
suggested instrumental technique. The style was that of the vocal
compositions of the time--contrapuntal.
A genuine and daring innovator in the field of violin music was Claudio
Monteverdi (1567-1643), who in some violin passages went up as high as
the fifth position. Besides broadening the technique of the left hand,
he demanded tremolos for dramatic effects in accompanying recitative:
[Illustration: Music score]
This passage from _Combattimento di Tanceredi e Clorinda_ (1624)
offered so many difficulties to the musicians that at first they
refused to play it. As we shall see presently, however, Monteverdi was
not the first to introduce this effect (_cf._ p. 381). Another of his
new effects was the introduction of the _pizzicato_, which he marked
thus: _Qui si lascia l’arco, e si strappano le chorde con duo diti_,
and afterwards _Qui si ripiglia l’arco_. That Monteverdi expected
violins to produce a _crescendo_ with the bow is apparent with the
instruction _Questa ultima note va in arcato morendo_. ‘Monteverdi
with his two violins “_alla Francese_” in the score of _Orfeo_ (the
first printed reference to the violin as an orchestral instrument in
the modern sense), probably meant nothing more than that the violins
were to be in the fashion of the French, but in place of accompanying
a dance, the character indicated in the opera was accompanied by two
violins in a particular part of its music.’[46] In other violin pieces
by Monteverdi, as in his _Scherzi musicali_ and _Ritornelle_ (1607), we
see his superiority to his contemporaries, just as in his _Sonata sopra
Sancta Maria detratta_, etc. (1610), he showed plainly his desire to
improve violin music.
III
The first attempt at independent violin composition was made by Biagio
Marini (1590-1660), _maestro di cappella_ in Santa Eufemia in Brescia
and a court concert-master in Germany, who may be regarded as the
first professional composer-violinist. In his early compositions the
violin parts were not difficult for the players. There were mostly
half and quarter notes in slow tempi, displaying the quality of vocal
compositions, and without much use of the G string. Witness the
following example from his _Martinenga Corrente_ (1622):
[Illustration: Music score]
A passage from his _Il Priulino Balletto e Corrente_ (marked canto
primo, secondo, and basso)
[Illustration: Music score]
is more instrumental in quality, though the second part of the Balletto
reveals again the character of vocal music. The whole may be played on
the A and E strings. More violinistic passages are to be found in his
sinfonia _La Gardana_; for example:
[Illustration: Music score]
Marini’s dance compositions are characteristic of all dance music at
the beginning of the seventeenth century. Among them, however, is one
that possesses particular interest for us from the fact that it is the
first extant composition marked distinctly ‘for violin solo.’ It is
entitled _La Romanesca per Violino Solo e Basso_ (ad libitum), and has
four sections, each consisting of two parts. The first section, _Parte
prima_, has six measures in the first and second part; the second
section has five measures in the first part and six in the second. The
form of the third section is not so clear as that of the previous ones,
although, as we may see from the basses, the composer endeavored to
give clear-cut melodies. The same may be said of the fourth section,
where the figures are in the bass. The third section--_terza parte in
altro modo_--with new melodic and rhythmic material, has the character
of a dance. The violin part moves in figures of eight, and there are
sustained notes in the bass. The first few measures of each section
will serve as illustration.
Section I
[Illustration: Music score]
Section II
[Illustration: Music score]
Section III
[Illustration: Music score]
Section IV
[Illustration: Music score]
In his technique Marini does not go beyond the first position;
consequently the fluency of the melody suffers many a break, for when
he reaches the limit of the first position, he continues the melody an
octave lower. Yet he is responsible for several technical innovations
for the violin. He was the first to mark the bowing (legato playing)
and to introduce--seven years before Monteverdi’s _Combattimento_--the
coloring effect of the tremolo, thus:
[Illustration: Music score]
Tremolo con arco.
Other innovations are to be found in his _Sonate e Sinfonie Canzoni_
(1629) where in a Capriccio ‘two violins play four parts’ (_due violini
sonano quattro parti_), thus:
[Illustration: Music score]
and a ‘Capriccio to be played on the violin solo with three strings
after the manner of a lyre’ (_Capriccio per sonare il Violino solo con
tre corde a modo di Lyra_).
[Illustration: Music score]
Besides Marini there were others who seriously endeavored to write in
a distinctive violin idiom. Before considering them we may mention here
Paolo Quagliati, who in his _Sfera armoniosa_ (1623) made the violin
accompany the voices and used it also as a solo instrument with the
accompaniment of the theorbo in a toccata of the same opus. The violin
part usually consisted of sustained tones that were to be embellished
by the players according to the custom of the time. Quagliati himself
was not a violinist and this fact serves to explain the simple
technique of his violin parts.
Four years later Carlo Farina, a Saxon chamber virtuoso and concert
master, who may be termed the founder of the race of violin virtuosos,
published a composition for the violin, called _Capriccio stravagante_.
Here he strove toward new and unusual violinistic effects. The very
title, ‘an extravagant caprice,’ explains his object. While the piece
shows little improvement in form, the technique is noticeably advanced.
Farina goes to the third position and points out how the change of
position should be executed. Besides broadening violin technique Farina
was among the first to venture into the field of realistic ‘tone
painting.’ For he tried to imitate the whistling of a soldier, the
barking of a dog, the calling of a hen, the crying of a cat, the sound
of a clarinet and the trumpet. Farina’s experiments in tone-painting
were, however, rather the product of a desire for sensational novelty
than of a legitimate seeking after artistic expression. He lacks the
genuine qualities of a true artist.
Although Farina did not use the G string, and did not go further than
the third position, he recognized the power of expression latent in
the violin. Besides rapid figures of sixteenth notes and considerable
variety in bowing there are double stops:
[Illustration: Music score]
and a series of consecutive chords with the instruction that it should
be executed with the stick of the bow:
[Illustration: Music score]
It was also his idea--not at all a bad one--to mark double stops with
figures:
[Illustration: Music score]
The fact that he found it necessary to give instruction for the
execution of double stops and tremolos, and the production of the
required effects in his imitations indicates that these devices were
entirely new in violin playing.
According to Gerber he published besides the Capriccio, a collection of
‛_Sonatas_’ and ‛_Pavanes_’ (1628), which, if they existed at all, are
entirely lost. Of his other compositions (Dances, Arias) we possess the
first violin parts containing the melody. He used the G clef and the
term ‘violino.’
The compositions of Marini, Quagliati and Farina represent the
beginnings of independent violin solo music. The first to write sonatas
for violin solo was the violinist-composer Giovanni Battista Fontana
(1630). His works, compared with the sonatas of Gabrieli, show a marked
improvement in violin technique; they are characterized by the same
polyphonic style, but they are not so conclusively vocal in character.
The following selections will show the great improvement in violin
technique; they virtually comprise the first ‘runs’ composed for the
violin:
[Illustration: Music score]
From a Sonata for Violin Solo.
or
[Illustration: Music score]
or
[Illustration: Music score]
or
[Illustration: Music score]
Fontana strove toward a broader form and in doing so he took a part in
the evolution of the later sonata. But he was not capable of fluent and
even expression, hence the effect of his works on the whole is stiff
and dry. We should not forget, however, that he lived during the period
of transition from the old tonal systems to the new, and that, while
he endeavored to write in the new style, the old one had not lost its
hold upon him. The result was awkwardness in modulation and a general
vagueness and uncertainty.
About the same time (1629) another composer, Bartolomeo Mont’ Albano,
published his _Sinfonie_ for one and two violins (and trombones, with
the accompaniment of the organ). These pieces are incoherent and lack
inspiration and power. Their value is far below that of Fontana’s
compositions. Mont’ Albano is only worthy of mention as showing that
Fontana was not absolutely alone in his attempts to improve violin
music. It may be noticed that he called his compositions _Sinfonie_,
meaning nothing more nor less than Fontana meant in his sonatas--a
proof that the technical terms at that time were not yet strictly
defined.
Great improvement in technique is obvious in the works of Tarquinno
Merula (1633). He used the G string freely, demanded skips from the G
to the E string, also tremolos, changes of position:
[Illustration: Music score]
and octave passages:
[Illustration: Music score]
Mont’ Albano’s music was thought out rather than invented and it
would give little pleasure to the modern ear. In the history of
the development of violin music these early compositions should be
considered simply as efforts or studies to advance violin technique and
musical form.
While Merula helped the progress of left hand technique, Marco Ucellini
(1669) made more demands on the bow, writing rapid thirty-second
notes for certain tremolo effects in his _sinfonia_ entitled _La gran
Bataglia_.
A more pleasing musical quality is to be found in the sonatas of
Massimiliano Neri, who was the first to make a distinction between
the _Sonata da chiesa_ and the _Sonata da camera_. In his _Sonate e
Canzoni a quattro_ and in his _Sonate da suonarsi con vari strumenti_,
Neri followed the path of Gabrieli in writing for as many as twelve
instruments. The frequent change of time and the restless rhythm are
also reminiscent of Gabrieli’s peculiarities. Although Neri’s structure
of phrases and periods is more normal, his modulation more fluent, and
his music on the whole more agreeable to the modern ear than that of
Fontana and Merula, his works still belong to the practical experiments
of violin music, and are without great intrinsic merits. The same may
be said of the sonatas of Biagio Marini whom we have already discussed.
He may be termed one of the originators of the cyclical form of the
modern sonata, since his sonatas were in four movements. The first,
usually in slow tempo, was followed by an Allegro, this by a longer
or shorter piece that led to the last movement (Allegro). While his
style was still distinctly polyphonic, the development of his motives
was considerably more pleasing. Improvement in harmony and modulation
is found in the _Sonate da chiesa_ and _Sonate da camera_ of Giovanni
Legrenzi (1655), who did not otherwise accomplish much in forwarding
solo violin music.
Turning to Germany, it is to be regretted that the works,
which, to judge by their titles, might have shed some light on the
development of early violin music, are irretrievably lost to us. They
are _Auserlesene Violinen Exercitium aus verschiedener Sonaten nebst
ihre Arien, Balladen, Sarabanden, etc., and Musicalische Tafelbedienung
von fünf Instrumenten, als zwei Violinen, zwei Violen, nebst den
General Bass_, by Wilhelm Furcheim (1674), concert-master at Dresden.
The most important figure, among the earliest German composers for the
violin from the standpoint of technical advance, is evidently Jacob
Walter. His twelve _Scherzi da violino solo_ are in the style of the
_Sonate da Camera_ (Suite) or in the form of variations. Eight of them
are called sonatas, and contain three or four movements, mostly in the
same key but in a variety of tempi. From a musical point of view most
of Walter’s compositions are unattractive, as the form is stiff, the
rhythm awkward, modulation poor, and the melody heavy and clumsy. His
importance lies exclusively in the advanced claims his writings make
upon execution, for he ascends as far as [Illustration: Music score] and
writes many difficult double stops, chords, and arpeggios. Walter was
also fond of imitating other instruments, birds, echoes, and so forth.
In a set of variations we meet with imitations of the guitar by playing
pizzicato, of the pipes by going up high on the E string, of fanfares
by playing on the G string. In another composition the imitation of the
call of the cuckoo was his chief purpose; but we would hardly recognize
the cuckoo’s call, had he not in every case taken the pains to mark the
imitation. In another instance, in _Hortulus Chelicus_, he endeavored
to imitate the voice of some other bird. This work as a piece of art is
more valuable, since here he attempted to write a duet for one violin.
Another composition that is characteristic of Walter’s musical ideas
is a _Capriccio_, where the C major scale is used as basso ostinato in
forty-nine variations, as though the composer wanted to give as many
kinds of motions and figures as he could.
[Illustration]
Stradivarius at Work: ANTONIO STRADIVARI.
Walter was not an innovator in the art of tone painting, for Farina
had tried the same devices seventy years before. Still he cannot be
dubbed a mere imitator of Farina, though he was without doubt strongly
influenced by the latter. Walter’s technique is much more advanced than
that of Farina, but at the same time he shows little improvement in a
purely musical way.
IV
There is an obvious advance in musical value in the _Correnti e
balletti da camera a due violini_, 1666; _Balletti_, _Sonate_, 1667,
1669; _Correnti e capricci per camera a due violini e violone_, 1683,
and other instrumental pieces by Giovanni Battista Vitali, ‛_sonatore
di Violino di brazzo_’ in the orchestra of Bologna. Vitali’s melodies
contain much more pleasing qualities than those of his contemporaries.
In regard to form, his sonatas, in which rapid changes from quick to
slow movements mark the various sections, show the transition from the
suite to the _sonata da camera_. Vitali was one of those early inspired
composers, whose greatest merit lies in their striving toward invention
and toward the ideal of pure absolute music. In technique Vitali does
not show any material progress.
Of particular importance is Tommaso Antonio Vitali, a famous violinist
of his time. Of his works, _Sonate a tre, due violini e violoncello_,
1693; _Sonate a due violini, col basso per l’organo_, 1693, and
_Concerto di sonate a violino, violoncello e cembalo_, 1701, the most
famous and most valuable is his _Ciaccona_, which is very often played
on the concert stage by present-day violinists. The _Ciaccona_ is full
of poetic moods and its short, pregnant theme shows deep feeling and
genuine inspiration, qualities which we find here for the first time.
The whole is a set of variations upon a short theme, constituting a
series of contrasting pictures. Noteworthy are the harmony and the
advanced treatment of modulation. The ornamental figures, too, are
derived from the logical development of the theme, hence do not serve
the sole purpose of providing the virtuoso with an opportunity to
display his technical skill.
The first representative virtuoso-composer was Giuseppe Torelli
(1658-1708), to whom is ascribed the invention of the concerto, that
is, the application of the sonata form of his time to concerted music.
In Torelli’s concertos the solo-violins were accompanied not only by
a bass as in the sonatas, but by a stringed band, to which sometimes
a lute or organ was added. The solo-violins in his ‘Concerti grossi’
(1686) usually played together, though not always. That he had the
virtuoso in mind when he wrote may be gathered from the following
examples:
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
In his concertos Torelli was the direct precursor of Corelli, Vivaldi,
and Handel. His influence, however, was not so intense as that of
Giovanni Battista Bassani (1657-1716), whose music had more unity and
definiteness and on the whole ranked very much higher artistically.
This, added to the fact that he was Corelli’s teacher, gives him a
prominent place in the history of violin music. While the single
movements of Bassani’s sonatas on the whole show little improvement
in form, the composer established a higher standard in the evenness
and uniformity of his figures, in the smoothness of his modulation
and chromatics, in rhythms that were far superior to those of earlier
composers, in phrasing that was clear, especially in slow movements,
and in the almost complete abandonment of the ‘fugal’ treatment. His
influence upon Corelli is so evident that one could hardly distinguish
one of his later compositions from an early sonata of his famous pupil.
A few examples of Bassani’s writing may be of interest:
[Illustration: Music score]
Grave. From a Sonata for two Violins and Bass.
[Illustration: Music score]
Largo. From a Baletto e Corrente.
[Illustration: Music score]
Gige
[Illustration: Music score]
Sarabande. Presto
Before closing our account of the seventeenth century, reference should
be made to the prominent Antonio Veracini, the uncle and teacher of
Francesco Maria Veracini, whose sonatas are still played by violinists
today. Antonio Veracini’s sonatas, composed in the form of the _sonata
da chiesa_, do not lack a certain amount of beauty, inspiration, and
repose; they show, moreover, clearness, fluency and roundness. His
melodies are original, his modulations and contrapuntal combinations
good. While his Allegro movements show no improvement in comparison
with Bassani’s works, the Adagios and Largos are of more independent
finish.
There were numerous contemporaries, followers, and pupils of the
composers already discussed. Their works, however, were academic,
lacked individuality, and contained little that was worthy of
special consideration. The list of these minor composers includes
Laurenti, Borri, Mazzolini, Bononcini, Buoni, Bernardi, d’Albergati,
Mazzaferrata, Tonini, Grossi, Ruggeri, Vinacesi, Zanata, and others.
V
The first German composer of violin music of æsthetic value was
Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (born 1638), a very prominent violinist
and composer of his time. Although frequently his form is vague and his
ideas often dry, some of his sonatas contain movements that not only
exhibit well-defined forms, but also contain fine and deeply felt ideas
and a style which, though closely related to that of the best Italians
of his time, has something characteristically German in its grave
and pathetic severity. His sonatas on the whole are of a much higher
artistic quality than those of his contemporaries. His sixth sonata,
in C minor, published in 1687, is a genuinely artistic piece of work.
‘It consists of five movements in alternately slow and quick time. The
first is an introductory _largo_ of contrapuntal character, with clear
and consistent treatment in the fugally imitative manner. The second
is a _passacaglia_, which answers roughly to a continuous string of
variations on a short, well-marked period; the third is a rhapsodical
movement consisting of interspersed portions of _poco lento_, _presto_,
and _adagio_, leading into a _Gavotte_; and the last is a further
rhapsodical movement alternating _adagio_ and _allegro_. The work is
essentially a violin sonata with accompaniment and the violin parts
point to the extraordinary rapid advances toward mastery. The writing
for the instrument is decidedly elaborate and difficult, especially in
the double stops and contrapuntal passages. In the structure of the
movements the fugal influences are most apparent and there are very few
signs of the systematic repetition of keys which in later times became
indispensable.’[47] It was characteristic of Biber that his ambition
was to create something original and that his works always showed
individuality. He was fond of variations and this form was not lacking
in any of his eight sonatas. Besides the variation form he frequently
used the form of _gavotte_ and _giga_, which he began and ended with
an organ point. In his eighth sonata he attempted to write a duo in
polyphonic style for one violin, writing it out on two staves. This
work is of little importance to us, aside from the fact that he sought
originality in changing the tuning of the violin from [Illustration:
Music score] to [Illustration: Music score] and sometimes to
[Illustration: Music score]. This kind of modified tuning, however,
was not his invention, for we know that Johann Fischer, a composer and
violinist in the same century, also attempted to write for differently
tuned violins.
One of the best violinists of the seventeenth century was Nicholas Adam
Strungk. He was also a good cembalist and once accompanied Corelli.
It was Strungk to whom Corelli said upon hearing him play on the
violin: ‘My name is Archangelo, but you should be called Archidiavolo.’
Strungk published _Exercises pour le violin_ (1691), besides sonatas,
chaccones, etc.
Our review of the violin music of the seventeenth century would
not be complete without mention of the compositions for violin
by non-violinist composers, such as, for instance, Henry Purcell
(1658-1695). Purcell imitated G. B. Vitali, and perhaps also other
contemporary Italian composers, to whom, however, he was superior
in originality, in vigor, in genuine inspiration and in a certain
emotional quality. His violin compositions did not accentuate
technique, since he himself was not a violinist. Concerning the sonatas
of John Jenkins (1600), Dr. Burney remarks: ‘Though written professedly
in the Italian style, he could hardly have been familiar with the
early Italian compositions of the same order, and though he had been,
he would not be deprived of praise on the score of originality, his
musical knowledge being quite equal if not superior to the composers
for the violin at that time in Italy.’ Among French composers we may
single out Jean-Baptiste Lully (1633-1687), leader of the famous band
of petit violins at the court of Louis XIV--the first large stringed
orchestra. Lully studied the capacity of the instrument and tried to
write in an idiomatic style, but on the whole he did not contribute
much to the progress of violin music.
The appearance of a great number of violinist-composers in the
seventeenth century indicates that the use of the violin was almost
general at musical affairs of the time. In Coriat’s ‘Crudities’ the
author speaks of hearing an ensemble in which ‘the music of a treble
viol was so excellent that no one could surpass it.’ He continues:
‘Sometimes sixteen played together, sometimes ten, or different
instruments, a cornet and a treble viol. Of these treble viols I heard
three whereof each was so good, especially one that I observed above
the rest, that I never heard the like before.’ Pepys (1660) made
references to the viol in his Diary: ‘I have played on my viol and I
took much pleasure to have the neighbors come forth into the yard to
hear me.’ Many other references in literary works of the time attest
the increasing popularity and the appealing qualities of the instrument.
There was no dearth of publications of collections for string
instruments, which gradually became more discriminating in the _kind_
of instruments to be used. The appearance of works designed to instruct
the amateur indicate the spread of the art of violin playing and gave
way toward the systemizing technique. A few of these publications
appearing at different periods of the seventeenth century may be
enumerated: Early in the century Dowland (1603-1609) printed a work in
five parts for lute and viols, named ‘Lacrimæ, or Seven Tears figured
in passionate Pavans, with divers other Pavans, Galliards, etc.’ In
1614 Sir William Leighton published ‘The Tears or Lamentations of a
sorrowful soule; composed with the Musical Ayres and songs both for
voyces and divers instruments.’ In this he included published vocal
music of different composers with the accompaniment of the lute, and
appended to the titles the remark: ‘Cantus with the Treble Viol.’
Orlando Gibbons (about 1620-1630) composed nine Fantasies, four for
treble viols. These fantasies are in fugal style. He also published
Madrigals, Motets, etc., ‘apt for viols and voices.’ From 1654 we
have reference to a work, which, if correctly described, would be the
earliest string quartet by an English author. It is a ‘Set of Ayre for
two violins, Tenor and Bass,’ by Dr. Benjamin Rogers. According to
Burney these pieces were never printed. In 1657 Matthew Lock published
the ‘Little Consort of three parts containing Pavans, Courants,
Sarabandes, for viols and violins.’ In 1659 Chr. Simpson published ‘The
Division violinist or an introduction to the Playing upon the Ground.
Divided into two parts, the first directing the hand, with other
preparative instructions, the second laying open the manner and method
of playing extempore, or composing division to a ground. To which are
added some divisions made upon grounds for the Practise of learner.’
This title clearly shows the content of the work. Roger L’Estrange, the
licenser of that time, addressed the reader in a second edition with
the following words: ‘the book certainly answers the pretense of the
title, both for matter and method, to the highest point of reasonable
expectation.’
John Lentor, a member of William and Mary’s state band, published ‘The
Gentleman’s Diversion, or the Violin explained.’ A second edition was
issued in 1702 with the title ‘The useful Instructor on the Violin.’ In
1676 Thomas Mace published ‘Musick’s Monument, or a Remembrance of the
best practical music,’ etc., where we find many interesting particulars
relative to viols.
In 1669 John Playford published ‘Apollo’s Banquet.’ It contained
‘Short Rules and Directions for Practitioners of the Treble Violin
with a collection of old Century Dances.’ In a preface, that Playford
calls ‘Advertisement,’ we read: ‘Several persons coming often to my
Shop for Books of tunes for the Treble-Violin, to accommodate each I
have made public this collection of Choice Tunes; and also of tunes
of the newest French Dances: All which are very useful to those who
use the Treble-Violin. Some will object, many of these tunes were
formerly printed at the end of the Book, Entitled, the Dancing Master:
I grant they were, but some which were choice I would not omit in this
collection.’
E. K.
FOOTNOTES:
[42] _Cf._ Vol. VIII, Chap. I.
[43] See Vol. I, Chap. VII.
[44] The various ‘positions’ in violin playing indicate the positions
which the left hand occupies in reaching the different parts of the
fingerboard. The first position is that in which the thumb and first
finger are at the extreme end of the instrument's ‘neck.’ With the
usual tuning the compass controlled by the first position is from a to
b".
[45] Leopold Mozart (father of Wolfgang Amadeus) referred to it in his
method for the violin (1758) and sharply condemned it. ‘Some teachers,’
he remarked, ‘in their desire to help pupils, label the names of tones
upon the fingerboard or make marks upon it by scratching. All these
devices are useless, because the pupil who is musically talented finds
the notes without such aid, and persons who are not thus inclined
should learn how to handle the ax instead of the bow.’
[46] George Hart: ‛The Violin and Its Music.’
[47] Parry in ‘Grove’s Dictionary,’ Vol. 4.
CHAPTER XII
VIOLIN COMPOSERS IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Corelli, Vivaldi, Albinoni--Their successors, Locatelli,
F. M. Veracini, and others; Tartini, and his pupils;
pupils of Somis: Giardini and Pugnani--French violinists
and composers: Rébel, Francœur, Baptiste Anet, Senaillé
and Leclair; French contemporaries of Viotti: Pagin,
Lahoussaye, Gaviniès; Viotti--Violinists in Germany and
Austria during the eighteenth century: Pisendel, J. G.
Graun, Franz Benda; Leopold Mozart--The Mannheim school: J.
Stamitz, Cannabich and others; Dittersdorf, Wranitzky and
Schuppanzigh--Non-violinist composers: Handel, Bach, Haydn,
Mozart--Conclusion.
I
Corelli’s opus 5 was published in Rome in 1700. The four earlier
_opera_ and the _concerti grossi_ of 1712 occupy a place in the
development of chamber and symphonic music. The opus 5 may be taken as
the solid foundation of violin music, that is music for a single violin
with accompaniment. It consists of twelve solo sonatas, with figured
bass for harpsichord, 'cello, or theorbo. The first six of these are
similar in spirit to the _sonate da chiesa_. They are generally serious
in treatment. The other six correspond to the _sonate da camera_.
Five of them are made up of dance movements in the style of a suite,
though the order is irregular, and here and there the dance name is not
written in the score. The last consists of variations on a melody known
as _La folia_. The melody is very old. The sarabande rhythm suggests an
origin in connection with some sort of Spanish dance; and in a series
of Spanish dances published in 1623 there is a _Follie_. Also the
French clavecinist d’Anglebert wrote a series of variations which he
published in his set of clavecin pieces (1689) as _Folies d’Espagne_.
It is very doubtful that this melody, of which Corelli and Vivaldi as
well made use, was composed by G. B. Farinelli, though in England it
was known as ‘Farinelli’s Ground.’ Rather it is one of the old popular
songs, such as _La romanesca_, which composers employed as a _basso
ostinato_ in sets of divisions or variations, very much like a Chaconne
or a Passacaglia.
The treatment of the violin in these twelve sonatas has, and well may
have, served as a model during the years which have passed since they
were written. Music cannot be conceived more fitting to the instrument.
It is true that none calls for brilliant virtuosity. Corelli never goes
beyond the third position; but within this limit no effect in sonority
or delicacy has been neglected.
The polyphonic style of the first six is worth mentioning. It will be
observed that in all the first allegros, and in the last as well, the
violin is given a certain amount of two-part music to play. Usually
there is a strong suggestion of fugal style. The violin announces the
subject, and continues with the answer. Then the figured bass takes
it up. The first allegro in the fourth sonata offers a clear example.
Throughout the entire movement the instrument is called upon to play
more or less in polyphonic style--carrying _two_ parts. It is, however,
a graceful and flowing style. There is no suggestion of learning too
heavy for sound. The short, slow preludes at the beginning of each
sonata are all beautifully wrought. The smooth imitations in No. 2, the
use of a rhythmical figure in the bass of No. 3, and in all the free
independent movement of the two parts, speak of a composer of finest
instinct and true skill.
In the second six, on the other hand, the violin is not called upon to
carry more than one part. The style is consequently lighter, and on the
whole more brilliant. The rhythmical elements of the dances are brought
out prominently, and here Corelli shows himself no less a master.
Take for example the allemande in the eighth sonata (E minor), or the
gavotte in the tenth (F major).
The variations on _La folia_ present Corelli’s technical resources in a
nut-shell, so to speak. Such variations as the first, second, and third
show a command of counterpoint; but the fifth begins to reveal his
instinct for effects upon the violin, which is given freer and freer
play in the eleventh, thirteenth, and fourteenth. The contrast between
upper and lower strings is brought out in those mentioned. In the
twelfth and sixteenth he uses the rich thirds and sixths destined in
the course of the century to displace the polyphonic style altogether.
Finally the twenty-third brings an astonishing effect of vibration and
resonance.
It is neatness of form, surety of technique, and perfection of style
which give these sonatas their historical importance, which have made
them a foundation for further development. Their beauty, however, is
not a matter of history. We know of no music that speaks of an age that
is passed with more gentleness, more sweetness, or more dignity. There
is none that is more admirable. It is gratifying to note that such
music as this was in its own day beloved. The _Apothèse de l’admirable
Corelli_ written by the great French clavecinist, François Couperin,
is among the few whole-souled and disinterested tributes of one
contemporary to another. It describes in quaint music the entrance of
Corelli into the company of Lully in the Elysian Fields. Couperin held
that the combination of what was best in Italian music with what was
best in French would produce an ideal music; and obviously he prized
Corelli as representative of the best that there was in Italy.
[Illustration]
Early Masters of the Violin. Top: Archangelo Corelli.
Bottom: Antonio Vivaldi. Giuseppe Tartini.
It would be hard today to point to the music of any other Italian
master which has endured through radical changes of style and taste
and has lost nothing; or indeed to that of the masters of any nation.
Yet no subsequent developments have made a single quality of these
sonatas dim or stale. The reason may be found in the just proportion
in them of all the elements of music. The forms are slight; but they
are graceful and secure, and there is not in the emotional quality of
Corelli’s music that which calls for wider expression than they afford.
The treatment of the violin shows a knowledge of it and a love of its
qualities, tempered always by a respect and love for music as an art of
expression. Therefore there is no phrase which is not in accord with
the spirit and the law of the piece in which it is written, nothing
which, written then for the sake of display, may make a feeble show in
the light of modern technique. There is no abandonment to melody at
the cost of other qualities; nor even a momentary forgetfulness of the
pleasure of the ear in the exercise of the mind. Nothing has come into
music in the course of two hundred years which can stand between us and
a full appreciation of their beauty.
This can hardly be said of the music of his contemporaries, three of
whom, however, have lived to the present day, and one in more than
name. Tommaso Albinoni (1674-1745) and Giuseppe Torelli (d. 1708)
were both important in the establishment of the form of solo concerto
which J. S. Bach acquired from Vivaldi.[48] Albinoni was a Venetian
dilettante and spent most of his life in Venice in connection with the
opera. Besides the fifty-one operas which he wrote, there are several
instrumental works, from some of which Bach appropriated themes. A
beautiful sonata in D minor has been edited by Alfred Moffat and
published in a _Kammer-Sonaten_ series (B. Schott’s Söhne, Mainz).
Notice the cadenza at the end of the slow movement. Torelli was a
native of Bologna, but he spent at one time a few years in Vienna and
also a year or two in Ansbach.
Antonio Vivaldi, likewise a Venetian, is one of the most significant
composers in the history of musical form, and was second only to
Corelli as a composer for the violin and a player, if indeed he was not
fully Corelli’s equal. Among his works are eighteen sonatas for solo
violin and bass, opus 2 and opus 5, and a great number of concertos
for a single violin and a varying number of accompanying instruments.
Commonly it is said that much of Vivaldi’s music is touched with the
falseness of virtuosity; and to this is laid the fact that his work
has been forgotten while Corelli’s has lived. The fact itself cannot
be denied. Yet there is a fine breadth and dignity in some of the
concertos and in the sonatas, and warmth in the slow movements. He died
in 1743 as director of a school for girls in Venice. On account of his
red hair and his rank as priest he was known as _il prete rosso_.
II
From the time of Corelli to the time of Paganini there was an unbroken
line of Italian violinists most of whom were composers. The violin was
second only to the voice in the love of the Italians, which, it must
not be forgotten, was, during the eighteenth century, the love of all
Europe. The violinists rose to highest favor much as the great opera
singers, but unlike the singers, composed their own music. This under
their hands might move thousands to rapture, and still may work upon
a crowd through a great player. Such is the power of the violin. But
as a matter of fact most of this music has been allowed to sink out
of sight, and the names of most of these composers have remained but
the names of performers. With only a few are definite characteristics
associated.
Among these whose activities fell within the first half of the century
are two pupils of Corelli, Francesco Geminiani (1667-1762) and Pietro
Locatelli (1693-1764). From 1714 Geminiani lived, with the exception
of five or six years in Paris, in London and Ireland. He was highly
respected as a teacher, and his book, ‘The Art of Playing on the
Violin,’ is the first complete violin method. This was published
first anonymously in 1731, but later went through many editions and
was translated into French and German, and established Geminiani’s
fame as the greatest of teachers. Besides this he wrote other works,
on harmony, memory, good taste, and other subjects, founded a school
for the guitar, and composed sonatas and concertos for violin, trios,
quartets, and even clavecin pieces.
Locatelli was a brilliant virtuoso and seems to have travelled widely
over Europe. To him is owing an extension of the violin style, and a
few effects in virtuosity, especially in chromatics. And he is said to
have raised the pitch of the first string to bring new effects within
his grasp. One notes in both his and Geminiani’s music the frequent
use of thirds and sixths, the employment of high registers and of wide
chords.
Another especially famous and influential in the development of violin
music was Francesco Maria Veracini (1685-1750). He, too, was a wanderer
and an astonishing virtuoso. In 1714 the young Tartini heard him play
in Venice and was so struck by his brilliance that he himself decided
to retire and practise in order to be able to compete with him.
Some time before 1717 Veracini was for two years in London, where he
played violin solos between the acts at the Italian opera, as was the
custom not only in England but in the continental countries as well.
After this he was for some years in Dresden and in Prague. In 1736
he came back to London, but Geminiani was then at the height of his
fame. Veracini could make little of his gifts there and consequently
went to Pisa, near where he died. During his lifetime he published
twelve sonatas for violin and figured bass. After his death symphonies
and concertos were found in manuscript. One of the sonatas was
republished by David, and one in B minor is included in the series
of _Kammer-Sonaten_ previously mentioned. The final rondo of this is
exceedingly lively and brilliant, with a cadenza in modern style.
Other names of this period are Somis (1676-1763), Ruggeri and Giuseppe
Valentini. Somis was a pupil of Corelli’s, and in turn the teacher
of Pugnani, who was the teacher of Viotti, the founder of the modern
school of violin playing.
The most brilliant name of the century is Giuseppe Tartini
(1692-1770). He was intended by his parents for the church, but opposed
their wishes and went in 1710 to the university at Padua to study
law. Evidently music was more attractive to him than law, and even
more attractive than music was the art of fencing. In this he became
a great master. A secret marriage and elopement with the daughter of
Cardinal Carnaro involved him in serious troubles. He was forced to
flee from the wrath of the churchly father-in-law, and took refuge in
a cloister at Assisi. Here he lived in secret for two years, until the
anger against him in Padua had cooled down. During these two years he
worked constantly at his fiddle, and at composition as well. Later he
chanced to hear Veracini at Venice. Whereupon, full of enthusiasm,
he sent his wife back to his relatives in Pirano for the time being,
and went himself again into retirement at Ancona. Finally in 1721 he
acquired the position of solo violinist and leader of the orchestra in
the cathedral of St. Anthony in Padua; and this place he held to the
end of his life, refusing, with one exception, numerous invitations to
other towns and countries. In 1728 he founded a school for violinists
at Padua, of which Nardini was for many years a pupil.
Tartini was a man of brilliant though sometimes erratic mind. His book
on bowing (_L’arte del arco_) laid down practically all the principles
upon which the modern art of bowing rests. But his investigations
into the theories of sounds and harmonies are sometimes ill-founded
and without importance. Throughout his life he published sets of six
sonatas for violin and bass or harpsichord, and concertos. Probably
he is generally best known today by his sonata in G minor, called the
‘Devil’s Trill,’ which, however, was not published during his lifetime.
The story that he dreamed the Devil appeared to him and played a piece
of bewitching beauty, that he rose from his bed to play what he heard,
and could not, that with these unearthly sounds still haunting him
several days later he wrote this sonata, is well known.
Tartini’s playing was brilliant, but he played little in public,
seeming to have an aversion for that sort of display similar to that
felt later by the great Viotti. More than his contemporaries he had the
power to make his violin sing.
Pietro Nardini is the most famous of Tartini’s pupils. He was a Tuscan
by birth. During the years 1753-67 he was employed in the court
chapel at Stuttgart. After this he returned to Tartini, and after
1770 was court chapel-master in Florence. His publications included
solo sonatas, concertos and various other forms of chamber music. His
playing was distinguished by softness and tenderness. In the words of
a critic who heard him: Ice-cold princes and ladies of the court have
been seen to weep when he played an adagio.
Other violinists associated with the school at Padua founded by
Tartini are Pasqualini Bini (b. 1720), Emanuele Barbella (d. 1773), G.
M. Lucchesi, Thomas Linley, Filippo Manfreli, a friend and associate
of Boccherini’s, and Domenico Ferrari. Finally mention should be made
of the Signora Maddalena Lombardini, among the first of the women
violinists, who was a pupil of Tartini’s and won brilliant success at
the _Concerts Spirituels_ in Paris. She was, moreover, famous as a
singer in the Paris opera and later in the court opera at Dresden.
Two of the most famous violinists of the latter half of the century,
Felice Giardini and Gaëtano Pugnani, received their training in Turin
under Somis, the pupil of Corelli, who is commonly accepted as the
founder of a distinct Piedmont school. Giardini settled in London about
the middle of the century, after wanderings in Italy and Germany; and
here endured a changing fortune as player, teacher, composer, conductor
and even impresario. Luck was against him in almost every venture. In
1791 he left London forever, with an opera troupe which he led into
Russia. He died at Moscow in 1796.
Pugnani’s life was happier. He was a pupil not only of Somis but of
Tartini as well, and though between 1750 and 1770 he gave himself up to
concert tours and made himself famous in London and Paris as a player,
he was greatest and most influential as a teacher in Turin between
1770 and 1803, the year of his death. Only a few of his compositions,
which included operas and church music as well as music for the
violin, were published. A great part of the money won by these and his
teaching was given over to the poor, and he was not only one of the
greatest violinists of his age but one of the most beloved of men. His
compositions are noteworthy for a soft charm, rather than for fervor or
strength.
Giambattista Viotti, the greatest of his pupils, stands with Corelli
and Tartini as one of the three violinists of Italy who have had the
greatest influence upon the development of violin music. Through
Pugnani he received directly the traditions of the two great men whom
he was destined so worthily to follow.
Though it is nearly impossible sharply to differentiate the styles
of the host of violinists Italy gave to the world in the eighteenth
century, two tendencies show in the total of their work. One of
these was towards a noble and restrained style, the model for which
Corelli gave to all his successors. The other was towards the surface
brilliance of pure virtuosity, which comes out astonishingly in the
works of Locatelli. Viotti was a musician of highest ideals, and
chiefly through him the traditions that had been inherited from Corelli
were brought over into the violin music of a new era.
The time of Viotti is the time of the symphony and the sonata. He is
the contemporary of Mozart, Haydn, and Beethoven, and of (among his own
people) Clementi and Cherubini. As a composer he gave up writing what
had so long been the chief work of the violinist-composers--the sonata
with figured bass or simple accompaniment. Only a few sonatas are
numbered among his compositions; but he wrote no less than twenty-nine
violin concertos with full orchestral accompaniment, all of which show
the breadth of the new form of sonata and symphony, which had come out
of Italy, through Mannheim to Paris.
III
Before considering Viotti’s work in detail something must be said
about the condition of violin music in France during the eighteenth
century, and the violinists in Paris, with the assistance of whom
he was able to found a school of violin playing the traditions of
which still endure. With but one or two conspicuous exceptions, the
most significant violinists of the eighteenth century in France came
directly under the influence of the Italian masters. This did not
always contribute to their material successes; for throughout the
century there was a well-organized hostility to Italian influences in
one branch and another of music. Nevertheless most of what is good in
French violin music of the time owes a great deal to the Italians.
Such men as Rébel and Francœur (d. 1787), who were closely connected
with the _Académie_ founded by Lully, may be passed with only slight
mention. Both were significant in the field of opera rather than in
that of violin music. Their training was wholly French and their
activities were joined in writing for the stage. The latter composed
little without the former, except two sets of sonatas for violin, which
belong to an early period in his life. Francœur advised the use of the
thumb on the fingerboard in certain chords, a manner which, according
to Wasielewski,[49] is without another example in violin music.
On the other hand, Batiste Anet, J. B. Senaillé and Jean Marie
Leclair, all trained in Italy, are important precursors of the great
violinists at the end of the century who gathered about Viotti and
the _Conservatoire_. Anet, who is also known merely by his Christian
name, was a pupil of Corelli’s for four years. Upon his return to
Paris, about 1700, he made a profound impression upon the public;
but the great King Louis refused him his favor, and he was forced
to seek occupation in Poland. It was largely owing to his influence
that Senaillé (d. 1730), after having studied in Paris with one of
the famous twenty-four violins of the king, betook himself to Italy.
He returned to Paris about 1719 and passed the remainder of his life
in the service of the Duc d’Orleans. Five sets of his sonatas were
published in Paris, and one of them was included in J. B. Cartier’s
famous collection, _L’art du violon_.
Jean Marie Leclair is more conspicuous than either Batiste or Senaillé.
He was for some time a pupil of Somis in Turin. After troubles in
Paris on his return, he retired from public life and gave himself
up to teaching. Towards the end of his life he sought lessons of
Locatelli in Amsterdam. He was murdered in the streets of Paris one
night in October, 1764. After his death his wife had his compositions
engraved and printed. Among them are sonatas for violin and figured
bass, concertos with string accompaniment, trios, and even one opera,
_Glaucus et Scylla_, which had been performed in Paris on October 4,
1747.
In spite of the Italian influences evident in his work, Leclair may be
taken as one of the main founders of the French school of violinists.
Form and style of his works for the instrument are Italian; but the
spirit of them, their piquant rhythms, their preciseness, their
sparkling grace, is wholly French. The best known of his compositions
today is probably a sonata in C minor (from opus 5), which, on account
of a seriousness not usual with him, has been called _Le tombeau_.
None of his pupils was more famous than Le Chevalier de St. Georges,
the events of whose life, however, are more startling than his
music. He was the son of a certain de Boulogne and a negress, born
on Christmas day, 1745, in Guadaloupe. He came as a child to Paris,
and was trained by Leclair to be one of the most famous violinists in
France. For several years he was associated with Gossec in conducting
the _Concerts des amateurs_; but subsequently misfortune overtook him.
He was a soldier of fortune in the wars accompanying the Revolution;
and he escaped the guillotine only to drag on a miserable existence
until he died on the 12th of June, 1799.
Following Leclair the list of violinists in France grows steadily
greater and more brilliant. A. N. Pagin and Pierre Lahoussaye were of
great influence. The former was born in 1721 in Paris, and went as a
young man to study with Tartini. The prejudice against Italian music
destroyed his public career on his return to Paris, so that he retired
from the concert stage and like Leclair gave himself up to teaching.
Burney heard him in private in 1770, and was struck by his technique
and the sweetness of his tone. He often played at the house of a Count
Senneterre in Paris, where such men as Giardini and Pugnani were heard.
It was here that he heard Lahoussaye, still a boy, play the ‘Devil’s
Trill’ by Tartini, which he had learned only by ear. He promptly took
the young fellow under his care and thus his influence passed on into
the foundation of the violin school in the Paris _Conservatoire de
Musique_ in 1795.
For Lahoussaye proved to be one of the greatest violinists France
has produced, and was appointed, together with Gaviniès, Guènin, and
Kreutzer, to be one of the original professors of the violin at the
_Conservatoire_. Owing largely to the influence of Pagin he was filled
as a young man with the longing to study with Tartini himself, and this
longing came in time to be gratified. So that Lahoussaye forms one of
the most direct links between the classical Italian school, represented
by Corelli and Tartini, and the new French school soon to be founded
after the model of the Italian under the powerful influence of Viotti.
The most brilliant of the French violinists toward the end of the
century was Pierre Gaviniès. Neither the exact date of his birth (1726
or 1728) nor his birthplace (Bordeaux or Paris) is known. From whom
he received instruction remains wholly in the dark. But when Viotti
came to Paris in 1782 Gaviniès was considered one of the greatest of
living violinists. The great Italian is said to have called him the
French Tartini; from which one may infer that in his playing he had
copied somewhat the manner of the Italian players who, one after the
other, made themselves heard in all the great cities of Europe. But,
judging from his compositions, he was more given to brilliancy and
effectiveness than Tartini; and though he may not be ranked among
violinists like Lolli who had nothing but astonishing technique at
their command, he was undoubtedly influential in giving to the French
school its shining brilliance whereby it passed beyond the older
classical traditions.
His compositions are numerous, and they exerted no little influence
upon the development of the art. Besides two sets of sonatas for violin
and figured bass he published six concertos, three sonatas for violin
alone (among them that known as _Le tombeau de Gaviniès_), the once
famous _Romance de Gaviniès_, written while he was serving a sentence
in prison after a more or less scandalous escapade, and finally the
best known of his works, _Les vingt-quatre Matinées_.
There were twenty-four studies, written after he was seventy years old,
as if to show to what an extent the mastery of technical difficulties
of fingering could be developed. Consequently they lack very deep
feeling and meaning, and unhappily the difficulties in them are
presented so irregularly that they are hardly of use as studies to any
but the most advanced students. They have been re-edited by David since
his death and published once again. The sonatas and concertos have
failed to survive.
Leclair, Pagin, Lahoussaye, and Gaviniès represent together the best
accomplishment of the French violinists before the arrival of Viotti.
Among others neither so famous nor so influential may be mentioned
Joseph Touchemoulin (d. 1801), Guillemain (d. 1770), Antoine Dauvergne
(d. 1797), L’Abbé Robineau, who published several pieces for violin
about 1770, Marie Alexandre Guénin (d. 1819), François Hippolite
Barthélémon (d. 1808), Leblanc (b. ca. 1750), and Isidore Berthaume (d.
1820).
Little by little the French had developed the art of playing the violin
and composing for it. The time was ripe in the last quarter of the
eighteenth century for the founding of that great school of French art
which was to exert a powerful and lasting influence upon the growth of
violin music. And now the influence of Viotti comes into play.
Viotti was by all tokens one of the greatest of the world’s
violinists. He was born May 23, 1753, at Fontanetto, in Piedmont, and
when hardly more than a boy, came under the care of Pugnani. In 1780
he started out with his master on an extended concert tour, which
took him through Germany, Poland, Russia and England. Everywhere he
met with brilliant success. Finally he came to Paris and made his
first appearance at the _Concerts Spirituels_ in 1782. His success was
enormous, not only as a player but as a composer. Unhappily subsequent
appearances were not so successful, and Viotti determined to withdraw
from the concert stage. Except for a short visit to his home in 1783,
he remained in Paris until the outbreak of the Revolution, variously
occupied in teaching, composing, leading private orchestras, and
managing in part the Italian opera. The Revolution ruined his fortunes
and he went to London. Here he renewed his public playing, appearing at
the famous Salomon concerts, in connection with which he saw something
of Haydn. But, suspected of political intrigues, he was sent away
from London. He lived a year or two in retirement in Hamburg and then
returned to London. He was conductor in some of the Haydn benefit
concerts in 1794 and 1795, and he was a director in other series of
concerts until his success once more waned. Then like Clementi he
entered into commerce. The remainder of his life was spent between
London and Paris, and he died in London on March 10, 1824.
The most famous of his compositions are the twenty-nine concertos
previously referred to; and of these the twenty-second, in A minor,
is commonly acceded to be the best. The treatment of the violin is
free and brilliant, and some of his themes are happily conceived. Yet
on the whole his music now sounds old-fashioned, probably because we
have come to associate a more positive and a richer sort of music with
the broad symphonic forms which he was among the first to employ in
the violin concertos. It was rumored at one time and another that the
orchestral parts of these concertos were arranged by Cherubini, with
whom Viotti was associated during his first years at the Italian opera
in Paris; but the only foundation for such a report seems to be that it
was not uncommon for violinist composers of that period to enlist the
aid of their friends in writing for the orchestra. Viotti was a broadly
educated musician, whose experience with orchestras was wide.
Second in importance to the concertos are the duets for two violins
written during his stay in Hamburg. These are considered second in
musical charm only to Spohr’s pieces in the same manner. That Viotti
was somewhat low in spirit when he was at work on them, exiled as he
was from London and Paris, is shown by the few words prefixed to one
of the sets, ‘This work is fruit of the leisure which misfortune has
brought me. Some pieces came to me in grief, others in hope.’
Viotti had a brilliant and unrestricted technique. He was among the
greatest of virtuosi. But little of this appears in his music. That is
distinguished by a dignity and a relative simplicity, well in keeping
with the noble traditions inherited from a country great in more ways
than one in the musical history of the eighteenth century. But as far
as form and style go he is modern. He undoubtedly owes something to
Haydn. Moreover, Wasielewski makes the point that there is no trace in
his music of the somewhat churchly dignity one feels in the sonatas of
Corelli and Tartini. Viotti’s is a thoroughly worldly style, in melody
and in the fiery but always musical passage work. He is at once the
last of the classic Italians and the first of the moderns, standing
between Corelli and Tartini on the one hand and Spohr, David, and
Vieuxtemps on the other.
The list of the men who came to him for instruction while he was in
Paris contains names that even today have an imposing ring. Most
prominent among them are Rode, Cartier, and Durand. And among those
who were not actually his pupils but who accepted him as their ideal
and modelled themselves after him were Rodolphe Kreutzer and Pierre
Baillot. These men are the very fountain head of most violin music and
playing of the nineteenth century. They set the standard of excellence
in style and technique by which Spohr and later Vieuxtemps ruled
themselves.
IV
Before considering their work, the development of violin music in
Germany during the eighteenth century must be noticed. The influence
of the Italians was not less strong here than in France. Both Biber
and Strungk had come under it in the late seventeenth century, Strungk
being, as we know, personally acquainted with Corelli and at one time
associating closely with him in Rome. The German violinists of the
eighteenth century either went to Italy to study, or came under the
influence of various Italians who passed through the chief German
cities on concert tours.
The most conspicuous of them are associated with courts or cities
here and there. For instance, early in the century there is Telemann
in Hamburg; a little later Pisendel in Dresden; J. G. Graun in Berlin;
Leopold Mozart in Salzburg; the gifted Stamitz and his associates
Richter, Cannabich and Fränzl in Mannheim; and the most amiable if not
the most gifted of all, Franz Benda, here and there in Bohemia, Austria
and Saxony. Though these and many more were widely famous in their day
as players, and Mozart was influential as a teacher, little of their
music has survived the centuries that have passed since they wrote
it. The eighteenth century was in violin music and likewise in opera,
the era of Italian supremacy; and in violin music we meet with little
except copies outside of Italy.
Georg Philipp Telemann, it is true, wrote that he followed the French
model in his music; but as Wasielewski says, this applies evidently
only to his vocal works and overtures, for his violin compositions
are very clearly imitations of Corelli’s. All his music, and he wrote
enormous quantities in various branches, is essentially commonplace.
Between 1708 and 1721 Telemann occupied a position at the court of
Eisenach. It was chiefly during these years that he gave himself to the
violin and violin music. Afterwards he went to Hamburg and there worked
until his death in 1767.
Johann Georg Pisendel is a far more distinguished figure. He was born
on the twenty-sixth of December, 1687, at Carlsburg in Franconia, and
died in Dresden, after many years’ service there, in November, 1755.
While still a boy the Marquis of Anspach attached him to his chapel,
on account of his beautiful voice. In the service of the same prince
at that time was Torelli, the great Italian composer for the violin;
and Pisendel was his pupil for a considerable period. Later in life
he was able to journey in Italy and France, and was apparently at one
time a pupil of Vivaldi’s in Venice. From 1728 to the time of his death
he was first violin in the royal opera house at Dresden. His playing
was distinguished by care in shading, and in his conducting he was
said to have laid great importance upon ‘loud and soft.’ As a composer
he is without significance, though some of his works--concertos and
sonatas--have been preserved. But his influence served to educate
violinists in that part of Germany, so that little by little Germans
came to supplant the Italians in that branch of music, and to find
occupation in connection with the opera house orchestra, which had been
up to that time almost entirely made up of Italians.
Most conspicuous among those who were actually his pupils was Johann
Gottlieb Graun, brother of the still familiar Carl Heinrich. But
Graun was not content with instruction in Germany alone, and betook
himself to Tartini in Padua. After his return to his native land, he
eventually found his place at the court of Frederick the Great, who
was still crown prince. With him at this time were Quantz, the flute
player, and Franz Benda. After the accession of Frederick to the throne
of Prussia, Graun was made first violin and concert master in the
royal orchestra; and he held this place until his death in 1771. His
compositions, like all others for the violin at this period, are hardly
more than imitations of the Italian masterpieces. And like Pisendel,
his importance is in the improvement of the state of instrumental music
in Germany, and especially of the orchestra at Berlin.
His successor in this royal orchestra was Franz Benda, who, not
only by reason of the romantic wanderings of his life, is one of the
most interesting figures in the history of music in Germany during
the eighteenth century. His father, Hans Georg, had been a sort of
wandering player, as well as a weaver; and his brothers, Johann, Georg,
and Joseph, were all musicians who won a high place in their day. Georg
was perhaps the most distinguished of the family, but in the history of
violin-music Franz occupies a more important place.
The Bendas were Bohemians, but most of them settled in Germany and
accepted German ideals and training. Franz Benda, after a changing
career as a boy singer in various places, finally came under the
influence of Graun and Quantz in the crown prince’s orchestra, at
Rheinsberg. The principal instruction he received upon the violin came
from Graun, who was himself a pupil of Tartini’s; so, although Benda
shows the marks of an independent and self-sufficient development, not
a little of Italian influence came close to him. He remained in the
service of the Prussian court from 1733, when Quantz befriended him,
until his death as an old man in 1786.
His playing was admired for its warm, singing quality, which showed to
such advantages in all slow movements that musicians would come long
distances to hear him play an adagio. Burney heard him in 1772 and was
impressed by the true feeling in his playing. Burney, too, mentioned
that in all Benda’s compositions for the violin there were no passages
which should not be played in a singing and expressive manner. He went
on to say that Benda’s playing was distinguished in this quality from
that of Tartini, Somis, and Veracini, and that it was something all his
own which he had acquired in his early association with singers.
He had indeed been a great singer, and he gave up public singing only
because after singing he was subject to violent headache. He trained
his two daughters to be distinguished singers of the next generation.
His works for the violin are numerous, but only a small part of them
was published, and this posthumously. In spite of the often lovely
melodies in the slow movements they have not been able to outlive their
own day. Wasielewski calls attention to the general use of conventional
arpeggio figures in the long movements, which, characteristic of a
great deal of contemporary music for the violin, may have been written
with the idea of offering good technical exercise in the art of bowing.
Among Benda’s many pupils the two most significant are his own son,
Carl, and Friedrich Wilhelm Rust. The former seems to have inherited
a great part of his father’s skill and style. The sonatas of the
latter are among the best compositions written in Germany for the
violin in the second half of the eighteenth century. Rust died in
February, 1798. His name is remembered as much for his sonatas for
pianoforte as for his violin compositions. Another pupil, Carl Haack,
lived until September, 1819, and thus was able to carry the Benda
tradition over into the nineteenth century. On the whole Franz Benda
may be said to have founded a school of violin playing in Berlin
which has influenced the growth of music for that instrument in
Germany. Its chief characteristic was the care given to simplicity and
straightforwardness, especially in the playing of slow movements and
melodies, which stands out quite distinctly against the current of more
or less specious virtuosity running across the century.
Johann Peter Salomon (1745-1815) has been associated with the Berlin
group, though his youth was spent in and about Bonn, and his greatest
activity was displayed as an orchestral conductor in London. It was
he who engaged Haydn to come to London and to compose symphonies
specially for a London audience; and he occupies an important place
in the history of music in England as one of the founders (1813) of
the Philharmonic Society. He published but little music, and that is
without significance.
One of the outstanding figures in the history of violin music in
Germany is Leopold Mozart, the father of Wolfgang. He is hardly
important as a composer, though many of his works were fairly well
known in and about Salzburg where the greatest part of his life was
spent; but his instruction book on playing the violin marks the
beginning of a new epoch in his own country. This was first published
in Augsburg in 1756, was reprinted again in 1770, 1785, and in Vienna
in 1791 and 1804. It was for many years the only book on the subject in
Germany.
Much of it is now old-fashioned, but it still makes interesting
reading, partly because he was far-seeing enough to seize upon
fundamental principles that have remained unchanged in playing any
instrument, partly because the style is concise and the method clear,
partly because of the numerous examples it contains of both good and
bad music. Evidently his standard of excellence is Tartini, so that
we still find violin music in Germany strongly under the influence
of the Italians. But the great emphasis he lays upon simplicity and
expressiveness recalls Benda and his ideals, so that it would appear
that some wise men in Germany were at least shrewd enough to choose
only what was best in the Italian art. Among the many interesting
points he makes is that it takes a better-trained and a more skillful
violinist to play in an orchestra than to make a success as a soloist.
Evidently many of the German musicians distrusted the virtuoso. Emanuel
Bach, it will be remembered, cared nothing for show music on the
keyboard. C. F. D. Schubart, author of the words of Schubert’s _Die
Forelle_, said that an orchestra made up of virtuosi was like a world
of queens without a ruler. He had the orchestra at Stuttgart in mind.
V
Meanwhile about the orchestra at Mannheim there was a band of gifted
young men whose importance in the development of the symphony and other
allied forms has been but recently recognized, and now, it seems,
can hardly be overestimated. The most remarkable of these was J. C.
Stamitz, a Bohemian born in 1719, who died when less than forty years
old. His great accomplishments in the domains of orchestral music have
been explained elsewhere in this series. In the matter of violin music
he can hardly be said to show any unusual independence of the Italians,
but in the meagre accounts of his life there is enough to show that
he was a great violinist. He was the teacher of his two sons, Carl
(1746-1801) and Anton (b. 1753), the latter of whom apparently grew
up in Paris, where the father, by the way, had been well known at the
house of La Pouplinière. Anton, as we shall see, was the teacher of
Rodolphe Kreutzer, already mentioned as one of the great teachers at
the Paris Conservatory in the first of the nineteenth century.
Christian Cannabich, a disciple if not a pupil of Stamitz, was likewise
a famous violinist, but again like his master, was more influential
in what he accomplished with the famous orchestra at Mannheim than in
his playing or composing for the violin. He seems to have spent some
years in Naples to study with Jomelli, and the Italian influence is
evident in all he wrote for the violin. Wilhelm Cramer, the father of
the now more famous J. B. Cramer, was another violinist associated with
the Mannheim school, until in 1773 he went to London on the advice of
Christian Bach. Here he lost one place after another as conductor,
owing now to the arrival of Salomon, now to that of Viotti. He died in
1799 in great poverty.
Others connected with the orchestra at Mannheim are Ignaz Fränzl,
whose pupil, F. W. Pixis, became the teacher of Kalliwoda and Laub, and
whose son Ferdinand (1770-1833) was a distinguished violinist in the
next century; and Johann Friedrich Eck (b. 1766) and his brother Franz.
Their father was, like Stamitz, a Bohemian. Indeed Stamitz seems to
have induced Eck the elder to leave Bohemia and come to Mannheim. Franz
Eck is most famous today as one of the teachers of Ludwig Spohr.
In Vienna the Italian influence was supreme down to nearly the
end of the century. The first of the Viennese violinists to win an
international and a lasting renown was Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf
(b. 1739), the friend of Haydn and Gluck. Though two of his teachers,
König and Ziegler, were Austrians, a third, who perfected him, was an
Italian, Trani. Through Trani Dittersdorf became familiar with the
works of Corelli, Tartini, and Ferrari, after which he formed his
own style. Practically the first German to draw a circle of pupils
about him was Anton Wranitzky (b. 1761). Among his pupils the most
distinguished was Ignaz Schuppanzigh, who, as the leader of the
Schuppanzigh quartet, won for himself an immortal fame, and really set
the model for most quartet playing throughout the nineteenth century.
He was the son of a professor at the Realschule in Vienna. From
boyhood he showed a zeal for music, at first making himself a master
of the viola. At the time Beethoven was studying counterpoint with
Albrechtsberger he was taking lessons on the viola with Schuppanzigh.
Later, however, Schuppanzigh gave up the viola for the violin. His most
distinguished work was as a quartet leader, but he won fame as a solo
player as well; and when the palace of Prince Rasoumowsky was burned in
1815, he went off on a concert tour through Germany, Poland and Russia
which lasted many years. He was a friend not only of Beethoven, but of
Haydn, Mozart, and of Schubert as well; and was the principal means of
bringing the quartet music of these masters to the knowledge of the
Viennese public. He died of paralysis, March 2, 1830. Among his pupils
the most famous was Mayseder, at one time a member of the quartet.
What is noteworthy about the German violinist-composers of the
eighteenth century is not so much the commonness with which they
submitted to the influence of the Italians, but the direction their
art as players took as soon as they began to show signs of a national
independence. Few were the match of the Italians or even the French
players in solo work. None was a phenomenal virtuoso. The greatest
were most successful as orchestral or quartet players; and their most
influential work was that done in connection with some orchestra. This
is most evident in the case of the Mannheim composers. Both Stamitz
and Cannabich were primarily conductors, who had a special gift in
organizing and developing the orchestra. Their most significant
compositions were their symphonies, in the new style, in which they not
only gave a strong impetus to the development of symphonic forms, but
brought about new effects in the combination of wood-wind and brass
instruments with the strings. Leopold Mozart’s opinion that a man
who could play well in an orchestra was a better player and a better
musician than he who could make a success playing solos, is indicative
of the purely German idea of violin music during the century. And
it cannot be denied that great as Franz Benda and Johann Graun may
have been as players, they contributed little of lasting worth to the
literature of the violin, and made practically no advance in the art
of playing it. But both were great organizers and concert masters,
and as such left an indelible impression on the development of music,
especially orchestral music, in Germany.
VI
Before concluding this chapter and passing on to a discussion of the
development of violin music in the nineteenth century a few words must
be said of the compositions for the violin by those great masters who
were not first and foremost violinists. Among these, four may claim our
attention: Handel, Bach, Haydn, and Mozart.
Handel is not known to have given much time to the violin, but it is
said that when he chose to play on it, his tone was both strong and
beautiful. He wrote relatively little music for it. Twelve so-called
solo sonatas with figured bass (harpsichord or viol) were published
in 1732 as opus 1. Of these only three are for the violin: the third,
tenth, and twelfth. The others are for flute. Apart from a few
characteristic violin figures, chiefly of the rocking variety, these
solo sonatas might very well do for clavier with equal effect. There is
the sane, broad mood in them all which one associates with Handel. In
the edition of Handel’s works by the German Handel Society, there are
three additional sonatas for violin--in D major, A major, and E major.
These seem to be of somewhat later origin than the others, but they are
in the same form, beginning with a slow movement, followed by allegro,
largo, and final allegro, as in most of the cyclical compositions of
that time. One cannot deny to these sonatas a manly dignity and charm.
They are in every way plausible as only Handel knows how to be; yet
they have neither the grace of Corelli, nor the deep feeling of Bach.
One may suspect them of being, like the pieces for clavier, tossed off
easily from his pen to make a little money. What is remarkable is that
sure as one might be of this, one would yet pay to hear them.
There are besides these solo sonatas for violin or flute and figured
bass, nine sonatas for two violins, or violin and flute with figured
bass, and seven sonatas, opus 5, for two instruments, probably intended
for two violins.
Among the most remarkable of J. S. Bach’s compositions are the six
sonatas for violin without any accompaniment, written in Cöthen, about
1720. These works remain, and probably always will remain, unique in
musical literature, not only because of their form, but because of the
profound beauty of the music in them. Just how much of a violinist
Bach himself was, no one knows. He was fond of playing the viola
in the court band at Cöthen. It can hardly be pretended that these
sonatas for violin alone are perfectly adapted to the violin. They
resemble in style the organ music which was truly the whole foundation
of Bach’s technique. In that same organ style, he wrote for groups
of instruments, for groups of voices, for clavier and for all other
combinations.
On the other hand no activity of Bach’s is more interesting, and
perhaps none is more significant, than his assiduous copying and
transcribing again and again of the violin works of Vivaldi, Torelli,
and Albinoni. Especially his study of Vivaldi is striking. He used
themes of the Italian violinists as themes for organ fugues; he
transcribed the concertos of Vivaldi into concertos for one, two,
three, or four harpsichords. And not only that, practically all his
concertos for a solo clavier are transcriptions of his own concertos
for violin.
But the polyphonic style of the sonatas for violin alone is peculiarly
a German inheritance. Walter and Biber were conspicuous for the use of
double stops and an approach to polyphonic style. Most remarkable of
all was a pupil of the old Danish organist, Buxtehude, Nikolaus Bruhns
(1665-1697), who was able to play two parts on his violin and at the
same time add one or two more with his feet on the organ pedals. Though
Corelli touched gently upon the polyphonic style in the movements of
the first six of his solo sonatas, the polyphonic style was maintained
mostly by the Germans. As Bach would write chorus, fugue, or concerto
in this style, so did he write for the violin alone.
Of the six works the first three are sonatas, in the sense of
the _sonate da chiesa_ of Corelli, serious and not conspicuously
rhythmical. The last three are properly suites, for they consist
of dance movements. The most astonishing of all the pieces is the
_Chaconne_, at the end of the second suite. Here Bach has woven a
series of variations over a simple, yet beautiful, ground, which finds
an equal only in the great _Passacaglia_ for the organ.
The three sonatas of this set can be found transcribed, at least in
part, by Bach into various other forms. The fugue from the first,
in G minor, was transposed into D minor and arranged for the organ.
The whole of the second sonata, in A minor, was rearranged for the
harpsichord. The fugue in the third sonata for violin alone exists also
as a fugue for the organ.
There are besides these sonatas for violin alone, six sonatas for
harpsichord and violin, which are among the most beautiful of his
compositions; and a sonata in E minor and a fugue in G minor for violin
with figured bass. It is interesting to note that the six sonatas for
harpsichord and violin differ from similar works by Corelli and by
Handel. Here there is no affair with the figured bass; but the part for
the harpsichord is elaborately constructed, and truly, from the point
of view of texture, more important than that for the violin.
Bach wrote at least five concertos for one or two violins during
his stay at Cöthen. One of these is included among the six concertos
dedicated to the Margrave of Brandenburg. All of these have been
rearranged for harpsichord, and apparently among the harpsichord
concertos there are three which were originally for violin but have
not survived in that shape. The concertos, even more than the sonatas,
are not essentially violin music, but are really organ music. The
style is constantly polyphonic and the violin solos hardly stand out
sufficiently to add a contrasting spot of color to the whole. Bach’s
great work for the violin was the set of six solo sonatas. These must
indeed be reckoned, wholly apart from the instrument, as among the
great masterpieces in the musical literature of the world.
Haydn’s compositions for violin, including concertos and sonatas, are
hardly of considerable importance. His associations with violinists
in the band at Esterhazy, and later in Vienna with amateurs such as
Tost and professionals like Schuppanzigh, gave him a complete idea of
the nature and the possibilities of the instrument. But the knowledge
so acquired shows to best advantage in his treatment of the first and
second violin parts in his string quartets, in many of which the first
violin is given almost the importance of a solo instrument. Eight
sonatas for harpsichord and violin have been published, but of these
only four were originally conceived in the form.
The young Mozart was hardly less proficient on the violin than he
was on the harpsichord, a fact not surprising in view of his father’s
recognized skill as a teacher in this special branch of music. But
he seems to have treated his violin with indifference and after his
departure from Salzburg for Paris to have quite neglected his practice,
much to his father’s concern. The most important of his compositions
for the violin are the five concertos written in Salzburg in 1775.
They were probably written for his own use, but just how closely in
conjunction with the visit of the Archduke Maximilian to Salzburg in
April of that year cannot be stated positively. Several serenades and
the little opera, _Il re pastore_, were written for the fêtes given
in honor of the same young prince. The concertos belong to the same
period. In Köchel’s Index they are numbers 207, 211, 216, 218, and 219.
A sixth, belonging to a somewhat later date, bears the number 268. Of
these the first in B-flat was completed on April 14, 1775, the second,
in D, June 14, the third, in G, September 12, the fourth, in D, in
October, and the fifth, in A, quite at the end of the year.
The sixth concerto, in E-flat, is considered both by Jahn and Köchel
to belong to the Salzburg period. It was not published, however, until
long after Mozart’s death; and recently the scholarly writers, Messrs.
de Wyzewa and de St. Foix, have thrown considerable doubt upon the
authenticity of large parts of it. According to their theory[50] the
opening _tutti_ and the orchestral portion at the beginning of the
development section are undoubtedly the work of Mozart, but of the
mature Mozart of 1783 and 1784. Likewise the solo passages in all
the movements seem to bear the stamp of his genius. But apart from
these measures, the development of the solo ideas and the orchestral
accompaniment were completed either by André, who published the work,
or by Süssmayer, who was also said by Mozart’s widow to be the composer
of a mass in B-flat, published by C. F. Peters as a composition of
Mozart’s.
In addition mention should be made of the concertos introduced between
the first and second movements of various serenades, according to the
custom of the day. Most of these are of small proportions; but one, in
G major (K. 250), written in Salzburg some time in July, 1776, has the
plan of an independent composition.
It was the custom for a master like Schobert in Paris, or Mozart
in Vienna, to ‘accompany’ the young ladies who played pianoforte or
harpsichord sonatas of his composition and under his instruction with
music on the violin. There are many sonatas for harpsichord published
by Schobert, with a violin part _ad libitum_. This in the main but
reinforces the chief melodic lines of the part for harpsichord or
pianoforte; and works with such a violin part, _ad libitum_, are not
at all violin sonatas in the sense of the term accepted today, i.e.,
sonatas in which violin and piano are woven inextricably together. They
are frankly pianoforte or harpsichord sonatas with the ‘accompaniment’
of a violin.
On the other hand, we have found the violin masters like Corelli and
Tartini writing sonatas for violin, with figured bass for harpsichord,
lute, or even viol. Such sonatas were often called solo sonatas, as
in the case of those of Handel, recently mentioned. The accompanying
instrument had no function but to add harmonies, and a touch of
imitation in the written bass part, here and there.
Between these two extremes lies the sonata with harpsichord
_obbligato_, that is to say, with a harpsichord part which was not an
accompaniment but an essential part of the whole. In these cases the
music was generally polyphonic in character. The violin might carry
one or two parts of the music, the harpsichord two or three. Very
frequently, if the instruments played together no more than three
parts, the composition was called a Trio. The sonatas by J. S. Bach for
harpsichord and violin are of this character. Though the harpsichord
carries on more of the music than the violin, both instruments are
necessary to the complete rendering of the music.
Mozart must have frequently added improvised parts for the violin to
many of his sonatas written expressly for the keyboard instrument.
Among his earliest works one finds sonatas for clavecin with a
free part for violin, for violin or flute, for violin or flute and
'cello. Oftenest the added part does little more than duplicate the
melody of the part for clavecin, with here and there an imitation
or a progression of thirds or sixths. But among his later works are
sonatas for pianoforte with added accompaniment for violin in which
the two instruments contribute something like an equal share to the
music, which are the ancestors of the sonatas for violin and piano by
Beethoven, Brahms, and César Franck. Among the most important of these
are six published in November, 1781, as opus 2. In Köchel’s Index they
bear the numbers 376, 296, 377, 378, 379, and 380. The greatest of them
is that in C major, K. 296, with its serious and rich opening adagio,
its first allegro in Mozart’s favorite G minor, and the beautiful
variations forming the last movement. Four more sonatas, of equal
musical value, were published respectively in 1784, 1785, 1787, and
1788.
VII
Looking back over the eighteenth century one cannot but be impressed
by the independent growth of violin music. The Italians contributed far
more than all the other nationalities to this steady growth, partly
because of their native love for melody and for sheer, simple beauty
of sound. The intellectual broadening of forms, the intensifying of
emotional expressiveness by means of rich and poignant harmonies,
concerned them far less than the perfecting of a suave and wholly
beautiful style which might give to the most singing of all instruments
a chance to reveal its precious and almost unique qualities. This
accounts for the calm, classic beauty of their music, which especially
in the case of Corelli and Tartini does not suffer by changes that have
since come in style and the technique of structure.
The success of the Italian violinists in every court of Europe, both
as performers and as composers, was second only to the success of
the great singers and the popular opera composers of the day. Their
progress in their art was so steadfast and secure that other nations
could hardly do more than follow their example. Hence in France and
Germany one finds with few exceptions an imitation of Italian styles
and forms, with a slight admixture of national characteristics, as
in the piquancy of Cartier’s, the warm sentiment of Benda’s music.
What one might call the pure art of violin playing and violin music,
abstract in a large measure from all other branches of music, was
developed to perfection by the Italian violinist-composers of the
eighteenth century. Its noble traditions were brought over into more
modern forms by Viotti, henceforth to blend and undergo change in a
more general course of development.
Perhaps only in the case of Chopin can one point to such a pure and
in a sense isolated ideal in the development of music for a single
instrument, unless the organ works of Bach offer another exception.
And already in the course of the eighteenth century one finds here
and there violin music that has more than a special significance.
The sonatas for unaccompanied violin by Bach must be regarded first
as music, then as music for the violin. The style in which they were
written is not a style which has grown out of the nature of the
instrument. They have not served and perhaps cannot serve as a model
for perfect adaptation of means to an end. Bach himself was willing
to regard the ideas in them as fit for expression through other
instruments. But the works of Corelli, Tartini, Nardini and Viotti are
works which no other instrument than that for which they were written
may pretend to present. And so beautiful is the line of melody in them,
so warm the tones which they call upon, that there is scarcely need of
even the harmonies of the figured bass to make them complete.
In turning to the nineteenth century we shall find little or no more
of this sort of pure music. Apart from a few brilliant concert or
salon pieces which have little beyond brilliance or charm to recommend
them, the considerable literature for the violin consists of sonatas
and concertos in which the accompaniment is like the traditional half,
almost greater than the whole. In other words we have no longer to
do with music for which the violin is the supreme justification, but
with music which represents a combination of the violin with other
instruments. Glorious and unmatched as is its contribution in this
combination, it remains incomplete of itself.
FOOTNOTES:
[48] See A. Schering: _Geschichte des Instrumentalkonzerts_.
[49] _Die Violine und ihre Meister._
[50] See ‘W. A. Mozart,’ by T. de Wyzewa and G. de St. Foix, Paris,
1912. Appendix II, Vol. II, p. 428.
CHAPTER XIII
VIOLIN MUSIC IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
The perfection of the bow and of the classical
technique--The French school: Kreutzer, Rode, and
Baillot--Paganini: his predecessors, his life and fame, his
playing, and his compositions--Ludwig Spohr: his style and
his compositions; his pupils--Viennese violinists: Franz
Clement, Mayseder, Boehm, Ernst and others--The Belgian
school: De Bériot and Vieuxtemps--Other violinist composers:
Wieniawski, Molique, Joachim, Sarasate, Ole Bull; music of
the violinist-composers in general--Violin music of the
great masters.
The art of violin music in the nineteenth century had its head in
Paris. Few violinists with the exception of Paganini developed their
powers without the model set them by the great French violinists at the
beginning of the century. Most of them owed more than can be determined
to the influence of Viotti. Even Spohr, who with more or less
controversial spirit, wrote of the French violinists as old-fashioned,
modelled himself pretty closely upon Rode; and therefore even Spohr is
but a descendant of the old classical Italian school.
The technique of playing the violin was thoroughly understood by
the end of the eighteenth century. Viotti himself was a brilliant
virtuoso; but, trained in the classic style, he laid less emphasis upon
external brilliance than upon expressiveness. The matters of double
stops, trills, runs, skips and other such effects of dexterity were
largely dependent upon the fingers of the left hand; and this part of
technique, though somewhat hampered by holding the violin with the
chin upon the right side of the tailpiece, was clearly mastered within
reasonable limits by the violinists of the middle of the century,
Tartini, Veracini, Nardini, Geminiani, and others. Indeed Geminiani
in his instruction book recommended that the violin be held on the
left side; and in range of fingering gave directions for playing as
high as in the seventh position. Leopold Mozart, however, naturally
conservative, held to the old-fashioned holding of the instrument.
The technique of bowing, upon which depends the art of expression
in violin playing, awaited the perfection of a satisfactory bow.
Tartini’s playing, it will be remembered, was especially admired for
its expressiveness; and this, together with certain of his remarks on
bowing which have been preserved in letters, leads one to think that he
may have had a bow far better than those in the hands of most of his
contemporaries. Whether or not he made it himself, and indeed just what
it may have been, are not known. Certainly it must have been better
than the bows with which Leopold Mozart was familiar. The clumsy nature
of these may be judged by the illustrations in his instruction book.
The final perfection of the bow awaited the skill of a Frenchman,
François Tourte (1747-1835), who has properly been called the
Stradivari of the bow. It was wholly owing to his improvements
that many modern effects in staccato, as well as in fine shading,
particularly in the upper notes, became possible. He is supposed not
to have hit upon these epoch-making innovations until after 1775;
and there is much likelihood that he was stimulated by the presence
of Viotti in Paris after 1782. No better testimony to the service
he rendered to the art of violin playing can be found than the new
broadening of violin technique and style accomplished by men like
Viotti, Kreutzer, Baillot, Rode, and Lafont, who availed themselves
immediately of the results of his skill.
I
Something may now be said of these men, whose activities have without
exception the glaring background of the horrors of the French
Revolution. Though Kreutzer was of German descent, he was born in
Versailles (1766) and spent the greater part of his life in and about
Paris, intimately associated with French styles and institutions. Apart
from early lessons received from his father, he seems to have been for
a time under the care of Anton Stamitz, son of Johann Stamitz. At the
Chapelle du Roi, to which organization he obtained admittance through
the influence of Marie Antoinette, he had the occasion of hearing
Viotti. The great Italian influenced him no less than he influenced his
young contemporaries in Paris. Concerning his activities as a composer
of operas little need be said, though one or two of his ballets,
especially _Paul et Virginie_ and _Le Carnaval de Venise_, held the
stage for some years. As a player he ranks among the most famous of the
era. His duets with Rode roused the public to great enthusiasm. In 1798
he was in Vienna in the suite of General Bernadotte, and here made the
acquaintance of Beethoven. Subsequently Beethoven dedicated the sonata
for violin and piano (opus 47) to Kreutzer.
By reason of this and his book of forty _Études ou caprices pour
le violon_, he is now chiefly remembered. His other compositions
for the violin, including nineteen concertos and several airs and
variations, have now been allowed to sink into oblivion. To say that
the concertos are ‘more brilliant than Rode’s, less modern than
Baillot’s’ distinguishes them as much as they may be distinguished
from the compositions of his contemporaries. They are dry music, good
as practice pieces for the student, but without musical life. But
Kreutzer was a great teacher. He was one of the original professors of
the violin at the Conservatoire, and with Baillot and Rode prepared the
still famous _Méthode_ which, carrying the authority of that sterling
institution, has remained, almost to the present day, the standard
book of instruction for the young violinist. His own collection of
forty studies likewise holds still a place high among those ‘steps to
Parnassus’ by which the student may climb to the company of finished
artists.
Pierre Rode (1774-1830) was the greatest of the players of this period.
He was for two years a pupil of Viotti, and when he made his initial
public appearance in 1790 at the Théâtre de Monsieur he played Viotti’s
thirteenth concerto in such a way as to win instantly the admiration of
all musical Paris. Considering that he was then but a boy of sixteen,
and that Paris was accustomed to the playing of Kreutzer, Viotti,
Gaviniés and other violinists of undisputed greatness, one can have
little doubt that Rode had the power of true genius. This is further
borne out by the fact that when he passed through Brunswick on a
concert tour to Poland in 1803, Spohr heard him and was so struck with
admiration for his style that he determined to train himself with the
ideal of Rode in his mind. Later his playing fell off sadly and even in
Paris he finally ceased to hold the favor of the public.
Like Kreutzer he came into contact with Beethoven. Beethoven’s sonata
for violin in G major (opus 96) was completed for Rode, and was
apparently performed for the first time (1812) by Rode and Beethoven’s
pupil, the Archduke Rudolph. Even then, however, Rode’s playing
was faulty, and, according to Thayer, Beethoven sent a copy of the
violin part to him that he might study it before attempting a second
performance.
Like Kreutzer’s, Rode’s compositions, with the exception of
twenty-five caprices written as exercises, have been nearly forgotten.
And yet, though Rode was without conspicuous musicianship, he had
a gift for melody which made his compositions widely popular in
their day. Of his thirteen concertos two, the first, in D minor, the
eleventh, in A minor, were in the repertory of Paganini, who, moreover,
professed a high admiration for Rode. And among the earliest of his
compositions was a theme in G major, with variations, which won such
broad success that it was transposed and arranged for the voice,
and sung again and again on the stages of Paris.[51] Perhaps only
Paganini’s variations on the ‘Carnival of Venice’ have been so popular.
Pierre Marie François de Sales Baillot (1771-1842) was the last of
the great French violinists of this time. Though as a mere boy he was
an accomplished player, and though he spent some years in Italy as a
pupil of Pollani (who was a disciple of Nardini’s), he seems not to
have decided to take up the profession of music until 1795. At this
time, according to Fétis, he first became thoroughly acquainted with
the masterpieces of the Italian classical composers, Corelli, Tartini,
and others, and the enthusiasm they stirred in him settled the future
course of his career. Upon the founding of the Conservatoire he was
appointed professor of violin playing, with Kreutzer and Gaviniés.
Subsequently he was active as a teacher, and not only as a solo player
but as a quartet leader. His was the greatest share in the preparation
of the _Méthode_ which has already been mentioned. He was a friend
of Mendelssohn and of Ferdinand Hiller, and was much admired by them
for his qualities both as a player and as a leader. His compositions,
including fifteen trios for two violins and bass, various studies, nine
concertos, and a series of twenty-four preludes for violin in all keys,
have suffered the fate that has overtaken the music of his friends
and colleagues, Kreutzer and Rode. But his instruction book, _L’art
du violin_, is still worthy of most careful study, not only for the
technical advantages of its many exercises, but for his own remarks on
the condition of violin music in his day. These offer to the student
the best analysis of the qualities of the Paris school of violin music,
and of the relations of that school to the past.
II
The French school of classic violin music, represented by Rode and
Baillot, may be said to have come to an end at least partly by the
influence of Paganini. This greatest of all virtuosos made his
first appearance in Paris on March 9, 1831, after having astonished
Austria and Germany. His success was here as elsewhere instantaneous
and practically unbounded; and the examples his playing offered of
extraordinary technical effects became the model for subsequent French
violinists.
There are three virtuosos of the violin whose names stand out
conspicuously in the history of violin music: Locatelli, Lolli,
and Paganini. Each of these men is noted for special and in many
ways overstretched efforts to bring out of the instrument sounds
and combinations of sounds which, in that they can have little true
musical significance and are indeed often of questionable beauty,
are considered rather a sign of charlatanism than of true genius.
This really means that the men are not geniuses as musicians, but as
performers. Their intelligence is concentrated upon a discovery of the
unusual. They adopt any means to the end of astonishing the multitude,
such as altering the conventional tuning of the instrument, and
employing kinds of strings which are serviceable only in the production
of certain effects.
Of Locatelli some mention has already been made. He was a pupil of
Corelli and the serious traditions of his master have found a worthy
expression in many of his own works. On the other hand, his twenty-four
caprices, in the _L’arte del Violino_ (1733), and the _Caprices
enigmatiques in the L’arte di nuova modulazione_, are sheer virtuoso
music and little more. They are the prototypes for many of the studies
and caprices of Paganini, who apparently devoted himself almost with
frenzy to the study of these caprices during the year 1804.
But Locatelli was a thorough musician as well as an astonishing
virtuoso. The type of empty-headed virtuoso who has apparently nothing
in his musical equipment but tricks, is represented by Antonio Lolli
(1730-1802). Here was a man who won unprecedented success in most
of the capitals of Europe, yet who, by all accounts, knew little or
nothing about music. Indeed, there is something pathetic in his frank
admission that he was an ass. ‘How can I play anything serious?’ he
is reported to have asked when requested to play a simple adagio.
Apparently he could neither keep time nor read even easy music at
sight. Yet he could so fiddle that many a man believed he heard, not
the violin, but voices, oboes, and flutes. And some cried out that he
must have ten fingers on the left hand and five bows in the right.
And at least two of his pupils, Woldemar (1750-1816) and Jarnowick
(1745-1804), were famous for no greater accomplishments. But in the
main the ‘tone’ of violin playing was set, at the end of the century,
by the great Italian, Viotti, and his followers. This endured, as we
have said, until the advent of Paganini in the world of music.
Paganini’s early life in Italy (1784-1828) was at first not free from
hardship, but after 1805, at least, it was brilliantly successful.
The only lessons of importance in his training were received from
Alessandro Rolla (1757-1804). His prodigious skill was almost wholly
due to his own ingenuity, and to his indefatigable industry. There is
every reason to believe that he practiced hour after hour until he was
so exhausted that he fell upon the ground.
During the years between 1801 and 1804 he lived in retirement under
the protection of a lady of high rank, and during these years gave up
his violin and devoted himself almost wholly to the guitar. This is
among the first of his eccentricities, which every now and then during
his triumphant career cropped out to the amazement of the public of
all Europe. He was in fact so unaccountable in many ways that a whole
cycle of fables grew up about him, through which he loomed up, now as a
murderer who had acquired his skill during long years of imprisonment,
now as a man more than half spectre, who had bought at some hideous
price the intimate, and it must be said wholly serviceable, coöperation
of the devil. How many of these stories were originated and purposely
circulated by Paganini himself, who knew how to cast a spell over the
public in more ways than one, cannot be definitely answered. On more
than one occasion he openly denied them and complained of them not
without bitterness, all with the greatest of plausibleness; and yet one
cannot but suspect that he knew the value of them in attracting the
crowd out of a fearsome curiosity.
After his extended tour over Europe (1827-1834), which brought him a
fame and a fortune hardly achieved since by any performer, he retired
into a semi-private life at his Villa Gaiona, not far from Parma.
From time to time he came again before the public. The more or less
scandalous affair of the ‘Casino Paganini’ in Paris (1836) took a slice
out of his fortune and perhaps seriously impaired his health. He died
on May 27, 1840.
There can be no doubt that whatever the so-called serious musical value
of his playing may have been, it took hold of the whole world and
left a mark upon it. His technique was at once colossal and special.
He built it up with the idea of playing before huge audiences, and
Spohr has remarked that in small surroundings he did not show to good
advantage. He had, of course, an incredible swiftness of fingering, an
amazing skill with the bow, particularly in staccato passages, which
he played, not in the classic manner of Rode, with a movement of the
wrist for each separate note, but by allowing the bow to spring upon
the strings. His intonation was faultless, in runs, in double-stops and
in octaves. Though he used oftenest light strings in order to secure
special effects in harmonics, and these precluded a full, rich tone in
the playing of melodies, yet he could play simple passages with great
sweetness and charm.
So far, however, his technique could hardly have exceeded that of
Rode. It was in the realm of special effects that he proved himself
little less than a wizard. Of these at least three are now within
the command of all the great players of the present day. One was the
combination of the left-hand pizzicato with notes played by the bow;
another the playing of ‘harmonics,’ particularly double-harmonics; the
third the playing of long and difficult movements upon a single string.
Musicians were in that day so baffled by these amazing sounds, of which
Paganini alone seemed to be master, that for years they attributed
to him a special secret power. There was no end of speculation about
Paganini’s secret, which, by the way, he was said to have imparted to
but one man, his pupil Sivori. Now, however, it is all revealed. In
playing pieces upon a single string he was accustomed to raise the
pitch of the string, and to go into the highest registers by means of
harmonics. He changed the tuning of his violin also in playing his
concertos and some of his caprices, and he made a frequent practice of
sliding his fingers, and was not above imitating sobs, cries, laughter,
and on one occasion, of which he has left an account, somewhat
maliciously the braying of donkeys in Ferrara!
[Illustration]
Caricature of Paganini.
_Statuette by J. P. Dantan (1832)_.
Still, though the secrets of his mechanism are now clear as day, and
within the control of many even mediocre players, his music, wherewith
he literally set half Europe crazy, has fully responded to no fingers
but his own. This may be because his tricks have become known and
familiar; but more likely his success drew from more than these tricks,
and the secret of it was in his astounding appearance and uncanny
personal magnetism. Tall, lank, gaunt, dark, with blazing eyes and
fingers like a skeleton, he may well have brought with him a sulphurous
halo when he glided like a spectre upon the stage. He was indeed more
a magician than a musician, a sorcerer too inspired to be called a
charlatan.
The effect of his playing upon all branches of music was instantaneous.
His name became the synonym for the highest perfection in playing and
singing of all kinds. In the opinion of Chopin, Mlle. Sontag is as
perfect as Paganini; and in that of Mendelssohn Chopin upon the piano
rivals Paganini upon the violin. Schumann sets about transcribing the
caprices of Paganini for the piano. Liszt makes of himself a second
wonder of the world by imitating Paganini; and not only that, but
expands the technique of his own instrument to unheard of dimensions.
Paganini’s compositions are for the most part without conspicuous
value, except for the purely technical extravagances which they
display. Relatively few were published during his lifetime. These
include the universally famous twenty-four caprices for solo violin,
opus 1, two sets of sonatas for violin and guitar, and three quartets
for violin, viola, guitar and 'cello. After his death a host of
spurious works appeared; but Fétis gives as genuine two concertos, one
in E-flat, one in B minor, the latter of which contains the _Rondo à la
clochette_, which was one of his most successful pieces; two sets of
variations, one on an air by S. Mayer, known as _Le Stregghe_ (‘Witch’s
Dance’), one on the immortal air _Le carnaval de Venise_, both of which
were almost invariably on his programs; and the _Allegro de concerto_
in perpetual motion.
III
Paganini’s success was hardly less brilliant in Germany than it was
elsewhere in Europe. At least Schumann and Mendelssohn submitted to the
fascination of his incomparable skill. Yet on the whole violin playing
in Germany remained less influenced by Paganini than it proved to be in
France, Belgium and England. This was not only because of the influence
of the great German classics, nor because the tendency of the German
violinists was rather away from solo virtuosity and toward orchestral
and quartet playing; but largely also because of the firm leadership
of Ludwig Spohr, practically the one man about whom a definite German
school of violin playing of international importance centres.
Spohr was born in the same year as Paganini (1784). His training on
the violin was received from Franz Eck, a descendant of the famous
Mannheim school. But according to his own account, the example of Rode,
whom he heard in 1803, was of great importance in finally determining
his style of playing. His numerous activities took him considerably
beyond the field of playing and composing for the violin. He was famous
as a conductor in Vienna, in Dresden and Berlin, and in London, whither
he was frequently called to undertake the conducting of his own works.
As a composer he was famous for his symphonies, his oratorios, and his
operas. Yet he was not, in a sense, a great musician; and the only
part of his great number of works which now seems at all likely to
endure much longer in anything but name is made up of the compositions,
chiefly the concertos, for violin.
Of these concertos there are seventeen in all. Among them the seventh,
eighth, and ninth are often singled out as the best; and indeed these
may be said to be the best of all his works. The eighth was written
on the way to a concert tour in Italy, and was intended especially
to please the Italians, and written in a confessedly dramatic style,
_in modo d’una scena cantante_. None of the concertos is, strictly
speaking, virtuoso music. Naturally all reveal an intimate knowledge
of the peculiarities of the violin; but these hardly over-rule the
claim of the music itself. He calls for a sort of solid playing, for a
particularly broad, deep tone in the _cantilena_ passages, for a heavy,
rather than a light and piquant, bow. He was a big man in stature, and
his hands were powerful and broad. Evidently he was more than usually
confined within the limits of his own individuality; and his treatment
of the violin in the concertos is peculiar to him in its demand for
strength and for unusually wide stretches. Even the passage work,
which, it must be said, is far more original than that with which even
Rode and Viotti were willing to be content, hardly ever exhibits the
quality of grace. He is at times sweet and pure, but he is almost never
bewitching.
A great many will say of him that he deliberately avoids brilliant
display, and they will say it with contentment and pride. But it may be
asked if the avoidance of brilliancy for its own sake is a virtue in a
great musician. This sort of musical chastity becomes perilously like
a convenient apology in the hands of the prejudiced admirer. In the
case of Brahms, for example, it daily becomes more so. And now we read
of Spohr’s unlimited skill as a player and of the dignified restraint
manifested in his compositions for the violin. But by all tokens the
concertos are being reluctantly left behind.
Among his other works for violin the duets have enjoyed a wide
popularity, greater probably than that once enjoyed by Viotti’s. His
_Violinschule_, published in 1831, has remained one of the standard
books on violin playing. Its remarks and historical comments are,
however, now of greater significance than the exercises and examples
for practice. These, indeed, are like everything Spohr touched, only a
reflection of his own personality; so much so that the entire series
hardly serves as more than a preparation for playing Spohr’s own works.
Spohr was typically German in his fondness for conducting, and for the
string quartet. As quite a young man he was the very first to bring out
Beethoven’s quartets opus 18, in Leipzig and Berlin. Paganini is said
to have made a favorite of Beethoven’s quartet in F, the first of opus
59; but Spohr was positively dissatisfied with Beethoven’s work of this
period. Yet Paganini was in no way a great quartet player, and Spohr
was. We cannot but wonder which of these two great fiddlers will in
fifty years be judged the more significant in the history of the art.
Certainly Spohr was hard and fast conservative, in spite of the fact
that he recognized the greatness of Wagner, and brought out the ‘Flying
Dutchman’ and _Tannhäuser_ at the court of Cassel. And what can we
point to now that has sprung from him? On the other hand, Paganini was
a wizard in his day, half-charlatan, perhaps, but never found out.
With the exception of Corelli and Vivaldi he is the only violinist
who, specialist as he was, exerted a powerful influence upon the whole
course of music. For he was like a charge of dynamite set off under
an art that was in need of expanding, and his influence ran like a
flame across the prairie, kindling on every hand. Look at Schumann and
Liszt, at Chopin and even at Brahms. Stop for a moment to think of what
Berlioz demanded of the orchestra, and then of what Liszt and Wagner
demanded. All of music became virtuoso music, in a sense. It all sprang
into life with a new glory of color. And who but Paganini let loose the
foxes to run in the corn of the Philistines?
Among Spohr’s pupils Ferdinand David (1810-1873) was undoubtedly the
greatest. He was an excellent performer, uniting with the solidity
of Spohr’s style something of the more occasional fervor of the
modern school, following the example of Paganini. His friendship with
Mendelssohn has been perpetuated in music by the latter’s concerto
for the violin, in E minor, which David not only performed for the
first time in March, 1845, but every measure of which was submitted to
his inspection and correction while the work was in process of being
composed.
David has also won a place for himself in the esteem and gratitude of
future generations by his painstaking editing of the works of the old
Italian masters. Few of the great works for the violin but have passed
through his discriminating touch for the benefit of the student and
the public. And as a teacher his fame will live long in that of his
two most famous pupils: Joseph Joachim (1831-1907) and August Wilhelmj
(1845-1908).
IV
How great an influence the group of French violinists exercised upon
violin music and playing in the first quarter of the nineteenth century
is revealed in the training and the characteristics of the famous
Viennese players of the time. Vienna had always proved fertile ground
for the growth of Italian ideas, and the French style recommended
itself to the Viennese not only by the prevalence of French ideas in
the city, owing to political conditions, but also because this style
was in no small measure a continuance of the Italian style of Viotti.
Among the Viennese violinists may be mentioned Franz Clement
(1780-1842), who, even as a boy of eleven, was making successful
concert tours over Europe. In the years 1791 and 1792 he played in
London in concerts directed by Haydn and Salomon. Here as elsewhere
his playing was admired for its delicacy as well as for its sureness
and clarity, qualities which ever recalled to the public of that day
the playing of Viotti and Rode. He was not above the tricks of the
virtuoso; yet there can be no better proof that he knew how to use his
great technique with the worthiest aim than that Beethoven dedicated
to him his concerto for violin. He was a thorough musician. They told
a story in Vienna, according to Spohr, of how, after hearing Haydn’s
‘Creation’ only a few times, he was able, using only the text-book
alone, to arrange all the music for the pianoforte so completely and
so accurately that when he showed his copy to old Haydn the master
thought his score must have been stolen and copied. Another proof of
his musicianship is that he was appointed the first konzertmeister at
the Theater an der Wien.
Schuppanzigh’s pupil, Joseph Mayseder (1789-1864), was among the
brilliant and pleasing players of the time. In spite of the fact
that he was at one time a member of his master’s famous quartet, his
tastes seem to have run to a light and more or less frivolous style of
music. The tendency showed itself not only in his playing, but in his
compositions. These included concertos and brilliant salon pieces; and
also string quartets and quintets and other pieces of chamber music,
all now quite out of date.
Perhaps the two most influential of the Viennese violinists were Joseph
Boehm and Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst. Boehm (1798-1867) was a pupil of
Rode, whose acquaintance he made in Poland. Later he visited Italy, and
afterwards was appointed a teacher of the violin in the Conservatory at
Vienna. Though he was famous in his day as a player who possessed the
necessary skill in fingering and bowing, he was above all a teacher.
The list of his pupils includes Ernst, G. Hellmesberger (b. 1800),
Joachim, Ludwig Strauss (b. 1835), Rappoldi (b. 1831) and Grün. Also
Reményi, at one time an associate with Brahms on concert tours, belongs
among them.
Ernst was less a teacher than a virtuoso, whose skill was so
extraordinary as to pique Paganini. It is even said that he used to
follow the astounding Italian on his concert tours that he might
discover some of the secrets of his playing. His own variations on
the ‘Carnival of Venice’ are a brilliant imitation of the style of
Paganini. He spent most of his life in concert tours; and, though he
was known to be a fine, if not a deep, musician, the virtuoso shows
in most of his compositions, which are of little more than secondary
merit. He died on October 8, 1865, having enjoyed a fame as a player
second only to that of Paganini and de Bériot.
The Bohemians Johann Wenzelaus Kalliwoda (1801-1866) and Joseph Slawjk
(1806-1833), both achieved considerable fame. Chopin spoke of Slawjk
with greatest admiration, wrote that with the exception of Paganini
he had never heard a violinist like him. The two became friends and
conceived the project of writing together a work for piano and violin.
If Slawjk had lived longer he might well have rivalled Paganini, whose
playing he, like Ernst, strove to match.
The star of Paganini exercised over every nation of musicians its
irresistible attraction. Besides famous players of Austria and Bohemia
mention must be made of C. J. Lipinski, the Pole. Lipinski remained
in Poland up to the time (1817) when rumors came out of Italy of
the astonishing performances of the Genoese. Then he went to Italy
determined to hear the wonder himself. In Piacenza he heard him, and
later became his friend and associate. It is even said that Paganini
proposed to him a joint concert trip through the large Italian cities;
but Lipinski had been too long away from his native land and felt
unable to remain away longer. His playing was characterized by an
especially strong stroke of the bow, an art he possibly acquired from
a year’s hard work on the 'cello. His compositions, few of which
are generally heard today, are said by Wasielewski to show fine
musicianship and considerable subjective warmth. The best of them is
the so-called ‘Military’ concerto in D major. His ability as an editor
is proved by his work with Klengel on an edition of Bach’s sonatas for
violin and harpsichord, published by Peters. Lipinski died at Urlow,
near Lemberg, in December, 1861.
V
The most brilliant offshoots of the French school, to the formation of
whose style the influence of Paganini contributed, were the Belgians
de Bériot and Henri Vieuxtemps, who stand together as representative
of a Belgian school of violin playing. But before considering them a
few names in the long and distinguished list of the pupils of Kreutzer,
Rode, and Baillot may be touched upon. Among those of Kreutzer Joseph
Massart was perhaps the most influential. He was born in Belgium in
1811, but went early in life to Paris to complete with Kreutzer the
work begun with his countryman Lambert. Here he remained, and from 1843
was a professor of the violin at the Conservatoire. At least one of his
pupils, Henri Wieniawski, won a world-wide fame as a virtuoso.
Among Rode’s pupils Charles Philippi Lafont (1781-1839) stands out
prominently. Lafont had also been a pupil of Kreutzer’s. His playing
was, according to Spohr, full of energy and grace, perfect in
intonation, and fine of tone, but rather mannered. His compositions,
including duos written with Kalkbrenner, Henri Herz and other virtuoso
pianists, and more than two hundred Romances, are of no genuine value.
The seven concertos are quite forgotten.
F. H. Habeneck (1781-1841), one of the most influential of French
musicians, was a pupil of Baillot. He and his two brothers, Joseph and
Corentin, were excellent violinists. But though he held a place of
honor among virtuosi of that day, and though he wrote a number of works
for the violin, he is remembered today chiefly as the founder of the
_Société des concerts du Conservatoire_. These were instituted by his
energy in 1828, and for twenty years he remained conductor of them. By
him the symphonies of Beethoven were introduced into France. He was for
many years teacher of the violin at the Conservatoire. Alard (b. 1815),
the teacher of Sarasate, was his most famous pupil.
Massart, Alard, and Léonard (b. 1819), another pupil of Habeneck,
were all Belgians; but all remained in Paris as teachers in the
Conservatoire. Hence they are considered as representative of a
Franco-Belgian school of violin playing. Charles Auguste de Bériot
(1802-1870), though studying for many years in Paris under the advice
at least of Viotti and Baillot, and though familiar to all Europe as
one of the most brilliant of the world’s virtuosos, was for nine years
(1843-52) professor of violin playing at the Brussels Conservatory,
and may therefore be considered to have brought to Brussels that fame
as a centre of brilliant violinists which she has enjoyed without
interruption down to the present day.
In de Bériot’s playing as well as in his numerous compositions the
influence of Paganini rises clearly into sight above that of the older
classical traditions of which Paris was the guardian during the first
quarter of the century. He was a master of the Paganini effects, of the
mysterious harmonics, the dazzling runs and arpeggios, the sparkling
pizzicatos; and they are thickly sown over his music. Yet there was
in both his playing and his compositions a genuine musical charm.
Especially in melodiousness. His wife was Maria Malibran, and through
her inimitable singing he heard at their best the graceful melodies of
the Italians Bellini and Donizetti, and of the Frenchman Auber, which
undoubtedly greatly affected his own compositions. These, once widely
popular, included seven concertos, several _airs variés_, and duos
for piano and violin, written in conjunction with such virtuosos as
Thalberg.
Among his pupils the most famous was Henri Vieuxtemps (1820-1881), one
of the few great virtuosos of the violin whose fame as a player has not
outlasted in memory his compositions. Vieuxtemps’ five concertos, his
_Ballade et Polonaise_, and even his _Fantaisie-Caprice_ are still in
the repertory of most violinists and have not yet lost their favor with
the public.
His life is a series of long and enormously successful tours, which
took him not only over most of Europe, even Russia, but thrice to the
United States.
[Illustration]
Great Violinists. From top left to bottom right:
Charles Auguste de Bériot, Henri Wieniawski (his brother Joseph at the
Piano), Joseph Joachim, Henri Vieuxtemps.
These tours were undertaken now alone, now in the company of some
other virtuoso such as Thalberg. He made the acquaintance of almost
all the distinguished musicians of his age, among them Robert Schumann
and Richard Wagner; his repertory was wide and varied, including even
Beethoven’s concerto, which was not during the early years of his life
frequently performed by any but the German violinists.
As to his playing Paul David wrote in an article for Grove’s
Dictionary: ‘He had all the great qualities of technique so
characteristic of the modern French school. His intonation was perfect;
his command of the bow unsurpassed. An astonishing staccato--in up and
down bow--was a specialty of his; and in addition he had a tone of such
breadth and power as is not generally found with French violinists.
His style of playing (_Vortrag_) was characteristically French. He was
fond of strong dramatic accents and contrasts, and generally speaking
his style was better adapted to his own compositions and those of other
French composers than to the works of the great classical masters. At
the same time it should be said that he gained some of his greatest
successes in the concertos of Beethoven and Mendelssohn, and was by no
means unsuccessful as a quartet player, even in Germany.’
VI
Excepting Spohr, there are few of the violinist-composers of the
second half of the century with whom fate has dealt so kindly as with
Vieuxtemps. Most have been forgotten as composers, a fact which may
be taken to prove that their compositions had little musical vitality
except that which their own playing infused into them. Those few who
have been remembered in fact as well as in name owe the permanence of
their reputations to one or two pieces in the nature of successful
salon music. Among these should be mentioned Henri Wieniawski
(1835-1880), undoubtedly one of the finest players of the century. In
the early part of his life he wandered from land to land, coming in
company with his friend Anton Rubinstein, the great pianist, even as
far as the United States. He was after this (1874) for a few years
professor of the violin at the Conservatory in Brussels, filling the
place left vacant by Vieuxtemps; and then once more resumed his life of
wandering. His compositions were numerous, including two concertos as
well as a number of studies and transcriptions, or fantasias, of opera
airs. Now perhaps only the _Légende_ is still familiar to a general
public, though the Fantasia on airs from ‘Faust,’ empty as it is of all
save brilliance, holds a place on the programs of the virtuosi of the
present day.
Bernhard Molique (1803-69), a violinist of considerable repute about
the middle of the century, composed five concertos, as well as numerous
smaller pieces, an acquaintance with which today is a privilege in the
main reserved to the student. The concertos are without genuine musical
vitality. Most of his life, after 1849, was spent in England, where he
surrounded himself with many pupils.
Joseph Joachim, one of the most admired violinists and musicians to
be found in the history of the art, was a thoughtful composer. His
relations with Brahms have elsewhere been mentioned in this series. But
Joachim’s compositions are for the most part likely to be forgotten,
with the possible exception of the Hungarian Concerto, opus 11, the
second of his three compositions in this form. However, few if any
other virtuosi have ever so united in themselves the highest qualities
of man and musician, and probably no other player ever exerted just
the sort of moderate and wholly salutary influence which sprang from
Joachim. Among the many signs of the high esteem in which he was held
may be mentioned only the four honorary degrees conferred upon him by
the universities of Cambridge, Glasgow, Oxford and Göttingen.
In the course of his long life (1831-1907) Joachim became intimately
associated with various circles of musical activity. During the six
years between 1843 and 1849 he was in Leipzig, then enjoying the
enthusiastic efforts of Mendelssohn and Schumann. Again we find
him for four years holding the place of konzertmeister in Liszt’s
orchestra at Weimar. Then he is konzertmeister in Hannover, where he
married Amalie Weiss, a singer of unrivalled art. Still later he went
to Berlin, where, as teacher and quartet leader, he stood for the
very highest ideals of his art. The famous Joachim quartet, which his
spirit may be said almost to have created, consisted of Joachim, De
Ahna (1835-1892), once a pupil of Mayseder, Emanuel Wirth, violist,
who succeeded Rappoldi in 1877, and Robert Hausmann (1852-1909). De
Ahna was succeeded by J. C. Kruse (b. 1859), and Kruse in 1897 by Karl
Halir. Joachim gave himself with deepest devotion to the study of
Beethoven’s works; and probably his performances of the last quartets
of Beethoven have established a standard of excellence in chamber music
which may never be exalted further. Brahms wrote his violin concerto
especially for Joachim, who alone for many years was able to play it.
Here is but another case where the great virtuoso stands behind the
great composer. Kreutzer, Clement, and Rode all have entered in spirit
into the immortality of great music through Beethoven. David stands
behind the concerto of Mendelssohn, Joachim behind that of Brahms.
So, too, there is a great virtuoso just behind three of the most
successful of modern concertos: Sarasate behind the first concerto of
Lalo, the very substance of Bruch’s second concerto and his Scottish
Fantasia. Pablo de Sarasate (1844-1908) came from his native land of
Spain to Paris in 1856. Already as a boy of ten he had astonished
the Spanish court. Into his small hands had already come a priceless
Stradivari, gift of the queen of Spain. After three years’ study under
Alard in Paris he entered upon his career of virtuoso, which took him
well over the face of the world, from the Orient to the United States.
The numerous short pieces which he has composed are tinged with Spanish
color. There are gypsy dances, Spanish dances, the _Jota Aragonesa_,
romances and fantasias, all of which are brilliant and many of which
are at present among the favorite solos of all violinists.
The Norwegian violinist, Ole Bull (1810-1880), who achieved an
international fame, should be mentioned in this connection. His
compositions, in slight forms or transcriptions, enjoyed considerable
popularity.
On the whole the technique of violin playing has hardly advanced
beyond Paganini. Practically little or no advance has been possible.
But undoubtedly this once miraculous technique is now within the
grasp of all the great virtuosi of the present day. To mention these
would go beyond the purpose of this chapter, which has been, in so
far as possible, to select from the list of hundreds a few men that
have united, so to speak, the technique of the violin to the general
progress of music, through their influence as players, as teachers,
as composers, or as mentors, so far as violin music is concerned, to
greater composers.
The mass of music composed by the great violinists of the nineteenth
century is immense. The works of large proportions as well as those of
small were composed with perhaps the chief aim of revealing the scope
of the instrument; and as for the concertos it is hardly unfair to say
that they were composed with the additional purpose of offering to the
composer the best chance to display his individual style as a player.
Certainly of these many composers Spohr and Vieuxtemps were the most
capable as musicians in a general way; and as it must be granted that
both were at their best in the performance of their own concertos,
so it may be said that their concertos rose to their highest value
under the fingers of their creators. To that same value they have not
otherwise risen.
The concerto is, after all, a long piece of music in symphonic
proportions, and time seems to have proved that it must justify itself
by more than display of the special qualities of a certain instrument.
There must be in addition to this something of genuine musical value.
The thoughts which it expresses--for so we must name the outpourings of
a musical inspiration which have no substance but sound--must be first
worthy of expression. There must be melody and harmony of distinct and
vivid character. These the concertos of the violin-composers oftenest
lack; and therefore from the point of view of pure music, one finds in
them a lack not only of originality but of strength.
Their short pieces stand a better chance of a longer life, because in
them a slender idea is not stretched to fill a broad form, and because
for a short time sheer beauty of sound, such as the violin is capable
of, and dexterity of fingers are a sufficient delight to the ear.
VII
In turning to the violin pieces of the great masters of music one
finds first and foremost ideas, great or charming, which are wholly
worthy of expression. As these find their outlet in music in melody,
harmony, and rhythm, and take their shape in form, melody becomes
intensified and suggests as well as sings, harmony is enriched, form
developed and sustained. Only the solo sonatas of Bach have demanded
such manifold activity from the violin alone. Other composers have
called to the aid of their ideas some other instrument--pianoforte,
organ, or orchestra. The great masters have indeed placed no small
burden of the frame and substance of such compositions on the shoulders
of this second instrument, usually the pianoforte. Hence we have music
which is no longer solo music for the violin, but duets in which both
instruments play an obbligato part. Such are the violin sonatas of
Beethoven, Brahms, César Franck and others, thoroughly developed,
well-articulated and often truly great music.
Beethoven wrote ten sonatas for pianoforte and violin, all but one
between the years 1798 and 1803. This was a time when his own fame as a
virtuoso was at its height, and the pianoforte part in all the sonatas
calls for technical skill and musicianship from the pianist. Upon the
violinist, too, they make no less claim. In fact Beethoven’s idea of
this duet sonata as revealed in all but the last, that in G major,
opus 96, is the idea of a double concerto, both performers displaying
the best qualities and the most brilliant of their instruments,
the pianist at the same time adding the harmonic background and
structural coherence which may well be conceived as orchestral. It
is not surprising then to find in these works something less of the
‘poetic idea’ than may be discovered, or has been, in the sonatas for
pianoforte alone, the string quartets, and the symphonies. Beethoven is
not concerned solely with poetic expression in music. And not only many
of the violin sonatas, but the horn sonata and the 'cello sonatas, were
written for a certain player, and even for a special occasion.
Of the three sonatas, opus 12, written not later than 1798 and
dedicated to the famous Italian Salieri, then resident in Vienna,
little need be said. On the whole they are without conspicuous
distinction in style, treatment, or material; though certain movements,
especially the slow movements of the second and third sonatas, are
full of deep feeling. Likewise the next two sonatas, that in A minor,
opus 23, and that in F major, opus 24, are not of great significance
in the list of Beethoven’s works, though the former speaks in a highly
impassioned vein, and the latter is so frankly charming as to have won
for itself something of the favor of the springtime.
Shortly after these Beethoven composed the three sonatas, opus 30,
dedicated to the Czar of Russia, in which there is at once a more
pronounced element of virtuosity and likewise a more definite poetic
significance. The first and last of this set are in A major and G
major, and show very clearly the characteristics which are generally
associated with these keys. The former is vigorous, the latter
cheerful. Both works are finely developed and carefully finished in
style, and the _Tempo di minuetto_ in the latter is one of the most
charming of Beethoven’s compositions. The sonata in C minor which
stands between these two is at once more rough-hewn and emotionally
more powerful.
The sonata in A, opus 47, is the ninth of the violin sonatas of
Beethoven. It was written especially for the English violinist, George
Bridgetower, with whom Beethoven played it for the first time on the
17th or 24th of May, 1803. According to the violinist himself, who was,
by the way, a mulatto and exceedingly mannered, he altered a passage in
this performance of the work which greatly pleased Beethoven. However
this may be, Beethoven later fell out with him, and subsequently
dedicated the sonata to the great violinist Rodolphe Kreutzer, who came
to Vienna in the suite of General Bernadotte. It has since been known
as the Kreutzer Sonata. It is an imposing and brilliant work, but it
may be fairly said that it owes its general popularity to the favor
of virtuosi to whom it offers a grateful test of technical ability.
Emotionally the first movement alone is of sustained and impressive
meaning. The theme of the Andante is of great sweetness, but the
variations are hardly more than a series of more and more elaborate
ornamentations, designed for the benefit of the players. The brilliant
last movement seems to have been first conceived for the preceding
sonata in A major, opus 30, No. 1.
Toward the end of 1812 the French violinist, Pierre Rode, came to
Vienna, and to this event alone is probably due the last of Beethoven’s
sonatas for pianoforte and violin. If he had set out to exhaust the
possibilities of brilliant effect in the combination of the two
instruments, he achieved his goal, as far as it was attainable within
the limits of technique at that time, in the Kreutzer Sonata. Then
for a period of nine years he lost interest in the combination. When
he turned to it again, for this sonata in G, opus 96, it was with far
deeper purpose. The result is a work of a fineness and reserve, of a
pointed style, and cool meaning. It recalls in some measure the Eighth
Symphony, and like that symphony has been somewhat eclipsed by fellow
works of more obvious and striking character. Yet from the point of
view of pure and finely-wrought music it is the best of the sonatas
for pianoforte and violin. Mention has already been made of the first
performance of the work, given on the 29th of December, 1812, by Rode
and Beethoven’s pupil, the Archduke Rudolph.
The concerto for violin and orchestra, opus 61, must be given a place
among his masterpieces. It belongs in point of time between the two
great pianoforte concertos, in G major and E-flat major; and was first
performed by the violinist Franz Clement, to whom it was dedicated, at
a concert in the _Theater an der Wien_, on December 23, 1806. Difficult
as the concerto is for the violinist, Beethoven has actually drawn
upon only a few of the characteristics of the instrument, and chiefly
upon its power over broad, soaring melody. He had written a few years
earlier two Romances, opus 40 and opus 50, for violin and orchestra,
which may be taken as preliminary experiments in weaving a solo-violin
melody with the many strands of the orchestra. The violin part in the
concerto is of noble and exalted character, and yet at the same time
gives to the instrument the chance to express the best that lies within
it.
The plan of the work is suggestively different from the plan of the
last two concertos for pianoforte. In these Beethoven treats the solo
instrument as a partner or at times as an opponent of the orchestra,
realizing its wholly different and independent individuality. At the
very beginning of both the G major and the E-flat major concertos, the
piano asserts itself with weight and power equal to the orchestra’s,
and the ensuing music results as it were from the conflict or the union
of these two naturally contrasting forces. The violin has no such
independence from the orchestra, of which, in fact, it is an organic
member. The violin concerto begins with a long orchestral prelude, out
of which the solo instrument later frees itself, as it were, and rises,
to pursue its course often as leader, but never as opponent.[52]
The few works by Schubert for pianoforte and violin belong to the
winter of 1816 and 1817, and, though they have a charm of melody, they
are of relatively slight importance either in his own work or in the
literature for the instrument. There are a concerto in D major; three
sonatinas, in D, A minor, and G minor, opus 137, Nos. 1, 2, 3; and a
sonata in A, opus 162.
There are two violin sonatas by Schumann, in A minor, opus 105, and
in D minor, opus 121. Both are works belonging to the last years of
his life, and both reflect a sad and gloomy spirit; but both contain
much that is rarely beautiful. They will strike the ear at once as
more modern than those of Beethoven, mostly of course because of
the treatment of the pianoforte. Here it may well be mentioned that
improvements in the pianoforte rather changed the problem of writing
duet sonatas such as these. The new power of the instrument might
easily threaten the violin with extinction. On the whole Schumann’s
handling of the combination is remarkably successful. He is inclined
now and then to treat the pair of instruments in unison--as in the
first movement of the sonata in A minor--which is a rank waste of the
beauties which the diversity in the natures of pianoforte and violin
makes possible. On the other hand, such a movement as that in G major
in the second sonata, its unusual beginning with a melody given by the
violin in pizzicato chords, and its third statement of the melody in
rich double-stops, is a masterpiece.[53]
The only considerable contribution by Mendelssohn to the literature of
the violin is the concerto written for and first performed by Ferdinand
David. A sonata in F minor, opus 4, is without distinction. But the
concerto must be reckoned as one of Mendelssohn’s greatest works.
Certainly, standing as it does between the concerto of Beethoven, on
the one hand, and that of Brahms, on the other, it cannot but appear
small in size and slight in content. But the themes, especially the
chief theme of the first movement, are well chosen, the orchestral part
exquisitely and thoroughly finished, and the treatment of the violin,
thanks to David, smoothly effective. The cadenza--is it Mendelssohn
or David?--is of sterling worth, and it is happily arranged in the
movement as a whole before the third section, so that the hearer has
not the shock which accompanies the enforced dragging in of virtuoso
stuff in most cadenzas. It glides naturally out of what came before,
and slowly flows back into the course of the movement.
There are three violin sonatas by Brahms which hold a very high place
in music. The first, opus 78, in G major, was written after the first
and second symphonies and even the violin concerto had been made public
(Jan. 1, 1879). It has, perhaps, more than any of his earlier works,
something of grace and pleasant warmth, of those qualities which made
the second symphony acceptable to more than his prejudiced friends.
Certainly this sonata, which was played with enthusiasm by Joachim all
over Europe, made Brahms’ circle of admirers vastly broader than it had
been before.
The workmanship is, of course, highly involved and recondite. There
is a thematic relationship between the first and last movements,[54]
and the themes and even the accompaniment are put to learned uses. But
the style is gracious and charming, the treatment of the violin wholly
satisfactory, and the combination of the two instruments close and
interesting.
The second sonata, opus 100, did not appear until seven years after
the first. Here again there is warmth and grace of style, though the
impression the work makes as a whole is rather more serious than that
made by the earlier sonata. Of course at a time when Brahms and Wagner
were being almost driven at each other by their ardent friends and
backers the resemblance between the first theme of this sonata in A
major and the melody of the Prize Song in the _Meistersinger_ did not
pass unnoticed. The resemblance is for an instant startling, but ceases
to exist after the first four notes.
The third sonata, that in D minor, opus 108, appeared two years later.
On the whole it has more of the sternness one cannot but associate
with Brahms than either of those which precede it. There are grotesque
accents in the first movement, and also a passage of forty-six measures
over a dominant pedal point, and even the delightful movement in
F-sharp minor (_un poco presto e con sentimento_) has a touch of
deliberateness. The slow movement on the other hand is direct, and the
last movement has a strong, broad swing.
No violin sonatas show more ingenuity in the combining of the two
instruments than those of Brahms. Mr. Thomas F. Dunhill in his book on
Chamber Music,[55] chooses from each of them a passage which really
represents a new effect in this field of which one would have thought
all the effects discovered.
The concerto for violin and orchestra stands among Brahms’ supreme
achievements, a giant among concertos matched only by that of
Beethoven. It is not a matter for surprise that Brahms, who in many
ways deliberately tried to follow Beethoven, and who even here chose
the same key (D major) that Beethoven chose for his concerto, chose
likewise the old-fashioned form of concerto. The work gains ponderance
by reason of the long orchestral introduction in both the first and
second movements. There is, likewise, as in the pianoforte concertos,
too conscious a suppression of superficial brilliance. But what is this
slight heaviness compared to the soaring power of its glorious themes?
Truly the violin rises high above the orchestra as on wings of light.
The treatment of the violin relates the concerto to Joachim even
more definitely than the dedication. It is full of the most exacting
difficulties, some of which in the last movement gave even Joachim
pause. The double-stops, however, and the frequent passages in two
voices were, after all, effects in which Joachim was especially
successful. Some of the close co-operation of the two great masters on
this single great masterpiece is revealed in the correspondence which
passed between Joachim and Brahms and happily has been preserved.
VIII
Turning now to music in its more recent developments, we shall find
that each nation has contributed something of enduring worth to the
literature of the violin. Certainly, high above all modern sonatas,
and perhaps above all sonatas for pianoforte and violin, stands that
by César Franck, dedicated to M. Eugène Ysäye. By all the standards we
have, this work is immortally great. From the point of view of style it
presents at their best all the qualities for which Franck’s music is
valued. There are the fineness in detail and the seemingly spontaneous
polyphonic skill, the experiments, or rather the achievements in
binding the four movements into a unified whole by employing the same
or cognate thematic material in all, the chromatic alterations of
harmonies and the almost unlimited modulations. Besides these more
or less general qualities, the pianoforte and the violin are most
sympathetically combined, and the treatment of both instruments is
varied and interesting. Franck’s habit of short phrases here seems
wholly proper, and never suggests as it does in some of his other works
a too intensive development of musical substance. In short this sonata,
full of mystical poetry, is a flawless masterpiece, from the opening
movement that seems like a dreamy improvisation, to the sunny canon at
the end of the work.
This is by no means the only brilliant accomplishment of the French
composers in violin music. Lalo’s Concerto in F minor, opus 20, and his
Spanish Symphony for violin and orchestra, opus 21, must be given a
place among the most successful of modern compositions. They were both
composed between 1873 and the beginning of 1875. Both were dedicated to
Sarasate, whose influence contributed not a little to their perfection
of style, and who was the first to play them in public. The ‘Spanish
Symphony’ was greatly admired by Tschaikowsky and apparently put the
thought of writing his own concerto into his head. In a letter to Mme.
von Meck, written in March, 1878, he showed a positive enthusiasm
for Lalo’s work which had recently become known to him through the
performance by the ‘very modern’ violinist Sarasate. And of Lalo he
wrote that, like Léo Delibes and Bizet, he shunned studiously all
routine commonplaces, sought new forms without wishing to appear
profound, and, unlike the Germans, cared more for _musical beauty_ than
for mere respect of the old traditions. Besides these two concertos
Lalo wrote within the next few years a ‘Romance-Serenade,’ a ‘Norwegian
Fantasia,’ and a _Concerto Russe_, for violin and orchestra.
Sarasate seems to have stimulated almost all of the composers with
whom he came in contact. Saint-Saëns wrote three concertos for violin
and orchestra, opus 20, in A major, opus 58, in C major, and opus 61,
in B minor, and dedicated all to Sarasate. Of these the third is the
broadest in form and the most impressing, and is a favorite among its
fellows as the second concerto for pianoforte, opus 22, is among the
five works in that form. It was composed in 1880 and played for the
first time by Sarasate. Saint-Saëns wrote besides these three concertos
an ‘Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso,’ opus 28, a ‘Romanze,’ opus
48, and a ‘Concert Piece,’ opus 62, for violin and orchestra, and two
sonatas--opus 75, in D minor, and opus 102, in E-flat major--for violin
and pianoforte. There is also a brilliant _Havanaise_, opus 83, for
violin and orchestra.
There is a sonata for violin and piano by Gabriel Fauré, opus 13,
which has won favor, and which Saint-Saëns characterized as _géniale_.
The year 1905 heard the first performance of the admirable violin
sonata in C major of M. Vincent d’Indy.
Among the Scandinavian composers Grieg holds the highest rank, and
his three sonatas for violin and pianoforte are among the favorite
compositions for this combination. Their charm is like that of his
other works, and consists not a little in the presence of a distinct
national idiom which, until one becomes thoroughly used to it, strikes
the ear with delightful freshness. The three sonatas are respectively
opus 8, in F major, opus 13, in G major, and opus 45, in C minor. The
last is a fiery, dramatic work. The two earlier ones are characterized
by grace and charm. With the exception of the pianoforte concerto in
A minor, Grieg showed himself nowhere more successful than in these
sonatas in the treatment of form. His ideas are generally slight, and
his workmanship delicate and refined. Hence he is at his best in short
pieces. But the violin sonatas are on the whole well sustained, and the
themes in the last of them, and particularly the chief theme of the
first movement, have a breadth quite unusual in the great part of his
music.
Of far broader conception, however, than the sonatas, are the two
brilliant concertos by Christian Sinding, the first in A major, opus
45, the second in D major, opus 60. Concerning his music in general
M. Henry Marteau, the eminent French violinist who introduced the
first concerto to the public and who is a close friend of Sinding,
has written: ‛He is very Norwegian in his music, but less so than
Grieg, because his works are of far broader conception and would find
themselves cramped in the forms that are so dear to Grieg.’[56]
Among the Russians, Tschaikowsky’s concerto for violin in D major,
opus 35, is one of the greatest written for the instrument. Of
Tschaikowsky’s admiration for the Spanish Symphony of Lalo, mention
has already been made. After this had prompted him to write a concerto
of his own, the work went on with astonishing rapidity; was, in fact,
roughly on paper within the space of a month. It was first performed on
December 4, 1884, at a Philharmonic concert in Vienna by Adolf Brodsky
(b. 1851). It was originally dedicated to Leopold Auer (b. 1845), but
Tschaikowsky later re-dedicated it to Brodsky, having heard that Auer
had dissuaded Émile Sauret from playing it in Petrograd. As to the
difficulties of the work much may be gleaned from a letter written
by Brodsky to Tschaikowsky after the first performance. Among other
things he wrote: ‛I had the wish to play the concerto in public ever
since I first looked it through. * * * I often took it up and often put
it down, because my laziness was stronger than my wish to reach the
goal. You have, indeed, crammed too many difficulties into it. * * *
One can play it again and again and never be bored; and this is a most
important circumstance for the conquering of its difficulties.’[57]
Of the three movements only the last (allegro vivacissimo, 2-4, D
major) has a distinctly Russian flavor. This comes to it not only from
the nature of the two chief themes, which are in the character of
Russian folk-songs, but from the gorgeous coloring, both harmonic and
orchestral, the wildness of climaxes, and the Slavic idiom of repeating
a single phrase over and over again. It is a riotous piece of music,
this last movement, full of an animation, almost a madness which is
intoxicating. Hanslick heard in it only the brutal and wretched jollity
of a Russian Kermesse; but his fierce judgment has not been supported
by the public or by the profession.
There is a concerto for violin in A minor, opus 82, by Alexander
Glazounoff, composed in 1904 and first performed at a Queen’s Hall
concert in London, by Mischa Elman, on October 17, 1905. The work
is dedicated to Leopold Auer, to whom, as has just been mentioned,
Tschaikowsky originally dedicated his concerto for violin. It is a work
without distinction.
[Illustration]
Modern Violinists. From top left to bottom right:
Pablo Sarasate, Fritz Kreisler, Eugène Ysäye. Jacques Thibaud.
The violin concerto of Sibelius in D minor, opus 47, was composed in
1905 and first played by Karl Halir in Berlin, October 19, 1905. It is
a work of far greater power than that of Glazounoff. Mrs. Rosa Newmarch
in her monograph on Sibelius,[58] likens the difficulties in it to
those of the Tschaikowsky concerto, which were for a while considered
insurmountable. The concerto is in three movements of which the first
is gloomy and forbidding, though poignant in the extreme, the second
noble and more classic, the last--the coda of which was added by Pietro
Floridia--savagely effective.
In Germany we meet with Sarasate again in the second concerto and
Scottish Fantasy by Max Bruch. These are the best known of Bruch’s
works for violin and orchestra, among which may be mentioned a
first concerto, opus 26, in G minor, a Romance, opus 42, an Adagio
Appassionato, opus 57, and a Serenade, opus 75. The second concerto,
opus 44, was, according to Bruch, inspired by stories of the Carlist
wars in Spain, told by Sarasate. It was composed in Bonn in 1877, ten
years after the first, and was first publicly performed by Sarasate,
in London, during the fall of that year. In form it is free and
rhapsodical, consisting of an adagio movement, then a movement in
recitative style, and a final rondo. All through the work the solo
violin predominates. The Scottish Fantasia, composed a year or two
later, was dedicated to Sarasate. The use of Scotch songs in the five
movements is so free that English critics could hardly recognize them,
and were angry.
Among more recent works for the violin by German composers the sonata
by Richard Strauss stands conspicuous. This is an early work--opus
18--and its popularity is already on the wane. There is a concerto in A
major, opus 101, by Max Reger, and a _Suite im alten Stil_ for violin
and piano, opus 93. There are concertos by Gernsheim, as well: but on
the whole there has been no remarkable output of music for the violin
in Germany since that of Brahms and of Max Bruch.
Karl Goldmark, the Bohemian composer, has written two concertos, of
which the first, opus 28, in A minor, offers an excellent example of
the composer’s finished and highly pleasing style. The second concerto,
without opus number, is among his later works. Two suites for piano and
violin, opus 11 and opus 43, were made familiar by Sarasate. Dvořák’s
concerto, opus 53, has been frequently played. He composed as well a
Romance, opus 11, for violin and orchestra, and a sonatina, opus 100,
for violin and pianoforte. The works of Jenö Hubay are of distinctly
virtuoso character.
The Italian Leone Sinigaglia became known to the world by his concerto
for violin, opus 20, in A major, played in Berlin in 1901 by his
countryman, Arrigo Serrato. Later works include a _Rapsodia piemontese_
for violin and orchestra, and a Romance for the same combination,
opus 29. The violin music of Emanuel Móor, including a concerto and a
remarkably fine suite for violin unaccompanied, has yet to be better
known. Georges Enescou first attracted attention by compositions for
the violin. On the whole, however, it may be said that the violin is
awaiting a new contribution to its literature. This contribution is
doubtless delayed by the great attention given at the present day to
the piano, the orchestra, or other combinations of instruments, by
which the modern growth in harmony and the change in ideas of polyphony
may be given a full expression. Until these various ideas have become
firmly rooted and well-grown, the violin will profit but vicariously by
them.
FOOTNOTES:
[51] This famous arrangement was published by the Maison Richault in
Paris as _Thème de Rode, chanté avec variations dans le Barbier de
Séville en Italien par Mmes. Sontag, Alboni, Trebelli; en français
par Mlle. Maria Bailly; paroles françaises d’Adolph Larmande, avec
accompagnement de piano par L. Moreau_. See _Notice sur Rode_, by F. A.
A. Paroisse-Pougin (Paris, 1874).
[52] See Paul Bekker: ‘Beethoven.’ Berlin, 1913.
[53] Joachim had in his possession a concerto for violin by Schumann,
written likewise near the end of his life.
[54] The theme of the last movement can be found in two songs,
_Regenlied_ and _Nachklang_, opus 59, published seven years earlier.
[55] ‘Chamber Music.’ London, 1913.
[56] See _Song Journal_, November 10, 1895.
[57] See Modest Tschaikowsky: ‘Life of Peter Ilyitch Tschaikowsky.’
[58] ‘Jean Sibelius, a Finnish Composer.’
CHAPTER XIV
THE BEGINNINGS OF CHAMBER MUSIC
The term ‘chamber music’; fifteenth-century dances; lute
music, early suites; vocal ‘chamber music’--Early ‘sonatas’:
Gabrieli; Rossi; Marini; etc.--Vitali, Veracini, Bassani and
Corelli; Corelli’s pupils; Vivaldi; Bach and Handel.
I
In giving an account of early chamber music we may confine ourselves
to the consideration of early instrumental music of certain kinds,
although the term at first did not apply to pure instrumental music
alone. Chamber music in the sixteenth century meant instrumental or
vocal music for social and private purposes as distinguished from
public musical performances in churches or in theatres. In its modern
sense chamber music applies, of course, only to instrumental ensembles,
and it is therefore not necessary to dwell upon the vocal side of
chamber music beginnings, except where, as in its incipient stages,
music was written for both kinds of performances.[59] In searching for
examples of early chamber music, therefore, we must above all consider
all such music, vocal or instrumental, as was not composed for the use
of the church or theatre. Properly speaking the accompanied art-songs
of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, which were discussed in Vol.
I, Chapter IX, of our narrative history, represent the very beginnings
of artistic instrumental music that during the following three
centuries developed into pure instrumental chamber music. In forwarding
this development the dance music of the period and other instrumental
compositions of the fifteenth century were important factors.
The fifteenth century dances such as the _Pawirschwantz_, the
_Fochsschwantz_, and others, employed the polyphonic style peculiar to
the vocal compositions of the time. They lacked inspiration and were
of a restless character because of frequent changes of rhythm. There
was little to distinguish them from each other; they were in fact, in
the words of Michael Prætorius, ‘as like as eggs,’ and their general
character was not different from that of the vocal compositions of the
same period. Probably no modern ear could listen to them with enjoyment.
Presumably this music was to be played on any instrument, without
differentiation. No single instrument was especially favored until
the following century, when the perfection and the popularity of the
lute helped to bring chamber music into existence. This instrument was
indeed so highly perfected and the players so skilled that they were
able to perform upon it even difficult polyphonic works. This gave
an opportunity to the people to become acquainted, through private
performances, with a great number of musical compositions. To satisfy
the demands of their friends lutenists arranged and transcribed for
their instruments all kinds of compositions, including even entire
six-part masses. While these arrangements served their purpose they
were probably not more satisfactory than the pianoforte arrangement
of orchestral scores today. Pieces of polyphonic character were also
composed directly for the lute, and bore such names as _Ricercar_,
_Fantasia_, _Præludium_, _Preambel_, _Trio_, _Trium_, _Toccata_,
_Tartar le corde_, etc. Besides this the lutenists produced a large
amount of music in a more popular vein, popular tunes, dances, and
descriptive pieces including ‘battles,’ ‘echoes,’ ‘bird-songs,’ in
which the composer’s intention was often not self-evident.
This lute music must have been usually played in rooms of limited
size, for the delicate tone quality of the lute would scarcely render
it practical for accompaniments to dances. Hence we may conclude that
this early lute music was played for its own sake. It is the earliest
form of true chamber music and represents the beginning of absolute
instrumental music in general.
We find already in this early chamber music the elements of artistic
form. It is evident from the examination of numerous collections from
the sixteenth century that composers for the lute applied the principle
of contrast, being impelled thereto by a natural artistic sense. In
Petrucci’s lute collection (1507-08), for example, a _Ricercar_ is
preceded by a sort of prelude-like _Tartar le corde_ that in its rapid
passages forms an evident contrast to the even and more simple style
of the _Ricercar_. It is this tendency toward artistic contrast that
helped to build up the cyclical forms of the suite and of the sonata.
Lutenists, in fact, preferred to combine their favorite songs and
dances in groups of two, three, or more, which thus constituted the
earliest suites. A suite of three dances is to be found in Petrucci’s
collection. It contains a _Pavane_, a _Saltarello_, and a _Piva_. The
Pavane (in common time) gives the melodic material for the two other
movements (in triple time), a crude example of the use of a leading
theme in the different movements. Attaignat’s French collection (1529)
also contains a suite of three dances: _Bassedance_, _Recoupe_,
and _Tordion_. Some German suites consisted of a slow movement (in
triple time), and a second, more rapid, on the melody of the first.
The individual pieces sometimes had no names, but frequently the
slow movement was called _Hoftanz_, while the fast movement bore the
designation _Hupfauff_. Other combinations of movements were _Ein guter
Hoftanz_ (in common time), _Proportz darauf_ (in triple time), and
_Pavana_, or _Ein kunstreicher Gassenhauer_, _Ander Thyl_, _Proportz
dritt Thyl_. Toward the middle of the century, when movements increased
in number, the suites ended with a postlude, such as a _Toccata_. The
relation between the movements was evident not only in the common
thematic material, but also in the use of the same key throughout.
Later the dances were grouped under their different titles--all the
Pavanes and Allemandes, for instance, being brought together. Not every
kind of dance was regarded as suitable for combination with others.
Such dances as _Caluta a la Spagnola_ or _a la Italiana_, the _Branle_,
the _Morino_, the _Balletti_, the Polish, ‘Welsh,’ French, Swiss,
Hungarian, Bavarian, and Swabian dances are always found alone. The
contrasted tempi of the better suites lent them a certain variety and
lightness.
[Illustration]
Lute music gradually ‘went out of fashion,’ as Thomas Mace,
himself a composer for the lute, remarked, because it was ‘a very
chargeable instrument’ and ‘the hardest instrument in the world.’ In
the meantime certain composers were writing chamber music for which
no special instrument was indicated. Of this class of instrumental
compositions we may mention especially a _Canzon da sonare a 4_,
by Florentino Maschera from his _Libro primo de canzoni da sonare
a 4_ (1593). It is called _La Capriola_ and is written for basso,
tenore, alto, e canto. Maschera’s canzonas are among the earliest
printed specimens of independent instrumental compositions. Their
phrase structure is very irregular. One canzona, for instance, has an
introduction of twenty-one measures, followed by a longer piece of six
periods of 22, 21, 18, 19, and 23 measures. On the whole, Maschera’s
instrumental compositions are vocal in character and polyphonic
in style. Almost the same may be said of the _Canzoni_ and _Sacræ
Symphoniæ_ of Giov. Gabrieli (1597), although his _Sonata con tre
violini and canzoni a 6_ (two violins, _cornetto_, _tenore_, _trombone_
and bass) (1615) show an advance in instrumental writing. In Gabrieli’s
_Sonata piano e forte_, we meet for the first time the term ‘Sonata.’
This composition is scored for a double choir of instruments, the
first consisting of a cornet and three trombones, and the second of a
violin and three trombones. These two choirs are employed antiphonally.
Gabrieli usually preferred to score his sonatas and canzonas for eight
instruments in two choirs, but not infrequently he wrote from four to
twenty-two parts in one or three choirs.
In comparing Gabrieli with Maschera we get the impression that while
Maschera’s canzonas are song-like, Gabrieli’s polyphonic style
represents rudimentary symphonic music.
A link in the evolution of chamber music form is to be found in the
_Fantasie overo Canzoni alla Francese per suonare nell’organo ed altri
stromenti musicali a 4_, by Adriano Banchieri (1603). In some of these
pieces the first part corresponds with the third, the second part
appearing as a kind of middle movement, an arrangement that shows the
elements of the three-part form of the modern sonata.
We have seen that chamber music included dances (single and in suites)
and compositions of free invention. The names of the former class of
pieces clearly expressed and described the character of the music. The
terms applied to compositions of free invention, however, were not
strictly defined, and compositions with scarcely any difference between
them were variously entitled Sonata, Fantasia, Simphonia and Canzona.
To illustrate the uncertain terminology of the time we may quote the
following from Prætorius’ _Syntagma Musicum_ (1618): ‘In my personal
opinion there is still some difference between Sonatas and Canzonas.
Namely, Sonatas contain serious, solemn and pompous music, in the
manner of Motettes; while the Canzonas briskly, quickly, and merrily
pass away.’ Sometimes, however, the term ‘Sonata’ conveyed the idea of
music that was played at banquets and for dancing.
Currently with the rise of music of free invention, dances and
suites were further cultivated, as we see from the large number of
such compositions extant. The dances of Melchior Franck (1603) were
sometimes of polyphonic phraseology, sometimes of lively flowing
melodies, with irregular structure, and we find a Galliarde by Johann
Ghro (1604) consisting of periods of 13--11--11 measures. Similar
pieces by Brade (1607), Thomas Simpson (1617), Erasmus Widman (1618),
and others, showed more or less skill in handling their musical
materials. Besides single dances, we find also several interesting and
valuable collections of suites. I. H. Schein’s _Banchetto musicale_,
1617, a series of twenty suites, contains very characteristic examples
of the suite in five movements. We may quote here the beginnings of the
five movements of his tenth suite:
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
Similar to Schein’s suites in the character of their variations are
those by Paul Bäuerl, edited six years earlier. Variations in suites
were so popular that in a work by Andreas Hammerschmidt (1639) the
author gave instructions for playing ‘Gaillarde on the 1, 2, 7,
Pavane.’ Change in the order and in the number of the single movements
is to be found in the suites of Johann Neubauer (1649). They contain
only four movements, Pavane, Gaillarde, Balletto, and Courante. The
Balletto stands for the Allemanda and Tripla, having two parts, the
first in common, the second in triple, time.
The four movement form of suite was adopted by Froberger (1649), and
by K. Briegel (1652). After the middle of the century composers began
to include in their suites movements that were not dances, such as
Canzonas, Symphonias, Sonatas, Sonatinas or Præludia. The earliest
examples of those are by I. R. Ahle (1650), Martin Rubert, Joh.
Jak. Löwe (1658), Diedrich Becker (_Musikalische Frühlingsfrüchte_,
1668), Joh. Rosenmüller (_Sonata da camera_, 1667), Joh. Petzolds
(_Leipzigische Abendmusik_, 1669), Esajas Reusser (Suites for two
violins with continuo, containing the following movements: Allemande,
Courante, Sarabande or Gavotte, Gigue, with an Adagio--called
Sonata--as introduction, 1670). Thus through the mixture of ‘suites’
with ‘sonatas’ the way was prepared for the classical chamber-sonata.
II
It must not be forgotten that an important part of early chamber
music consisted of various compositions in the form of vocal
pieces--madrigals, canons, rounds, and catches. As far as we know the
earliest printed collection of such music extant is a volume entitled
_Pammelia_ (o) _Musicks Misscellane_ (1609). The mixed variety of these
‘pleasant and delightful Roundelays’ shows skillful counterpoint and
good harmony. The names of the composers are not mentioned in the book,
but since the style of the compositions suggests great antiquity, this
collection may represent the oldest printed vocal chamber music. With
the striking progress of instrumental music, purely vocal compositions
were less and less used as chamber music, since instruments were
being used to play in unison with the voices. Such performances were
called _concertati_. Significant vocal compositions with instrumental
accompaniments were produced by Peri (1561-1633) and Caccini (d. 1618),
whose _Cantate da camera_ or _Madrigali da camera_ were mostly pieces
for a single voice accompanied by a single instrument. On the whole,
however, it is not necessary to emphasize the vocal music here, since
chamber music as we know it today represents a purely instrumental
development.
We have already referred to Gabrieli’s use of the term sonata and to
the first specimens of canzonas. Besides these we may mention a _Canzon
francese a risposta_ by Viadana (1602) for ‘violino, cornetto, two
tromboni, and basso continuo.’ The parts of the instruments that lead
the melodies are handled here as in a dialogue. The treatment of the
melody is monodic rather than contrapuntal.
Of much more interest and value are a _Sonata in dialogo_ for violin,
with basso continuo, and a _Sonata detto la moderna_, from the _Varie
Sonate_ (1613) of Salomone Rossi. Rossi’s sonatas contain good examples
of variations on a basso ostinato (_Sopra l’Aria della Romanesca_
and _Sopra l’Aria di Ruggiero_). The basses, however, are not always
strictly carried out. Rossi also cultivated variations on melodies not
in the bass. He is noted for his first attempts in the form of the trio
sonata (two violins with _basso continuo_), where, as in his simpler
and shorter ‘Sinfonias,’ the homophonic style is predominant. His
compositions have thematic unity, and he sometimes demands the changing
of his _tempi_ (_Si replica l’ultima parte ma piu presto_).
Similar to Rossi’s trio sonatas are those by Buonamente (1626), who
is likewise fond of variations and of writing in dialogues for two
violins. In his _Sonate a 3_ (for two violins and string-bass) the bass
has a more important rôle than a mere accompaniment; it also helps to
carry the themes, showing a tendency toward independent movement. A
sonata (113 measures long) arouses our interest by the development of
the first three notes of its theme [Illustration: Music score] that
reappears in the following manner [Illustration: Music score] reminding
us of the C minor symphony of Beethoven. Some of Buonamente’s sonatas
end with the complete form of the original themes as if to unify the
whole composition--a characteristic we again find in Beethoven (i.e.,
at the end of the first movement of the eighth symphony). The single
themes and the lack of variety in tempi lend a certain monotony to
Buonamente’s compositions, though otherwise they are very interesting.
Another writer of sonatas in Rossi’s manner is Francesco Turini (_Tanto
tempo hormai_, 1624). His compositions, too, are in the form of
variation suites, where the same bass, with slight changes in rhythm
and character, is used in all movements. For the sake of completeness
we may also mention G. Allegri’s sonatas for four string instruments,
which may be considered crude early specimens of the string quartet.
An important advance in chamber music compositions is marked by B.
Marini, who introduced into the trio sonata a second theme, contrasting
strongly in rhythm with the first. This new second theme is announced
simultaneously with the first when the latter appears for the second
time thus:
[Illustration: Music score]
Marini is also notable for the use of chromatics in his later works
(1651) and his effective instrumental writing. He did not, however,
lay special stress upon developing the idea of the new theme nor upon
giving more independence to the two leading instruments. Frescobaldi
also failed to recognize the possibilities of the second motive in his
trio sonatas (1628). The idea, however, was well developed by Tarquinio
Merula (especially in a sonata called _La Pedrina_, 1637), whose works
(_Canzoni da sonar_, 1615, _Canzoni overo Sonate concertate da chiesa
e camera a 2 e 3_, 1637, etc.) show not only more proficiency in
instrumental writing, but also greater independence in the single parts
and more individuality in the bass parts. Merula’s compositions have a
sort of jovial humor, and on the whole they produce a more satisfactory
general effect than those of his predecessors.
Of minor importance are the _Sinfonie ad uno e duoi violini, a duoi
trombone, con il partimento per l’organo con alcune quattro viole_,
1629, by Mont’Albano, and the few chamber music compositions (besides
solo sonatas) by Fontana (1630, 1641), whose graceful melodies are
suggestive of the coming era. In further developing the forms of
chamber music (mostly in trio sonatas) an important place belongs to
Maurizio Cazzati (d. 1677), who is distinguished especially for his
clear-cut melodies. The following from his sonata, _La Lucilla_ (1648),
is a good example:
[Illustration: Music score]
Here the contrasting second theme is brought in before the exposition
of the first is completed. _La Lucilla_ has repose and thoughtfulness
instead of the restlessness usual in similar compositions. It is in
four parts and ends with the first theme without the contrasting second
motive.
[Illustration]
"The concert"; painting by Terborch.
Among other chamber music composers of the middle of the seventeenth
century, we may point out Massimiliano Neri, who first used the terms
sonata and canzona without any distinction. After his time the term
canzona was less and less used and the name sonata finally became
general for all instrumental chamber music compositions. Neri’s works
are characteristic products of the century. His scoring for three to
twelve instruments, his restless changing of rhythm and tempo, his lack
of unity and ‘development,’ are the ever-present signs of the age in
which he wrote. Still, his construction of phrase, his modulations,
his more graceful figures show an improvement upon the writing of his
predecessors. The following analysis of his Sonata in nine movements
(1651) for two violins, viola and bass--another ancestor of the modern
string quartet--shows the looseness of form which was characteristic of
all contemporary instrumental music:
Movement I: in 4/4--46 measures
Movement II: Adagio in 3/2--20 measures
Movement III: Allegro in 4/4--26 measures
Movement IV: Adagio in 4/4--8 measures
Movement V: Allegro in 6/4--22 measures
Movement VI: Adagio in 4/4--6 measures
Movement VII: Allegro in 3/4--24 }
} 56 measures
Adagio in 3/4--32 }
Movement VIII: Allegro in 4/4--5 measures
Movement IX: Presto in 4/4--9 measures
Among writers of sonatas who varied less the number of movements we
may notice Nicolaus Kempi (Sonatas and ‘Symphonies’ for 1-3 violins,
1-5 instruments, 1644, 1647, 1669), who employed the four movements of
the modern cyclical sonata form, thus:
I. A pathetic movement (in the style of the Pavane).
II. An Allegro movement (imitative).
III. Gaillarde or Courante.
IV. Similar to the first movement (with figurative elements).
Although Kempi’s compositions show some improvement in fluency, they
are otherwise of little interest.
Of far more eminence is Giovanni Legrenzi, the first composer of
chamber music who abandoned entirely the term canzone. He is rightly
called a ‘master of first rank,’ and his harmonies, chromatics (in the
Sonata _La Cornava_, 1655), and modulations are noteworthy. In his trio
sonatas (_La Rosetta_, 1671) and in his _Sonata a 5: La Fugazza_, he
demonstrated that a few instruments could be made to express musical
ideas of genuine value.
Among the minor sonata writers of this period we may mention Mazzolini
(_Sonate per camera a 3_, containing preludes and dances), Mazzaferrata
(_Sonate a due violini: con un basetto viola_, 1674, all in four
movements), Bononcini (_Sonate da chiesa_ and ‘Symphonie’ for two to
eight instruments 1666, 1678), Tonini, C. A. Marini, Grossi, Taglietti,
Rugieri, Vinacesi, Zanata, Charelli, and Gighi.
Practically all the compositions we have noticed possess for us little
interest apart from their significance in the evolution of chamber
music. To a modern ear their appeal is very slight. Historically,
however, they are of importance, constituting as it were the
substructure upon which the edifice of chamber music has been reared.
Between them and the music which has a genuine artistic appeal and an
emotional content lies a sort of transition stage in which the most
notable names are Giovanni Battista Vitali, Antonio Veracini, and
Giovanni Bassani.
III
Vitali is the dance composer _par excellence_ of the seventeenth
century. His _Correnti e balletti da camera a 2 violini col suo basso
continuo_ (1666) have melodic value and clarity of structure and form.
In his _Balletti correnti, e capricci per camera_ for two violins and
bass (1683), in his _Sonate da camera_ for two violins and bass (1667),
and in sonatas for two to five instruments (1669) we find inspiration,
expression, and a dignified style. Vitali’s sonatas consist of three
movements. The first and the last are in fast 4/4 time, and in fugal
style; the middle, in 3/4 or 3/2 time, is more tranquil in character.
Sometimes a short _largo_ precedes the first movement, sometimes
a largo is inserted before or after the middle movement. The two
allegros are thematically connected. In one sonata Vitali uses the same
theme through all three movements with a dexterity that suggests the
influence of his teacher, Cazzati.
Antonio Veracini (1690) was not a fertile composer, and he is
important rather for his personal influence than for the volume of his
work. His _Sonate a 3_, _Sonate da chiesa a violino e violoncello_
and _Sonate da camera a 2_, possess nobility and individuality of
style, with a certain melodic originality. His forms are clear, his
contrapuntal combinations not unattractive, and all his details with
a few exceptions show careful workmanship. His adagios are especially
fine.[60]
Giovanni Battista Bassani, too, derives his importance largely from
his personal influence, especially as the teacher of Arcangelo Corelli.
Bassani’s chamber music compositions include _Balletti, Correnti,
Gighue e Sarabande a violino e violono overo spinetta, con il secondo
violino_ (1673); twelve _sonate da camera_ (each containing four
dances in the following order: _1--Balletto, 2--Corrento, 3--Gigha,
and 4--Sarabanda)_; _Sinfonie a due o tre instrumenti con il basso
continuo per l’organo_ (1638), in which each single piece bears the
title of ‘sonata.’ All these compositions are interesting rather than
attractive; though while emphasizing and broadening the technique
and form of his predecessors, Bassani improved upon their harmony
and exhibited more fluency and smoothness through better modulations
and transitional passages. We may note especially his independent
part-writing, his rythmic steadiness, and his ingenious working-out
of motives taken from the main theme. The device of developing themes
in contrapuntal works had been variously used since Gabrieli, but the
credit for first resolving a theme into its motives and working with
them skillfully belongs to Bassani. The following examples will clearly
show Bassani’s skill in thematic development.
The theme of a Sonata (for two violins, violoncello ad libitum and
organ, 1683):
[Illustration: Music score]
The motives:
[Illustration: Music score]
and
[Illustration: Music score]
[Illustration: Music score]
Here again we are reminded of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.
The large amount of chamber music composed toward the end of the
seventeenth century is eloquent of the popularity of this class of
composition. In fact chamber music was so much favored that a certain
Thomas Britton (in London) formed a chamber music club (1678) and
gave weekly concerts for thirty-six years, at first free of charge
but afterwards at a subscription fee of ten shillings. Later, similar
and stronger organizations came to play an important part in the
development of music.
IV
We now arrive at an epoch in chamber music where for the first time
we meet with works that are today deemed worthy of performance for
their purely musical value. The beginning of this era is marked by
the name of Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713). Corelli’s music is simple
and expressive in style and is distinguished by a peculiarly ascetic
and spiritual quality suggestive of the church. It is plastic and
concise in thought and dignified and noble in utterance. Corelli
was not a pioneer. It was his mission to synthesize into a more
logical and graceful whole the musical effects discovered by his many
predecessors, and his highly individual genius enabled him to do this
with a distinction which makes his name a landmark in the progress of
the art of music. In analyzing Corelli’s compositions we find graceful
harmonies, fluent modulations and pleasingly regular, well-balanced
phrase structures. His musical ideas, especially in the adagio
movements, have dignity, grace and lucidity. His allegros, although not
lacking in dignity, do not stand on the high artistic level of his slow
movements.
Corelli’s earliest chamber works are included in a collection of _XII
Sonate a tre, due violini e violone col Basso per l’organo_, op. 1
(1683). In these church-sonatas his strong individuality is already
apparent, although Bassani’s influence is clearly recognizable. Some
passages lack beauty and are not very pleasing to the ear. The sonatas
consist of four movements, as follows: adagio, allegro, adagio,
allegro. Sometimes the first slow movement is replaced by an allegro,
and the second movement is in a related key. The seventh sonata has
only three movements: allegro, adagio and allegro.
The next series, _XII Sonate a camera a tre, due violini e violone e
cembalo_, op. 2 (1685), consists of idealized dances with a prelude
(largo or adagio). The third sonata of this collection has the
following movements: Prelude (largo), Allemande (allegro), adagio (of
free invention), and Allemande. The twelfth sonata has a _Ciaccona_ and
a longer allegro movement. Corelli’s talent appears to better advantage
in his _Sonate da chiesa a 3_ (1689) and in _Sonate da camera a 3_
(1694) which in form are similar to his previous sonatas. Most of them
are in the suite form; some consist of movements of abstract nature,
some show a combination of different forms.
The period of chamber music composition inaugurated by Corelli lasted
until about the middle of the eighteenth century. It is characterized
by a mixture of contemporary and older monodic and polyphonic styles,
with a strong tendency toward independent, individual part writing. In
this period Corelli’s pupils and imitators produced valuable works,
though they could not surpass their master. Among his more prominent
pupils may be mentioned F. Geminiani (1680-1782) and P. A. Locatelli
(1690-1764). Geminiani’s works (sonatas for two violins and 'cello, and
sonatas for two violins and bass) possess neither individuality nor
enduring merit, but they claim attention for the careful marking of
dynamic nuances. In Locatelli’s sonatas for two violins and cembalo,
the virtuoso element is too strong to make them good examples of pure
ensemble writing. The same may be said of Torelli’s (d. 1708) _Concerti
da camera_ for two violins and bass, _Sinfonie_ for two, three and four
instruments, _Balletti da camera_ for three violins and bass, _Sinfonie
a 3_, _Conzerti a 4_, _Conzerti musicali a 4_, and _Caprici musicali
per camera_, for violin, viola and archlute. Torelli helped to fuse
the _Sonata da camera_ with the _Sonata da chiesa_ and is notable as
the first to use the term concerto. In general the violinist-composers
of the period preferred to cultivate solo sonatas and concertos which
would demonstrate the virtuosity of the performers. The elevation of
chamber music through serious and pure ensemble writing was not at all
their aim. This was notably the case with F. M. Veracini (1685-1750),
a pupil and cousin of Antonio Veracini, and with T. Antonio
Vitali--_Sonate da chiesa_ for violin and 'cello (1693), _Sonate_ for
two violins and bass, _Conzerto di Sonate a violino e violoncello e
cembalo_ (1701).
The most prominent and gifted of Corelli’s immediate successors was
Antonio Vivaldi (died 1743). His early compositions were ‘wild and
irregular,’ but later, under the influence of Corelli’s pure style, he
acquired an ‘elegant manner of writing’ that was often entirely free
from contrapuntal phraseology. His works (_Sinfonie_, _Sonate_, etc.)
became the models of his time and exercised a strong influence even
upon Bach. On the whole, however, he pandered chiefly to the prevailing
passion for virtuosity. His sonatas are written in three movements.
The opening movement still lacks the ‘song-like’ second theme of the
modern sonata-movement, and its first theme is long, consisting of
several brief, slightly-developed motives. His second movements closely
resemble the preludes of his fellow-composers.
Up to the time of Haydn and Boccherini we find very few important
works in ensemble chamber music. The solo sonata was chiefly cultivated
and from it the sonata form really was developed. So we find that the
instrumental compositions of Alessandro Scarlatti (1659-1725) are not
of much value (sonata for two flutes, two violins and _continuo_,
sonatas for flute, sonatas for three flutes and continuo). His _Sonate
a quattro_ (string-quartets of archaic style) in which tediously
developed figures are the principal movements and only the little
‘brisk minuettos’ have a certain modernity, are below the artistic
standard established by Corelli. Much the same may be said of
François Couperin’s (1668-1733) trio sonatas entitled _La Parnasse ou
l’apothéose de Corelli_, and other trios for two violins and bass, and
_Pièces de viole_, published in 1724-26.
The two great composers, John Sebastian Bach and George Frederick
Handel, also produced more valuable works in the form of solo sonatas,
suites, and concertos than in ensembles. Bach’s concertos are often
classified as chamber music and indeed the grouping of the solo
instruments of his Brandenburg concertos resembles chamber music
combinations. In his trio sonatas for two violins and thorough-bass, or
for flute, violin and thorough-bass, Bach employed the three movement
form of Vivaldi. Handel[61] cultivated the four and five movement form
of Corelli.
Much of Handel’s chamber music is in point of view of form strikingly
in advance of his time. Many of his sonatas contain movements which,
within a comparatively brief compass, follow strictly the general
outlines of the sonata form. The second movements of two of his solo
sonatas, in A and D, and of the sonata in C minor for flute and violin,
are good instances.
In tracing the evolution of modern principles in chamber music we
have mentioned only those composers who were of striking importance in
the development of the genre. It did not seem practical to divide the
field to be covered into periods, since up to Corelli no works were
sufficiently original or individual to establish a new school or new
style. In the works between Gabrieli’s first attempts in the field of
chamber music and those of Corelli, Bach and Handel, we recognize the
elementary principles of modern form, harmony, thematic development and
instrumentation. It is this phase of the development of chamber music
that prepared the way for Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, the greatest
masters of pure instrumental music.
E. K.
FOOTNOTES:
[59] Distinction between church music and chamber music, as far as can
be ascertained, was first made by Nic. Vicentino in 1555 in a work
entitled _L’antica musica ridotta alla moderna_. The term chamber
music had its origin in the practice of rich citizens and princes who
regularly kept in their service musicians to provide private concerts
in their chambers (_camera_) for the delectation of their friends. The
musicians thus employed were given the title of chamber musicians, or
chamber singers. The official title of chamber musician--_suonatore
di violino da camera_--was probably used for the first time by Carlo
Farina (1627) in the service of the court at Dresden.
[60] It was G. B. Vitali whom Henry Purcell (1658-1695) ‘faithfully
endeavored to imitate’ in his ‘Sonatas of three parts: two violins
and bass: to the Organ or Harpsichord.’ Purcell’s twelve sonatas show
power, originality, and inspiration, and are not lacking in emotional
content of considerable warmth.
[61] Trio sonatas for two oboes and bassoons (1693), Chamber duets
(1711), Trio sonatas for two violins (or two oboes or two flutes) and
bassoon (1732), Sonatas or Trios (1737), four Chamber Duets (1741), two
Chamber Duos, Chamber Duets (1745).
CHAPTER XV
THE FIRST PERIOD OF THE STRING QUARTET
The four-part habit of writing in instrumental
forms--Pioneers of the string quartet proper: Richter,
Boccherini and Haydn; Haydn’s early quartets--The Viennese
era of the string quartet; Haydn’s _Sonnen_ quartets; his
‘Russian’ quartets; his later quartets--W. A. Mozart;
Sammartini’s influence; Mozart’s early (Italian) quartets;
Viennese influences; Mozart’s Viennese quartets--His last
quartets and their harmonic innovations.
The greater part of the vocal music of the fifteenth and early
sixteenth centuries was written in four parts, masses and motets as
well as _chansons_. Only the madrigal was normally in five. After
the middle of the sixteenth century, however, composers inclined to
increase the number of parts, until four-part writing became rare.
During the seventeenth century, while the art of instrumental music
was growing rapidly, composers centred their attention either on groups
of several instruments, which we may call primitive orchestras, or
on one or two solo instruments supported by the figured bass of the
harpsichord. Therefore, about the middle of the eighteenth century,
when sonatas and symphonies took on their modern form, instrumental
compositions were usually for orchestra, or for a trio, or for a solo
instrument with harpsichord accompaniment. But besides these there
were many works of indistinct form and name; and not a few of these
were written in four parts. Hardly before 1750 can such sonatas or
symphonies _a quattro_ be considered string quartets in the present
meaning of the word. They are planned and executed in an orchestral
manner.
I
Franz Xaver Richter (1709-1789), Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809), and
Luigi Boccherini (1743-1804) brought the string quartet into popular
favor. Richter was, next to Johann Stamitz, the most significant of
the composers at one time or another associated with the orchestra at
Mannheim, who may properly be called the founders of the classical
symphony. Six of his string quartets were published in London between
1767 and 1771. These were probably written much earlier. One finds in
them the now clearly defined sonata-form; a careful writing for each
of the four instruments (two violins, viola, and 'cello), which, of
course, marks the disappearance of the figured bass from music of this
kind; finally an intimacy of sentiment rather distinct from the hearty
music of the young Mannheim symphonies.
Luigi Boccherini, for many years supposed to have created the string
quartet out of his head, is now generally recognized as a disciple of
the Mannheim reformers. He was himself a brilliant 'cellist. In 1768
his performances at the _Concerts spirituels_ brought him and his
compositions into fame. He held court positions at Madrid, later was
chamber-composer to Frederick Wilhelm II, of Prussia; and after the
death of this king in 1797 went back again to Spain, where, unhappily,
in spite of the friendly patronage of Lucien Buonaparte, the French
ambassador, he was overtaken by poverty and misery.
As a composer of chamber music he was unusually prolific. He wrote no
less than one hundred and twenty-five string _quintets_, one hundred
and thirteen of which are for two violins, viola, and two 'celli; and
there were at least ninety-one string quartets from his easy pen. The
first six of these were composed about 1761, and were published in
Paris in 1768, while Boccherini was in that city. They appeared as _Sei
Sinfonie_, or _Sei Quartetti_, for two violins, alto, and violoncello,
dedicated to amateurs and connoisseurs of music.
A sympathetic writer on Boccherini’s life and work[62] said of these
first quartets that in them the composer revealed himself entirely.
‘His taste, his style, his easy touch, his genius show themselves
suddenly with a superiority, an understanding of the art, which leave
similar works by his predecessors far behind. He thus becomes creator
of this _genre_, of which he fixes the true character forever. Other
great masters who have come since have doubtless modified and extended
the domain of the Trio, the Quartet, and the Quintet, but following
the road which he had the glory first to trace. When one approaches
the works of his immediate predecessors and of his contemporaries, and
compares them with his, one cannot but admire the complete revolution,
ahead of the time and yet sure, accomplished at the first shot, and
without hesitation, by a young artist of twenty-one years!’
This is extravagant. Boccherini is not now considered the creator of
a new style. Indeed, there is no musician to whom alone the invention
of any musical form may be ascribed. But his writing is clear and
fluent, and intimately adapted to the string instruments for which it
was conceived. These first quartets are said to have been especially
admired by the great violinist Viotti.
It is unhappily true that Boccherini does reveal himself entirely
in the first six of his published works. Subsequent works show little
sign of advance or development. In his work as a whole there is a fatal
sameness. Too much gentle elegance has driven out humor and genuine
vigorous life. For this reason a great part of it has fallen into
oblivion. Yet it does not lack charm, and is, indeed, conspicuous for
excellent treatment of the slender tone-material.
[Illustration]
Pioneers of the String Quartet. From top left to bottom right:
Luigi Boccherini, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn,
Franz Xaver Richter.
Haydn’s string quartets are immensely more vigorous. Three sets of
six were published in Paris between 1764 and 1769.[63] These first
eighteen of his numerous works in this form had been written some ten
years earlier, while Haydn was at the house of Joseph von Fürnberg in
Weinzirl, near Melk, not far from Vienna. The young nobleman was an
enthusiastic amateur of music and was accustomed to invite friends to
his house to practise and play with him all sorts of chamber music. He
suggested to Haydn, who had in some way become known to him, possibly
by some early trios, that he write a string quartet. This Haydn did,
and his music made such a favorable impression that the fame of it
spread rapidly abroad. There followed seventeen more quartets, all
written for the group of musicians whom Fürnberg had gathered round
him. In this group were men who played the horn, the oboe, and the
flute; and some of these first eighteen quartets were originally
composed for strings and wind. The wind players were, however,
unskillful, and Haydn contented himself for the most part in writing
for only the four strings.
It is interesting to note that Haydn wrote these quartets as
_Cassations_, _Divertimenti_, and _Notturni_;[64] a fact which goes
far to show how loose was the terminology of instrumental music even
as late as 1755. Cassation, divertimento, serenade, notturno, all
meant about the same thing: a piece of music in several movements of
light character, usually arranged for a band of both wind and string
instruments. They differed from the sonata and from the growing
symphony in number of movements. There were usually at least five.
These early quartets of Haydn’s were printed in Paris as symphonies,
symphony still being applicable to any piece of music written for more
than three instruments.
It would seem, then, that Haydn wrote his quartets just to suit the
requirements of a happy circumstance; that he had no idea of creating
a new art form; that he applied to music for four instruments the
principles of form with which he was already familiar through the works
of Emanuel Bach, and which, moreover, were becoming more and more
familiar to the world by reason of the popular fame of the Mannheim
symphonies. But by this happy circumstance he came upon the special
branch of music which to the end remained wholly fitting to his genius.
As to the special form of these first quartets there is little to say.
The first twelve, with one exception, have five movements apiece.
Of these, two are usually minuets. The first is usually in the
sonata-form. The fifth quartet has three movements. It was undoubtedly
not only originally conceived as a symphony, but was actually so
played, and may, therefore, be called Haydn’s first symphony. Of the
last six quartets four have four movements; the fourteenth has three
and the sixteenth is the only one of Haydn’s quartets with but two
movements. In this very first series, written for the pleasure of a
music-loving young nobleman, Haydn found himself. They show each after
the other a steady progress in the treatment of instruments, in the
management of form; and, finally, seem to show a decision, henceforth
maintained almost without exception, to limit the number of movements
to four.
All are full of that spirit of joy and healthiness which has ever
been associated with Haydn’s music in general. They introduced a new
spirit into the art of music--the spirit of humor, sunny and naïve.
On account of this they were welcomed in all the countries of Europe,
and spread such general delight that before the middle of the ‘sixties
Haydn was among the best known of all musicians. A Parisian publisher
named Vénier included the first six of Haydn’s quartets in a series of
works _di varii autori_ which were published in Paris about 1764 with
the motto: _Les noms inconnus bons à connaître._ In this series there
were forty-six numbers, of which Haydn’s quartets formed the sixth.
Other composers represented were Jomelli, Stamitz, Christian Bach and
Boccherini.[65] By 1765 editions had appeared in Amsterdam and in
London as well.
II
During the years Haydn lived at Esterhazy he composed between forty
and fifty string quartets. These were published usually in groups
of six, after 1781 by Artaria; and the appearance of a fresh set of
Haydn’s quartets was announced in the papers of Vienna and Berlin, and
was occasion for enthusiasm among the amateurs of most of the great
capitals of Europe. It was the age of the string quartet, a time when
amateurs and dilettanti, men of wealth and influence, often of culture,
met at least once a week to play together. Musicians were everywhere in
demand.
Haydn wrote six quartets (opus 9, Nos. 1-6) in the year 1769, numbers
21-26, inclusive, in Pohl’s index, and six more before 1771, numbers
27-32. In both these series the treatment of the first violin is
conspicuous, and it is noteworthy that during these years he wrote
most of his concertos for the violin. The first and last movements of
the quartet in C major, No. 21 (opus 9, No. 1), seem to be almost solo
music for the first violin, which not only introduces all the principal
themes, but which in many pages adds brilliant ornament. In the first
movement of No. 24 (opus 9, No. 4), in D minor, again one is reminded
of a violin concerto. Likewise in the first movement of No. 22 (opus
9, No. 2), in E-flat major; and before the end of the slow movement in
this quartet, which here, as in most of these two series, is the third
movement, following the minuet, an elaborate cadenza is written out for
the first violin. In the quartets Nos. 27-32 (opus 17, Nos. 1-6), such
a brilliant treatment of the first violin is even more conspicuous. The
other instruments play for the most part the rôle of accompaniment. The
quartets are all in four movements and in the majority, as has been
said, the minuet is the second movement and the slow movement is the
third.
Over all there is the delightful play of Haydn’s humor. Perhaps the
best known and loved of the series is that in G major, No. 31 (opus 17,
No. 5).
The next series of six quartets, Nos. 33-38 (opus 20, Nos. 1-6), were
written about 1774 and were known in Berlin as the _Sonnen_ quartets.
In 1800 they were published by Artaria in Vienna and dedicated by Haydn
to Nicolaus Zmeskall von Domanowecz, one of the earliest admirers of
Beethoven, to whom, by the way, the latter dedicated his own quartet
in F minor, opus 95. The earlier quartets, for all they were generally
hailed with praise and admiration, had not gone wholly scatheless.
There were conservatives, especially in the north of Germany, who
looked askance at the entrance of humor into music, who felt the art
was in danger thereby of degradation, who regarded Haydn as a musical
joke-maker. These quartets, Nos. 33-38, may have been written by
Haydn to prove his command of what was considered the indisputably
serious and dignified art of composition. All are contrapuntal in
style, intricate and serious in manner if not in mood. In the first
movement of the first (opus 20, No. 1), in E-flat major, the style is
compact and full of imitations. The minuet is short; the slow movement,
_affettuoso et sostenuto_, closely and richly woven, distinctly
polyphonic music.
The second of the series in C major (opus 20, No. 2) has for its final
movement a fugue with four subjects, and the last movements of the
fifth and sixth are both fugues, the former on two, the latter on three
subjects. The entire series at once became currently known as the
‘great’ quartets.
In 1781 another series of six (opus 33, Nos. 1-6) was published by
Artaria in Vienna. A female figure on the carefully engraved title-page
gave to the set for some time the name of _Jungfern Quartette_; but
they are now more generally known as the Russian quartets. They were
dedicated to Archduke Paul of Russia, and had been played at the
apartments of the Archduchess during a visit to Vienna. They have also
gone by the name of _Gli Scherzi_, for the reason that in each the
place of the minuet is taken by a scherzo.[66] They bear the numbers
39-44 in Pohl’s index. No. 41 (opus 33, No. 3) is perhaps the best
known; and has often been called the ‘Bird Quartet.’ The first movement
suggests the twitter and song of birds, partly by the nature of the
principal theme, with its four long notes and their graces, and the
descending turning figures which follow them; and partly by the nature
of the accompaniment, which is staccato or half staccato throughout,
now in naïvely repeated thirds shared by second violin and viola,
now in figures that imitate the chirping of the principal theme. The
trio of the second movement suggests birds again. It is a dialogue
between first and second violins, staccato and chirping throughout, in
effective contrast with the main body of the movement, which is legato,
and _sotto voce_ as well. The Adagio is wonderfully calm and hushed.
The last movement, to quote Pohl, brings the cuckoo with fresh life and
all the forest folk answer him. ‘The merry figures fly from voice to
voice, after each other, against each other, in twos and threes, all
with the “springing” bow.’
In the _Musikalisches Kunstmagazin_ for 1782 there is a criticism
of these quartets and of six symphonies which appeared about the
same time, by J. F. Reichardt, part of which may be quoted. ‘Both
these works are full of the most original humor, the liveliest and
pleasantest wit. No composer has so united individuality and variety
with pleasantness and popularity as Haydn; and few of the agreeable
and favorite composers have such a good command of form as Haydn shows
himself for the most part to have. It is especially interesting to
observe with critical eye the progress of Haydn’s work. In his very
first works, which were well known among us some twenty years ago,
there were signs of his peculiar good-natured humor; rather for the
most part youthful spirits and unrestrained jollity, with a superficial
treatment of harmonies. Then little by little his humor grew more
manly, his work more thoughtful, until now the mature originality, the
firm artist, show in all his work.’ Haydn sent a copy of these quartets
to Frederick William II of Prussia, who acknowledged the gift with
pleasure and sent as a token of his esteem for the now universally
admired musician a gold medal and his picture.
These six quartets published in 1781 show Haydn in full command of
the art of the quartet. They must have served in a way as foundations
for all subsequent writing for a similar group of four instruments,
surely so for Mozart and Beethoven. The earlier quartets showed now an
experimental mood, particularly as regards the treatment of the first
violin, now serious endeavor to disprove the critics who cried out that
he had no genuine skill. In these Russian quartets there is perfect
treatment of each of the instruments, an even disposition of the music
between them all. His mastery shows in the movement of the two inner
voices, whereby a constant and at the same time varied sonority is
procured. The balance of form is secure, the sequence and length of the
movements as well. Only in one particular does he seem unwilling to
decide. This is the place of the minuet, which even now he most often
makes second in the group. With all this development of skill he has
lost nothing of his prevailing cheerfulness, nothing of his spontaneous
humor, nothing of his gift of melody. The quartets are perfect as the
expression of his own individuality, till now practically uninfluenced
by other musicians.
Immediately after, Mozart settled in Vienna. In 1785 he published the
famous six quartets written as proof of his admiration for Haydn, his
friend even more than his master. Haydn’s excellent opinion, indeed
his unqualified admiration, of Mozart is well known. The two men acted
favorably upon each other and the work of the older man was hardly
less influenced by that of the younger than that of the younger by the
older. However, the individuality of both was strong. To compare their
compositions is always to find in what ways they are dissimilar rather
than in what ways they copied each other. Haydn never wrote with the
inexplicable grace of Mozart; nor did Mozart put into his music the
wholly naïve and spontaneous gaiety of Haydn. Mozart gained from Haydn
in conciseness of form, Haydn from Mozart in refinement of style.
Such a gain shows in the six quartets (opus 50, Nos. 1-6) published
in 1787 and dedicated by Haydn to the king of Prussia. These are in
Pohl’s index, Nos. 45 to 50. The first movements are all distinctly
Haydn in treatment, though a touch of seriousness in No. 48 (opus 50,
No. 4) suggests Mozart. The second movements are all slow; and in all
six quartets the minuet has come back to its regular place as third
in the group. The last movement of No. 48 is in the form of a fugue.
The last movements of Nos. 45, 46, 47, and 49 (opus 50, Nos. 1, 2, 3,
5), however, are in Haydn’s inimitable manner. In the last movement of
No. 46 (opus 50, No. 2) there is a suggestion of a theme from Mozart’s
‘Magic Flute.’ No. 50 (opus 50, No. 6) has the nickname ‘Frog Quartet.’
In 1789 and in 1790, respectively, two more sets appeared, both
dedicated to Monsieur Jean Tost. These are opus 54, Nos. 1-3, and opus
55, Nos. 1-3; and opus 64, Nos. 1-6. In Pohl’s index they are Nos.
51-62, inclusive. Johann Tost was a rich merchant in Vienna who was
not only a patron of music but an excellent performer on the violin
himself, and later closely associated with Spohr. As if wishing to give
Tost full chance in these quartets to display his skill on the first
violin, Haydn has consistently given to that instrument an unusually
conspicuous part. He not only writes for it in the highest registers,
as, for instance, in the Trio of opus 55, No. 1; but frequently allots
to the other instruments the rôle of simplest accompaniment, as in the
first movement of opus 54, No. 2. The favorite of the series is perhaps
that in D major, opus 64, No. 5, the last movement of which is in
perpetual, rapid motion, the first violin being the most active.
Prince Esterhazy, Haydn’s patron, died in September, 1790. Shortly
after, Haydn went upon his first visit to London. His life was full
of occupation with the last symphonies, written for Salomon, the
London manager, and with his two great oratorios, ‘The Creation’ and
the ‘Seasons.’ Only a few more quartets are to be mentioned. Opus 71
and opus 73 both consist of three quartets. Opus 76 contains six, and
the whole set was dedicated to Count Erdödy. In this series two are
conspicuous. The first movement of that in D minor, opus 76, No. 2,
is built on a simple, impressive motive of four notes. The adagio of
opus 76, No. 3, is a set of variations on the hymn, _Gott erhalte Franz
der Kaiser_, which Haydn had composed in January, 1797, and which has
since become, as Haydn hoped it would, the national hymn of Austria.
The variations are justly admired; and the quartet has been called on
account of them the ‘Kaiser quartet.’ Finally there are two quartets,
published as opus 77 and dedicated to Prince Lobkowitz. The minuet and
andante of the second are given special mention by Sauzay.[67] The last
quartet of all, published posthumously as opus 103, is unfinished.
It consists of but two movements, the second of which is a minuet.
Evidently without hope of completing it, Haydn wrote at the end of the
minuet a few bars of melody from a vocal quartet, composed a few years
before, called _Der Greis_. The words are: _Hin ist alle meine Kraft,
Alt und schwach bin ich._ The same melody and words he had printed on
a visiting card, to be given to those who came to enquire after his
failing health.
There are in all eighty-three quartets. Instrumental music composed
to accompany the recitation in church of the seven last words of
Christ are no longer reckoned among the quartets. To Haydn more than
to any other single man belongs the honor of having established the
string quartet as a work of art and as the vehicle for noble musical
feeling. Over all the eighty-three sparkles the sun of his peculiar
and inimitable humor; yet none the less they show from start to finish
an ever-growing skill in handling the slender materials of sound,
an appreciation of the separate instruments, a knowledge of how to
dispose the parts so as to preserve a rich and varied sonority.
They recommended themselves at once to the affection as well as the
admiration of amateurs and musicians alike, and indubitably paved
the way for the quartets of Mozart and Beethoven. Through Haydn the
delicate beauty of such a combination of instruments was first made
clear to the world, and with it no little of its power to express the
finest ideals which have inspired musicians.
III
Mozart and Haydn are in no regard more different than in their
approaches to mastery of their art. Haydn received almost no
training. He developed his powers unaided and without direction. The
circumstances of his life at Esterhazy cut him off from general musical
intercourse and he was, as he himself said, practically forced to be
original. The string quartet offered him one of the happiest means of
self-expression; and to that end in general he used it, putting his
kindly humor and fun freely into music.
Mozart, on the other hand, was carefully guided, even from infancy, in
the way which custom has approved of as the proper way for a musician
to travel. Surely before he was ten years old he was no mean master
of the science of harmony and counterpoint, thanks to the strict
attentions of his father; and he was hardly out of his mother’s
arms before he was carried about Europe, to display his marvellous
genius before crowned heads of all nations, and, what is even more
significant, before the greatest musicians of his age.
One by one the influences of the men with whom he came in contact make
their appearance in his youthful music. In London there was Christian
Bach, in Paris, Jean Schobert, in Vienna, old Wagenseil; and at the
time he wrote his first string quartet--in March, 1770--he was almost
completely under the influence of Giovanni Battista Sammartini,
organist at Milan, once teacher of Gluck, and always one of the most
gifted of Italian musicians.
Haydn had no appreciation of Sammartini. He seems likewise to have
looked upon Boccherini with a cold regard. But in Italy, where Mozart
stayed from December, 1769, to March, 1771, these were both names to
conjure with; and the music of both was likely to be heard every day.
Sammartini had composed a series of _concertinos a quattro istromenti
soli_ in 1766 and 1767; and, though Mozart was surely acquainted with
the quartets of Michael Haydn, Stamitz, and Gossec, it is after those
of Sammartini that he modelled his own first quartet. Two external
features point to this: the fact that the first quartet has but three
movements,[68] which was the number customary among the Italians,
especially with Sammartini; and the treatment of the second violin,
which plays quite as great a part in the quartet as the first violin.
In addition to this there is a certain melodic elegance which was not
characteristic of German music at that time, and which seems very
closely akin to the charming nature of the works of Sammartini. The
three movements are in the same key, a fact which we may attribute to
the influence of a set of quartets by Florian Gassmann.[69]
Mozart’s next ventures with this form are the three _divertimenti_
written at Salzburg early in 1772 (K. 136, 137, 138). In these there
are traces of the influence of Michael Haydn at work on the Italian
style of which Mozart had become master. The first is distinctly in
the style of Haydn. The second is again predominantly Italian, notably
in the equal importance given to the two violins, as in the quartets
of Sammartini. The third, the most effective of the three, seems
to represent a good combination of the two other styles. The final
rondo is especially charming and brilliant. These three quartets were
probably of a set of six. The remaining three have disappeared. In
Köchel’s Index they are numbers 211, 212, and 213, in the appendix.
In the fall of the same year Mozart was again in Italy, and to this
period in his life belong six quartets (K. 155-160, inclusive). The
first seems to have been written, according to a letter from Leopold
Mozart, to pass away a weary time at an inn in Botzen. The very first
quartet of all had been written at Lodi, with much the same purpose,
two years before. This quartet in D major is, on the whole, inferior to
the five others which follow in the same series and which were probably
written within the next few months at Milan. The quartet in G major, K.
156, was probably written in November or December, 1772. It is strongly
Italian in character. Notice in the first movement a multiplicity of
themes or subjects, instead of the development of one or two, which was
the German manner. Notice, also, that among the thematic subjects the
second has the greatest importance; not, as in German quartets of this
time, the first. The second movement, an _adagio_ in E minor, has a
serious and sad beauty.
The two quartets which follow in the series (K. 157, 158) are
masterpieces in pure Italian style. The slow movements of both, like
the slow movement in the preceding quartet, are worthy of the fully
mature Mozart. An enthusiasm for, or even an appreciation of, this
style which lends itself so admirably to the string quartet is now
unhappily rare. These early quartets of Mozart are passed by too often
with little mention, and that in apologetic vein. We may quote a
passage from the ‘Life of Mozart,’ previously referred to. ‘This (K.
157), we say, is the purest, the most perfect, of the series; also
the most Italian, that which is brilliant with a certain intoxication
of light and poetry. Of the influence of Haydn there is but a trace
here and there in the scoring. The coda, with new material, at the
end of the andante may likewise be regarded as an echo of the recent
Salzburg style. But for the rest, for the invention of the ideas and
the treatment of them, there is not a measure in this quartet which
does not come straight from the spirit of Italy (_génie italien_),
such as we see transformed in the quartets of a Tartini, and yet
again in the lighter and easier works of a Sacchini or a Sammartini.
Numerous little, short, melodious subjects, the second of which is
always the most developed, an extreme care in the melodic design of
the ritornelles, a free counterpoint rarely studied (_peu poussé_),
consisting especially of rapid imitations of one voice in another; and
all this marvellously young, and at the same time so full of emotion
that we seem to hear the echo of a whole century of noble traditions.
* * * Incomparable blending of gaiety and tears, a poem in music, much
less vast and deep, indeed, than the great quartets of the last period
in Vienna, but perhaps more perfectly revealing the very essence of
the genius of Mozart.’ And of the quartet in F major (K. 158): ‘This
quartet is distinguished from the preceding one by something in the
rhythm, more curt and more marked, which makes us see even more clearly
to what an extent Mozart underwent the influence, not only of Italian
music of his own time, but of older music belonging to the venerable
school issued from Coulli. * * * From the point of view of workmanship,
the later quartets of Mozart will surpass immeasurably those of this
period; but, let it be said once more, we shall never again find the
youthful, ardent, lovely flame, the inspiration purely Latin but none
the less impassioned, of works like the quartet in C and in F of this
period. Let no one be astonished at the warmth of our praise of these
works, the beauty of which no one hitherto seems to have taken the
pains to appreciate. Soon enough, alas! we shall have to temper our
enthusiasm in the study of Mozart’s work, and regret bitterly that
the obligation to follow the “galant” style of the time led the young
master to forget his great sources of inspiration in years passed.’
The remaining two quartets in the series (K. 159, 160) were written,
one in Milan in February, 1773, the other probably begun in Milan about
this time but finished a few months later in Salzburg.
On the first of July, 1773, Mozart arrived in Vienna. He remained
there three months, and during this time wrote six quartets (K.
168-173, inclusive), the first four probably in August, the last two
in September. The fact of his writing six quartets in such haste might
suggest that he had received a commission from some nobleman or rich
amateur. There is no document, however, mentioning such a circumstance;
and it may well be that Mozart composed them, as he had composed
quartets in Italy, at once to occupy spare moments and to satisfy that
craving for expression which seems ever to have seized him when he came
in contact with any active and special musical surroundings. Vienna
was full of quartets and of amateurs and artists who played them often
together. Haydn was brilliantly famous, his quartets were constantly
performed. Dr. Burney heard some of them exquisitely played at the
house of the English emissary, Lord Stormont, in this very September.
Michael Kelly, in his ‘Memoirs,’ mentions an evening when, to fill up
an hour or two, a band of musicians played quartets; and among these
musicians Mozart himself was one. Therefore, being so surrounded by
quartets, Mozart probably could not, so to speak, keep his hands off
the form.
Naturally enough, he wrote as nearly as he could in the Viennese style
which now, just on the eve of the _style galant_, still breathed of
Emanuel Bach and the seriousness of musical learning. Haydn’s _Sonnen
Quartette_, those in which he replied to the charges of hostile critics
by an exhibition of excellent contrapuntal skill, were probably already
composed, though they were not printed until the following year.
Very likely Mozart had become familiar with some if not all of them.
Gassmann, too, had composed a series of quartets in 1772, each of which
had four movements, two of them fugues. But probably the fugues which
Mozart wrote as finales to the first and sixth of these quartets owe
their place to the influence of Haydn.
Indeed, the entire series shows Mozart in a process of assimilating
a serious style of music to which he had hitherto, through force of
circumstances, remained indifferent. Without question the recent
quartets of Haydn stirred in him a fever of emulation. That the six
quartets were written in the space of a month, or very little more,
is evidence of his impatience to make Haydn’s style his own. Other
influences than Haydn’s are present, but less obvious; such as the
influence of Gluck, at least in spirit, in one or two of the slow
movements. Consequently the series as a whole is not satisfying. It
does not reveal Mozart at ease. He has abandoned for the moment the
pure grace of the Italian style, of which he was consummate master,
in an effort, too sudden and hasty for success, to make his music all
German. He is consistently neither one thing nor the other, neither
graceful nor expressive. The last, in D minor, is naturally the best.
The first movement and the final fugue are proof that he had already
accomplished what he set out to do.
These first Viennese quartets stand alone between Mozart’s Italian
quartets and the great quartets written ten years and more later,
which were dedicated to Joseph Haydn, as the tribute of a son to a
father. Here Mozart has fully expressed his genius. There are six in
all, written at various times; the first three between December, 1782,
and the summer of 1783, the last three in the winter of 1784-85. Haydn
heard them before they were published, and praised them highly. It was
perhaps this warm appreciation which led Mozart to dedicate the series
to his old friend and teacher when he published it in the autumn of
1785. The dedication is hearty, long, and naïve. In Köchel’s Index the
quartets are listed as Nos. 387, 421, 428, 458, 464, and 465.
IV
These quartets are much more broadly planned than earlier works by
Mozart in the same form. Not only are the separate movements generally
longer; the middle section of the first movements is intricate and
extended, and the minuets are not less seriously treated than the other
movements. The treatment of the separate instrumental parts is, of
course, distinguished and fine.
It would be difficult to characterize each one distinctly. The first,
in G major (K. 387), is marked by a certain decisive clearness
throughout. The two themes of the first movement are especially clearly
differentiated. The development section is long and rather severe. It
will be noticed that the minuet takes the second place in the cycle,
as in many of Haydn’s quartets. The final movement is in fugal style
and not unrelated in spirit to the final movement of the great Jupiter
symphony.
The second quartet, in D minor (K. 421), takes both from its tonality
and from the nature of its themes a thin veil of melancholy. The
opening theme is poignantly expressive, but the fire of it is often
covered. The characteristic width of its intervals is used throughout
the entire movement, with a strange effect of yearning, now resigned,
now passionately outspoken. The andante, in F major, is tinged with the
same melancholy. The trio of the minuet is one of the few places where
Mozart made use of pizzicato effects. The last movement is a series
of variations on a melancholy little theme cast in the rhythm of the
_Siciliana_, one of the Italian rhythms already made use of by Handel
and Gluck, among others.
The third quartet, in E-flat major (K. 428), is on the whole reserved
and classical in spirit. The opening theme, given in unison, has a
gentle dignity which marks the whole first movement. The measures
following the second theme are especially smooth and lovely in their
slowly falling harmonies. In the second movement, _andante con moto_,
there is a constant shifting of harmonies, and a somewhat restless
interchange of parts among the instruments. The trio of the minuet, in
C minor, is subtly woven over a drone bass. The final movement is a
lively rondo.
The fourth, in B-flat major (K. 458), is, in the first movement, very
like Haydn, light-hearted and wholly gay. The following minuet, adagio,
and rondo need hardly be specially mentioned. The A major quartet (K.
464), the next in the series, is in a similar vein. The slow movement,
again the third in the cycle, is in the form of variations; and the
last is full of imitations and other contrapuntal devices.
The last of these quartets, in C major (K. 465), is the most profound
and the most impassioned. The boldness of Mozart’s imagination in
harmonies is in most of his work likely to fail to impress the modern
ear. One hears but half-consciously the subtlety of his modulations.
But here and there in his work the daring of the innovator still has
power to claim our attention; as in the andante of the last pianoforte
sonata in F major (K. 533), and still more in the introduction of
this quartet. The sharp harmonies of the first few measures roused
hostility; and the discussion as to their grammatical propriety was
continued for more than half a century after Mozart’s death.
The whole quartet is full of an intensity of feeling. The andante
has that quality of heart-melting tenderness which sprang only from
Mozart’s genius. One cannot but place the four movements with the three
great symphonies, as something not only immortal, but precious and
inimitable in the world’s treasure of instrumental music.
This series of six quartets did not make a decidedly favorable
impression upon the general public. The next quartet from his pen was
in a much more conventional manner, as if Mozart had tried to suppress
the genius in him which prompted him ever to new discoveries in his
art. The quartet in D major (K. 499) was composed on the 19th of
August, 1786. It is beautifully worked in detail, light in character.
No special reason is known why he should have written and published a
single quartet like this; and it has been thought that he hoped by it
to rouse the public to enthusiasm for his instrumental works.
There remain three more quartets to mention. These were written for
Frederick William II of Prussia, at whose court Mozart had been a
frequent attendant during the early spring of 1789. The first quartet
was completed in Vienna, in June, 1789. The other two were written
about a year later. In Köchel’s index the three are Nos. 575, in D
major, 589, in B-flat major, and 590, in F major.
All are very plainly written with a king in mind who played the
violoncello. In most of the movements the 'cello is given a very
prominent part, frequently playing in unusually high registers as in
the announcement of the second theme in the first movement of the first
of these quartets; in the trio and the finale as well. In many places
the viola plays the bass part, leaving the 'cellist free to be soloist,
as in the opening measures of the _Larghetto_ in the second sonata.
Thus these quartets, fine and free in style as they are, are not the
fullest expression of Mozart’s genius, as the series of six dedicated
to Haydn may be taken to be.
There are, as we have said, twenty-three quartets in all. The majority
of the early ones were written under the influence of a certain mode
or style, as experiments or as test pieces; and the last four were
written with the purpose of pleasing the public or of suiting the
special abilities of a king of Prussia. Only the six quartets dedicated
to Haydn may be taken as what Mozart felt to be his best effort in
the form, the expression, perfect as far as he could make it, of his
highest ideals. As such they are almost unique in his music.
With the quartets may be mentioned the four great quintets for strings,
written, two in the spring of 1787, one in December, 1790, and one
in April, 1791. Of the combination of five string parts Haydn made
little use. Boccherini, however, had written at least one hundred
and twenty-five quintets. He was himself a 'cellist and, as might be
expected, the added instrument in his quintets was a 'cello.
Mozart added another viola to the group. Though this added no new
strand of color to the whole, it rather complicated the problems
offered by the quartet. As Otto Jahn has carefully explained, with the
volume of sound thus thickened, there came a need for even more active
movement of the separate parts. Since the additional part was among the
middle voices, the outer voices must be spread as far apart as possible
so as to allow sufficient freedom of movement to the inner. The extra
viola might be treated as a bass part to the first and second violins,
or as the upper part above the other viola and the 'cello. Mozart made
use of this possibility of contrast nowhere more clearly than in the
opening pages of the quintet in G minor.
The four quintets are respectively in C major (K. 515), G minor (K.
516), D major (K. 593), and E-flat major (K. 614). Of these that in
G minor is clearly the most remarkable; and it is indeed conspicuous
above almost all his instrumental music, for the passionate intensity
of the moods which it voices. Needless to say it still holds its place
as one of the supreme master-works in chamber music. More than a
similarity of key unites it to the symphony in G minor. The themes in
both works seem much alike, and both are equally broad in form and full
of harmonic color.
FOOTNOTES:
[62] L. Piquot: _Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi
Boccherini_; Paris, 1851.
[63] These are Nos. 1-18, inclusive, in Pohl’s index. The opus numbers
by which Haydn’s quartets are usually designated are taken from the
thematic index prefixed to the complete Trautwein Edition of 1844.
These first quartets are: Opus 1, Nos. 1-6; opus 2, Nos. 1-6; and opus
3, Nos. 1-6.
[64] C. F. Pohl: ‘Joseph Haydn,’ Vol. I, p. 331.
[65] Eugène Sauzay: _Étude sur le quatuor_. Paris, 1861.
[66] _Cf._ C. F. Pohl: _op. cit._, Vol. II, p. 293.
[67] _Étude sur le quatuor._
[68] Adagio, allegro, minuetto. The finale rondo was added some years
later. _Cf._ ‘W. A. Mozart,’ by de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix: Paris,
1912.
[69] _Cf._ Wyzewa and Saint-Foix: _op cit._ Gassmann was born in
Bohemia in 1723 and died in Vienna in 1774. A great many of his works
in manuscript are in the libraries at Milan. He had been appointed to
a place in Vienna in 1762, and was hardly likely, therefore, to be in
Milan when Mozart was; but he had lived at one time in Milan and came
back there occasionally from Vienna to superintend performances of his
operas.
CHAPTER XVI
THE STRING QUARTET: BEETHOVEN
Beethoven’s approach to the string quartet; incentives; the
six quartets opus 18--The Rasumowsky quartets; _opera_ 74
and 95--The great development period; the later quartets,
op. 127 _et seq._: The E-flat major (op. 127)--The A minor
(op. 132); the B-flat major (op. 130); the C-sharp minor
(op. 131); the F major (op. 135).
I
Beethoven’s six quartets, opus 18, were first published in 1800. He
had already experimented in other forms of chamber music, not only
for strings alone. The sextet for two clarinets, two bassoons, and
two horns; the quintet, opus 16, for piano, oboe, clarinet, horn, and
bassoon; the string quintet, opus 4; three trios for violin, viola, and
violoncello; the trio, opus 11, for piano, clarinet, and violoncello;
and sonatas for violin and piano, and violoncello and piano, had
already been written. The pianoforte sonatas up to that in B-flat, opus
22, and the first symphony had likewise been completed. Beethoven thus
turned to the composition of string quartets after an experience with
almost all other branches of music had made him master of the art of
composition.
Apart from any inner development in the man which waited thus long
before attempting expression in that form in which the very last and in
some ways the most remarkable of his thoughts were to find utterance,
one or two external circumstances probably turned his attention to
the string quartet. One was undoubtedly the morning musicales at the
house of his friend and patron, Prince Lichnowsky, where such music
was especially in demand, and where Beethoven must constantly have
heard the quartets of Haydn and Mozart.[70] Another was his personal
acquaintance with Emanuel Aloys Förster,[71] a composer of quartets for
whom Beethoven had a high regard.
These first quartets appeared in two groups of three. They are not
arranged in the order of their composition. For example, that in D
major, the third in the first set, is probably the oldest of the six.
But the series presents little evidence of development within its
limits, and there is hardly reason to attach serious importance to
the order in which the various quartets were created. Besides, with
the exception of the quartet in C minor, No. 4, the entire series is
expressive of much the same mood and intention. If one quartet is at
all distinguished from the others, it is only by a few minor details,
usually of biographical or otherwise extrinsic significance. The
technique is that of Haydn and Mozart, lacking, perhaps, the assured
grace of the earlier masters; the character, one of cheerfulness, with
only here and there a flash of the emotional imperiousness with which
Beethoven took hold of music.
No. 1, in F major, is known as the ‘Amenda’ quartet. Beethoven had
sent an earlier form of it (completed in 1799) to his friend Karl
Amenda. A year later he wrote Amenda, saying that he had greatly
altered it, knowing now for the first time how truly to write a
quartet. The later arrangement differs from the original in details of
workmanship, not in spirit. There are four movements, in conventional
form and sequence: an _allegro con brio_, 3:4; an _adagio affettuoso
ed appassionato_, in D minor; a scherzo and a final rondo. Amenda had
a story to tell of the _adagio_, to the effect that when Beethoven had
completed the quartet he played this movement to a friend and asked him
afterward of what it made him think. It seemed to the friend to have
represented the parting of two lovers. Beethoven is reported then to
have said that in composing it he had had in mind the scene in the tomb
from ‘Romeo and Juliet.’
The second quartet of the series, in G major, is known as the
_Komplimentier_ quartet, because of the graceful character of the
opening theme, and, indeed, of the whole first movement. The third,
in D major, is not less cheerful. The final movement is a virtuoso
piece for all the instruments. The triplet rhythm is akin to the
last movement of the Kreutzer sonata, and to that of the sonata for
pianoforte, opus 31, No. 3; both of which originated not later than
in 1801. Similarly the whole of the fifth quartet--in A major--is
in brilliant concert style. There is a minuet instead of a scherzo,
standing as second, not third movement, as was frequently the case
in the works of Haydn and Mozart, and, indeed, in later works of
Beethoven. The third movement is an andante and five variations in
D major. Finally the first movement of the sixth and last of the
series--in B-flat major--cannot but suggest a comparison with the first
movement of the pianoforte sonata, opus 22, in the same key, which
originated about the same time. Both are very frankly virtuoso music.
The last movement of the quartet is preceded by a short adagio, to
which Beethoven gave the title, _La malinconia_. This whispers once
again for a moment not long before the end of the lively finale in
waltz rhythm.
The fourth quartet of the series is alone in a minor key. It is of
more serious nature than those among which it was placed, and may be
related in spirit, at least, to the many works in the same key (C
minor) which seem like successive steps in a special development. Paul
Bekker suggests in his ‘Beethoven’[72] that we may consider a C minor
problem in Beethoven’s work; and points to sonatas, opus 10 and 13,
the pianoforte trio, opus 1, the string trio, opus 9, the pianoforte
concerto, opus 37, the duet for piano and violin, opus 30, and finally
the fifth symphony and the overture to _Coriolanus_, all of which
are in C minor, and all of which follow closely one after the other.
Whether or not the quartet in question may be thus allied with other
works, there is evidence that it is closely connected with an early
duet for viola and violoncello (with two obbligato _Augengläser_)
which originated in 1795 or 1796. Riemann[73] is of the opinion that
both the duet and the quartet are rearrangements of some still earlier
work. The first movement is weakened by the similarity of the first and
second themes. The second is a delightful _Andante scherzoso, quasi
allegretto_, in C major, 3:8. The third movement is a little minuet and
the last a rondo.
II
The year after the publication of these first quartets appeared the
quintet for strings, in C major, opus 29. This is the only original
string quintet of Beethoven’s, except the fugue written for a similar
group of instruments in 1817, probably as a study. The quintet, opus 4,
is a rearrangement of the octet for wind instruments, written in 1792,
before coming to Vienna. The quintet, opus 104, is an arrangement of
the trio in C minor, opus 1, which Beethoven made in 1817, following an
anonymous request, and which he regarded humorously.
In 1808 were printed the three great quartets opus 59, dedicated
to Count (later Prince) Rasumowsky. Beethoven’s earlier patron,
Prince Lichnowsky, had left Vienna, and the famous quartet under the
leadership of Schuppanzigh, which had played such a part in his Friday
morning musicales, was now engaged by Rasumowsky, Russian Ambassador to
the court at Vienna. Rasumowsky commissioned Beethoven to write three
quartets in which there was to be some use of Russian melodies.
Between the quartets, opus 18, and these so-called Russian quartets,
Beethoven had written, among other things, a number of his great
pianoforte sonatas, including opus 27, opus 31, opus 53, and most of
opus 57, the Kreutzer sonata for violin and piano, the second and third
symphonies, and _Fidelio_. These are the great works of the second
period of his creative activity; and the qualities which are essential
in them are, as it were, condensed, refined and assembled in the three
quartets, opus 59. They may be taken as the abstract of his genius at
that time.
Nothing gives more striking evidence of the phenomenal power of
self-development within Beethoven than a comparison of opus 18 with
opus 59, or, again, of the latter with the five last quartets. Of
course, to compare the early with the late sonatas, or the first two
symphonies with the ninth, will astonish in a like measure. But there
are intermediate sonatas and symphonies by which many steps between
the extremes can be clearly traced. The quartets stand like isolated
tablets of stone upon which, at three distinct epochs in his life,
Beethoven engraved the sum total of his musicianship. The quartets opus
74 and opus 95 hardly serve to unite the Russian quartets with opus 127.
The Russian quartets are regular in structure, but they are as broad
as symphonies by comparison with opus 18. The style is bold, though
the details are carefully finished, and the instruments are treated
polyphonically, each being as prominent and as important as the others.
This in particular marks an advance over the earlier works in the same
form. There is in them, moreover, an emotional vigor, which, expressed
in broad sweeps and striking, often strident, harmonies, worked in the
opinion of many contemporaries a barbarous distortion of the hitherto
essentially delicate form. To interpret them is but to repeat what
has been already made familiar by the sonatas of the period, by the
_Eroica_, and by _Fidelio_. It is the same Beethoven who speaks here
with no less vigor, though with necessarily finer point.
The first quartet begins at once with a melody for violoncello,
unusually long and broad even for Beethoven. It has in itself no
Russian quality; but the monotonous accompaniment of chords, repeated
with but the harmonic change from tonic to dominant for eighteen
measures, suggests a primitive sort of art, a strumming such as may
well be practised by Russian peasants in their singing. The harsh
dissonances created by the long F’s in the melody, and a little later
by the whole-note D, against dominant seventh harmony will not pass
unnoticed. Such clashes between melody and harmony can be found in
other works of about the same period; for example, at the return of
the first theme in the third section of the first movement of the
_Eroica_; and the much-discussed, prolonged D-flat of the oboe against
the entrance of the A-flat melody in the second movement of the fifth
symphony. Elsewhere in this quartet the same procedure makes a striking
effect; namely, in the approach to the second theme, where, however,
the long G’s--sharply accented--are in the nature of a pedal point. The
second theme--in C major--is cognate with the first. The interweaving
of the instruments in its statement is noteworthy. The first phrase
is anticipated by the first violin, and then sung out broadly by the
viola; from which the first violin immediately takes away the second
phrase. The second violin and 'cello, and even the viola, after its
first phrase, interchange with each other the broad C’s which lie
at the foundation of the whole. The line of the melody itself and
the suave flow of polyphony will suggest certain passages in Richard
Wagner’s _Die Meistersinger_.
The second movement (_allegretto vivace e sempre scherzando_, B-flat
major, 3:8) has in rhythm at least a strong Russian flavor. Here again
there are repeated chords in the accompaniment even more barbaric in
effect than those in the first movement. The 'cello alone gives in
the opening measures the rhythmical key to the whole; and in the next
measures the solo violin (2d) announces, staccato and pianissimo, the
chief melodic motive. The effect of the whole movement is at once
fantastical and witty. The following Adagio in F minor, in essence
and in adornment one of the full expressions of a side of Beethoven’s
genius, dies away in a long cadenza for the first violin which,
without ending, merges into a long trill. Softly under this trill the
'cello announces the Russian melody upon which the following wholly
good-humored and almost boisterous _finale_ is built.
The second quartet of the series is less forceful, and far more
sensitive and complicated. The key is E minor. Two incisive, staccato
chords, tonic and dominant, open the movement. One remembers the
opening of the _Eroica_. There follows a full measure of silence and
then the melodic kernel of the first movement, pianissimo in unison--a
rising figure upon the tonic triad (which will again recall for an
instant the _Eroica_) and a hushed falling back upon the dominant
seventh. Again the full measure of silence, and again the rising and
falling, questioning, motive, this time in F major. After an agitated
transitional passage, the first violin gives out the second theme, a
singing melody in G major. But the threefold first theme--the incisive
chords, the measure of silence, and the questioning figure--carry
the burden of the work, one of mystery to which the second theme is
evidently stranger. At the beginning of the middle section, and again
at the beginning of the long coda, the chords and the breathless
silences assume a threatening character, now hushed, then suddenly
angry, to which the figure reluctantly responds with its unanswered
question.
The second movement (Adagio, E major) must, in Beethoven’s own words,
be played with much feeling. The chief melody is like a chorale. It
is played first by the first violin, the other instruments adding a
note-for-note, polyphonic accompaniment. It is then repeated by second
violin and viola, in unison, while the first violin adds above it a
serious, gently melodious counterpoint. Other more vigorous episodes
appear later, but the spirit of the movement is swayed by the sad and
prayerful opening theme.
In the trio of the following scherzo another Russian theme is used as
the subject of a fugue. The last movement is unrestrainedly joyful and
vigorous, beginning oddly in C major, but turning presently to the
tonic key (E minor), from which the rondo unfolds in more and more
brilliant power.
The last of this series of quartets--in C major--is for the most
part wholly outspoken. There is little obscurity in meaning, none in
form. At the basis of the slow introduction lies a series of falling
half-tones, given to the 'cello. The first allegro is almost martial in
character. The second movement--_andante con moto quasi allegretto_, in
A minor--is in the nature of a _Romanza_; and the frequent _pizzicato_
of the 'cello suggests the lutenist of days long gone by. There follows
a Minuet instead of a Scherzo; and at the end there is a vigorous fugue.
Between these three quartets and the final series beginning with opus
127, stand two isolated quartets: opus 74, in E-flat major, and opus
95, in F minor. Neither indicates a considerable change in Beethoven’s
method, or in his attitude towards his art. The former, composed
in 1809 and dedicated to Prince Lobkowitz, is in the spirit of the
last of the Rasumowsky quartets; that is, outspoken, vigorous, and
clear. The relatively long, slow introduction alone hints at a tragic
seriousness; but it serves rather to show from what the composer had
freed himself, than to expose the riddle of the piece. The first theme
of the first movement is stalwart and well-built; the second, of rather
conventional character, chiefly made up of whirring scale groups. In
the development section there are many measures of arpeggio figures, at
first _pizzicato_, later growing into _arco_; by reason of which the
quartet has been given the name of _Harfenquartett_ (Harp-quartet). In
connection with this passage Dr. Riemann has remarked that all such
experiments in sound effects [such as pizzicato, harmonics and playing
on special strings] serve only to reveal the actual lack of different
tone-colors in the quartet; and, indeed, distract the attention from
the ‘drawing’ [i.e., the pure lines of the various parts] which is
peculiarly the affair of the quartet.
The second movement is an adagio in rondo form; the third a scherzo,
with an astonishing trio in 6/8 time; and the last consists of a theme,
oddly syncopated so that the groundwork of the harmonic progressions
may be traced only on the unaccented beats of the measures, together
with five variations.
The quartet in F minor, opus 95, was completed in October, 1810.
In the autograph copy Beethoven gave the work the title _Quartett
serioso_, omitted in the engraved editions. Theresa Malfatti is
supposed to have refused Beethoven’s offer of marriage in April of
this year. He confided himself rather freely in his friend Zmeskall
von Domanowecz, during these months. The fact that the quartet, opus
95, was held to be _serioso_ by Beethoven, and furthermore that he
dedicated it to Zmeskall, are at least some sort of evidence that
the work sprang from his recent disappointment in love. However, the
first movement is rather spiteful than mournful. It is remarkable for
conciseness. It is, indeed, only one hundred and fifty measures long,
and there are no repetitions. The dominant motive is announced at once
by all four instruments in unison, and is repeated again and again
throughout the movement, like an irritating thought that will not be
banished. There is a second theme, in D-flat major, which undergoes
little development.
The second movement, an _allegretto_ in D major, 2/4, is highly
developed and unusual. It opens with a four-measure phrase of detached,
descending notes, for 'cello alone, which may be taken as a motto for
the movement. This is followed by a strange yet lovely melody for first
violin which is extended by a long-delayed cadence. After this the
viola announces a new theme, suggestive of the opening motive, which is
taken up by the other instruments one after the other and woven into a
complete little fugue, with a _stretto_. Once again, then, the 'cello
gives out the lovely, and somewhat mysterious, opening phrase, this
time thrice repeated on descending steps of the scale, and punctuated
by mournful harmonies of the other instruments. The viola announces the
fugue theme again, in F minor; and the fugue is resumed with elaborate
counterpoint. And at the end of this, again the 'cello motive, once
more in the tonic key, and the strange melody sung early by the first
violin.
The movement is not completed, but goes without pause into the next,
a strangely built scherzo, _allegro assai vivace, ma serioso_. The
_vivace_ evidently applies to the main body of the movement, which
is in a constantly active, dotted rhythm. The _serioso_ is explained
by the part of the movement in G-flat major, which one may regard as
the trio. This is merely a chorale melody, first given by the second
violin. The lower instruments follow the melody with note-for-note
harmonies; the first violin adds to each note of the melody an
unvarying formula of ornamentation. All this is done first in the key
of G-flat major, then in D major. The opening section is then repeated,
and after it comes the chorale melody, a little differently scored; and
a coda, _piu allegro_, brings the movement to an end.
The last movement is preceded by a few introductory measures, which are
in character very like the _Lebewohl_ motive in the sonata, opus 81.
And the progression from the introduction into the _allegro agitato_
is not unlike the beginning of the last movement of the same sonata.
The allegro itself is most obviously in hunting-song style, suggesting
in the first melody Mendelssohn, in parts of the accompaniment the
horns at the beginning of the second act of _Tristan und Isolda_. The
second theme is a horn-call. Just before the end the galloping huntsmen
pass far off into the distance, their horns sound fainter and fainter,
finally cease. Then there is a mad coda, in _alla breve_ time.
III
There follows between this quartet and the quartet, opus 127, a
period of fourteen years, in which time Beethoven composed the
seventh, eighth, and ninth symphonies, the last pianoforte sonatas,
the _Liederkreis_, and the Mass in D. He turned to the quartet for the
last expression in music of what life had finally come to mean to him,
stone-deaf, miserable in health, weary and unhappy. There is not one of
the last five quartets which does not proclaim the ultimate victory of
his soul over every evil force that had beset his earthly path.
In November, 1822, Prince Nikolaus Galitzin, a man who held Beethoven’s
genius in highest esteem, asked him if he would undertake the
composition of three quartets. In the spring of the following year
Ignaz Schuppanzigh returned to Vienna after a seven-years’ absence and
resumed his series of quartet concerts. Whether these two facts account
for Beethoven’s concentration upon the composition of quartets alone
during the last two years of his life is not known. Before the receipt
of Prince Galitzin’s invitation Beethoven had written to Peters in
Leipzig that he expected soon to have a quartet to send him. But no
traces of quartet composition are to be found before 1824. Probably,
then, the quartet in E-flat major, opus 127, was composed in the
spring of 1824. In 1825 the quartet in A minor, opus 132, and later
that in B-flat major, opus 130, were composed. These three quartets
were dedicated to Prince Galitzin. The final rondo of the quartet in
B-flat major was written considerably later (was, indeed, the last
of Beethoven’s compositions). Originally the last movement of this
quartet was the fugue, now published separately as opus 133, which
the publishers felt made the work too long and too obscure. Beethoven
therefore wrote the final rondo to take its place.
There is much internal evidence that while Beethoven was at work on the
last two of the quartets dedicated to Prince Galitzin he was likewise
at work on the quartet in C-sharp minor, opus 131, dedicated to Baron
von Stutterheim. The quartet in F major, opus 135, was written later in
1826. It was dedicated to Johann Wolfmeier.
The first performance of opus 127 was given by the Schuppanzigh
quartet[74] on March 7, 1825. On September 9th of the same year,
Schuppanzigh led the first private performance of opus 132 at the inn
_Zum Wilden Mann_. It was first publicly performed at a concert given
by Linke on November 6, and was well received. Opus 132 was publicly
performed first (in its original form, i.e., with the fugue finale) on
March 21, 1826. The second and fourth movements were encored.
Of the five last quartets the first and last are formally the most
clear; the intermediate three, especially those in A minor and C-sharp
minor, are perhaps the most intricate and difficult music to follow and
to comprehend that has been written. All but the last are very long,
and thus tax the powers of attention of the average listener often
beyond endurance. Their full significance is discerned only by those
who not only have made themselves intimately familiar with every note
and line of them, but who have penetrated deep into the most secret
mysteries of the whole art of music.
Opus 127 begins with a few measures--_maestoso_--which, as Dr. Riemann
has suggested, play something of the same rôle in the first movement
as the _Grave_ of the _Sonata Pathétique_ plays there. The passing
over from the introduction to the allegro is only a trill, growing
softer over subdominant harmony. The allegro is in 3/4 time, and the
first theme, played by the first violin, is obvious and simple, almost
in the manner of a folk-song. Yet there is something sensuous in its
full curves and in the close, rich scoring. The transitional passage
is regularly built, and the second theme--in G minor--pure melody
that cannot pass unnoticed. Everything is simple and clear. The first
section ends in G major, and the development section begins with the
_maestoso_ motive in the same key, followed, just as at the opening of
the movement, with the trill and the melting into the first theme. This
theme is developed, leading to the _maestoso_ in C major. It is then
taken up in that key. The _maestoso_ does not reappear as the beginning
of the restatement section, the first theme coming back in the original
key without introduction. Instead of the simple note-for-note scoring
with which it was first presented, it is now accompanied by a steadily
moving counterpoint. The second theme is brought back in E-flat major.
The coda is short and simple, dying away pianissimo.
The following movement is an adagio, to be played not too slowly and in
a wholly singing manner. The time is 12/8, the key, A-flat major. The
opening notes, which build up slowly a chord of the dominant seventh,
are all syncopated. The first violin gives only a measure or two of the
melody, which, thus prepared, is then taken up by the violoncello. The
second strophe is sung by the violin. There is a full cadence.
The first variation opens with the melody for violoncello, only
slightly altered from its original form. The violins add a counterpoint
in dialogue. This variation comes to a full stop. The second brings
a change in time signature (_C, andante con moto_). The theme, now
highly animated, is divided between the first and second violins. In
the fourth variation (E major, 2/2, _adagio molto espressivo_) only
the general outline of the theme is recognizable, cut down and much
compressed. The fifth variation brings back the original tempo and the
original key. The violoncello has the theme, only slightly varied in
rhythm, and the first violin a well-defined counter-melody. The sixth
and last variation (in this movement) grows strangely out of the fifth,
in D-flat major, _sotto voce_, leads to C-sharp minor, and thence to
A-flat major. There is a short epilogue.
The main themes of the Scherzo and Trio which follow are so closely
akin to the theme of the adagio, that the movements may be taken as
further variations. The main body of the Scherzo is in that dotted
rhythm of which Beethoven made frequent use in most of his last works;
and is fairly regular in structure, except for the intrusion, at the
end of the second part, of measures in 2/4 time, in unison, which may
be taken as suggestions of still another fragmentary variation of the
adagio theme. The Trio is a presto in E-flat minor.
The _Finale_ is entirely in a vigorous, jovial and even homely
vein. The themes are all clear-cut and regular; the spirit almost
boisterous, suggesting parts of the ‘Academic Festival Overture’ or the
_Passacaglia_ from the fourth symphony of Brahms.
III
This E-flat major quartet was completed at the latest in January, 1825.
Work on the following three quartets--in A minor, B-flat major, and
C-sharp minor--began at once, but was interrupted by serious illness.
About the sixth of May Beethoven moved to Gutenbrunn, near Baden; and
here took up the work again. The A minor was completed not later than
August, the B-flat in September or October, the C-sharp minor some
months later, after his return to Vienna.
The three quartets are closely related. In the first place all
show a tendency on the part of Beethoven to depart from the regular
four-movement type. There are five movements in the A minor, six in
the B-flat major, seven in the C-sharp minor; though in the last, two
of the movements are hardly more than introductory in character. The
_Danza Tedesca_ in G major in opus 130, was written originally in A
major and intended for the A minor quartet. Finally the chromatic
motive, clearly stated in the introduction to the A minor quartet, and
lying at the basis of the whole first movement, may be traced in the
fugue theme in opus 130, and in the opening fugal movement of opus 131.
The A minor quartet is fundamentally regular in structure. The opening
allegro is clearly in sonata-form; there follows a Scherzo and Trio.
The Adagio consists of a chorale melody, thrice repeated in higher
registers, with regular interludes. A short march and a final Allegro
in A minor conclude the work. But the movements are all strangely
sustained and at the same time intense; and there is a constant
whisper of inner and hidden meanings, which cannot be grasped without
deep study and which leave but a vague and mysterious impression.
The chromatic motive of the introduction has a more or less cryptic
significance; the chorale melody is in an unfamiliar mode; and there
are reminiscences of earlier and even youthful works. So that the whole
proves intricate and even in the last analysis baffling.
There are eight introductory measures (_Assai sostenuto_) which are in
close polyphonic style out of a single motive. This motive is announced
by the violoncello; immediately taken up, transposed, by the first
violin; given again, inverted, by the violoncello; and in this form
answered by the violin. The Allegro begins upon a diminished seventh
chord in which all the instruments take part, and from which the first
violin breaks with a descending and ascending run of sixteenth notes,
founded upon the chord. The first theme is at once announced by the
first violin, a theme which, distinct and full of character in itself,
really rests upon the opening motive, or upon the harmonies implied
in it. A single measure of adagio prepares for another start with the
same material. The violin has another run, founded upon the diminished
seventh chord, rising thereby to F. Under this the violoncello takes
up the first theme, which is completed by the viola; while, it will
be observed, the first violin, followed by the second, give out the
opening motive, inverted, in augmentation. Later a transitional theme
is announced in D minor by the first violin, closely imitated by the
violoncello and the second violin. The true second theme follows
shortly after, in F major, a peaceful melody, sung by the second violin
over an accompaniment in triplets shared by viola and violoncello.
The movement is fairly regular in structure. The development is short
and is based chiefly upon the opening chromatic motive, with which
indeed the 'cello begins it. The restatement begins in E minor, with
the familiar diminished seventh run for the first violin. The second
theme appears in C major, and is given to the 'cello. There is a long
coda, which, toward the end, swells over a mysterious low trill to a
brilliant climax.
The next movement is really a Scherzo in A major. The instruments have
four measures in unison, each measure beginning with a half-step which
cannot but suggest some relationship to the chromatic motive of the
first movement. But the short phrase of the first violin, begun in the
fifth measure, is the real kernel of the main body of the movement.
The Trio, in E major, is of magical beauty. The first section is over
a droning A, shared by both violins, at first, to which the viola and
'cello soon join themselves. The melody is decidedly in folk-song
manner, and is played by the first violin in high registers, and
faithfully followed by the second a tenth below, both instruments
maintaining at the same time their droning A.
This melody is supplanted by a lilting dance movement. The short
phrases begin always on the third beat of the measure, and their
accompanying harmonies are likewise syncopated, in the manner which
is frequent with Brahms. The short phrases are arranged at first in
dialogue fashion between first violin and viola. Later the viola
converses, as it were, with itself. Only the 'cello is limited
throughout the section to accompaniment. A few measures in unison
between the 'cello and viola appear twice before the end of the
section, the notes of which may be intended dimly to recall the
chromatic motive of the first movement. A more positive phrase in _alla
breve_ time, played by second violin, viola, and 'cello in unison,
brings back an epilogue echoing the opening phrases of the Trio; after
which the main body of the movement is repeated.
Beethoven entitled the next movement ‘a devout song of praise, offered
by a convalescent to God, in the Lydian mode.’ It probably owes its
origin to the fact that Beethoven was taken seriously ill while at
work on this and the B-flat major quartet. It seems likely that before
this illness he had other plans for the quartet, and that the _Danza
tedesca_ before mentioned was to find a place in it.
The movement is long in performance but relatively simple in
structure. The chorale melody, simply harmonized, is preceded by a
short, preludizing phrase; and its strophes are set apart from each
other by short interludes in the same manner. After the chorale has
been once given, there is an episode in D major (_Neue Kraft fühlend_)
of blissful, gently animated character. The chorale is then repeated,
the melody an octave higher than before, the interludes and the
accompaniment complicated by syncopations. Once again the D major
episode, highly elaborated. Following this, the chorale is introduced
once more; but the introductory phrase is greatly lengthened and
developed, and there are suggested entrances of the theme in all the
instruments; nor does the complete theme make itself heard, but only
the first phrase of it seems ultimately to soar aloft, in yet a higher
register than before. So that this last section may be taken as a coda,
or as an apotheosis.
The short march which follows calls for no comment. The final allegro
is introduced by recitative passages for the first violin, gaining in
passion, culminating in a dramatic run over the diminished seventh
chord which bears some resemblance to the opening of the allegro of
the first movement. There is a passing sigh before the last movement
begins, _Allegro appassionato_.
Compared with the quartet in A minor, that in B-flat major is simple.
It is more in the nature of a suite than in that of a sonata, though
the first movement presents beneath an apparently irregular outline
the basis of the classical sonata-form. At first glance the frequent
changes of not only key signature but time signature as well are
confusing. The key signatures are now two flats, six flats, two sharps
and one sharp; and at the beginning, the middle and the end of the
movement the time is now triple, now duple, now slow, now fast.
The slow measures are related to the introduction, which here as in
other works of Beethoven is recalled at times in the main body of the
movement. The allegro makes a false start, in which the main outlines
of the first theme are suggested. From the second start, however,
the movement follows a relatively normal course. The first theme is
compound. On the one hand, there are rapid groups of sixteenths,
which play an important part in the whole movement; on the other, a
rhythmical motive, rather than a theme, first announced by the second
violin, which is the motto of the piece. The second theme is first
presented in G-flat major by the second violin and immediately taken up
by the first. At the beginning of the development section and again in
the coda use is made of the motive of the introduction.
The second movement, a Presto in B-flat minor in _alla breve_ time,
with a Trio in 6/4 time, is short and in the manner of a folk-song or
dance. It has no inner relation with the first movement; but it may
be said to breathe something of its spirit into the following andante
(D-flat major, common time). The kernel of the melody of this movement
may be found in the first measure, given by viola and 'cello; and this
kernel was sown, so to speak, by the previous movement. The viola
develops it in the second measure and the phrase is immediately after
taken up by the first violin.
For the fourth movement there is a rapid German waltz--_Alla danza
tedesca_--in G major. The fifth is a simple cavatina. Karl Holz, one of
the members of the Schuppanzigh quartet, has reported that Beethoven
could not read over the score of this short movement without tears in
his eyes. As the sixth movement there is the fugue, published as opus
133, with a new dedication to Archduke Rudolph, which was, as we have
said, written for this quartet, and one of the themes of which seems
related to the chromatic motives of the A minor quartet, on the one
hand, and of the C-sharp minor quartet, on the other; or there is the
brilliant rondo with which Beethoven replaced it at the behest of the
publishers, and which is the last of Beethoven’s compositions.
The fourth of the last quartets, in C-sharp minor, is dedicated to
Field Marshal Baron von Sutterheim, who interested himself deeply in
the affairs of Beethoven’s family. It is in some respects the most
elusive, in others the most unusual of all. Its various movements are
designated by numbers; yet two of them are so short that they need
not be regarded as separate movements, but only as transitional or
introductory sections. These are the third and the sixth. Furthermore,
a definite pause is justifiable only between the fourth and fifth.
Thus, in spite of the numbers, the work is closely blended into a
whole, of which the separate parts are not only æsthetically united,
but thematically complementary.
The first movement is a slow fugue, on a chromatic motive that makes
us once again remember that Beethoven was working on this and the two
preceding quartets at the same time. The fugue unfolds itself with
greatest smoothness and seeming simplicity. The texture of the music
is extremely close until near the end, where wide skips appear in the
various parts, like the movement of a more vigorous life soon to break
free in subsequent sections from such strict restraint of form. One
will find a perfect skill in technical details, such as the diminution
of the theme which appears in the first violin at the change of
signature, and the augmentation in the 'cello part in the stretto not
far before the end.
The fugue ends on a C-sharp unison, following a chord of C-sharp major
in seven parts. Then, as if this single C-sharp bore within itself a
secret harmonic significance, i.e., as the leading note in the scale
of D major, the whole fabric slips up half a tone in the opening
notes of the following movement, _allegro molto vivace_, D major--in
6/8 time. One cannot but feel the relationship between the delicate
convolutions of this new theme and the fugue theme. The whole second
movement hardly moves away from the motives of the opening measures. A
sort of complement to them may be found in the successions of fourths
which begin to rise up in the twenty-fifth measure; and much farther on
a sequence of chords beginning in F-sharp major suggests some variety.
But on the whole the movement plays upon one theme, which recurs at
intervals as in a rondo, but after episodes that offer only in the main
an harmonic contrast.
The third movement, _allegro moderato_, in common time, is a
recitative, begun in F minor and leading to a half-cadence in the
dominant seventh harmonies of A major, in which key the following
movement opens. We have here an andante and seven variations,
variations so involved and recondite that, though they may be clearly
perceived in the score, they will strike the unfamiliar ear as aimless
and inexplicable music.
The theme itself is in the form of a dialogue between first and second
violins. It merges into the first variation without perceptible break
in the music. Here the theme is carried by the second violin, the first
filling the pauses with a descending figure. This clause of the theme
is then repeated by the viola, the 'cello taking the rôle of the first
violin. The second clause of the theme is similarly treated.
The remaining six variations are clearly set apart from each other
by changes in the time signature. There is a variation marked _piu
mosso_, really _alla breve_, which is a dialogue between first
violin and 'cello, accompanied at first monotonously by the other
two instruments, later with more variety and animation. The next is
an _andante moderato e lusinghiero_, in which the theme is arranged
as a canon at the second, first between the two lower instruments,
later between the two higher. This leads to an _adagio_ in 6/8 time,
in which the theme is broken up into passage work. The next and fifth
variation (_allegretto_, 2/4) is the most hidden of all. The notes of
the theme are separated and scattered here and there among the four
parts. But the sixth, an _adagio_ in 9/4 time, is simpler. The seventh,
and last, is a sort of epilogue, a series of different statements of
the theme, at first hidden in triplet runs; then emerging after a long
trill, in its simplest form, in the key of C major; then in A major
with an elaborated accompaniment; in F major, simple again; and finally
brilliantly in A major.
The following Presto in E major, _alla breve_, is very long, but is
none the less symmetrical and regular in structure. It is in effect
a scherzo and trio. The scherzo is in the conventional two sections,
both of which are built upon the same subject. The second section is
broken by four measures (_molto poco adagio!_); and there is a false
start of the theme, following these, in G-sharp minor, suddenly broken
by a hold. This recalls the effect of the very opening of the movement,
a single measure, _forte_, by the 'cello, as if the instrument were
starting off boldly with the principal subject. But a full measure of
silence follows, giving the impression that the 'cello had been too
precipitate.
The Trio section offers at first no change of key; but a new theme
is brought forward. Later the key changes to A major, and the rhythm
is broadened. A series of isolated pizzicato notes in the various
instruments prepares the return of the Scherzo (without repeats). The
Trio follows again; and there is a coda, growing more rapid, after the
Scherzo has been repeated for the second time.
A short adagio, beginning in G-sharp minor, forms the sixth movement,
modulating to the dominant seventh in C-sharp minor. The last movement
is in sonata form. There are clearly a first theme and a second theme,
arranged according to rule. But the coda is very long; and, even more
important, not only the first and second themes, but secondary themes
and motives are all vaguely or definitely related to the themes of
the earlier movements. The first theme, for all its somewhat barbaric
character, is akin to the theme of the first allegro in D major. In the
episodes which follow, the notes of the first violin and of the 'cello,
in contrary motion, give a distinct impression of the opening fugue
theme. The second theme itself--in E major--brings back a breath of the
Trio, and Dr. Riemann finds in the accompaniment suggestions of the
fourth variation. Only a detailed analysis could reveal the elaborate
and intricate polyphony which is in every measure in the process of
weaving.
After the C-sharp minor quartet, the last quartet--in F major,
opus 135--appears outwardly simple. It shares with the first of the
series simplicity and regularity of form; and is, like the quartet in
E-flat major, calm and outspoken, rather than disturbed, gloomy, or
mysterious. It is the shortest of all the last quartets.
The first movement is in perfect sonata form. The first theme (viola)
has a gently questioning sound, which one may imagine mocked by the
first violin. The second theme, in C major, is light, almost in the
manner of Haydn. The movement builds itself logically out of the
opposition of these two motives, the one a little touched with sadness
and doubt, the other confidently gay. The Scherzo which follows needs
no analysis. Two themes, not very different in character, are at the
basis. The second is presented successively in F, G, and A, climbing
thus ever higher. The climax at which it arrives is noteworthy. The
first violin is almost acrobatic in the expression of wild humor, over
an accompaniment which for fifty measures consists of the unvaried
repetition of a single figure by the other three instruments in unison.
Following this fantastical scherzo there is a short slow movement in
D-flat major full of profound but not tragic sentiment. The short
theme, flowing and restrained, undergoes four variations; the second
in C-sharp minor, rather agitated in character; the third in the tonic
key, giving the melody to the 'cello; and the fourth disguising the
theme in short phrases (first violin). To the last movement Beethoven
gave the title, _Der schwer gefasste Entschluss._ Two motives which
occur in it are considered, the one as a question: _Muss es sein?_
the other as the answer: _Es muss sein._ The former is heard only in
the introduction, and in the measures before the third section of the
movement. The latter is the chief theme. Whether or not these phrases
are related to external circumstances in Beethoven’s life, the proper
interpretation of them is essentially psychological. The question
represents doubt and distrust of self. The answer to such misgivings is
one of deeds, not words, of strong-willed determination and vigorous
action. Of such the final movement of the last quartet is expressive.
Such seems the decision which Beethoven put into terms of music.
FOOTNOTES:
[70] The famous Schuppanzigh quartet met every Friday morning at the
house of Prince Lichnowsky. Ignaz Schuppanzigh (b. 1776) was leader.
Lichnowsky himself frequently played the second violin. Franz Weiss (b.
1788), the youngest member, hardly more than a boy, played the viola.
Later he became the most famous of the viola players in Vienna. The
'cellist was Nikolaus Kraft (born 1778).
[71] Förster (1748-1823) forms an important link between Haydn and
Beethoven.
[72] 2d edition, Berlin, 1913, pp. 482, _et seq._
[73] _Beethoven’s Streichquartette._
[74] Only Schuppanzigh himself, and Weiss, the violist, remained of
the original four who first played Beethoven’s quartets opus 18 at the
palace of Prince Lichnowsky. The second violinist was now Karl Holz,
and the 'cellist Joseph Linke.
CHAPTER XVII
THE STRING ENSEMBLE SINCE BEETHOVEN
The general trend of development: Spohr, Cherubini,
Schubert--Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms, etc.--New
developments: César Franck, d’Indy, Chausson--The
characteristics of the Russian schools: Tschaikowsky,
Borodine, Glazounoff and others--Other national types:
Grieg, Smetana, Dvořák--The three great quartets since
Schubert and what they represent; modern quartets and the
new quartet style: Debussy, Ravel, Schönberg--Conclusion.
I
There is little history of the string quartet to record after the
death of Beethoven in 1827. It has undergone little or no change
or development in technique until nearly the present day. The last
quartets of Beethoven taxed the powers of the combined four instruments
to the uttermost. Such changes of form as are to be noted in recent
quartets are the adaptation of new ideas already and first put to test
in music for pianoforte, orchestra, or stage. The growth of so-called
modern systems of harmony affect the string quartet, but did not
originate in it. A tendency towards richer or fuller scoring, towards
continued use of pizzicato or other special effects, and a few touches
of new virtuosity here and there, reflect the general interest of the
century in the orchestra and its possibilities of tone-coloring. But
it is in the main true that after a study of the last quartets of
Beethoven few subsequent quartets present new difficulties; and that,
excepting only a few, the many with which we shall have to do are the
expressions of the genius of various musicians, most of whom were more
successful in other forms, or whose qualities have been made elsewhere
and otherwise more familiar.
Less perhaps than any other form will the string quartet endure by
the sole virtue of being well written for the instruments. Take, for
example, the thirty-four quartets of Ludwig Spohr. Spohr was during
the first half of the nineteenth century the most respected musician
in Germany. He was renowned as a leader, and composer quite as much
as he was world-famous as a virtuoso. He was especially skillful as
a leader in quartet playing. He was among the first to bring out
the Beethoven quartets, opus 18, in Germany. He was under a special
engagement for three years to the rich amateur Tost in Vienna to
furnish chamber compositions. No composer ever understood better the
peculiar qualities of the string instruments; none was ever more
ambitious and at the same time more serious. Yet excluding the violin
concertos and an occasional performance of his opera _Jessonda_, his
music is already lost in the past. Together with operas, masses, and
symphonies, the quartets, quintets, and quartet concertos, are rapidly
being forgotten. The reason is that Spohr was more conscientious
than inspired. He stood in fear of the commonplace. His melodies and
harmonies are deliberately chromatic, not spontaneous. Yet shy as he
was of commonplaceness in melody and harmony, he was insensitive to a
more serious commonplaceness.
When we consider what subtle systems of rhythm the semi-civilized
races are masters of, we can but be astonished at the regularity of
our own systems. Only occasionally does a composer diverge from the
straight road of four-measure melody building. Yet is it not a little
subtlety even within this rigorous system that raises the great
composer above the commonplace? Certainly the ordinary in rhythm most
quickly wearies and disgusts the listener even if he is not aware of
it. Spohr’s rhythmical system was so little varied that Wagner wrote of
his opera _Jessonda_ that it was ‛_alla Polacca_’ almost all the way
through.
The thirty-five string quartets are fundamentally commonplace, for
all the chromaticism of their harmonies and melodies, and for all the
skillful treatment of the instruments. The double-quartets (four, in D
minor, E minor, E-flat major, and G minor) amount to compositions for
small string orchestra. There are, among the quartets, six so-called
‘brilliant,’ which give to the first violin a _solo_ rôle, and to the
other instruments merely accompaniment. It is hardly surprising that
the first violin is treated brilliantly in most of the quartets.
But the point is that Spohr’s quartets have not lived. In neatness of
form and in treatment of the instruments they do not fall below the
greatest. They are in these respects superior to those of Schumann for
example. The weakness of them is the weakness of the man’s whole gift
for composition; and they represent no change in the art of writing
string quartets.
[Illustration]
Ludwig Spohr.
Another man whose quartets are theoretically as good as any is
Cherubini. Of the six, that in E-flat major, written in 1814, is still
occasionally heard.
On the other hand, Schubert, a man with less skill than either Spohr or
Cherubini, has written quartets which seem likely to prove immortal.
Fifteen are published in the complete Breitkopf and Härtel edition
of Schubert’s works. Of these the first eleven may be considered
preparatory to the last four. They show, however, what is frequently
ignored in considering the life and art of Schubert--an unremitting
effort on the part of the young composer to master the principles of
musical form.
[Illustration]
The first of the great quartets, that in C minor--written in
December, 1820--is but a fragment. Schubert completed but the first
movement. Why he neglected to add others remains unknown. But the
single movement is inspired throughout. The opening measures give at
once an example of the tremolo, of which Schubert made great use in all
his quartets. The general triplet rhythm is familiar in all his later
works. We have here the Schubert of the great songs, of the B minor
symphony, of the later pianoforte sonatas; warm, intense, inspired.
Two quartets were written in 1824, that in A minor, published as opus
29, and that in D minor,[75] the best known of all his quartets. The
A minor is dedicated to Ignaz Schuppanzigh, with whom Schubert was on
friendly terms. The second movement of the quartet in D minor is a
series of variations on the song _Der Tod und das Mädchen_.
Finally there is the great quartet in G major, written in 1826,
which may be taken as representative throughout of the very best of
Schubert’s genius as it showed itself in the form. In it are to be
found all the qualities associated with Schubert especially. The
opening major triad, swelling to a powerful minor chord in eleven
parts, and the constant interchange of major and minor throughout the
movement; the tender second theme with its delicate folk-rhythm, its
unrestrained harmonies, its whispering softness in the variation after
the first statement; these could have been the work of Schubert alone.
Peculiar to Schubert’s treatment of the quartet are the tremolo, and
the general richness of scoring--the sixths for second violin in the
variation of the second theme, for example; the frequent use of octaves
and other double-stops, the eleven-voiced chord at the beginning, and
other such effects of fullness. There is little sign of the polyphonic
drawing which so distinguished the last quartets of Beethoven. The
quartet is made up of rich masses of sound that glow warmly, and fade
and brighten. The inner voices are used measure after measure frankly
to supply a richly vibrating harmony, nothing more. And an occasional
dialogue between two instruments is all of polyphonic procedure one
meets.
The beautiful andante in E minor begins with a melody for violoncello,
a true Schubertian melody, which is carried on for two sections. Then
a new spirit enters through hushed chords, and breaks forth loudly in
G minor. There follows a passage full of wild passion. The agitated
chords swell again and again to fortissimo. At last they die away, only
the monotonous F-sharp of the cello suggests the throbbing of a despair
not yet relieved. Over this the first violin and the viola sing the
opening melody. Later the hushed tapping is given to other instruments
and the cello takes up its melody again. Once more the despair breaks
wildly forth, and yet again is hushed but not relieved. The sudden
major in the ending can not take from the movement its quality of
unconsoled sadness. The scherzo, in B minor, is built upon the constant
imitation and play of a single merry figure. The trio is in G major,
one of those seemingly naïve yet perfect movements such as Schubert
alone could write. There is only the swing of a waltz, only the melody
that a street gamin might carelessly whistle; but somewhere beneath
it lies genius. The interchange of phrases of the melody between the
different instruments, and the mellifluous counter-melodies, have
something the same sort of charm as the Scherzo of the symphony in C
major. The final movement is a rondo with a profusion of themes. There
are the familiar marks of Schubert: the triplet rhythm (6/8), the
shifting between major and minor; the full, harmonic style; the naïve
swing, the spontaneous and ever fresh melodies.
Schubert worked at the string quartet with special devotion.
Excepting the songs, his steady development toward perfect mastery
of his expression is nowhere better revealed than in the quartets.
Certainly the last two quartets are second only to the songs as proof
of his genius. There is that soft, whispering, quality in Schubert’s
music, for the expression of which the string quartet is a perfect
instrument. Much of Schubert is intimate, too, and happily suited to
the chamber. Less than any of the great composers did Schubert make use
of polyphonic skill. It is easy to say that he lacked it; but what is
hard to understand is how without it he could have contributed to music
some of its most precious possessions.
II
We may say that Schubert applied himself to the composition of string
quartets with a special devotion and ultimately with great success;
that certain qualities of his genius were suited to an expression
in this form. Mendelssohn applied himself to all branches of music
with equal facility and with evidently little preference. Most of his
chamber music for strings alone, however, belongs to the early half of
his successful career. This in the case of Mendelssohn does not mean,
as in the case of almost every other composer, that the quartets may
not be the expression of his fully-matured genius. Mendelssohn never
wrote anything better than the overture to ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream.’
This before he was twenty! But having put his soul for once into a few
quartets he passed on to other works.
There was a time when these quartets were considered a worthy sequel
to Beethoven’s. In the English translation of Lampadius’ ‘Life of
Mendelssohn’ occurs the sentence: ‘But in fact they [his works] stand
in need neither of approval nor defense: the most audacious critic
bows before the genius of their author; the power and weight of public
opinion would strike every calumniator dumb.’ And yet what can now be
said of Mendelssohn’s quartets save that they are precise in form,
elegant in detail?
There are six in all. The first, opus 12, is in E-flat major. The slow
introduction and the first allegro have all the well-known and now
often ridiculed marks of the ‘Songs Without Words’: short, regular
phrases; weak curves and feminine endings; commonplace harmonies,
monotonous repetitions, uninteresting accompaniment. The second
movement--a canzonetta--is interesting as Mendelssohn could sometimes
be in light pieces; but the andante oozes honey again, and the final
allegro is very long.
Is it unfair to dwell upon these wearisome deficiencies? Is there
anything substantially better in the last of the six, in the quartet
in F minor, opus 80? Here we have to do with one of the composer’s
agitated spells. There is a rough start and measures of tremolo for
all the instruments follow. This is the first theme, properly just
eight measures long and as thoroughly conventional as music well may
be. Then measures in recitative style, and again the first theme, and
its motives endlessly repeated. Suddenly the instruments in an access
of fury break into triplets; but this being calmed, the second theme
appears, as it should in A-flat major, a theme that positively smirks.
But why attempt either analysis or description of works so patently
urbane? There is no meaning hidden in them; there is no richness of
sentiment; no harmonies out of new realms; no inspiration; nothing
really to study. Between the first two quartets mentioned and the last
in F minor there is a series of three (opus 44), one in D major, one
in E minor, and one in E-flat major. There is an ‘Andante, Scherzo,
Capriccio and Fugue’ for the four instruments, published as opus 81.
One turns to Schumann for a breath of more bracing air. Though Schumann
was first and foremost a composer for the pianoforte, and though his
quartets seem to be written in rather a pianoforte style, yet there are
flashes of inspiration in the music which must be treasured, imperfect
as the recording of them may be. There are three quartets, composed in
1842 and dedicated to Mendelssohn. As early as 1838 Schumann mentioned
in letters to his sweetheart that he had a string quartet in mind;
but work in this direction was seriously hindered by troubles with
Wieck, which were growing daily more acute. The second summer after his
marriage, however, work on the quartets was resumed; and the three were
composed in the short time of eight weeks, the last indeed apparently
in five days (18-22 July).
The first offers an harmonic innovation. The introduction is in
A minor, which is the principal key of the whole quartet; but the
first allegro is in F major. There is a Scherzo in A minor, with an
_Intermezzo_, not a Trio, in C major. In these first two movements
the habit of syncopation which gives much of his pianoforte music
its peculiar stamp is evident: in the first theme of the allegro;
in the measures which lead to the repetition of the first part; in
the motive of the Intermezzo, which is rhythmically similar to the
first movement and suggests some connection in Schumann’s mind. It is
perhaps the prevalence in all three quartets of the rhythmical devices
which we associate mostly with the pianoforte that raises a question
of propriety of style. The adagio is pure Schumann, in quality of
melody and accompaniment. Measures in the latter--noticeably the viola
figure which accompanies the first statement of the melody--look upon
the printed page like figures in a piano piece. Such figures are not
polyphonic. They are broken chords, the effect of which is felicitous
only on the pianoforte. The final presto suggests no little the spirit
of the first and last movements of the pianoforte quintet, opus 44,
which was composed in the following months. The whole movement, except
for a charming _musette_ and a few following measures of sustained
chords just before the end, is built upon a single figure.
The first movement of the next quartet (in F major) likewise suggests
the quintet. The style is smoothly imitative and compact; and the
theme beginning in the fifty-seventh measure casts a shadow before.
The _Andante quasi Variazioni_ is most carefully wrought, and is rich
in sentiment. The Scherzo which follows--in C minor--is syncopated
throughout. The final allegro suggests the last movement of the B-flat
major symphony, the joyous Spring symphony written not long before.
The last quartet (in A) may rank with the finest of his compositions.
Whether or not in theory the style is pianistic, the effect is rich
and sonorous. The syncopations are sometimes baffling, especially in
the last movement; but on the whole this quartet presents the essence
of Schumann’s genius in most ingratiating and appealing form. The
structure is free, reminding one in some ways of the D minor symphony.
But there is no rambling. The whole work is intense. There is an
economy of mood and of thematic material. One phrase dominates the
first movement; the _Assai agitato_ is a series of terse variations.
There is a sustained Adagio in D major; and then a vigorous finale in
free rondo form, the chief theme of which is undoubtedly related to the
chief theme of the first movement.
It must be admitted that Schumann’s quartets are beautiful by
reason of their harmonies and melodies; that theirs is a fineness of
sentiment, not of style; that the luminous interweaving of separate
parts such as is found in the quartets of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven,
is not to be found in his. He follows rather Schubert, but without
Schubert’s instinct for instrumental color. So then one feels that
it happened that Schumann should seek expression thrice through the
medium of the string quartet; not that a certain quality of inspiration
within him demanded just that expression and none other. His quartets
represent neither a refinement nor an abstract of his genius. They are
of a piece with his pianoforte pieces and his songs; as are likewise
his symphonies. We admire and love all for the same qualities.
Brahms, who for so many reasons we may think of as taking up German
music where Schumann left it, published only three string quartets.
That he had written many others which he had chosen to discard before
the two quartets, opus 51, were published in 1873, is evident from the
note to Dr. Billroth concerning a dedication.[76] Several pianoforte
quartets, and two sextets for two violins, two violas and two
violoncellos, opus 18 and opus 36, are closely related to the string
quartet. The sextets are especially noteworthy.
The first sextet, in B-flat major, has won more popular favor than many
other works by the same composer. The addition of two instruments to
the regular four brought with it the same sort of problems which were
mentioned in connection with Mozart’s quintets: i.e., the avoidance of
thickness in the scoring. The group of six instruments is virtually a
string orchestra; but the sextets of Brahms are finely drawn, quite in
the manner of a string quartet. Especially in this first sextet have
the various instruments a like importance and independence.
The first theme of the first movement (cello) is wholly melodious.
The second theme, regularly brought forward in F major, is yet another
melody, and again is announced by the violoncello. A passage of
twenty-eight measures, over a pedal point on C, follows. This closes
the first section. The development is, as might be expected, full of
intricacies. The return of the first theme is brilliantly prepared,
beginning with announcing phrases in the low registers, swelling to
a powerful and complete statement in which the two violins join. The
second movement is a theme and variations in D minor. The theme is
shared alternately by first viola and first violin. The variations are
brilliant and daring, suggesting not a little the pianoforte variations
on a theme of Paganini’s. There is a Scherzo and Trio. The main motive
of the Scherzo serves as an accompaniment figure in the Trio; and the
Trio is noteworthy for being entirely _fortissimo_. The last movement
is a Rondo.
The second sextet, in G major, is outwardly less pleasing; and like
much of Brahms’ music is veiled from the casual or unfamiliar listener.
The first movement (_allegro non troppo_) opens mysteriously with a
trill for first viola, which continues through the next thirty-two
measures. In the third the first violin announces, _mezza voce_, the
main theme of the movement; of which the chief characteristic is
two upward fifths (G--D--E-flat--B-flat). The second theme appears
after an unexpected modulation in D major, and is given to the first
violoncello. The striding fifths sound again in the closing measures of
the first section. The development begins with these fifths employed as
a canon, in contrary motion; and the same intervals play a prominent
part in the entire section. The recapitulation is regular. The
following Scherzo (_Allegro non troppo_, G minor) has a touch of Slavic
folk-music. There is a Trio section in G major. The slow movement
is, as in the earlier sextet, a theme and variations. The last is in
sonata form. The first theme may be divided into two wholly contrasting
sections, of which the second is melodiously arranged in sixths. The
second theme is given out regularly in D major by the violoncello.
There is a long coda, _animato_, which is practically a repetition of
much of the development section.
In these sextets and in the three quartets, written many years later,
we have the classical model faithfully reproduced. The separate parts
are handled with unfailing polyphonic skill; there is the special
refinement of expression which, hard to define, is unmistakable in a
work that is properly a string quartet.
Opus 51, No. 1, is in C minor. The first theme is given out at once
by the first violin; a theme characteristic of Brahms, of long
phrases and a certain swinging power. Within the broadly curving line
there are impatient breaks; and the effect of the whole is one of
restlessness and agitation. This is especially noticeable when, after a
contrasting section, the theme is repeated by viola and cello under an
agitated accompaniment, and leads to sharp accents. There is no little
resemblance between this theme and Brahms’ treatment of it, and the
theme of the first movement of the C minor symphony, completed not long
before. There is throughout this movement the rhythm, like the sweep
of angry waves, which tosses in the first movement of the symphony; an
agitation which the second theme (B-flat major, first violin) cannot
calm, which only momentarily--as just after the second theme, here, and
in the third section of the movement--is subdued.
The following _Romanza_ is simple and direct. One cannot fail to hear
the stormy motive of the first movement, however, in the accompaniment
figure of the second.[77] Also one may suspect the movement to have
been modelled pretty closely on the _Cavatina_ in the Beethoven quartet
in B-flat major. The broken effects--von Bülow called them _sanglots
entrecoupés_ in the piano sonata, opus 110--in the Beethoven work are
copied rather closely in the Brahms. The Scherzo and Trio are widely
contrasted; the one being in shifting harmony and 2/4 rhythm; the other
plainly in F major and true Viennese waltz rhythm. In the final allegro
motives from the first movement appear, so that the entire quartet is
rather closely woven into a whole.
Apart from the general traits of Brahms’ style one finds little to
comment upon. It is striking that Brahms, in nearly the same measure
as Beethoven, was able to express symphonic material, that is material
of the greatest force and dramatic power, in the form of the quartet
without destroying the nature of the smaller form. But the Brahms
quartets are by no means the unfathomable mysteries of the last
Beethoven quartets. They are comparable in general to the Rasumowsky
quartets.
There is scarcely need to speak of the quartet in A minor, opus
51, No. 2, nor of that in B-flat major, opus 67, in detail. Brahms
was already master of his technique and in the short period between
writing the quartets opus 51 and the quartet opus 67, his manner of
expression hardly developed or changed. Kalbeck describes in detail the
significance of the chief motive, A-F-A^2-E, in the A minor quartet.
The F-A^2-E may be taken as initial letters of the motto _Frei aber
einsam_, which was of deep meaning both to Brahms and Joachim, to the
latter of whom Brahms would have liked to dedicate the quartet. The
four movements, Allegro non troppo, Andante moderato, Quasi minuetto
moderato, and Allegro non assai are vaguely related by minute motives.
The quartet in B-flat major is on the whole happy in character, in
noticeable contrast to the melancholy which pervades that in A-minor.
There is not, either in the quartets of Schumann or those of Brahms,
any radical change from the so-called classical method. One is
not surprised to find in Schumann’s a concentration upon lyrical
moments rather than an organic development. This is the mark of the
romanticists. A thoughtful ear will detect the same underlying lyricism
in those of Brahms, though Brahms’ power of construction passes wholly
unchallenged. In the matter of harmony neither composer is so modern
as Schubert. Schumann, it is true, gives us the first allegro of a
quartet in A minor in the key of F major. This is what one might call
an external irregularity only. There are rhythmical oddities in all
Schumann’s music, and ever present evidence of a complicated rhythmical
system in Brahms’. These peculiarities are represented in their
quartets.
The quartets of able men like Robert Volkmann and Joachim Raff are not
less classical. There are three quartets of Raff’s which stand a little
out of the general path; one in form of a suite, one called _Die schöne
Müllerin_, and one in form of a canon. But in the main it may be said
that the string quartets of all German composers down to the present
day adhere closely to the model of the Rasumowsky quartets, not only
in form, but in general harmonic principles. We must look to other
countries for changes.
III
Among the very great quartets, that in D minor by César Franck holds
a foremost place. Vincent d’Indy remarks in his life of Franck that
the great quartets have been the work of mature genius. Franck waited
until his fifty-sixth year before attempting to write in the form. He
prepared himself specially by a year’s study of the quartets of Haydn,
Mozart, Beethoven, and even Brahms; and in 1889 began work upon what
was to prove one of his indisputable masterpieces.
The peculiarities of Franck’s style are striking and have been
discussed at some length elsewhere in this series. They are clearly
marked in the string quartet: the constant chromatic shifting of
harmonies, the intensive cultivation of short phrases, the polyphonic
skill, and the singular purity of thought that fills all his music
with the spirit of cathedrals. His workmanship is everywhere fine, and
shows at its best in the treatment of the four parts. The analogies
which have been suggested between him and the great Bach are at least
a little supported by the fact that Franck, like Bach, was influenced
in all his work by the organ. The great chords in the opening portions
of the quartet suggest organ music. Yet on the whole the style of
the quartet is perfectly adapted to the instruments for which it was
written.
The form is unusual. There is an opening section in D major, _poco
lento_, an indescribably full and glorious expression of the
fundamental musical thought of the entire work. It is complete in
itself, but is followed without pause by the first allegro, in D minor.
The allegro movement is regular in structure, except for the recurrence
of the theme of the introduction as foundation for the first part of
the development section, and again as coda. The first theme recalls
motives in the first movement of the pianoforte quintet in F minor.
There is a transitional theme in D minor (violoncello) which plays a
considerable part in this movement, and which later on is metamorphosed
and becomes a part of the second theme of the last movement. The second
theme of the first movement appears regularly in F major (first violin).
The first part of the development section is, as already suggested,
a fugal treatment of the introductory motive. The tempo becomes
_piu lento_, so that we seem to be listening to a section of music
independent of the allegro. At the end of this fugal process the time
becomes again allegro and the development of the first and second
allegro themes, together with the transitional motive of the first
section, proceed regularly according to classical traditions. The
restatement is likewise regular; but the coda is built upon the opening
motif. Hence the movement as a whole presents the interweaving of two
quasi-independent movements, each very nearly complete in itself, and
each consistently developed through its own proper course. In fact the
three sections marked _Piu lento_ could be joined to each other with
scarcely a change of note; and the sections marked allegro likewise.
The double scheme is carried out perfectly to the very end of the
movement, even the coda itself playing with motives from both sections.
The Scherzo is in F-sharp minor, with a Trio in D major, delicate
throughout; and the Largo is in B major. Of the latter nothing can be
said in words that will represent the strange, devout exaltation of its
beauty.
The last movement brings us face to face with the structural principles
upon which Franck worked, and which are clear in the violin sonata, the
works for pianoforte solo, the pianoforte quintet, and the symphony.
The fragmentary introduction is a combination of snatches of music yet
to be made fully known, and reminiscences of themes that have gone
before: of the melody of the Largo; the rhythmical figures of the
Scherzo and the motive of the Trio; and finally, as preparation for the
last movement itself the violoncello sings once more the motive of the
first introduction, and is answered by the first violin.
The _Allegro molto_ begins after a pause. The first theme is given
to the viola, a theme that is almost note for note the theme we have
just had recalled to us. The entrance of the second theme is prepared
by many anticipations. The theme is in three broad clauses, more or
less widely separated from each other. The first of these is a changed
form of transitional motive from the first movement. It is given out
in sustained chords, a little slowly. The second clause (violins in
unison) follows shortly after the restoration of the original tempo.
This is considerably developed, dying away to a series of chords on
the motive of the first clause (originally from the first movement).
There is a powerful crescendo, and a dramatic stamping of chords as
announcement to the third clause of the second theme (_molto energico_,
first violin).
The development and restatement of this material follows the regular
course of the sonata form. The coda brings back the motives of the
Scherzo, and these, developed with the first theme (originally from
the first introduction), lead up to a sublime chant of the melody of
the Largo (in augmentation). A few measures, recitative built upon
phrases of the first theme, and a short Presto bring the work to full
completion.
The César Franck quartet is a great work, and it is a great quartet.
The material is symphonic, but it is finely divided among the four
instruments. There is rich sonority but no thickness. The lines of the
form are clear, and it is not surprising to find genuine polyphony in
the work of a man who, like Franck, possessed a technical skill that
was instinctive. One may only raise a question as to whether this
quartet is really a further development of the last Beethoven quartet,
if indeed it is in principle of structure akin to them. In the matter
of form it is strikingly different from the quartets of Schumann and
Brahms, but is it not equally different from those of Beethoven? There
is a more vital organization in the C-sharp minor quartet of Beethoven
than can be explained by the presence of the same thematic material in
all the movements.
[Illustration]
The Flonzaley Quartet.
_From a photograph_
The entire work is in the nature of the development of a germinal
thought. This thought expresses itself in various forms; in the
initial fugue subject, in the gyrating theme of the second movement,
in the half-barbaric dance of the last. The quartet is, broadly
speaking, a series of variations, each outgrown from one before. The
music literally grows. In the quartet of Franck it progresses, and
its various themes are arranged. His method is nearer akin to the
symphonic poems of Liszt, or to the _Symphonie Fantastique_ of Berlioz.
The affinities between the various movements of the C-sharp minor
quartet are subtle, indeed almost not to be proved but only felt. In
the quartet of César Franck, the relationships are evident and even
striking. This question of form, however, concerns all branches of
music, and is not peculiar to the quartet.
Among the many devoted pupils of César Franck one is distinguished by,
among other things, two excellent quartets. This is Vincent d’Indy. The
quartet in D major, opus 35, was composed in 1890, the second quartet,
in E major, opus 45, in 1897. The second reveals two characteristic
features of d’Indy’s style: a use of folk-melodies, together with a
powerful intellectual command of the principles of musical form. The
cycle of four movements is constructed upon a single motive which is
printed as a motto at the head of the score. The procedure recalls
Schumann, particularly the _Sphinxes_ of the _Carnaval_. There is
a slow introduction in which the motive is made clear. An animated
movement in sonata form then follows, of which the opening measures
(cello) are sprung from the motive, and developed into a broad melody
(first violin). After a lovely second theme (G major, first violin,
initiated by viola) there is a long development of the motive and
this first theme. In one section--_très calme_--the motive appears
augmented--now for viola, now for first violin and at the same time
violoncello (syncopated). In the next section it is tossed about
between the violins, over a repeated B (violoncello). Suggestions of
the returning theme are given in C-sharp major (first violin) and in
C-sharp minor (second violin). The second theme returns, regularly, in
E major (viola).
In the following movement the motive is given in a piquant dance-like
style (5-4). In the adagio (_très lent_) it forms the first notes
of the chief melody (first violin and viola in unison); and in the
last movement is reduced to an accompanying whirr, suggestive of the
beginning of the last movement of the pianoforte quintet of Franck. It
is likewise in the monotonous melody of the first violin, taken up by
the 'cello, by the two violins in unison and repeated with a mad sort
of swing. Near the end it is given a soft, gently songful character
(first violin) in long notes, while the viola continues softly the same
motive on a different degree of the scale and in a different rhythm.
There is an unfinished quartet in C minor, opus 35, by Ernest Chausson,
consisting of three movements. The development of the first theme of
the first out of the motive of the slow introduction is worthy of
notice. The scherzo is delicate, but the best of the work is in the
slow middle movement, with its calm interweaving of soft voices over a
drowsy figure, and its moments of enraptured song.
There is a strong classical element, however, in the quartet of César
Franck and even in d’Indy’s quartet in E major. Both, compared with one
of the later quartets of Beethoven, will appear more richly scored and
harmonically more highly colored than the older work. And yet, in spite
of the introduction of new ideas of form, the old ideas still are at
the basis of these works. This is because both composers have adhered
to the fundamental harmonic principles of the classics, the principle
of a tonic key, of a dominant key, of keys that are contrasted with the
tonic key. They have added to the heritage which passed from Beethoven
and Schubert, through Chopin and Wagner, to them; but they have
discarded no part of it, nor added to it except in kind. The richness
of their works, however, must signalize a further and remarkable growth
upon the ancient stock of Bach and Beethoven.
IV
In a great many Russian quartets the adherence to established forms
is even more evident. The three quartets of Tschaikowsky and the two
of Borodine may be taken as representative of what we must now call
the older Russian school. The well-known quartet in D (opus 11) by the
former follows the classical model step by step as to the arrangement
of themes and even the disposition of keys. And though the later
quartets, in F (opus 22) and in E-flat minor (opus 30, written in
memory of Ferdinand Laub [1832-1875], a famous violinist) present wild
and even harsh features, the ground plan of them is essentially the
classical plan. We have but to note in them a richer and more highly
colored harmony, and a few sonorous effects--the muted beginning of
the first part of the second movement in opus 11; the pizzicato _basso
ostinato_ in the second part of the same movement; the syncopated
chords, the rolling accompaniment (cello in the development section) in
the first movement of opus 22; and others.
It would, of course, be absurd to claim that the Tschaikowsky quartets
are classical in style, or in spirit. Their quality is most intensely
romantic. Rhythm, melody, and harmony have well-nigh a barbaric guise
in many places. Yet they represent but modifications and alterations
of a familiar plan. We have a new poem in a language that has not yet
developed beyond our knowledge of it. Of the haunting beauty of these
poems in music there is little need to speak.
Borodine in regard to form is classical. The first movement of the
quartet in A is a masterpiece in clear construction. The exposition of
the principal allegro theme is as simple as Haydn. The second theme
follows regularly in E major. There is a development section with a
little fugato, and a restatement of the chief themes, both in the tonic
key. The first movement of the later quartet--in D major--is similarly
regular in structure. And there is scarcely any structural oddity
or newness in any of the subsequent movements. But Borodine, like
Tschaikowsky, has added a touch of new colors here and there which mark
an advance--at least technical--in handling the instruments together.
His style is remarkably clear throughout. Note only the opening
measures of the allegro. And it loses none of its transparency when it
expands to effects of great sonority, as in the treatment of the second
theme at the end of the development section, and of the first theme
later on in the restatement. The use of harmonics in the Trio is almost
unprecedented in quartet music.
The lovely effects in the slow movement of Tschaikowsky’s quartet in
D major, and these effects of Borodine’s, remain within the limits
of the quartet style. But they point most significantly towards an
orchestral treatment of the group which becomes the unconscious aim
of the majority of composers. It is difficult and perhaps absurd to
define a quartet style. Still a certain transparency and a fineness of
movement and drawing are peculiar to this combination alone; and it may
be said that when the volume of sound is thickened, and the delicacy of
movement coarsened; or when special tonal effects are introduced which
add color at the expense of line, then those peculiar possibilities
of the quartet are ignored. Hence music so written may be called
orchestral, though only by comparison, of course, with the traditional
quartet style, the outlines of which we have chosen to fix upon the
model of Mozart and Beethoven.
The later Russian composers have almost without exception aimed at
effects of sonority and color. For example there are five _Novellettes_
by Glazounoff, opus 15; one _Alla Spagnola_, full of pizzicato, an
_Orientale_, a Valse, and an _All’Ungherese_, all of which are made
up of effects of color and rhythm. There is a _Quatuor Slave_, opus
26, the _Mazurka_ of which is again wholly ‘effective.’ The final
movement--_Une fête Slave_--might far better be written for orchestra.
The earlier quartets, opus 1 and opus 10, are inconspicuous.
Mention should be made of the quartet written in honor of the publisher
Belaieff, to which Rimsky-Korsakoff, Liadoff, Borodine and Glazounoff
each contributed a movement. The same men, except Borodine, joined in
another quartet called _Jour de fête_.
There are six quartets by Serge Taneieff, all carefully written but
in the main orchestral. The third (D minor) is perhaps best known, but
the fourth and fifth seem to me more significant. There are quartets
by Alexander Gretchaninoff, by A. Kopyloff, by Nikolas Sokoloff. Most
of the Russian composers have written one or two. Reinhold Glière,
among the more recent, has been successful. A quartet in G minor,
opus 20, was published in 1906. It shows some influence of the modern
French movement in the matter of harmony; but unlike the recent French
quartets, this is in most pronounced orchestral style. A glance over
the final movement, an _Orientale_, will serve to show how completely
the traditional quartet style may be supplemented by effects of color
and wild sonority. In Taneieff there is trace of the older tradition;
but elsewhere in the modern Russian quartets the ancient style has
disappeared.
V
The same tendency has become evident in the quartets of nearly all
nations. The Grieg quartet offers a striking example. Here is a work
which for lovers of Grieg must always have a special charm. Nowhere
does he speak more forcefully or more passionately. There is a wild,
almost a savage vitality in the whole work. But there is hardly a trace
of genuine quartet style in any movement. In the statement of the first
theme the viola, it is true, imitates the violin; but the second violin
and the cello carry on a wholly orchestral accompaniment. The climax
in this statement, and the measures before the second theme almost cry
aloud for the pounding force of the piano, or the blare of trumpets
and the shriek of piccolos. In fact almost through the entire movement
the style is solid, without transparency and without flexibility of
movement. The coda is the most startlingly orchestral of all. Measure
after measure of a tremolo for the three upper instruments offers a
harmonic background for the cello. The tremolo by the way is to be
played _sul ponticello_, yet another orchestral manner. One cannot
but recall the strange ending of the E major movement in Beethoven’s
quartet in C-sharp minor, where, too, the instruments play _sul
ponticello_, but each one pursuing a clear course, adding a distinct
thread to the diaphanous network of sound. Surely in the hands of Grieg
quartet music has become a thing of wholly different face and meaning.
There have been magnificent quartets written in Bohemia. One by
Smetana is a great masterpiece. But here again we have the orchestral
style. The quartet--_Aus meinem Leben_--proved on this account so
distasteful to the Society of Chamber Music in Prague that the players
refused to undertake it. Smetana suspected, however, that sheer
technical difficulty rather than impropriety of style was at the bottom
of their refusal.[78] Whatever the reason may have been, the work is
supremely great. It seems to me there is no question of impropriety
or change of style here. Smetana set himself to tell something of his
life in music, and he chose the quartet because the four instruments
speak as it were intimately, as he would himself speak in a circle
of his friends about things which caused him more suffering than he
could bear. We have then not a quartet, which is of all music the most
abstract, or, if you will, absolute; but an outpouring of emotions.
This is not _l’art pour l’art_, but almost a sublime agony of musical
utterance.
As a quartet it stands unique--no piece of program music has
accomplished more successfully the object of its composer than
this. The first movement represents ‘love of music in my youth, a
predominating romanticism, the inexpressible yearning for something
which I could neither name nor clearly define, and also a sort
of portent of my future misfortune.’ The second movement brought
back memories of happy days when he wrote dance music for all the
countryside, and was himself an impassioned dancer. And there is a
slower section which tells of associations with the aristocracy. It
is of this section that the players of Prague chiefly complained.
A _Polka_ rhythm runs through the whole movement. And after this
thoughtlessly gay passage, the third movement speaks of his love for
the woman who afterwards became his wife. The last movement speaks
of the recognition of the awakening national consciousness in ‘our
beautiful art,’ and his joy in furthering this until the day of his
terrible affliction (deafness). At this place the music, which has
been unrestrainedly light-hearted and joyful, suddenly stops. The
cello attacks a low C, the second violin and viola plunge into a
shuddering dark series of harmonies, and over this the first violin
for more than six measures holds a high, piercing E, symbolical of
the chords, the ceaseless humming of which in his ears foretold his
deafness. After this harrowing passage the music sinks sadly to the
end with a reminiscence of hopes of earlier years (a theme from the
first movement). No thematic or formal analysis can be necessary.
The work is intense with powerful emotion from the first note to the
last, and speaks with a directness that does not spare the listener
thus introduced into the very heart of an unhappy and desperate man.
The general orchestral style is noticeable at the beginning, and in
the fateful passage at the end. In the second section of the second
movement there is a phrase (viola) to be played _quasi Tromba_. This
is later taken up by the second violin, and still later by the first
violin and viola in octaves. The form is regular and clear-cut, the
technical skill of the highest order. There is a later quartet, in D
minor, which is irregular, fragmentary, explosive. The writing is here,
too, orchestral. There is an excess of frantic unison passages, of mad
tremolo, as there is also at the beginning of the last movement.
In the quartets of Dvořák the orchestral manner is not so evident,
but none of his quartets is emotionally so powerful as Smetana’s great
work. Dvořák brings the quartet back into its proper sphere. His
instinct for effects shows itself at the very beginning. Notice in his
first quartet--in D minor, opus 34, dedicated to Johannes Brahms--the
presentation of the second theme in the first movement: the rolling
figure for cello, the persistent figure for the viola which by holding
to its shape acquires an independent significance, and over these the
duet between first and second violin. The varied accompaniment in the
second movement is well worth study.
The whole first movement of the second quartet--E-flat major, opus
51--is perfectly adapted to the four string instruments. Every part
has an independence and a delicate free motion. The second movement, a
_Dumka_, is one of his masterpieces in chamber music, and the following
_Romanze_ is almost its equal. The final movement cannot but suggest
Schumann. The third and fourth quartets, opus 61 and opus 80, lack the
inspiration of the two earlier ones.
In our time we come to the famous quartet in F major, opus 96, written
in Spillville, Iowa, in June, 1893. One may call it the little sister
of the New World Symphony, which had been composed shortly before in
New York City. Like the bigger work it is founded upon motives and
themes which have characteristics common to the music of the American
negro. Some say these same characteristics are common to music in
Bohemia and Hungary, even to Scottish music. Hence the discussion
which has raged from time to time over the New World Symphony, though
the title of the symphony was of Dvořák’s own choosing;[79] and the
quartet, and the quintet which followed it (opus 97) have likewise
been made a bone of contention. However, it must be granted by all
alike that the quartet is one of the most successful pieces of chamber
music that has been written. Nowhere does Dvořák’s style show to better
advantage, and few, if any quartets, are better adapted to the nature
of the instruments for which they were written.
Two later quartets, opus 105, in A-flat major, and opus 106, in G
major, do not compare favorably, at least from the point of view of
musical vitality, with the earlier works.
VI
Merely to mention the composers who have written string quartets and
to enumerate their works would fill a long chapter, and to little
avail. Haydn gave the quartet a considerable place among the forms
of musical composition. Mozart’s six quartets dedicated to Haydn are
almost unique as an expression of his genius not influenced by external
circumstances. The last Beethoven quartets are the final and abstract
account of that great man’s conclusions with life and his art. Since
the day of these three masters few composers have brought to the form
such a special intention. Few string quartets since that day contain a
full and special expression of the genius of the men who composed them.
We look to other forms for the essentials of their contribution to the
art of music. Indeed, among the men who have been discussed in this
chapter there are few whose quartets are of real significance or of a
merit that is equal to that of their other works.
As to form there has been little radical change down to the time of
the recent composers who have abandoned deliberately all that it was
possible to abandon of classical tradition. Of them and their work we
shall speak presently. Schumann, Brahms, Tschaikowsky and Borodine,
Smetana and Dvořák, and even César Franck and Vincent d’Indy have
adhered closely to the classical model, varying it and adding to it,
but never discarding it.
In the matter of style and technique most of the advance has been
made in the direction of special effects, already described, and of
increased sonority. With the result that the ancient and traditional
quartet style has given way in most cases to an orchestral style, in
which effects are essentially massive and broad, which is a tapestry,
not a web of sound. Take, for example, three quartets by modern
composers of yesterday: that of Tschaikowsky in D, Smetana’s _Aus
meinem Leben_, and César Franck’s. If these are not the greatest since
Schubert they have at least few companions; and they represent more
than those of Brahms, we think, the development in technique as well as
the change in style that the century brought. There are few pages in
any one of them which do not show fine and sensitive workmanship; but
the tone of all three is unmistakably _orchestral_, in the sense that
it is massive, sensuous, and richly sonorous.
It is then with some surprise that we find what at the present day
we call the modern movement expressed in three quartets which are as
conspicuous for delicate quartet style as for the modernness of their
forms and harmonies.
Debussy’s quartet was written comparatively early (1893), not more
than three or four years after Franck had completed his. It is not a
work of his first period, however, of the time when he was still a
disciple of Wagner. Rather it belongs to the second period of which
_L’isle joyeuse_, and _Estampes_, for piano, _L’après-midi d’un faune_,
for orchestra, and the opera ‘Pelleas and Melisande,’ are, with it,
representative works. It is written according to his own ideas of
harmony, explained elsewhere in this series, and hence may be taken as
the first quartet in which the classical tradition has been radically
altered if not wholly disregarded. For the forms of sonata, symphony,
and quartet were founded upon a system of harmony. Musical material,
however freely disposed, rested upon a basis of key and contrasting
keys common to all music of that era, the passing of which seems
now before us. The Debussy quartet is constructed thematically in a
way which in principle is old and familiar, but upon a basis which
transforms the work beyond recognition of those to whom his harmonic
series is not yet familiar.
There is little to be said of the plan of the work. The four movements
are constructed upon a single phrase. Men wrote suites that way in the
early seventeenth century. This phrase, in which there are two motives,
is given out at once by the first violin, solidly supported by the
other instruments. The movement is _animé et très décidé_. There is
an impassioned abandon to sound. Secondary motives are given out: by
the violin under which the three other instruments rise and fall in
chords that whirr like the wind; by the cello, the same wind of harmony
blowing high above. Then again the opening motives, growing from soft
to loud; and a new motive (first violin and viola in tenths), over a
monotonous twisting (second violin and cello in sixths). Then comes a
retard. One would expect a second theme here. The harmony rests for
a moment on F-sharp minor, and there is a snatch of melody (first
violin). But for those broad harmonic sections of the sonata there is
here no regard. The key flashes by. The melody was but a clever change
rung upon the opening phrase. It comes again following an impetuous and
agitated crescendo. Note how after this the music rushes ever up and
up, and with what a whirling fall it sinks down almost to silence; how
over a hushed triplet figure on an imperfect fifth (A-flat--D, cello)
it gains force again, and the opening phrases recur, and something
again of the secondary motives. There is perfect order of all the
material, an order hardly differing from that of the classical sonata;
but the harmonies melt and flow, they have no stable line, they never
broaden, never rest. And so all seems new, and was, and still is new.
The second movement (_assez vif et bien rythmé_) is in the nature
of a scherzo. Four pizzicato chords begin, and then the viola gives
out the chief idea, an easily-recognized variant of the fundamental
idea announced at the beginning of the first movement. But this is
used first as a _tenore ostinato_ (if one may speak of it so). It is
repeated by the viola fourteen times without variation; then five
times by first violin, and twice, dying away, by cello. Meanwhile the
other instruments are at something the same monotonous game. Nothing
is clear. There are cross-rhythms, broken phrases, a maze of odd
movements, independent of each other.
Then follows a passage of different character. The lower instruments
weave a network of faint sound, and the violin has a phrase, clearly
related to the fundamental motive, though greatly augmented. Then the
queer rioting chatter of the first part comes hack, all the instruments
pizzicato, the time 15/8.
The third movement (_andantino, doucement expressif_) presents the
motive (first violin) wrapped so to speak in a veil of melody and
thus disguised. The last movement, beginning slowly and working up to
frenzy, brings every sort of fragmentary suggestion of this motive.
It is particularly noticeable in augmentation (first violin) about
the middle of the movement; and this middle section is developed to a
tremendous climax at the height of which the first violin gives out the
whole phrase (_avec passion et très contenu_) in broad octaves. A short
coda (_très vif_) brings yet another transformation.
The style of the whole quartet is decidedly homophonic. There are some
measures, now and then passages of several measures, in which there is
only an harmonic effect; but for the most part there is one instrument
treated as the solo instrument; usually the first violin. Page after
page presents the familiar scheme of melody and accompaniment. There
is almost no trace of a polyphonic method, none of conventional
counterpoint, of fugal imitations.
Such devices were essential to the older quartet style. Accompaniment
figures were abominable in music which passed through definite and long
harmonic sections. Even the tremolo was not often satisfactory, and,
being indistinct, tended to make the style orchestral. But here we have
to do with a fluent harmony that is almost never still, that does not
settle, as it were, into well-defined lakes of sound on which a theme
may start forth with all sail set. Hence the accompanying parts move
with a free and wide motion. The style is flexible and animated, and
thoroughly suited to the quartet.
The fineness of Debussy’s conceptions offers the key to the subtlety
of his technique. He handles the instruments with a touch the delicacy
of which has hardly been equalled. He has new things to whisper. The
whirring figures beginning in the thirteenth measure, the triplet
figures (in sixth) after another statement of the principal motive,
over which, or interlaced with which, there is a melody for violin,
followed strangely by the viola; the wide accompanying figures for
violin and cello in contrary motion, not long before the end of the
first movement; all these are effects proper, though somewhat new,
to the quartet style. The first section of the second movement is a
masterpiece of quartet writing. Each instrument is at odds with the
others. In listening one could hardly say how many different parts were
at work in the music. Nowhere has the pizzicato been used with better
effect. The second section of the same movement offers a contrasting
effect of vagueness and quiet. The slow movement is newly beautiful,
and the last movement dramatic. By the treatment of the instruments the
quartet may stand as a masterpiece, the most conspicuous development
properly in quartet technique since the last quartets of Beethoven.
The quartet in F major by Maurice Ravel shows an instinct for the
instruments not less sensitive or delicate, and in a few places even
more bold. But the form of the work is more conventionally organized
than that of Debussy. There are distinct themes, regularly constructed
in four-measure phrases, and occurring regularly according to
established plans. The harmonies, however, are all fluent, so that the
sound of the work belies its close kinship to the past.
And Ravel is a master of the quartet style. The opening measures have
a suave polyphonic movement. There is polyphony in the treatment of
the second theme as it is taken up by second violin and woven with
a counter-melody by the first. And when he is not polyphonic he has
the same subtlety of harmonic procedure that distinguishes Debussy’s
quartet. The beginning of the second movement (_assez vif--très
rythmé_) seems to me not so extraordinary as the beginning of the
second movement in Debussy’s quartet, but it offers a brilliant example
of the use of pizzicato effects. The muted sections in the middle of
this movement; the accompaniment figures _quasi arpa_; the same sort of
figures in the following slow movement combined with pizzicato notes
of the cello; and the extraordinary figures in the 5/4 section of the
last movement, indeed all the last movement, are all signs of the new
development in a quartet style which is not an orchestral style.
Finally the quartet, opus 7, by Arnold Schönberg. The work was composed
in 1905. Among earlier works there are songs, a string sextet,
_Verklärte Nacht_, the _Gurre-Lieder_, for solo voices, chorus and
orchestra, and a symphonic poem, ‘Pelleas and Melisande.’ Later works
include a second string quartet (1907-8), five pieces for orchestra, a
monodrama, _Erwartung_, and a few pieces for pianoforte.
The _Verklärte Nacht_ is a work of rich, sensuous beauty. At the
head of the score are printed lines from a poem by Richard Dehmals,
which are either utterly decadent or naïve. They are beautiful, too.
So prefaced, the sextet proves to be a symphonic poem, in which the
composer has chosen to confine himself to the limited possibilities
of tone color within the range of the six instruments. There are two
violins, two violas and two cellos. The harmonies are richly varied
and free, but not at all unfamiliar. The form is the progressive form
made possible by the system of leading or characteristic motives. All
follows the poem very closely. The opening is depressed and gloomy.
The repeated low D’s (second cello and second viola) seem to suggest
the lifeless tread of the man and woman, going unhappily through the
cold barren grove. The sadly falling phrases (first viola, later with
violins) are indicative of their mood. After considerable development,
which clearly stands for the woman’s confession of sin and woe, comes
a beautiful section in E major which seems to reflect her dream that
in motherhood she should find happiness. This is roughly broken off.
The situation demands it. For having come with child by a strange man
for whom she had no love, she finds herself now walking with one whom
she would have greatly preferred. However, the man is generous, finds
that his love for her has made a child of him, and that he and she and
the babe unborn are to be transfigured by the strength of that love.
At the end, following this amorous exaltation, the music broadens and
gradually takes on an almost unearthly beauty.
Technically, as regards the treatment of the instruments, the sextet
is extraordinary. The additional cello and viola make it possible to
employ the pronounced color of the upper tones of these instruments and
at the same time reserve the resonant lower notes as a foundation. Much
use is made of harmonics, especially toward the end, where full chords
are given that ethereal quality so like a flute that one may easily be
misled into thinking wind instruments must have joined in the ensemble.
The quartet is radically different. The sextet is emotionally rich and
vital; the quartet is in the first place a vast intellectual essay.
There are moments in the Adagio section, and toward the close, where
music speaks in common language thoughts which are noble and inspired.
For the most part, however, the quartet is in a language which whatever
may be its future is incomprehensible to many today. One approaches
it as through a new grammar. One must first seek to master the logic
behind it, both in the matter of its broad form and in the idiom of its
harmonies. There are many who feel this language a sort of Esperanto,
artificial, not to say factitious. There are more and more who
recognize naturalness and spontaneity in it.
As to the harmonic idiom and the mathematical polyphony back of it
something has been written in an earlier volume. A detailed analysis
of the form is not possible without many examples from the score, for
which there is no space in this chapter. Only a few features of it may
be touched upon here.
The work is in a single movement, within the limits of which movements
which in earlier quartets were separate have been arranged and combined
as sections corresponding to the triple divisions in the old-fashioned
sonata-form, with a widely extended coda. Where in the classical
sonata-form there are single themes, in these divisions there are many
themes. Therefore one speaks of a first theme, really a chief-theme,
_group_, of transitional _groups_, of episodic though broadly developed
Scherzo and Adagio.
In the first theme group there are three distinct themes. The first
is announced at once (D minor) by the first violin, a theme not unlike
one of Richard Strauss’. In the fourteenth measure the second theme is
brought in by the second violin (D-flat major). This is taken up by the
first violin, the whole period being eight measures long. The third
theme (_etwas langsamer_) is a combination of a melodic formula (first
and second violins) and characteristic harmonies (viola and cello).
There follow many pages of polyphonic working with this threefold
material. The first theme of the group may be said to predominate. It
appears in varied shape throughout the separate parts.
What may be taken as a transitional section, leading to the second
theme group, is a long fugato on a new subject. This is introduced
by the second violin (first violin with secondary subject) after a
considerable ritard and a pause. The passage grows rapidly faster,
leading to a tremendous climax; after which the first of the second
theme group is announced (first violin, _zart bewegt, E-flat major_).
The second follows shortly after with a change of time (6/4). Here
there is beautiful scoring. The first violin is at first silent, the
second bearing the melody, the viola giving soft accompaniment figures,
the cello sliding down, pianissimo, in long notes. Then the melody is
taken by viola, the first violin has the long sliding phrases, the
cello the breaking figure. The third part of this section (_etwas
bewegter_) brings out in the first violin a rhythmically varied form of
the first theme of the same group.
Now follows the first broad development section (_erste Durchführung
und Überleitung in Scherzo_[80]), which leads to the Scherzo. The
entrance of the Scherzo is prepared and easily heard, and the Scherzo
itself is scored at first in note for note style. The principal
theme is closely related to the subject of the transitional fugue.
It works through many stages, now _kräftig_, now _sehr zart_, to a
terrific climax, echoed in harmonics, and savagely terminated. A few
mysterious measures, now muted and again without mutes, bring in the
Trio (_lebhaft_, E major) the principal theme of which is of almost
folk-song simplicity. The Scherzo is repeated, varied almost beyond
recognition. The theme is given first to viola, between strange triplet
figures (second violin and cello).
Then follows a second development section, working up again to an
overpowering climax, leading to the first theme group, as to the
restatement section in the sonata-form. This reëntrance of the theme
is truly heroic. The second violin and viola actually dash down upon
the opening notes, and the first violin and cello add a frenzy of
accompaniment. Now we have the first theme group (shortened) again; and
then, instead of the transitional fugue, a long and developed Adagio,
page after page of muted music of unearthly, ghostly beauty. Two themes
are recognizable, and the section may be divided into three parts, the
first of which rests upon the first theme (first violin solo); the
second upon the second theme, slower than the first (viola), and the
third upon the first again, slightly modified.
After this adagio comes the second theme group, just as the second
theme in the restatement section of the classical sonata form.
Finally there is a coda, in lively tempo, a rondo built upon three
themes, the first two of which are taken from the adagio. The broad
closing section brings back the opening theme of all, in major. The
ending is very simple and quiet.
Hence we have one huge movement in sonata form, our old familiar
exposition, with its first and second themes and its transitional
passages; its development--in which a scherzo is incorporated; its
restatement of both themes--with a new transitional passage between
them in the shape of an adagio--and its broad, completing coda. The
mind of a man has conceived it; and the mind of man can comprehend it.
The harmonies are often hideous, though no note in the entire quartet
is without a logical justification in the new grammar. On the other
hand, there are moments of ineffable beauty. Whatever the outcome,
there can be no denying that the quartet has entered here upon a new
stage, far removed from all other music. Only time can tell whether
this is an advance, and then only by showing new work when this shall
have proved itself a foundation on which to build.
Schönberg has since written another quartet (1907-8). It is not only
shorter as a whole than the earlier one, but is divided by pauses into
four separate movements. There is, however, a thematic relationship
between all four; and the third movement--_Litanie_--occupies in the
scheme the place of a _Durchführung_, a variation and weaving together
of all the previous themes.
The first movement begins and ends in F-sharp minor, and there are two
distinct themes: the opening theme (first violin), and, after a broad
ritard, a second theme (first violin, _sehr ausdrucksvoll_). The time
is measured yet often free. After a development of the two themes there
is a _fermata_, and then a restatement of them; so that on the whole
the movement is not difficult to follow, though the second half is
complex and long.
The second movement (_sehr rasch_) is in the nature of a wild scherzo.
The rhythmical motive with which it starts (cello, pianissimo) recalls
the now ancient style of Wagner. There is no precedent for the
following figure (second violin), which is one of the chief elements in
this fantastical movement. It is taken up by viola immediately, while
both violins present at the same time two equally important motives,
one of which is a sort of syncopated shadow of the other. Then, _etwas
langsamer_, the first violin and viola give out yet a fourth motive (in
octaves) and out of these four, with many less audible, a cacophonous,
spiteful tangle of sounds ensues. There is a Trio section (_etwas
rascher_), and a return of the Scherzo. There is a short coda, _sehr
rasch_, all instruments in unison (or octaves) until the last measures.
Then the cello beats out the opening rhythmical figure, fortissimo, on
D, the first violin shrieks G-C-sharp over and over again, the viola
and second violin fall together through unheard of intervals. There is
a hush, a roar, and a hush--a pizzicato note--unison--silence.
Both the third and the fourth movements bring in a soprano voice.
The words are from Stephan George;[81] the titles: _Litanei_ and
_Entrückung_. Here Schönberg has gone beyond the string quartet, and
here properly we may leave him. The instruments are busy during the
_Litanei_ with motives from the first and second movements. The voice
is independent of them. There is enormous dramatic force in the climax
at the words:
_Wacht noch ein Schrei
Töte das Sehnen...
Schliesse die Wunde!
Nimm mir die Liebe
Gieb mir dein Glück._
In the last movement there is no appreciable form. There is no harmony,
i.e., no regular sequence of keys, though the end falls on a common
chord. Even the melody has gone on into a new world.
Schönberg’s style is fundamentally polyphonic, and is in that regard
fitting to the quartet. In the use of harmonics and pizzicato he stands
a little ahead of his contemporaries. If we can follow Schönberg in his
new conception of form and harmony, we should indeed be reactionary if
we hesitated longer to admit harmonics and pizzicato into the category
of effects proper to quartet music. Moreover, the examples offered by
such exquisite masterpieces as the quartets of Tschaikowsky, Debussy
and Ravel must give to such procedures the sanction of good usage. That
Schönberg’s material is symphonic in character only goes to prove that
the whole question of form and style is at the present day one which no
man can definitely answer.
But having admitted the influence of modern virtuosity and of the
modern love of sensuous tone coloring into the realm of the string
quartet, we face a new idea of the combination of the four instruments
of one type. The old idea of the quartet was given fullest expression
in the quartets of Beethoven. In the expression of that idea little
progress has since been possible. The changes that have come have made
of the quartet something like a chamber symphony in which effects of
solid sound and of brilliant and pronounced colors predominate, music
that has salt for the senses as well as meaning for the spirit. Hence
it has lost that traditional quality of abstractness, which was pure
and unalloyed, and has become poignant, fiery, pictorial or dramatic.
We hear in it now the strumming of wild zithers, now the beat of savage
drums, madness and ecstasy, chords that are plucked, chords that float
in air, even confusion and riot of sound. The four instruments still
remain, but the old idea of the quartet has become lifeless or has
passed from among the present ideals of men.
FOOTNOTES:
[75] The date is fixed by a fragment of the autograph found in 1901.
See Richard Heuberger: _Franz Schubert_.
[76] See Max Kalbeck: _Johannes Brahms_, Vol. II, part 2, p. 442.
[77] Kalbeck has called attention to the resemblance between these
two motives and the _Erda-motif_ and the _Walhalla-motif_ in _Das
Rheingold_ and _Die Walküre_.
[78] See William Ritter: _Smetana_. Paris, 1907.
[79] From the New World.
[80] See Schönberg’s own analysis in _Die Musik_, June 2, 1907.
[81] _Der siebente Ring._
CHAPTER XVIII
THE PIANOFORTE AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS IN CHAMBER MUSIC
The trio--Pianoforte quartets and quintets--Sonatas
for violoncello and piano--The piano with wind
instruments--Chamber music for wind instruments by the great
composers.
The pianoforte has always played an important part in chamber music,
if, indeed, the best pianoforte music may not itself be considered
chamber music. Few instrumental works were written during the
seventeenth century in which the harpsichord was not supposed to
furnish a foundation of harmony, or was not expected to contribute
more specifically to the texture of the music. The concertos and
sonatas of Corelli and Vivaldi, of Bach and Handel, of Couperin and
Rameau, of Purcell; all these were founded upon a figured bass, to be
played by harpsichord, lute or viol, or contained a part written for
the harpsichord. The figured bass gradually dropped out of music as
composers gained skill to manage their combinations of instruments
sonorously. Out of this skill grew up the orchestra, and, in the
realm of chamber music, the string quartet. But meanwhile composers
were developing a great technique in writing for the harpsichord, so
that it came little by little wholly to supplant the lute, and to win
a distinguished, independent place of its own as a solo instrument.
There are concertos of Bach and Couperin in which the harpsichord
plays almost as brilliant a part as in the modern concerto, and the
violin sonatas of Bach are virtually in the style of trios, because the
harpsichord is treated always as adding two parts to the one of the
violin. Finally, the modern trio really grew up around the harpsichord
or the pianoforte.
I
The trios of the seventeenth century--the _Sonate a tre_--were written
for three concertizing instruments and a figured bass, really four
parts in all. During the eighteenth century the word trio took on
quite a different significance and was applied to compositions written
for the harpsichord with _one_ other solo instrument, violin, oboe,
or flute, like the violin sonatas of Bach. Vaguely at the time of the
young Haydn, clearly when Mozart entered the world of music, the word
took on the meaning that it still holds today: a composition written
for three instruments, pianoforte, violin and cello. If another
combination of instruments is meant, then those instruments are usually
specifically designated in the title of the work.
The Haydn Trios are of little importance. There are thirty-five in
all, and it has been said that the majority were written for a patron
who played the cello a very little. Hence one finds the cello part in
this combination to be merely a duplication of the bass part of the
pianoforte, having little independent movement of its own; and the
works are rather sonatas with violin than trios.
Mozart, on the other hand, treated the combination with a fine sense
of the effects that could be made with it. He gave to each of the
three instruments a free line of its own, and made fine use of the
possibilities of tonal contrast and color. There are eight trios in
all. They are not representative of Mozart’s best, though there is not
one in which Mozart’s inimitable grace is lacking; but in spite of
their slenderness they may be considered the first pianoforte trios in
the modern sense, and to have set the model for subsequent works in
that form.
These are not very numerous, if one excludes from them a great number
of fantasias or popular operas such as were written by Woelfl, Nicholas
Lomi and other composers of the virtuoso type. Nor does the form show
much development except that which accompanies an improvement in
pianofortes and a progress in technical skill on all these instruments.
Only a few trios stand out conspicuously as having high musical worth,
or as having been a worthy expression of genius.
There are eight trios by Beethoven. Of these three were published
as opus 1, and hardly show an advance over the trios of Mozart, if
indeed they do not fall considerably short of them in point of finish
and style. Two were not published in his lifetime, and one of these
is only a fragment, a single movement in B-flat major, composed in
June, 1812, for Maximilian Brentano. There are, then, but three that
are representative of the mature Beethoven, two published as opus
70, and one, in B-flat major, opus 97, dedicated to his favorite
pupil, the Archduke Rudolph. The writing for the three instruments is
especially clear in the first allegro of opus 70, No. 1, a lively,
vivacious movement in D major. The slow movement of this trio is rather
remarkably scored for the pianoforte, which is almost constantly
engaged in tremolos, strange broken trills, and runs. The last movement
is full of Beethoven’s humor, very distinctly in the swing of a
folk-song. Throughout there is much brilliant work for the piano, and
a ceaseless witty interchange between the other two parts. There is
an extraordinary pedal point before the return to the first section,
which is just touched upon at the end. The second of this pair of
trios is not less brilliantly arranged for the three instruments. The
variations in the second movement are finer than the variations in the
earlier works. There is folk-song again in the third movement, a smooth
_allegretto_ in A-flat major. Both trios are extraordinarily clear and
happy in mood.
The trio opus 97 is one of the biggest of Beethoven’s works. The
contents are more symphonic than those of his other trios, and recall
something of the spirit of the quartets of opus 59. There is, indeed,
a marked similarity between the opening theme of this trio and that
of the quartet opus 59, No. 1, especially in the broad line of the
melody. Yet though on the whole the effect of this great trio may be
orchestral, there are not lacking measures of finest style, like those
which follow the second theme in the first movement, with the touch
or two of delicate imitation, then the soft melody of the cello with
the dainty scale on the pianoforte, and then the cello and violin in
octaves, with the scales on the pianoforte becoming more and more
active and noisy. Immediately after, it is all cleverly changed about;
the strings have those lively scales and the pianoforte the melody. The
scoring of the whole Scherzo, too, is especially in trio style, and may
well be taken as a model. The andante and variations, and even more the
last movement, are, however, hardly in the style of chamber music, and
the vigorous passion of the ideas in them does considerable violence to
the essentially delicate combination.
The combination is without doubt one of the most difficult to treat
with success, partly because the pianoforte may be very easily led to
overpower its fellow instruments, partly because notes in the lower
ranges of the cello have so little carrying quality that except in
very soft passages they cannot be heard in the combination. It must be
said that the general development in pianoforte technique did much to
overthrow the balance and adjustment so charming in the trios of Mozart
and in those of opus 70 by Beethoven. Between Beethoven’s last trio,
opus 97, and the trios of Brahms there is hardly a single one that does
not suffer from maladjustment.
The two trios of Schubert, opus 99, in B-flat, and opus 100 in E-flat,
are full of inspiration, and Schubert’s fancy is so delicate that
on the whole he may be said to have succeeded with the combination.
Certainly the little canon which forms the Scherzo in the second trio
is a masterpiece of style. Also the announcement of the chief theme in
the first trio and the way in which it is developed cannot be found
fault with; nor is the charming D-flat section in the finale less
perfect. But in the scherzo there are rather weak accompaniments scored
for the strings in the orchestral manner of double stops, and there are
similar passages at the beginning of the transition to the second theme
in the first movement of the second trio. These are here acceptable
because of the sheer beauty of the material which is thus presented;
but one cannot deny that this would find even lovelier expression with
a group of three strings. In the _Andante con moto_ the impropriety of
style is more evident; but one will forgive anything in this inspired
movement, which later is to stand like a shadow behind the _Marcia_ in
Schumann’s great pianoforte quintet.
Mendelssohn wrote two trios, one in D minor, one in C minor, which,
after having for years been favorites with players and public alike,
are now sinking out of sight. In these the treatment of the pianoforte
is brilliant; and though it may not be said to overbalance the strings,
it certainly outshines them. Mention should be made of Marschner’s trio
in G minor, opus 110, because it so clearly influenced Schumann in his
own quartet in A minor. Five trios of Spohr’s were once well known, but
they represent no change or development either in style or form; and
even that in E minor, opus 119, which has been prized almost to the
present day because of its melodiousness, is fast being abandoned.
Schumann’s trios--in D minor, opus 63, in F major, opus 80, and in G
minor, opus 110--have at any rate a beauty of inspiration. They are
romantic and poetic as his other works are, and the warmth of them is
sufficient to melt a cold criticism. That in D minor is perhaps the
best, and the scherzo, especially the middle section of it, with its
smooth theme looking forward to the trio in Brahms’ first pianoforte
sonata, is admirable in style.
The three trios of Brahms are masterpieces. The first, opus 8, in B
major, was an early work and was revived years later and republished in
the form in which it is now generally familiar. But even in its revived
shape it is inferior to the two later trios, in C major, opus 87, and
in C minor, opus 101, though the opening theme is of a haunting beauty,
and the scherzo, suggesting that in Beethoven’s opus 97, is in piquant
and effective style.
In the first movement of the C major trio the violin and cello seem
like two noble and equal voices throughout. Their course is bold and
free. They are never overshadowed by the pianoforte. It seems to be
largely Brahms’ treatment of the cello that makes these works so
perfectly satisfying in sound and style. He showed always a fondness
for deep low notes. Sometimes his music suffers from it. But here,
in these trios, it gains immensely. For, as we have said, one of the
greatest difficulties of writing in good style for this combination of
instruments is to be met in handling the low notes of the cello. Brahms
seems to have done it almost instinctively. From the beginning of the
first movement, with its full-throated octaves, to the very end of the
whole, the cello never for one measure fails to equal the violin in
effectiveness. Very often they are made to play together in octaves,
and in places, as in the course of the second theme, they hold long
notes two octaves apart, defining the sonority so to speak, within the
limits of which the piano moves alone, filling the wide space with
richest sound. Again, at the beginning of the _Andante con moto_ violin
and cello are two octaves apart. He combines them in bold chords which
challenge the pianoforte, assert their own independence, as here, not
long before the middle section of this _andante_, or at the beginning
of the trio in C minor, opus 101. He allows one fully to support the
other without the pianoforte, as in the _Andante Grazioso_ of the C
minor. All through these truly magnificent works one is struck by the
comradeship and equality of the two strings, and this, together with
the way the pianoforte is adapted to them, leads us to say that there
are no trios so perfect in style as these two of Brahms. It might even
be added that it would be hard to match them in nobility of content.
Mention may be made here of two other trios by Brahms in which he has
shown himself no less a master of the difficult task of combining
three instruments of utterly different qualities and range. One of
these is the famous trio in E-flat, opus 40, for piano, violin and
horn. The horn may, it is true, be interchanged with cello or viola,
but only at the cost of the special tone color which makes the work
such a favorite. The other is the trio for pianoforte, clarinet, and
cello, a work which, together with the masterly quintet for clarinet
and strings, opus 115, is proof of Brahms’ admiration for the clarinet
playing of Professor Mühlfeld. Both these trios are almost unique in
their perfection.
One is at a loss to mention more trios which are at all comparable to
those of Brahms. It is in the main true that the pianoforte finally
took such complete possession of the trio that trios were no more
than brilliant concert sonatas or concertos. The Russians, headed
by Rubinstein, have written many trios. Rubinstein’s, as might be
expected, were far too brilliant for the pianoforte. Tschaikowsky’s
only trio, opus 50, written to the memory of Nicholas Rubinstein, is
one of his most impassioned works. Whatever improprieties of style
there may be, its emotional force cannot be resisted. He admitted a
fear that, having all his life written for the orchestra, he might not
have adapted the musical combination to his thoughts. Yet in spite of
the general orchestral style of treatment, this trio remains one of the
most moving of all chamber music compositions.
Also among Russian trios may be mentioned that by Arensky in D minor,
which is wholly delightful. The swing of the first theme in the first
movement is impelling, and the whole scherzo with its touch here and
there of waltz rhythms, and the fleet scales on the keyboard, are
effective. Paul Juon’s capricious fantasia on ‘Gösta Berling’ is
interesting.
Dvořák’s trios are worthy of study. Of the three--in G minor, opus 26,
in F minor, opus 65, and the Dumky, opus 90--the last two are the most
interesting, and also the most Bohemian in character. The treatment
of the pianoforte is brilliant. At times the cello is used a little
unworthily, that is to say, merely to accentuate low notes or to add a
sort of barbaric strumming; yet on the whole Dvořák’s treatment of the
two strings is not very unlike that of Brahms. There is a great deal
of octave playing between them, notably at the very beginning of opus
65, in the second section of the allegretto, and now and then in the
various sections of the Dumky. The cello is given long and impassioned
solos, or takes a full part with the violin in dialogues. On the whole
Dvořák makes more use of the upper registers; but again, in the manner
of Brahms, he knows how to use the low without concealing it beneath
the heavier tone of the piano. The whole section, _vivace non troppo_,
which follows the first _poco adagio_, is excellently scored for the
three instruments. Notice how at first the cello holds a low C-sharp,
supporting the light melody of the violin and the light staccato
accompaniment of the piano; how as the music grows more furious the
cello adds a G-sharp above its C-sharp. When at last the piano breaks
into the melody, violin and cello take equal parts in the series of
sharp, detached chords which accent its rhythm. Again the melody is
given to the violin, an octave higher than at first, and the cello
gives an accompaniment of single notes and chords, while between the
two the piano plays the whirlwind. After all this subsides, the cello
rises up from the deep in a broad solo cadenza. It must be granted that
the musical value of the notes allotted to the cello in this section
is not high; but the point is the admirable spacing of the three
instruments which allows each to display a peculiar sonority and all
to join in a rich and exceedingly animated and varied whole. Elsewhere
in these trios there is a fine polyphonic style. Much of the vitality
of the music comes from the vivid nature of the national rhythms and
melodies out of which it is constructed. These trios, then, are hardly
comparable to the classic trios of Brahms. Yet they seem to be the most
effective and the most successful trios that have been written since
Beethoven, with the exception only of Brahms’ two and Tschaikowsky’s
one.
The French composers have not given much attention to the trio. César
Franck’s first works were three short trios, but they are without
conspicuous merit. Two trios by Lalo are pleasingly scored. Among
the trios of Saint-Saëns that in E-flat major, opus 18, is the most
effective. The pianoforte part is especially brilliant, yet does not
throw the combination out of adjustment.
II
There are more brilliant and more distinguished works for the
combination of pianoforte, violin, viola, and cello. Inasmuch as one
of the difficulties in writing trios is the wide spaces between the
natural registers of cello and violin, and this is here filled up by
the viola, the pianoforte quartets of the last fifty years maintain a
higher standard than the trios. Moreover the general effect is more
satisfactory, because the three strings have naturally an independent
and complete life, and are more equal to withstanding the onslaughts of
the pianist.
The Schumann pianoforte quartet in E-flat, opus 47, is practically
the first work in this form of importance, and it has remained
unexcelled in beauty and romantic fervor. As to style, one notices in
the very first measures the fullness and completeness of the parts
for the strings, and throughout the entire work the effect of the
three stringed instruments is very like that of a string quartet. In
the scherzo and in the opening sections of the finale as well even
the piano is treated as a single part in a quartet, not as a sort of
foundation or a furnisher of harmonies and accompaniments to the others.
The Schumann piano quintet, opus 44, is even more famous than the
quartet. Here the problem is still simpler, for the piano quintet is
but a combination of two independent groups: the full string quartet
and the pianoforte. The piano must still be handled with care else it
will overpower its companions; but the complete resources of the four
strings make possible contrasts between them and the piano, measures
in which the piano may be quite silent, and others in which it less
fills up the harmony than adds its own color to the sonority. The
first broad section of the development in the first movement becomes,
therefore, almost a pianoforte concerto; whereas other sections like
the second trio in the scherzo are in the nature of a concerto for
string quartet and orchestra. In the beginning of the last movement the
strings are treated too much in an orchestral manner. There is no trace
of the fineness of the quartet which should never quite disappear in
this big combination. Later on the strings, however, are handled with
the greatest delicacy, as in the fugal parts before the last fugue.
Here, where the theme of the first movement comes back into the music
with splendor, there is perfection of style. But whatever may be the
technical merits or faults of this quintet as a quintet, as music it is
inspired from beginning to end.
From the time of Schumann, who may be said to have left the model and
set the standard for all subsequent pianoforte quartets and quintets,
our history will find not more than twenty such works upon which to
touch with enthusiasm. Among the quartets those of Brahms and Dvořák,
and that in C-minor, opus 15, by Gabriel Fauré stand out conspicuously.
Brahms wrote three pianoforte quartets, one in G minor, opus 25,
one in A major, opus 26, and one in C minor, opus 70. Of these the
first two are the best known and the most obviously pleasing. There
is a great deal of Hungarian atmosphere here and there in both,
specifically in the final movement of the first, which is a _Rondo alla
Zingarese_. But both quartets were written before Brahms went to live
in Vienna. Both may be taken as representative of Brahms first grown
to maturity, and both are rather delicately and unusually colored.
In the Intermezzo of the G minor quartet the violin is muted though
the other strings are not. In the beginning of the _poco adagio_ of
the second quartet all the strings are muted while the piano plays
_a tre corde_, not, as might be expected, _una corda_. Later in this
movement there are arpeggio passages for the pianoforte, _una corda_,
giving a strange effect like wind over a plain, one that Brahms was
particularly fond of, if we may judge by the frequency with which
he employed it. Here in this quartet, and in the _andante_ of the
earlier one, and in the slow movement of the first concerto one finds
it. The scoring of the first part of the second quartet is considered
admirable by Mr. Fuller-Maitland; but other places may be selected
equally beautifully arranged for the combination. The scoring of a sort
of secondary theme in the first movement (E major), first for strings
alone, then for pianoforte, carrying the melody, and strings, adding
their peculiar colors, rolling figures for the cello and pizzicato for
the upper strings, is exquisite. Greater, however, than all technical
arrangements is the quality of the themes themselves. This has made
both works greatly beloved among amateurs and artists alike.
The third Brahms’ quartet is less pleasing. The first movement was
written as early as 1855. It is morbid and gloomy in character and
indeed Brahms is said to have suggested to Hermann Deiters that he
should imagine, while listening to it, a young man about to kill
himself for lack of occupation. Of the same movement Dr. Billroth, one
of Brahms’ most intimate friends, said that it was an illustration in
music of Goethe’s Werther on his death bed, in his now famous buff and
blue. The cello solo in the slow movement and the scherzo in general
are more loveable.
The pianoforte quintet in F minor, opus 34, is one of Brahms’ greatest
compositions. It was published in 1865, but not until it had gone
through a rather complicated birth. Brahms had written it first as a
quintet for strings alone--with two cellos. This was unsatisfactory.
The themes were so powerful that Clara Schumann suggested even that he
re-write it for orchestra. He next arranged it, however, as a sonata
for two pianos; and indeed published it in this form a few years after
he had published it in the form in which it is now best known, as a
pianoforte quintet. The technical details are flawless, and to speak
of them is almost to attract attention to an art which is greatest in
concealment. It is far rather the broad themes, the massive structure,
reënforced and held together by every device known to composers,
the exalted sentiment of the slow movement, the powerful rhythms of
the scherzo, that give this quartet its undisputed place among the
masterpieces of music.
The two pianoforte quartets by Dvořák, opus 23, in D, and opus 87,
in E-flat, have the same perfection of style and animation of manner
that we have already noticed in the trios. The strings are handled
with discriminating touch. There is something clear and transparent in
the style, for all the impetuous, highly rhythmical, and impassioned
material. And the effectiveness of the pianoforte in the combination
is truly astonishing, considering how relatively simple it all is. In
the first movement of the quartet in D, for example, the duet that is
half canon between the cello and piano in the statement of the second
theme, and shortly after, following a two measure trill, the almost
Mozartian figuration given to the pianoforte while the strings develop
the possibilities within this second theme; the magical scoring at the
return of the first theme, which here, as at the beginning, is given in
the middle registers of the cello, being thus made both melody and rich
bass beneath the almost laughably simple figures for the pianoforte;
these alone in one movement are instances of a wholly delightful style.
In the second quartet the style is more powerful but not the less
clear. There is a splendid incisiveness in the first complete statement
of the first theme, following the impetuous run of the pianoforte.
Here are violin and viola in unison, the cello spreading richness
through the bass with its wide swinging figures, and the piano adding
a brilliance by means of commonplaces which are here delightful. Later
on there is a long passage scored in a favorite way of Dvořák’s. The
cello is given the low foundation notes, which are complemented by the
viola, both instruments playing pizzicato. The violin has a melody
which follows the figuration of the pianoforte, here of the simplest
kind, but floating as it were in mid-air over the foundation tones of
the cello. There are many passages in the third movement, similarly
arranged, the pianoforte part being without a bass of its own, the
whole fabric supported by the low notes of the cello.
The quintet, opus 84, in A major, is not less effectively scored. The
pianoforte part is perhaps a little more brilliant as a whole than
in the quartets, quite properly so because of the added force in the
strings. In the second movement we have another _Dumka_, with its wild,
passionate changes, and for a scherzo there is a _Furiant_, another
touch of Bohemia.
In French chamber music with pianoforte no work is so great as the
quintet in F minor by César Franck. It is fit to stand with the
symphony, the string quartet, even the Beatitudes of this master, as
a perfect and broad expression of his remarkable genius. The very
beginning makes us aware that we are to hear a work made up of two
independent groups of sound. There is the string quartet, with its
passionate announcement of the chief, or one of the chief, ideas of
the piece. Then there is the hushed reply of the piano, offering
another idea out of which much is to grow. And, so interchanging,
the two groups play out the introduction. The material of all three
movements is decidedly symphonic, and the resources of this combination
of instruments are taxed to the extreme. In a great part of the work
they maintain a decided independence, now answering each other as in
the statement of the first allegro motive, now asserting themselves
against each other, as very clearly throughout a large part of the last
movement where the figuration of the pianoforte is as distinct as a
theme and the four instruments play another theme against it in unisons
and octaves.
Indeed the use of unison and octave passages for the strings is
conspicuous in every movement, as if only by so combining the quartet
could maintain its own against the pianoforte. Notice this in the great
E minor passage of the development section in the first movement.[82]
Here is music of greatest and stormiest force. Franck has scored the
accompaniment in the heaviest registers of the pianoforte, and is yet
able to bring out his theme clearly above and his desired thunder
by joining all the instruments in the statement of it. Notice the
unisons, too, in the climax before the return of the chief motive,
how the strings make themselves heard, not only above a brilliant
accompaniment, but actually against another theme, given with all the
force of the piano. Only in the statement of the second theme in the
third section of the movement does the piano join with the strings.
Immediately after these follows another tremendous passage in which
only by joining together can the strings rise above the thunderous
accompaniment of the piano.
The result is, indeed, more a symphony than a pianoforte quintet, and
the style is solid and massive in effect. Franck’s polyphonic skill is,
however, revealed at its very best, and his special art of structure,
building all the movements out of a few ideas common to all, is not
less striking here than it is in the ‘Prelude, Chorale and Fugue’ for
the pianoforte alone. This quintet, with those of Schumann and Brahms,
represents the uttermost it is possible to produce with the combination
of string quartet and pianoforte. Schumann’s is the most lucid, Brahms’
the most vigorous, and Franck’s the most impassioned and dramatic of
all the pianoforte quintets.
Yet there are other brilliant and successful quintets to be noticed.
A quintet in D minor, opus 89, by Gabriel Fauré was performed for the
first time in Paris, in 1906. Fauré had already composed two pianoforte
quartets, one in C minor, opus 15, and one in G minor, opus 25. In
these he had shown himself a master of style in the combination of
pianoforte with strings, and such mastery is no less evident in the
quintet. The latter is more modern in spirit and in harmonies. There
are three movements: a _molto moderato_, an _adagio_, and an _allegro
moderato_. Of these the first is gloomy in character, and the second
is elegiac. The third is founded upon a single figure which is varied
again and again. The treatment of the piano is in the main light, so
that the instrument does not overpower the strings. Notice how the
piano opens the work with a sort of curtain of sound, against which
the instruments enter one by one. Most of this background is light,
being arranged for the upper registers of the piano. Throughout the
whole first movement the piano seldom takes part in the thematic
development, but almost always contributes a lightly flowing sound. In
the adagio, too, there is much of the same style. There is a middle
section here in which all the instruments, including the piano, always
in the upper registers, are lightly combined into a canonic flow which
is wholly exquisite in style. The motives so treated return in a sort
of apologue at the end of this movement but are not here so delicately
treated. In the last movement the piano takes a much greater part
in the development of the themes. It announces at once the motive
which, _passacaglia_-wise, is used as the foundation for the whole
movement. The odd spacing--the two hands are two octaves apart--gives
a peculiarly shadowy effect in which the pizzicatos of the other
instruments make themselves heard as sparks may be seen in mist. The
whole movement is a masterpiece of delicacy.
Other quintets have been written by composers of most of the nations
of Europe, but none has made more than a local impression. There is a
quintet by Goldmark, opus 30, in B-flat, hardly worth mentioning; a
more brilliant one by one of the younger Bohemian composers, V. Novàk
(b. 1870), which in its intense nationalism is a fitting descendant
of Smetana and Dvořák, but is lacking in personal inspiration; a
quintet by Ernst von Dohnányi. Sgambati has written a quintet without
distinction. Mr. Dunhill tells us in his book[83] on chamber music
that there is an excellent quintet by a young British composer, James
Friskin. Moreover the sextet for piano and strings by Joseph Holbrooke,
in which a double bass is added to the quartet, deserves mention. And
among American composers Arthur Foote and George Chadwick should be
mentioned, the one for his quintet in A minor, opus 38, the other for
his quintet in E-flat major, without opus number.
Only a few piano quartets have been written since those of Brahms and
Dvořák which are significant of any development or even of a freshness
of life. Those of Fauré have already been mentioned as being perfect in
style, but on the whole they seem less original and less interesting
than the quintet by the same composer. Saint-Saëns’ quartet, opus 41,
is remarkable for the brilliant treatment of the pianoforte, and the
fine sense of instrumental style which it reveals, but is on the whole
uninteresting and is certainly insignificant compared with the quartets
of Fauré or those of d’Indy and Chausson. D’Indy’s quartet, opus 7,
in A minor is no longer a new work, nor does it show in any striking
way those qualities in French music which have more recently come to
splendid blooming. But it is carefully wrought and the three movements
are moderately interesting. The second is perhaps the best music, the
third is certainly the most spirited. There is more of the manner
though perhaps less of the spirit of César Franck in Chausson’s quartet
in A major, opus 30.
In the North we come across an early work by Richard Strauss, opus
13, in the form of a pianoforte quartet, which is exceedingly long,
but interesting to the student who wishes to trace the development of
Strauss’ art of self-expression. The pianoforte is not given undue
prominence and the scoring is worthier of more interesting material.
Still farther north one meets with Christian Sinding’s quartet in E
minor, which is chiefly a _tour de force_ for the pianist.
Excepting sonatas for pianoforte and various other instruments, the
great amount of chamber music into which the piano enters consists of
trios, pianoforte quartets and pianoforte quintets. Mention must not be
omitted, however, of Schubert’s quintet for piano and strings in which
the cello is replaced by double bass. The employment of the air of
one of his songs (_Die Forelle_) as the subject for the variations in
the slow movement has given the work the name _Forellen Quintet_. The
treatment of the piano in the variations is exceedingly effective.
III
As to sonatas, those for violin and piano are treated elsewhere.
There are too many to be discussed in this chapter. There are fewer
for the cello and the best of these may here be mentioned. Skill in
playing the violoncello was slower to develop than that in playing the
violin. This was probably because the _viola da gamba_ with its six
strings was easier to play and was more in favor as a solo instrument.
The _baryton_ was a kind of _viola da gamba_ with sympathetic strings
stretched under the fingerboard, and even as late as the maturity
of Haydn this instrument was in general favor. But the tone of the
_viola da gamba_ was lighter than that of the violoncello, and so by
the beginning of the eighteenth century the cello was preferred to
the _gamba_ for the bass parts of works like Corelli’s in concerted
style. Little by little it rose into prominence from this humble
position. Meanwhile the immortal suites for the violoncello alone by
Bach had been written. Bach was probably advised in the handling of the
instrument by Abel, who was a famous _gamba_ player; so that it seems
likely that these suites were conceived for the _gamba_ as much as for
the cello.[84] The last of them, however, was written especially for
the _viola pomposa_, an instrument which Bach invented himself. This
was a small cello with an extra string tuned to E, a fifth above the A
of the cello.
Among composers who wrote expressly for the cello were Giorgio
Antoniotti, who lived in Milan about 1740, and Lanzetti, who was
'cellist to the king of Sardinia between 1730 and 1750. Later the
Italians A. Canavasso and Carlo Ferrari (b. 1730) became famous as
players, and Boccherini also was a brilliant cellist.
However, the cello sprang into its present importance as a solo
instrument largely through the Frenchman Jean Louis Duport (1749-1819),
whose understanding of the instrument led him to a discovery of those
principles of fingering and bowing which have made modern virtuosity
possible. His _Essai sur le doigter du violoncelle et la conduite de
l’archet_ was truly an epoch-making work. That a new edition was issued
as recently as 1902 proves the lasting worth and stability of his
theories.
Frederick William II, King of Prussia, to whom Mozart dedicated three
of his string quartets, was a pupil of Duport’s. Mozart’s quartets,
written with an eye to pleasing the monarch, give special prominence to
the cello. Hence through Duport we approach the great masters and their
works for the cello.
Beethoven wrote five sonatas for cello and piano. The first two,
opus 5, were written in 1796, while Beethoven was staying in Berlin,
evidently with the intention of dedicating them to Frederick William
II, and for his own appearance in public with Duport. They are
noticeably finer, or more expressive works, than the early sonatas for
violin, opus 12; perhaps because the cello does not suggest a style
which, empty of meaning, is yet beautiful and effective by reason of
sheer brilliance. The violin sonatas, all of them except the last, are
largely virtuoso music. The cello sonatas are more serious and on the
whole more sober. This may be laid to thoroughly practical reasons. The
cello has not the variety of technical possibilities that the violin
has, nor even in such rapid passages as can be played upon it can it
give a brilliant or carrying tone. By reason of its low register it
can be all too easily overpowered by the piano. Only the high notes
on the A string can make themselves heard above a solid or resonant
accompaniment. Hence if the composer desires to write a brilliant,
showy sonata for pianoforte and cello, he can do so only by sacrificing
all but the topmost registers of the cello. Even at that the piano is
more than likely to put the cello wholly in the shade.
To write effectively for the combination, therefore, and in such a way
as to bring out the variety of resources of the cello, limited as they
may be, one must not write brilliantly, but clearly, in a transparent
and careful style. Of such a style these early sonatas of Beethoven
offer an excellent example, though the music itself sounds today
old-fashioned and formal.
The best of the first sonata, which consists of a long slow
introduction, an _allegro_, and an _allegro vivace_, all in F major, is
the last movement. This is in mood a little scherzo, in form a rondo.
Particularly the chief subject is delightfully scored for the two
instruments at the very opening. The second sonata, in G minor, begins
like the first with a long slow introduction, in which the piano has
some elaborate figuration. There follows an _allegro molto_, rather
a _presto_, in 3/4 time, the opening theme of which has almost the
spontaneous melodiousness of Schubert. The pianoforte has a great deal
of work in triplets, which are high on the keyboard when the cello is
playing in its lower registers, and only low when the cello is high
enough to escape being overpowered. This constant movement in triplets
will remind one of the first pianoforte sonata. The final rondo is on
the whole less effective than the rondo of the first sonata. Toward the
end, however, there is considerable animation in which one finds cello
and piano taking equal share. The piano has for many measures groups of
rapid accompaniment figures against which the cello has saucy little
phrases in staccato notes. Then the cello takes up the rolling figures
with great effect and the piano has a capricious and brilliant melody
in high registers.
The next sonata, opus 69, in A major, was not written until twelve
years later. A different Beethoven speaks in it. The first theme,
announced at once by the cello alone, gives the key to the spirit of
the work. It is gentle (_dolce_) in character, but full of a quiet
and moving strength. After giving the first phrase of it alone the
cello holds a long low E, over which the piano lightly completes it.
There is a cadenza for piano, and then, after the piano has given the
whole theme once again, there is a short cadenza for cello, leading to
a short transition at the end of which one finds the singing second
theme. This is first given out by the piano over smooth scales by the
cello, and then the cello takes it up and the piano plays the scales.
Nothing could be more exquisite than the combination of these two
instruments in this altogether lovely sonata, which without effort
permits each in turn or together to reveal its most musical qualities.
Sometimes the cello is low and impressive, strong and independent,
while the piano is lively and sparkling, as in the closing parts of
the first section of the first movement. Again the cello has vigorous
rolling figures that bring out the fullest sonority the instrument
is capable of, while the piano adds the theme against such a vibrant
background, with no fear of drowning the cello, as in the first
portions of the development section.
The scherzo is the second movement, and here again each instrument is
allowed a full expression of its musical powers. The style is light,
the rhythm syncopated. There is fascinating play at imitations. And in
the trio the cello plays in rich double-stops. There is but a short
adagio before the final allegro, only a brief but telling expression
of seriousness, and then the allegro brings to full flower the quiet,
concealed, so to speak, and tranquil happiness of the first movement.
Finally there are two sonatas, opus 102, which are in every way
representative of the Beethoven of the last pianoforte sonatas and even
the last quartets. The first of these--in C major--Beethoven himself
entitled a ‘free sonata,’ and the form is indeed free, recalling the
form of the A major pianoforte sonata, opus 101, upon which Beethoven
was working at the same time. In spirit, too, it is very like the A
major sonata, but lacks the more obvious melodic charm. The sonata
begins with an andante, in that singing yet mystical style which
characterizes so much of Beethoven’s last work, and the _andante_
does not end but seems to lose itself, to become absorbed in a mist
of trills, out of which there springs a vigorous _allegro vivace_,
in the dotted march rhythm which one finds in the later pianoforte
sonatas. After this, a short rhapsodical adagio brings us back to a
bit of the opening andante, which once more trills itself away, seems
to be snuffed out, as it were, by a sudden little phrase which, all
unexpected, announces the beginning of the final rondo.
The second of the two, in D major, is more regular in structure. There
is an _allegro con brio_ in clear form, an _adagio_, and a final fugue,
following the adagio without pause. In both these sonatas every trace
of the virtuoso has disappeared. Both are fantasies, or poems of hidden
meaning. Because of this mysteriousness, and also because the lack of
all virtuoso elements seems to leave the combination a little dry, the
sonatas are not quite so satisfactory as the opus 69.
Besides the sonatas Beethoven wrote three sets of variations for cello
and piano, only one of which--on the air _Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen_
from Mozart’s ‘Magic Flute’--has an opus number. These are early works
and are without special interest or value.
It is remarkable how little chamber music has been written for
pianoforte and cello by subsequent composers. By Schumann there is only
a set of five short pieces, _in Volkston_, opus 102. Some of these are
charming, but all are, of course, slight. Schumann uses the cello in
very high registers, notably in the first, third, and fourth. In the
second part of the third he even writes sixths for the cello in such
high registers. The low registers are rather neglected, so that the set
is monotonous in color.
Mendelssohn wrote some _Variations concertantes_, opus 17, for piano
and cello, and two sonatas, opus 45 in B-flat, and opus 58 in D. The
piano predominates in the variations. The second and fourth are hardly
more than piano solos; but in others the cello is effectively handled.
The third, the fifth with its pizzicato, which, by the way Mendelssohn
stood in a fair way to overwhelm entirely by a noisy piano, and the
eighth, with its long held note, later its wide rolling figures and
powerful sixths, account in a measure for the wide popularity which
this work once enjoyed among cellists. But the life has gone out of
it. Of the sonatas little can be said but that they are generally well
scored, and that they display the qualities of the cello in its various
registers. The piano is less well treated, for Mendelssohn had, after
all, little instinct for a variety of pianoforte effects. The theme
in the last movement of the first sonata has something of a vigorous
swing. The chief theme of the first movement of the second sonata, too,
though it will irritate those to whom Mendelssohn’s mannerisms have
become distressing, has a breadth of line, and rises up quite manfully
to its high point. But the second theme rather proves that there
can be too much of a good thing. The allegretto is not dangerously
fascinating, but it has a sort of charm. Mendelssohn’s treatment of
the cello is generally suited to the salon. He brings out many of its
qualities, but in a way which seems to accentuate the shortcomings of
the instrument. In his hands the cello is a sentimental singer with a
small voice.
With Brahms the cello is more an instrument of mystery and gloom.
His fondness for low notes here causes him to write constantly for the
two lower strings, and his sonatas may suffer in the opinion of some
by the lack of a more vehement expression which is in some measure
possible to the upper strings. The first sonata, opus 38, is in E minor
and is more acceptable to the unfamiliar ear than the later one in F
major, opus 99. But the tone of the great part of the E minor sonata is
gloomy, though the second theme of the first movement has warmth and
the _allegretto quasi menuetto_ a certain light movement. The F major
sonata was probably written with the playing of Robert Hausmann (b.
1852) in mind. Mr. Fuller-Maitland finds in it a ‘mood of wild energy
such as is not frequent in Brahms’ later works.’ For all the gloominess
of the first and the sternness of the second of these sonatas there is
a splendid dignity in both which must ever give them a firm place in
the literature for the violoncello. It may be that they lose in grace
because Brahms has so carefully shunned any brilliant display; but on
the other hand what they lose in grace is more than made up by what
they gain in virility. The sentimental qualities in the cello have been
so much emphasized that without these sonatas of Brahms, and those of
Beethoven, one might well believe that it had none other than a sugary
voice.
[Illustration]
Great Violoncellists: Jean Gerardi, David Popper, Pablo Casals.
Among more modern sonatas only two stand out with any prominence. One
of these is by Grieg. It is in A minor, full of passion and swing. No
doubt it owes its prominence to the charm of the Norwegian material out
of which Grieg has made it. There are incisive rhythms that make one
aware of the strength of the cello. The piano is a little too prominent
in certain parts. Grieg has favored its brilliance. But nevertheless
the sonata is a manly and refreshing work.
A sonata for cello and piano in F major, opus 6, by Richard Strauss
has been gratefully adopted by cellists. Musically it is neither
profound nor interesting, though there is no lack of technical skill,
as in the fugal parts of the first movement, and though there are
some passages of great beauty. The second theme of the first movement
is what one might call luscious; there is a glorious theme in the
last movement contrasting with the light motives which generally
predominate; and the climax of the slow movement is passionate. The
pianoforte is not well handled, and there is a sameness in rhythms; but
the balance between the two instruments is remarkably well kept. In the
development of second theme material in the first movement there are
passages in which the cello is made boldly and passionately to sing,
and the use of its very low notes in the climax of the slow movement,
as well as the light figures in the last, leave no doubt as to the
variety which is in spite of all possible to it.
There remains only to mention the sonata by Max Reger, opus 78, two
sonatas by Emanuel Moór, one by Guy Ropartz in G minor, two by Camille
Saint-Saëns, opus 32 and opus 123, as among those which make a partial
success of the extremely difficult combination.
If excellent music for cello and piano is so rare, music for the viola
and piano is almost entirely wanting. The two instruments do not go
well together. Practically the only example of the combination in the
works of the great masters is furnished by Schumann’s _Märchenbilder_,
which are but indifferent music. York Bowen, an English composer, has
considered it worthy of the sonata, and has written two for it, one in
C minor and one in F major. Mr. Benjamin Dale has also written some
agreeable pieces, including a suite and a fantasy.
IV
There are relatively few works also in which the piano has been
combined with wind instruments. The wind instruments which have been
most employed in chamber music are the flute, oboe, clarinet, and
bassoon. Occasionally there is a short bit for horn, or for English
horn, and rarely something for trumpet or saxophone. No special
combination of these instruments either by themselves or with the piano
has obtained signal favor, and we may therefore confine ourselves to
mentioning with brief notice the various works of the great masters
in turn. We will include likewise here their chamber works for wind
instruments without pianoforte.
Of Haydn’s works we will only mention the two trios for flute and
violin and the octet for two oboes, two clarinets, two horns and two
bassoons. Most of Mozart’s works for wind instruments bear the mark of
some occasion. There are a great many Serenades and _Divertimenti_,
which can hardly be called representative of his best and can hardly
be distinguished from each other. Among the interesting works are the
concerto for flute and harp (K 299), the trio for clarinet, viola and
piano (K 498), the quintet for pianoforte, oboe, clarinet, horn and
bassoon (K 452), and the quintet for clarinet and strings (K 581). The
trio was composed in Vienna in August, 1786, and is conspicuous for
a fine handling of the viola. The clarinet is not used at all in the
lower registers, lest it interfere with the viola. Mozart considered
the quintet for piano and wind instruments at the time he wrote it the
best thing he had written. It was composed in March, 1784, for a public
concert and was received with great applause. Jahn wrote of it that
from beginning to end it was a true triumph in the art of recognizing
and adapting the peculiar euphonious quality of each instrument.
Doubtless it served as a model for Beethoven’s composition in the same
form.
Mozart was the first among composers to recognize the beauty of the
clarinet. Among his warmest friends was Anton Stadler, an excellent
clarinet player, and the great clarinet quintet was composed for
Stadler and is known as the Stadler quintet. The clarinet, owing to
the peculiar penetrating quality, is somewhat necessarily treated as
a solo instrument; but the background supplied by the strings is no
mere accompaniment. The whole work shows the finest care and may well
rank with the string quintets among Mozart’s greatest and most pleasing
works.
Beethoven’s works for wind instruments in chamber music are not
numerous. In the expression of his forceful and passionate ideas he
demanded a medium of far greater technical ability than he could ask
of the wind players of that day. There is an early trio for piano,
flute and bassoon, written before he left Bonn; an octet in E-flat
for two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, and two horns, written in
1792, but published as opus 103; and a few other early works without
value; a sextet for two violins, viola, cello, and two horns, written
in 1795 and not published till 1819, then as opus 81; another early
sextet, opus 71, for two clarinets, two bassoons, and two horns; and
finally the most considerable of his compositions for an ensemble of
wind instruments, the quintet in E-flat major, opus 16, for piano,
oboe, clarinet, horn, and bassoon, the septet in E-flat, opus 20,
for clarinet, horn, bassoon, violin, viola, cello, and double-bass.
The sonata in F, opus 17, for horn and piano was written in a night,
according to a well-known story, for the horn player Punto--originally
Stich--and can hardly be considered as more than a bit of pot-boiling.
Most of these early works were written for an occasion. Prince
Maximilian Franz, in whose service Beethoven was for a time employed
before he left Bonn and came to Vienna, was especially fond of wind
instruments. His ‘Table-music’ was generally of this kind and he had
in his employ two oboists, two clarinetists, two horn players, and
two players of the bassoon. Beethoven’s early works therefore may be
considered to have been written with these players in mind. He was sure
of having them performed. In later years he looked with no little scorn
upon many of them. Even of the septet, opus 20, he is reported to have
said that there was some natural feeling in it but little art. And of
the early sextet which was published in 1809 as opus 70 he wrote to
his publishers that it was one of his early pieces and was, moreover,
written in a night, that there was little further to say about it
except that it was written by a composer who had at least produced
some better works--though many men might still consider this the best.
Yet it is to be observed that in nearly all of them Beethoven made the
best of the possibilities open to him, possibilities which were greatly
restricted by the general lack of technical skill in playing wind
instruments, and that all show at least a clear and logical form.
The octet, opus 103, the sextet, opus 81, the sextet, opus 71, and the
quintet, opus 16, are all in the key of E-flat major, a key which is
favorable to all wood-wind instruments. The octet was written, as we
have said, in 1792. Beethoven rearranged it as a string quintet and
in that form it was published in 1796 as opus 4. In its original form
the chief rôle is taken by the oboe, especially in the slow second
movement, which has the touch of a pastoral idyl. The last movement in
rondo form offers the clarinets an opportunity in the first episode. A
Rondino for the same combination of instruments written about the same
time seems to forecast parts of _Fidelio_. The sextet for two horns and
string quartet is little more than a duet for the horns with a string
accompaniment.
We may pass over the trio for two oboes and English horn, published as
opus 87, and the flute duet written for his friend Degenhart on the
night of August 23, 1792. The sextet, opus 71, which Beethoven said
was written in a night, is none the less written with great care. The
prelude introduction and the cheerful style suggest some happy sort of
serenade music. The melody (bassoon) in the adagio is of great beauty.
There are, among its movements, a minuet and a lively rondo in march
rhythm.
The quintet, opus 16, in which the piano is joined with four
instruments may well have been suggested by Mozart’s quintet in the
same form; though Beethoven was a great pianist and had already in an
earlier trio and a sonata experimented in combining the pianoforte
with wind instruments. The wind instruments are here treated as an
independent group and the part for the piano is brilliant. There is a
richness of ideas throughout which raises the work above the earlier
compositions for wind.
The septet in E-flat, opus 20, for clarinet, horn, bassoon, violin,
viola, cello and double-bass, is undoubtedly the finest of Beethoven’s
works for combinations of wind instruments. It was written just
before 1800 and was so full of joy and humor that those who had heard
Beethoven’s other works with a hostile ear were quite won over for the
time being by this. Technically it may be considered the result of
all his previous experiments. It is rather in the manner of a suite.
There is a slow prelude, an _allegro con brio_, an _adagio cantabile_,
a _tempo di menuetto_, which he later arranged for pianoforte and
incorporated in the little sonata, opus 49, No. 1, a theme and
variations, a scherzo, and a final presto, which is preceded by an
introductory andante of great beauty and of more seriousness than is
characteristic of the work as a whole. The success of the work is due
first to the freshness of the ideas, then to the skill with which
they are arranged for the difficult combination of instruments. For
Beethoven has made something of charm out of the very shortcomings of
the wind instruments. The short phrases, the straightforward character
of all the themes and motives, and the general simplicity all show
these necessarily restricted instruments at their very best.
Schubert’s octet for two violins, viola, cello, double-bass, clarinet,
horn, and bassoon is among the most beautiful pieces of chamber music
for the wind instruments. It is the first of Schubert’s contributions
to chamber music which fully reveals his genius. Mention may also be
made of the variations for flute and piano on the melody of one of his
songs _Trockene Blumen_.
None of the great composers was more appreciative of the clarinet than
Weber. It is made to sound beautifully in all his overtures, notably in
that to ‘Oberon.’
[Illustration]
Arnold Schönberg.
_After a photo from life (1913)_
He wrote two concertos for clarinet and orchestra, and a big sonata in
concerto style, opus 48, for clarinet and piano. Besides these there is
an Air and Variations, opus 33, for clarinet and piano, and a quintet,
opus 34, for clarinet and strings. Weber also wrote a charming trio,
opus 63, for flute, cello, and piano.
Spohr, too, showed a special favor towards the clarinet and he, like
Weber, wrote two concertos for it. Three of Spohr’s works which
were broadly famous in their day and much beloved are the nonet for
strings, flute, oboe, clarinet, horn, and bassoon, opus 31; the octet
for violin, two violas, cello, double-bass, clarinet, and two horns,
opus 32; and the quintet for flute, clarinet, horn, bassoon, and
piano. The two former are delicately scored, but the latter is marred
by the piano. Some idea of the fervor with which Spohr’s music was
loved may be gained from the fact that Chopin, the most selective and
fastidiously critical of all composers, conceived Spohr’s nonet to
be one of the greatest works of music. Doubtless the perfection of
style delighted him, a virtue for which he was willing to forgive many
a weakness. At present Spohr’s music is in danger of being totally
neglected.
Mendelssohn contributed nothing to this branch of chamber music,
and Schumann’s contributions were slight enough. There is a set of
_Märchenerzählungen_, opus 132, for clarinet, viola, and pianoforte,
which have some romantic charm but no distinction, and three Romances
for oboe. Brahms’ trio for clarinet, violoncello, and piano has
already been mentioned. Besides these he wrote two excellent sonatas
for clarinet and piano, and a quintet for clarinet and strings. These
works are almost unique among Brahms’ compositions for an unveiled
tenderness and sweetness. All three were probably in a measure inspired
by the playing of his friend Professor Mühlfeld, who even from the
orchestra made an impression with his clarinet upon the memories of
those who gathered at the epoch-making performances at Bayreuth. The
quintet, opus 115, is one of the most poetic and moving of all Brahms’
compositions. The two clarinet sonatas, one in F minor and one in
E-flat major, were published together in 1896 as opus 120. In these
there is the same unusual tenderness which appeals so directly to the
heart in the quintet.
Since the time of Brahms most composers have written something in
small forms for the wind instruments with or without piano or strings.
Most of these have a charm, yet perhaps none is to be distinguished.
One of the most pleasing is Pierné’s _Pastorale variée_, for flute,
oboe, clarinet, trombone, horn, and two bassoons. But here we have in
truth a small wind orchestra. D’Indy’s _Chanson et Danses_, opus 50,
two short pieces for flute, two clarinets, horn, and two bassoons,
Fauré’s _Nocturne_, opus 33, for flute, two oboes, two clarinets, two
horns and two bassoons, and some of the smaller pieces of a composer
little known, J. Mouquet, are representative of the best that the
modern French composers have done in this kind of chamber music.
Debussy’s _Rhapsodie_, for clarinet and piano, is evidently a _pièce
d’occasion_. It was written for the Concours at the Conservatoire.
Max Reger’s sonata in A-flat, opus 49, No. 1, for clarinet and piano,
and a concerto for _Waldhorn_ and piano by Richard Strauss stand out
conspicuously among the works of the Germans. In this country Mr.
Charles Martin Loeffler is to be recognized as one with an unusually
keen instinct for the effects of wind instruments in chamber music. His
two Rhapsodies for oboe, viola, and piano show a delicacy of style that
cannot be matched in work for a similar combination by other composers.
FOOTNOTES:
[82] A few measures after L in the edition published by J. Hamelle,
Paris.
[83] ‘Chamber Music, a Treatise for Students,’ by Thomas F. Dunhill.
London, 1913.
[84] See Spitta: ‘Johann Sebastian Bach.’
LITERATURE FOR VOLUME VII
_In English_
H. ABELE: The Violin and Its History (1905).
E. HERON-ALLEN: De Fidiculis Bibliographia, 2 vols. (London, 1890-94).
CHARLES BURNEY: The Present State of Music in France and Italy (London,
1771).
CHARLES BURNEY: The Present State of Music in Germany, the Netherlands
and United Provinces, 2 vols. (1773).
CHARLES BURNEY: General History of Music, 4 vols. (1776-89).
HENRY FOTHERGILL CHORLEY: Music and Manners in France and
North-Germany, 3 vols. (London, 1843).
HENRY DAVEY: History of English Music (London, 1895).
J. W. DAVIDSON: An Essay on the Works of Fr. Chopin (London, 1849).
EDWARD DICKINSON: The Study of the History of Music (New York, 1905).
HENRY T. FINCK: Chopin and Other Essays (New York, 1889).
J. A. FULLER-MAITLAND: Schumann (1884).
J. A. FULLER-MAITLAND: Brahms (London, 1911).
Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 4 vols. (1879-89); 2nd ed.,
revised by Fuller-Maitland, 5 vols. (1904-9).
WILLIAM HENRY HADOW: A Croatian Composer (Joseph Haydn), (London, 1897).
G. HART: The Violin and Its Music (1881).
JOHN HAWKINS: A General History of the Science and Practice of Music
(London, 1776).
JAMES HUNEKER: Chopin, the Man and His Music (New York, 1900).
H. E. KREHBIEL: The Pianoforte and Its Music (New York, 1901).
LEIGHTON: Tears or Lamentations, Musical Ayres, etc. (1614).
EDWARD MACDOWELL: Critical and Historical Essays (New York, 1913).
Oxford History of Music, 6 vols. (Oxford, 1901, 1905, 1902, 1902, 1904,
1905).
I. PLAYFORD: An Introduction to the Skill of Musick, etc. (1683).
I. PLAYFORD: Apollo’s Banquet, etc. (1669).
WALDO SELDEN PRATT: The History of Music (New York, 1907).
JOHN SOUTH SHEDLOCK: The Pianoforte Sonata, Its Origin and Development
(1875).
CHRISTIAN SIMPSON: The Division Violinist (1659).
JOHN STAINER: Early Bodleian Music; Dufay and His Contemporaries
(London, 1898).
STOEVING: The Violin (1904).
_In German_
H. ABELE: Konrad Paumann (1912).
HERMANN ABERT: Robert Schumann (Berlin, 2nd ed., 1910).
WILHELM ALTMANN: Kammermusiklitteratur-Verzeichnis [from 1841] (1910).
A. W. AMBROS: Geschichte der Musik, 4 vols. (new ed. by H.
Leichentritt, Leipzig, 1909).
SELMAN BAGGE: Die Geschichtliche Entwickelung der Sonate (Leipzig,
1880).
KARL FERDINAND BECKER: Die Hausmusik in Deutschland im 16., 17. u. 18.
Jahrhundert (Leipzig, 1840).
FRANZ J. J. BEIER: Froberger (Leipzig, 1884).
PAUL BEKKER: Beethoven (Berlin, 1912).
N. D. BERNSTEIN: Anton Rubinstein (Leipzig, 1911).
KARL HERMANN BITTER: Johann Sebastian Bach, 4 vols. (2nd ed., 1881).
KARL HERMANN BITTER: K. Ph. Em. und W. Friedemann Bach und deren
Brüder, 2 vols. (Leipzig, 1868).
GERHARD VON BREUNING: Aus dem Schwarzpanierhause (1874; new ed. by
Kalischer, 1907).
HUGO DAFFNER: Die Entwickelung des Klavierkonzerts bis Mozart (1908).
HERMANN DEITERS: Johannes Brahms (Leipzig, 1880; 2nd part, 1898. In
Waldersees Sammlung musikalischer Vorträge).
ALFRED EINSTEIN: Zur deutschen Literatur für Viola da Gamba im 16. und
17. Jahrhundert (_Beiheft_ of the I. M.-G., II. 1, 1905).
IMMANUEL FAISST: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Klaviersonate (Mayence,
1846. In Dehns _Cäcilia_).
I. N. FORKEL: Allgemeine Litteratur der Musik (1792).
DAGMAR GADE: Niels W. Gade. Aufzeichnungen und Briefe (Basel, 1894).
AUGUST GÖLLERICH: Franz Liszt (1908).
OTTO JAHN: W. A. Mozart, 4 vols. (1856-1859); 4th ed. by H. Deiters, 2
vols. (1905-1907).
JOSEPH JOACHIM: Briefe von und an Joseph Joachim (ed. by J. J. and A.
Moser) vol. I [1842-1857] (1911).
MAX KALBECK: Johannes Brahms, 3 vols. (1904-1911).
OTTO KAUWELL: Geschichte der Sonate (1899).
LUDWIG KÖCHEL: Chronologisch-thematisches Verzeichnis der Tonwerke W.
A. Mozarts (1862; 2nd ed. by P. Graf Waldersee, 1905).
LEOPOLD MOZART: Violinschule (1750).
RICHARD MÜNNICH: Johann Kuhnau (Leipzig, 1902).
KARL NEF: Zur Geschichte der deutschen Instrumentalmusik in der zweiten
Hälfte des 17. Jahrhunderts (_Beiheft_ of the I. M.-G., I. 5, 1902).
WALTER NIEMANN: Die Musik Skandinaviens (1906).
WALTER NIEMANN (with Schjelderup): Grieg (1908).
LUDWIG NOHL: Beethoven, 3 vols. (1864-1877).
OSKAR PAUL: Geschichte des Klaviers (1868).
K. FERD. POHL: Joseph Haydn, 2 vols. (1875-1882).
HUGO RIEMANN: Geschichte der Musik seit Beethoven (1901).
HUGO RIEMANN: Handbuch der Musikgeschichte, vol. II. (3 parts, Leipzig,
1911-13).
HUGO RIEMANN: Zur Geschichte der deutschen Suite (_Sammelbände_ of the
I. M.-G., IV. 4, 1905).
HEINRICH REIMANN: Johannes Brahms (1897; 4th ed. 1911).
HEINRICH REIMANN: Robert Schumann (1887).
KARL REINECKE: Die Beethovenschen Klaviersonaten (1899; 4th ed. 1905).
WILHELM RITTER: Smetana (1907).
ARNOLD SCHERING: Geschichte des Instrumentalkonzerts (Leipzig, 1903;
new ed., 1905).
ANTON SCHINDLER: Biographie Ludwig van Beethovens (1840; rev. by A.
Kalischer, 1909).
J. P. SEIFFERT: Geschichte der Klaviermusik (Leipzig, 1899).
PHILIPP SPITTA: Johann Sebastian Bach, 2 vols. (Leipzig, 1873, 1880).
ALEXANDER WHEELOCK THAYER: Ludwig van Beethovens Leben, 5 vols., 1866
(1901), 1872 (1910), 1879 (1911), 1907, 1908; completed and revised by
H. Deiters and H. Riemann.
KARL THRANE: Friedrich Kuhlau (1886).
JOSEPH VON WASIELEWSKI: Das Violoncell und seine Geschichte (Leipzig,
1889; 2nd ed., 1911).
JOSEPH VON WASIELEWSKI: Die Violine im 17. Jahrhundert und die Anfänge
der Instrumentalkomposition (1874).
JOSEPH VON WASIELEWSKI: Die Violine und ihre Meister (Leipzig, 1869;
5th edition, 1911).
JOSEPH VON WASIELEWSKI: Geschichte der Instrumentalmusik im sechzehnten
Jahrhundert (1878).
JOSEPH VON WASIELEWSKI: Robert Schumann (1858, 4th ed., 1906).
KARL FRIEDRICH WEITZMAN: Geschichte des Klavierspiels und der
Klavierliteratur (1879).
KARL VON WINTERFELD: Johannes Gabieli und sein Zeitalter (1843).
_In French_
H. BARBEDETTE: Chopin, essai de critique musicale (1861).
H. BARBEDETTE: F. Schubert (1865).
H. BARBEDETTE: Stephen Heller (1876).
MICHEL BRENET: La jeunesse de Rameau (Paris, 1903).
M. D. CALVOCORESSI: Liszt (1911).
ARTHUR COQUARD: César Franck (Paris, 1891).
FRANÇOIS JOSEPH FÉTIS: Biographie universelle des musiciens, 8 vols.
(1837-1844, 2 ed. 1860-1865); Suppl. by A. Pougin, 2 vols. (1878-1880).
HUGUES IMBERT: Profils de musiciens (1888).
VINCENT D’INDY: César Franck (1906).
VINCENT D’INDY: Beethoven (1911).
H. M. LAVOIX: Histoire de l’instrumentation depuis le seizième siècle
jusqu’a nos jours (Paris, 1878).
ANTOINE FRANÇOIS MARMONTEL: Les pianists célèbres (1878).
ANTOINE FRANÇOIS MARMONTEL: Histoire du piano (1885).
L. PICQUOT: La vie et les œuvres de Luigi Boccherini (1851).
ANDRÉ PIRRO: Louis Marchand (_Sammelbände_ of the I. M.-G., VI. 1,
1904).
ANDRÉ PIRRO: J. S. Bach (Paris, 1906).
ARTHUR POUGIN: Notice sur Rode (1874).
ROMAIN ROLLAND: Beethoven (1907).
ALBERT SCHWEITZER: J. S. Bach, le musicien poète (Paris, 1905).
T. DE WYZEWA AND G. DE SAINT-FOIX: W. A. Mozart, 2 vols. (1912).
_In Italian_
H. GARDANO: Musica di XIII autori illustri (1576).
LUIGI TORCHI: La musica istromentale in Italia nei secoli 16º 17º e 18º
(_Rivista musicale_, IV-VIII, 1898-1901).
_In Spanish_
F. GASCUE: Historia de la sonata (S. Sebastián, 1910).
INDEX FOR VOLUME VII
A
Abel, 591.
Absolute music, 312.
Accentuation (in syncopated rhythm), 220f.
Accompaniment figures (in pianoforte music), 181, 198;
(Mendelssohn), 213f;
(Schumann), 222, 231;
(Brahms), 240;
(Chopin), 268f, 270, 272;
(Liszt), 306f;
(Heller), 321;
(Scriabin), 338;
(in string quartet), 564.
See also Alberti bass; Basso ostinato; Tum-Tum bass.
Acrostics in music, 218.
After-sounds (in pianoforte music), 356, 357, 363.
Agrémens, 35, 59, 128.
Agricola, 374.
Air and Variations, 26.
Alard, 447, 452.
Albéniz, Isaac, 339.
Albergati, 391.
[d’]Albert, Eugen, 324, 330.
Alberti, Domenico, 48, 97, 107f, 139.
Alberti bass, 110ff, 120, 178, 242, 268.
Albinoni, Tommaso, 399, 422.
Alkan, Charles-Valentin, 342ff.
Allegri, G., 475.
Allemande, 23, 25.
Amateurs, 209.
Amati, Andrea, 375.
America, Herz’ travels in, 285.
André, 425.
Anet, Batiste, 406.
Angelico (Fra), 373.
Anglaise, 76.
[d’]Anglebert, 36, 396f.
Antoniotti, Giorgio, 591.
Aquinas, Thomas, 371.
Arabs, 369.
Arcadelt, 10.
Arensky, Anton, 333.
Aria, 26, 69.
Aria form, 77, 102, 103.
Arpeggios, 20, 448;
(in violin playing), 415.
Arrangements. See Transcriptions.
Attaignant, 469.
Auer, Leopold, 464, 465.
Augengläser, 512.
[L’]Augier, 43, 100.
Austrian National Hymn, 496.
B
Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel, 35, 59, 86, 96, 98, 99, 100, 113,
_116ff_, 132, 417, 490;
(quoted on the pianist’s art), 133.
Sonata in D major, 118.
Bach, Johann Christian, 86, 97, 112, 113, 114, 116, 117ff, 491, 498.
Bach, Johann Sebastian, 8, 28, 30, 41, 42, _63ff_, 95, 99, 128f,
131, 134, 207, 267f, 305, 367, _421ff_, 428, 484;
(in rel. to fugue and suite), 70ff;
(in rel. to concerto, etc.), 81;
(influence on Chopin), 254f;
(popularization of), 300.
Well-tempered Clavichord, 64, 71, 81.
Italian concerto, 67, 82, 95.
English suite in G minor, 67.
Partitas, 75, 79.
English suites, 75f.
French suites, 75f.
Preludes, 80.
Toccatas, 81.
Fantasias, 81.
Goldberg Variations, 83, 85.
Musikalisches Opfer, 84.
Kunst der Fuge, 84.
Violin solo sonatas, 422.
Chaconne for violin alone, 423.
Sonatas for Harpsichord and Violin, 423.
Concertos for one or two violins, 423f.
Violoncello suites, 591.
Bach, Wilhelm Friedemann, 128.
Baillot, Pierre Marie François de, 412, 431, 433, 434.
Balakireff, Mily, 330, 331, 338.
Islamey Fantasy, 330.
Balance, 49.
Balakireff, 555.
Ballades, 17;
(Chopin), 256.
Balletti, 377, 470, 473.
Baltasarini. See Beaujoyeaulx.
Balzac (cited), 282.
Banchieri, Adriano, 471.
Barbella, Emanuele, 404.
Barcarolle (Chopin), 256.
Barthélémon, H., 410.
Baryton, 590f.
Basle, 372.
Bassani, Giovanni Battista, 389f, 480.
Bassedance, 470.
Bassoon (in chamber music), 598, 604.
Basso ostinato, 387.
Batiste. See Anet, Batiste.
Bäuerl, Paul, 473.
Beach, Mrs. H. H. A., 340.
Beaujoyeaulx, 376f.
Beaulieu, 376.
Bebung, 3.
Becker, Diedrich, 473.
Beethoven, 89, 98, 100f, 112, 116, 123, 131f, 136, _154ff_,
_158ff_, 175, 193, 206, 207, 253f, 267, 367, 432, 433,
_451ff_, _509ff_, 534, 575f, 592f, 599f, 602;
(compared to Haydn and Mozart), 133;
(pianoforte playing), 160f;
(popularization of), 300;
(transcriptions), 306.
Pianoforte sonatas, 154ff, 159ff, 168ff.
Piano sonata in C-sharp minor (op. 27, No. 2), 169f.
Piano sonata in A-flat (op. 110), 171f.
Bagatelles (piano), 173.
Piano Concerto in G major, 173.
Piano concerto in E-flat major (Emperor), 173.
Diabelli Variations, 173.
Early Violin Sonatas, 454f.
Violin sonata in G (op. 96), 456.
Violin concerto, 456f.
Six string quartets (op. 18), 510ff.
String quintet in C major (op. 29), 512.
‘Russian’ string quartets (op. 59), 513ff.
String quartets (op. 74 and 95), 517.
String quartet (op. 127), 520ff.
String quartet in A minor (op. 132), 523ff.
String quartet in B-flat major (op. 130), 527ff.
String quartets in C-sharp minor, 528ff.
String quartet in F major (op. 135), 531ff.
Trio, op. 70, 575f.
Trio, op. 97, 576.
Violoncello sonata in F (op. 5), 592f.
Violoncello sonata in A (op. 69), 593f.
Violoncello sonata in G (op. 5), 593.
Violoncello sonata (op. 102), 594f.
Variations on air from ‘Magic Flute,’ 595.
Trio for piano, flute and bassoon, 599f.
Septet, op. 20, 602.
Bekker, Paul, 512.
Belgian school of violin playing, 447.
Bellini, 286.
Benda, Carl, 416.
Benda, Franz, 413, 414f, 417, 420, 428.
Benda, Georg, 414.
Benda, Hans Georg, 414.
Benda, Johann, 414.
Benda, Joseph, 414.
Bennett, William Sterndale, 217.
Bériot, Charles Auguste de, 446, 448.
Berlioz, 207, 342;
(transcriptions), 306.
Bernadotte, General, 432, 455.
Bernardi, 390.
Berthaume, Isidore, 410.
Biber, Heinrich Ignaz Franz [von], 391f, 412, 422.
‘Biblical Sonatas,’ 27.
Biblical subjects, 27, 311.
Bie, [Dr.] Oskar (cited), 199, 322, 344.
Biffi, 108.
Binary form, 45, 49, 102, 103, 105.
Bini, Pasqualini, 403.
Bizet, 462.
Boccaccio, 373.
Boccherini, Luigi, 404, 487ff, 491, 591.
Boehm, Joseph, 445.
Bohemia, 556, 586.
Bohm (organist), 16.
Bononcini, 390, 478.
Borodine, 330, 553, 554f.
String quartet in A, 554.
Borri, 390.
Bourrées, 26.
Bowen, York, 598.
Bowing (violin), 403, 416, 431;
('cello), 591.
Brahms, 53, 168, 193, _238ff_, 271, 273, 321, 367, 442, 451,
_459f_, _543ff_, _578f_, 579, _583ff_, 587, 596f;
(influence), 335.
Pianoforte sonatas, 240.
Piano sonata in C major, 240f.
Piano sonata in F-sharp minor, 241.
Piano sonata in F minor, 241.
Paganini Variations (piano), 242f.
Ballades (piano), 242.
Variations on a Theme of Handel (piano), 243.
Capriccios, 244ff.
Rhapsodies (piano), 245f.
Intermezzos (piano), 246.
Piano concertos, 247f.
Violin sonatas, 459f.
Violin concerto, 460.
String sextet, 543ff.
String quartet in B-flat major (op. 67), 546.
String quartet in A minor (op. 51, No. 2), 546.
Trios in C major and C minor, 578f.
Clarinet Trio, 579.
Horn trio, 579.
Pianoforte quartets (op. 25 and 26), 583.
Pianoforte quartet (op. 70), 584.
Pianoforte quintet in F minor (op. 34), 584f.
Cello sonata, 596f.
Branle, 470.
Brentano, Maximilian, 575.
Briegel, K., 473.
Britton, Thomas, 481.
Broadwood, Thomas, 158.
Brodsky, Adolf, 464.
Bruch, Max, 452, 465.
Scottish Fantasia, 465.
Violin concertos, 465.
Bruhns, Nikolaus, 422.
Brussels, 448.
Bull, John, 19, 32.
Bull, Ole, 452.
Bülow, Hans von, 44, 332, 342.
Buonaparte, Lucien, 487.
Buoni, 390.
Buononcini. See Bononcini.
Burlesca, 79.
Burney, Charles, 43;
(cited), 48, 108, 394, 408, 415.
Buxtehude, 16.
Byrd, William, 19.
Byron, 318.
C
Caccia, 10.
Caccini, 474.
Cadences, 14.
Cadenza (in pianoforte concerto), 152f;
(in chamber music), 581.
Caluta à la Spagnola, 470.
Cambridge, 18.
Campion, Jacques (Chambonnières), 27.
Canavasso, A., 591.
Cannabich, Christian, 413, 418, 420.
Canon, 473.
Cantata (origin of name), 10.
Cantata da camera, 474.
Canzon a suonare (canzon da sonare), 93, 470.
Canzona, 11f, 472.
Caprice, 79.
Capriccio, 11.
Carissimi, 6.
Carlist Wars, 465.
Carnaro, Cardinal, 402.
Carneval de Venise (Le), 434, 440, 445.
Cartier, J. B., 407, 412, 428.
Casino Paganini, 437.
Cassation (quartet), 489.
Castiglione, 377.
Castor and Pollux (Abbé Vogler), 184, 185.
Catches, 473.
Cavalli, 6.
'Cello. See Violoncello.
Cembalo. See Clavicembalo; also Harpsichord.
Chabrier, Emanuel, 353, 366.
Chaconne, 83.
Chadwick, George W., 589.
Chamber music, 16;
(16th-17th cent.), 467ff;
(origin of term), 467, footnote;
(for wind instruments), 598.
See also Trio; String quartet; String quintet; Pianoforte quartet;
Pianoforte quintet; Sextet; Septet; Violin sonata; Violoncello
sonata; Wind instruments, etc.
Chamber sonatas, 94.
Chambonnières (Campion), 27, 32, 33, 104.
Chaminade, Cécile, 342.
Chanson, 9, 10, 11, 92.
Charelli, 478.
Charlatanism, 435.
Charles XI, 375.
Chausson, Ernest, (string quartet), 552;
(pianoforte quartet), 589.
Cherubini, 411;
(string quartet), 535.
Chess-board, 3.
Chopin, 55, 132, 207, _250ff_, 284, 305, 333, 342, 367, 428;
(opinion of Mendelssohn), 217;
(as character, in Schumann’s ‘Carnaval’), 227;
(popularization), 300;
(transcriptions of songs of), 306;
(transcription of ‘The Maiden’s Wish’), 307;
(influence on Russian composers), 329;
(influence), 335;
(influence in France), 341;
(compared to Paganini), 439.
Pianoforte sonatas, 257ff.
Barcarolle, 263.
Fantasia in F minor, 263.
Mazurkas, 281f.
Nocturnes, 281.
Pianoforte concerto, 263.
Polonaise-Fantasie (op. 61), 263f.
Preludes, 264.
Waltzes, 281.
Chord style, 11.
Christian Frederick VIII, King of Denmark, 309.
Chrotta, 368.
Chrysander, 53.
Church, Roman, (opposition to musicians), 371.
Church music, 9.
Church sonatas, 94.
Clarinet, 599;
(in chamber music), 579, 598, 604.
Clarinet sonatas, 603f.
Clavecin, 5, 52. See also Harpsichord.
Clavecinists, 26.
Clavicembalo, 5. See also Harpsichord.
Clavichord, 1, 2ff, 8, 67, 128.
Clement, Franz, 444, 451, 456.
Clementi, Muzio, 64, 98, 100, 112, 117, _119ff_, 143, 157.
_Gradus ad Parnassum_, 121.
Sonata in G minor (op. 7, no. 3), 121.
Sonata in B minor (op. 40, no. 2), 122.
Sonata in G minor (_Didone abbandonata_, op. 50, no. 3), 122.
Coda (Beethoven), 165f.
Color effects (in string quartet), 555f.
Concertati, 474.
Concert piece (Mendelssohn), 216. See also Konzertstück.
Concerto, (Italian), 67;
(Bach), 81;
(Vivaldi, Mozart), 150;
(for flute and harp), 599.
See also Pianoforte concerto; Violin concerto.
Concerto grosso (Torelli), 388f.
Concerts des Amateurs, 407.
Concerts Spirituels, 404, 410, 487.
Confrérie de St. Julien des Ménestriers, 372.
Conservatory. See Paris Conservatoire.
Contrapuntal style. See Polyphonic style.
Contrast, 49, 469;
(of key), 18, 561;
(of registers, in piano music), 277;
(rhythmic, in early chamber music), 476.
Corelli, Arcangelo, 6, 37, 93, 389, 392, _396ff_, 412,
427, 428, 480, 481.
Violin sonatas, 397ff.
Coriat (quoted), 393.
Cornetto, 377.
Cosyn, Benjamin, 18.
Cortecci, 376.
Counterpoint, 19f. See also Polyphonic style.
Counter-theme, 11.
Couperin, Charles, 52;
(compared to Bach), 65;
(influence on Bach), 69.
Couperin, François (le Grand), 8, 36, 41, _51ff_, 63, 86,
207, 267f, 398, 484;
(rondo), 58;
(influence on Bach), 69.
Couperin, Louis, 36, 52.
Courante, 23, 25, 473.
Cramer, J. B., 64, 132, 176, 178, 285, 418.
Cramer, Wilhelm, 418.
Cremona, 375.
Crescendo, 378.
Cristofori, Bartolomeo, 155.
Crossing of the hands, 47;
(Bach), 84;
(D. Scarlatti), 106.
Crowd, 368.
Cryptograms, 218.
Cryth, 368.
Cui, César, 330, 331.
Cycles of pianoforte pieces (Schumann), 221f.
Cyclic forms, 30. See also Sonata; Suite.
Czerny, Carl, 44, 64, 182.
D
Da capo form, 69, 77.
Dale, Benjamin, 598.
Dance form, 30.
Dance rhythms (Schubert), 206;
(Rubinstein), 321;
(Heller), 321.
See also Chopin: Mazurkas, Waltzes.
Dance tunes (15th cent.), 20, 22, 468.
Dances, (early French), 376;
(Spanish), 396;
(17th cent.), 472.
Dante, 318.
Daquin, Claude, 61.
Dargomyzhsky, 330.
Dauvergne, Antoine, 409.
David, Ferdinand, 409, 412, 443f, 451, 458.
David, Paul (quoted), 449.
De Ahna, 451.
Debussy, Claude, 353ff, 367;
(chamber music), 561ff, 604.
Suite Bergamasque, 359.
L’Isle joyeuse, 359.
Estampes, 360.
Images, 360f.
Preludes, 361ff.
String quartet, 561ff.
Delibes, Leo, 462.
Denmark, 326.
Descriptive music, 27f, 55f, 214, 311.
See also Picture music; Realism in pianoforte music.
Diabelli, 165.
Dialogues for two violins, 474, 475.
Dissonance (absence of), 13;
(unprepared), 14.
Dittersdorf, Carl Ditters von, 419.
Divertimento (quartet), 489.
Dohle, 64.
Dohnányi, Ernst von, 338;
(pianoforte quintet), 589.
Domanowecz, Nicholas Zmeskall von, 492, 518.
Double-bass (in chamber music), 590.
Double-harmonics, 438.
Double-stops (violin), 382, 383, 422, 430, 460.
Dowland, John, 394.
Dramatic style (in pianoforte sonata), 122;
(in violin music), 441.
Duet, (for one violin), 387;
(for two violins), 411;
(viola and violoncello), 512.
Duet sonata, 454.
Dumka, 586.
Dunhill, Thomas F. (cited), 460, 589.
Duport, Jean Louis, 591.
Durand, 412.
Durante, Francesco, 59, 97.
Dussek, 98, 176.
Dvořák, Antonin, 338;
(violin music), 466;
(chamber music), 558f;
(pianoforte quartets), 583;
(pianoforte quartets and quintets), 585f;
(influence), 589.
String quartet in A minor, 558.
String quartet in E-flat, 559.
‘American’ quartet, 559.
Trios (op. 65 and 90), 580f.
Pianoforte quartet (op. 23), 585.
Pianoforte quintet (op. 87), 585f.
E
Ecclesiastical modes (modern use of), 363f.
Eck, Franz, 418f, 440.
Eck, Johann Friedrich, 418.
Edward VI, 375.
Effects, pianistic, 303ff. See also Pianoforte technique.
Elizabeth, Queen of England, 4.
Elman, Mischa, 464f.
Embellishments, 35. See also Ornamentation.
Emotional expression, 14, 41.
Enescou, Georges, 466.
England, 18, 21;
(harpsichords in), 4;
(modern), 339.
English horn (in chamber music), 598, 601.
English virginal music, 18ff, 32.
Equal Temperament, 67f.
Érard, Sebastian, 157.
Ernst, Heinrich Wilhelm, 445.
Esterhazy, Prince, 496.
[L’]Estrange, Roger, 394.
[d’]Étree, 376.
Études. See Pianoforte études; Violin études.
Exoticism (in modern music), 362f.
F
Fantasia, 11, 469;
(on ut-re-mi-fa-sol-la), 20;
(popularity in early 19th cent.), 285;
(on airs from favorite operas), 286;
(Liszt), 308;
(early use of term), 472.
Fantasie, 79.
Fantasy pieces, 211. See also Schumann.
Farina, Carlo, 382, 467, footnote.
Farinelli, G. B., 397.
Farinelli’s Ground, 397.
Farrenc, Madame, 53. See also _Trésor des pianistes_.
Fauré, Gabriel, 352f, 604;
(violin sonata), 462;
(chamber music), 583, 588, 589.
Pianoforte quintet in D minor, 588.
Ferrara, Carlo, 591.
Ferrari, Domenico, 404.
Fétis (cited), 440.
Fidula, 369.
Field, John, 55, 132, 176, 179, 183, 254, 278.
Figured bass, 486, 487, 573.
Fingering (violin), 370;
('cello), 591.
First-movement form, 91. See also Sonata form.
Fischer, Johann, 392.
Fitzwilliam collection, 18, 21.
Fitzwilliam Museum, 18.
Florid style (harpsichord), 35.
Floridia, Pietro, 465.
Flute (use of, in chamber music), 598, 604.
Flute concerto, 599.
Fochsschwantz, 468.
Folk-melodies (in English virginal music), 20;
(in pianoforte music), 136, 325.
Fontana, Giovanni Battista, 383, 476.
Foote, Arthur, 340, 589.
Form, 10;
(harmonic principle), 14;
(Scarlatti), 49;
(Chopin), 256;
(César Franck), 550.
See also Instrumental forms; Fugue; Sonata form; etc.
Förster, Emanuel Aloys, 510.
Fortunatus, Venantius, 368.
Foster, Will, 18.
France, 25;
(modern pianoforte music), 341ff;
(violinist-composers), 405ff.
Franck, César, 207, 345ff, 349, 461, 547ff, 561, 581, 586.
Prelude, Chorale and Fugue, 345f.
Prelude, Aria and Finale, 346.
Symphonic Variations, 347f.
Violin sonata, 461.
String quartet in D minor, 547ff.
Pianoforte quintet, 586.
Franck, Melchior, 472.
Franco-Belgian school (of violin playing), 447f.
Francœur, 406.
Franz, Robert (transcriptions of songs), 306.
Franzl, Ferdinand, 418.
Franzl, Ignaz, 418.
Franzl, Johann C., 413.
Frederick the Great, 414.
Frederick William II, King of Prussia, 487, 494, 506, 591.
Freedom of the arms (in pianoforte playing), 301f.
Freedom of the hands (in pianoforte playing), 293.
Freedom of the wrist (in pianoforte playing), 296.
French Revolution, 407, 410, 432.
Frescobaldi, Girolamo, 15ff, 24, 476.
_Frische Clavier-Früchte_ (Kuhnau), 29.
Friskin, James, 589.
Froberger, Johann Jacob, 15, 23 (footnote), 24, 32, 75, 104, 473.
Fuga, 10.
Fugue, 11, 17, 21, 29, 41;
(Bach), 70ff;
(in pianoforte sonata), 129f, 166, 171;
(Mendelssohn), 215;
(Franck), 346;
(for 4 vlns., 16th cent.), 376;
(three and four subjects, Haydn), 493.
Furcheim, Wilhelm, 386.
Furiant, 586.
G
G-string, 374, 382, 384.
Gabrieli, Andrea, 10.
Gabrieli, Giovanni, 10, 11, 471.
Gade, Niels, 326.
Gaillarde. See Galliard.
‛_Gaily the Troubadour_,’ 285.
Galitzin, Nikolaus, Prince, 520.
Galliard, 22, 23, 473.
[Le] Gallors, 36.
Galuppi, Baldassare, 97, 116f.
Ganassi, Silvestro, 374.
Gassmann, Florian, 499, 503.
Gastoldi, 377.
Gautier, Denis, 26f, 33, 34.
Gaviniés, Pierre, 408f.
Gavotte, 26.
Gelinek, 182.
Geminiani, Francesco, 401, 430f, 482.
Generative theme, 562. See also Thematic metamorphosis.
Genouillière, 156.
Genre pieces, 212.
George, Stephen, 571.
Gerber (cited), 383.
Gerle, Hans, 374.
German romanticism, 320, 321.
Germany, 16, 36.
Gernsheim, Friedrich, 321, 324, 466.
Ghro, Johann, 472.
Giardini, Felice, 404.
Gibbons, Orlando, 19, 394.
Giga, 23.
Gighi, 478.
Gigue, 23.
Glazounoff, Alexander, 333;
(violin concerto), 464;
(chamber music), 555.
Glière, Reinhold, 555.
Glinka, 329;
(transcription of ‘A Life for the Czar’), 330.
Glissando, 192, 243.
Gluck, 7, 503.
‘God Save the King,’ 291, 308, 363.
Godard, Benjamin, 342.
Goldberg Variations, 67.
Goldmark, Karl (violin music), 466;
(pianoforte quintet), 589.
Gossec, 499.
‛_Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser_,’ 497.
Graces, 35.
Grainger, Percy, 339.
‘Grand style’ of piano playing, 303.
Graun, Johann Gottlieb, 413, 414, 415, 420.
Gravicembalo, 5. See also Harpsichord.
Greco, Gaëtano, 38, 43.
Greek modes (modern use of), 362f.
Greek mythology, 27.
Gretchaninoff, Alexander, 555.
Grieco. See Greco.
Grieg, Edvard, 326ff, 338;
(influence), 340;
(violin sonata), 463;
(cello sonatas), 597.
Pianoforte sonata in E minor, 327.
Pianoforte concerto, 327f.
Ballade (piano), 328.
Holberg, suite (piano), 328.
String quartet, 556.
Grossi, 391, 478.
Ground bass, 83.
Grün, 445.
Guenin, Marie Alexandre, 408, 409f.
Guillemain, 409.
Guitar, 437;
(imitation of, on violin), 387.
H
Haack, Carl, 416.
Habeneck, Coretin, 447.
Habeneck, F. H., 447.
Habeneck, Joseph, 447.
Halir, Karl, 451, 465.
Hammerschmidt, Andreas, 473.
Handel, 7, 8, 26, 42, 43, 87, 421, 484.
Harmonious Blacksmith, 87.
Hardelle, 36.
Harmonic basis (in the fugue), 70f.
Harmonic coloring (Mozart), 145.
Harmonic principle (in musical form), 14.
Harmonic style, 13.
Harmonics (on violin), 438, 439, 448;
(use of, in string quartet), 571f.
Harmonious Blacksmith, 87.
Harmony, 13f, 29;
(Schubert), 194;
(Chopin), 261f, 265ff;
(Liszt), 318;
(Scriabin), 336f;
(Debussy), 354f;
(Ravel), 364; (modern), 534.
Harp concerto, 599.
Harpsichord, 1, 2, 4ff, 32, 34, 35, 128;
(‘touch’), 5;
(with two or more manuals), 47;
(in instrumental combinations), 573f.
Harpsichord music, 16ff, _40ff_;
(florid style), 35;
(leaping figures), 47;
(descriptive pieces), 55f;
(ornamentation), 59.
Harpsichord playing, 66, 68.
Harpsichord sonata, 97;
(with violin _ad lib._), 426.
See also Pianoforte sonata.
Hasse, Johann Adolph, 7, 43.
Hausmann, Robert, 451.
Haydn, Joseph, 7, 89, 98, 100f, 112, 116, 128, 131f, 134, _135ff_,
207, 410, 412, 416, 424, 444, 487, 503;
(compared with Beethoven), 133;
(fugue), 493;
(string quartet), 489ff, _498ff_, 560;
(influence on Mozart), 499, 502f;
(trios), 574.
Piano sonata in G major (op. 14, Peters 11), 138.
Piano sonata in C major (op. 13, Peters 15), 138.
Piano sonata in F major (Peters 20), 138.
Piano sonatas in E-flat (Peters 1 and 3), 139.
Variations on a theme in F (for piano), 140f.
String quartets (op. 9), 491.
String quartets, (op. 20) (Sonnen quartets), 492.
String quartets (op. 33), 493f.
String quartets, op. 50 (1787), 495f.
String quartets (op. 54 and 55), 496f.
Haydn, Michael, 499.
Heine, 134.
Heller, Stephen, 321.
Helmesberger, G., 445.
Henselt, Adolf, 217.
Herz, Henri, 285ff, 297, 447.
‘La Sonnambula’ Variations, 286.
Heuberger, Richard, cited, 194.
Hiller, Ferdinand, 176, 182.
Hoffmann, E. T. A., 218, 232.
Hoftanz, 470.
Holbrooke, Joseph, 589.
Holland, 21.
Holz, Karl, 521 footnote.
‘Home, Sweet Home,’ 291.
Horn (in chamber music), 598, 600, 604.
Horn sonata, 600.
Hubay, Jenö, 466.
Hugo, Victor, 318.
Hummel, Johann Nepomuk, 158f, 175f, 183, 254.
Piano concerto in A minor, 176ff.
Hungary, 317.
Hupfauff, 470.
Huygens, Constantine, 32.
I
Imitative music, 28, 386f.
Impressionism. See France (modern).
Impromptus (Schubert), 200ff.
Improvisation (Mozart), 142f.
d’Indy, Vincent, 129f, 349ff;
(cited), 167;
(violin sonata), 463;
(pianoforte quartet), 589f.
Poëmes des Montagnes, 350.
Pianoforte sonata in E (op. 63), 351.
String quartets, 551f.
Inner melodies, 60;
(Chopin), 278.
Instrumental forms, 11f, 41, 102.
See also Canzona, Ricercar, Sonata, Toccata, etc.
Instrumental music (development), 1, 8ff;
(early), 92;
(in 16th cent.), 373;
(15th-16th cent.), 469ff.
Instrumental style, 11, 33;
(influence on vocal), 9, footnote.
Interlocking of the hands (piano-playing), 222, 352.
Inventions (Bach), 67.
Italian influences (in sonata), 99, 107, 117;
(in French violin music), 406;
(in German violin music), 412, 420;
(in France and Germany), 428;
(Mozart), 499.
Italy, 16, 25, 37;
(supremacy of, in 18th-cent. violin music), 427f.
J
Jahn, Otto (cited), 507.
Jannequin, Clement, 10.
Jarnowick, 436.
Jenkins, John, 392f.
Jensen, Adolf, 321, 323.
Jerome of Moravia, 370.
Joachim, Joseph, 238, 443, 445, 450f, 458 (footnote), 460.
Joachim quartet, 451.
Jommelli, 491.
Jongleurs, 370, 372.
_Jour de fête_ (String quartet by Russian composers), 555.
Judenkönig, 374.
Juon, Paul, 333.
K
Kaiserling, Count, 83.
Kalbeck, Max (cited), 543.
Kalkbrenner, 64, 176.
Kalliwoda, Johann Wenzelaus, 418, 445.
_Kammenoi-Ostrow_, 331.
Karganoff, Genari, 333.
Keiser, 7.
Kelly, Michael (cited), 502.
Kempi, Nicolaus, 478.
Key, variety of, 94.
Key contrast. See Contrast (of keys).
Key relationships, 30, 102;
(in suite), 23;
(Debussy), 355.
Keyboard instruments, 1ff.
Keyboard style, 12.
Kielflügel, 5. See also Harpsichord.
Klengel, 446.
Kopyloff, A., 555.
Kraft, Nikolaus, 510, footnote.
Kreisler, Johann (‘Kapellmeister Kreisler’), 232.
Kreutzer, Rodolphe, 408, 412, 418, 431f, 451.
Kruse, J. C., 451.
Kuhnau, Johann Friedrich, 27, 28f, 34, 35, 37, 59, 69, 75, 90, 94.
Sonate aus dem B., 28f.
L
_La ci darem la mano_, 258, 309.
Lablache, 254.
Laborde, Jean B. (cited), 108 (footnote).
Lacombe, Paul, 342.
Lady Nevile’s Book, 18.
L’Augier, 43, 100.
LeBègue, 36.
Leblanc, 410.
Lafont, 431.
LaFranco, 374.
Lahoussaye, Pierre, 408.
Lalo, Edouard, 451, 461f.
Lamartine, 318.
Lanzetti, 591.
‛[The] Last Rose of Summer,’ 285, 291.
Laub, Ferdinand, 418, 553.
Laurenti, 390.
Leaping figures (in harpsichord music), 47.
Leclair, Jean Marie, 406, 407.
Legato style, 30;
(pianoforte touch), 161;
(violin-playing), 374, 381.
Legends (Liszt), 311f.
Legrenzi, Giovanni, 386, 478.
Leighton, William, 394.
Lenau, 318.
Lentor, John, 394.
Lenz, W. von (cited), 290, 291.
Léonard, 447.
‘Lessons,’ 22, footnote.
Liadoff, Anatole, 334, 555.
Lichnowsky, Prince, 510, 513.
Lichtenstein, Ulrich von, 370.
‘Lily Dale,’ 291.
Linke, Joseph, 521 footnote.
Linley, Thomas, 404.
Lipinski, C. J., 446.
Liszt, 48, 134, 207, 276, 286, _298ff_, 321, 342, 357, 367;
(cited on Chopin), 253, 258;
(cited on Field), 278;
(on Thalberg), 296;
(influence on Raff), 322;
(influence on Russian composers), 329;
(influence), 337, 354;
(influence in France), 341.
Études, 301f, 313f.
Reminiscences de Don Juan, 309ff.
Realistic pieces, 311ff.
Années de pélerinage, 312.
Pianoforte concerto, 314.
Pianoforte sonatas, 314ff.
Hungarian Rhapsodies, 317.
Literary suggestions, 318.
Lobkowitz, Prince, 517.
Locatelli, Pietro, 95, 401, 405, 435, 436, 487f.
Lock, Matthew, 394.
Loeffler, Charles Martin, 604.
Lolli, Antonio, 409, 435, 436.
Lombardini, Maddelena, 404.
London, 24;
(Salomon concerts), 410, 443.
London Philharmonic Society, 416.
Longo, Alessandro, 44.
Lotti, Antonio, 108.
Louis XIV, 7, 52.
Loures, 26.
Löwe, Johann Jakob, 473.
Lübeck, 2.
Lucchesi, G. M., 404.
Lully, Jean-Baptiste, 7, 393.
Lute music, 9, 469;
(transcriptions), 468.
Lutenists, 26, 33.
Lutheran Church, 12.
Lydian mode, 526.
M
MacDowell, Edward, 340.
Mace, Thomas, 395, 470.
Mackenzie, A. C., 339.
Madrigali da camera, 474.
Madrigals, 9, 10, 473, 486.
Malfatti, Theresa, 517.
Malibran, Maria, 448.
Malibran-Garcia, 254.
Mandolin, 47.
Manfreli, Filippo, 404.
Manieren, 35, footnote.
Mannheim school, 419f.
Mannheim orchestra, 487.
Mannheim symphonies, 490.
Manuals (in organ and harpsichord), 47.
Marchand, 60.
Marie Casimire, Queen of Poland, 42.
Marini, Biagio, 379, 476.
Marini, C. A., 478.
Marmontel, A. (cited), 178, 344.
Marschner, Heinrich (trio), 577.
Marseillaise (The), 285.
Martini, Padre, 96f, 104, 106, 119.
Maschera, Florentino, 378, 470.
Mass, 9.
Massart, Joseph, 447.
Mattheson, 7.
Maximilian, Emperor of Mexico, 312.
Maximilian Franz, Prince, 600.
Mayseder, Joseph, 419, 444.
Mazurkas, 252f.
Mazzaferrata, 391, 478.
Mazzolini, 390, 478.
Medici, Ferdinand de’, 44.
Melody (treatment of, in pianoforte music), 296.
Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, Felix, 212ff, 440, 451;
(compared to Schumann), 223;
(transcription), 306, 307;
(influence), 326, 328;
(string quartets), 539ff;
(trios), 577;
(cello music), 595.
Songs without Words, 213, 217,
Variations sérieuses, 215.
Violin concerto, 458.
Mereaux, Amadée, 62.
Merula, Tarquino, 384, 476.
Merulo, Claudio, 10.
Meyerbeer, 191;
(transcriptions), 296.
Miniature forms, 211f, 321;
(Schubert), 204;
(Schumann), 222;
(Brahms), 239.
Minnesinger, 370.
Minstrels, 371.
Minuet, 26;
(in pianoforte sonata), 166;
(in string quartet), 493, 495, 504, 511.
Modes. See Ecclesiastical modes, Greek modes.
Modulation, 13, 114. See also Key contrast.
Moffat, Georg, 36f.
Moffat, Gottlieb, 36, 37.
Molinari, Marquis, 108.
Molique, Bernhard, 450.
Molliner Collection, 18.
Monochord, 2.
Mont’Albano, Bartolomeo, 384, 476.
Montaigne, 375.
Monteverdi, Claudio, 6, 378.
Moór, Emanuel, 466, 598.
Mordents, 32.
More, Sir Thomas, 375.
Morino, 470.
Morley, Thomas, 22.
Moscheles, Ignaz, 64, 132, 176, 182, 285.
Moszkowski, Maurice, 321, 323f.
Motet, 9.
Motive, 70.
Mouquet, J., 604.
Moussorgsky, 330, 331.
Mozart, 8, 89, 98, 100f, 112, 116, 123, 128, 131f, 134f, _141ff_,
207, 367, _424ff_, 426ff, 496, 591f;
(compared to Beethoven), 133;
(concerto form), 150ff;
(influence on Chopin), 254f;
(‘Don Giovanni’ transcription), 308f;
(influence on Haydn), 495;
(string quartet), _498ff_;
(miscel. chamber music), 560;
(trio), 574f;
(compositions for wind instruments with piano), 598f.
Pianoforte sonatas, 144ff.
Piano sonata in C minor (K. 457), 145.
Piano sonata in A minor, 145f.
Piano sonata in A minor (K. 310), 146.
Piano sonata in F major (K. 332), 146.
Piano sonata in A major (K. 331) 147f.
Piano sonata in F major (K. 332), 147.
Piano sonata in A major (K. 331), 148.
Piano sonata in C minor (K. 457), 148f.
Piano sonata in F major (K. 533), 149.
Piano fantasia in C minor, 149f.
Pianoforte concerto in A major (K. 488), 151f, 154.
Piano concerto in D-major: ‘Coronation’ (K. 537), 154.
Violin concertos, 425.
Violin sonatas, 427.
Divertimenti (1772), 499.
Six string quartets (1772, K. 155-160), 500ff.
Six string quartets (Vienna, 1773, K. 168-173), 502f.
Six string quartets (1782-1785) (G major, K. 387;
D minor, K. 421;
E-flat major, K. 428;
B-flat major, K. 458;
A major, K. 464;
C major, K. 465), 504ff.
String quartets (1789-90; K. 575, 589, 590), 506.
String quintets (K. 515, 516, 593, 614), 507f.
Mozart, Leopold, 374, 413, 416f.
Mühlfeld, Professor, 579, 603.
_Musikalisches Kunstmagazin_, 494.
N
Nardini, Pietro, 403, 428, 430.
Nationalism, 320, 325, 329;
(Brahms), 248;
(Chopin), 252f;
(Liszt), 317;
(Grieg), 326f;
(Spanish), 339;
(Tschaikowsky), 464.
Neri, Massimiliano, 385, 477.
Neubauer, Johann, 473.
Nevin, Ethelbert, 340.
Newmarch, Rosa (cited), 465.
Nibelungen Lied, 369.
Niemann, Walter (cited), 333, 334.
Niemetschek, Franz Xaver (quoted), 143.
Nocturne, (Field), 179;
(Chopin), 281.
Nocturne form, 180.
Nonet (Spohr), 603.
Notker, 369.
Notre Dame, Paris, 369.
Notturni (quartet), 489.
Novàk, Vatislav (pianoforte quintet), 589.
O
Oboe (in chamber music), 598, 601, 604.
Octet (with wind instruments), 600, 601.
Ofried, 369.
Opera, 6, 14, 40.
Operatic fantasias, 286, 291, 300, 308, 575.
Orchestra, 6, 7;
(early combinations), 370f, 373, 376.
Orchestral masterpieces (transcriptions of), 306.
Orchestral style (in pianoforte music), 162f, 193;
(organ-playing), 16;
(in early chamber music), 486;
(in string quartet), 556f, 558, 561.
Ordres, 22 (footnote), 54.
Organ, 1f, 4, 8.
Organ music, 9, 16, 21;
(influence of, on harpsichord), 30.
Organ style, 30f, 63, 347, 422, 424.
Organist-composers (16th and 17th cent.), 14ff.
Organists, 17.
Oriental ‘color,’ 362, 365.
Ornamentation (in harpsichord music), 59;
(Chopin), 278f.
Ottoboni, Cardinal, 42.
Overtones, 219, 243, 356, 357, 363. See also Harmonics.
Overture, French, 79.
Overtures, transcriptions of, 310.
P
Pachelbel, 16.
Paderewski, Ignace, 338.
Paganini, 243, 299, 318, 430, 433, 435, 437ff, 443, 446;
(influence), 448.
Pagin, A. N., 408.
Palestrina, 10, 13.
Paradies, Domenico, 97, 116.
Paris, 430.
Paris Conservatoire, 408, 433, 434.
Paris School (violin music), 430, 435.
Parthenia, 18, 22.
_Partien_, 22 (footnote).
Partita. See Bach, J. S.
Parody (in pianoforte music), 366.
Pasquini, Bernardo, 6, 37, 43, 90.
Passacaglia, 83.
Passages, 32;
(Weber), 186f;
(Chopin), 276.
See also Arpeggios, Scales.
Passepieds, 26.
Pasta, 254.
Paul, Archduke of Russia, 493.
Paumann, Conrad, 372.
Pauses, 140.
Pavane, 22, 23, 469, 473.
Pawirschwantz, 468.
Pedal, 156.
Pedalling, 161f, 181, 356;
(Schumann), 219.
Pepys’ Diary, 393.
Pergolesi, Giovanni, 1O1f, 107.
Peri, 474.
Petrarch, 318.
Petrucci’s lute collection, 469.
Petzolds, Johann, 473.
Philip, Isadore, 343.
Pianists. See Virtuosi (piano).
Pianoforte, 132;
(use of, by Mozart), 144;
(development of), 155ff;
(exploitation of resources), 310;
(modern development of resources), 363;
(in chamber music combinations), 573ff.
See also Virtuoso music.
Pianoforte actions, 156, 157.
Pianoforte concerto, (Mozart), 150ff, 154;
(Beethoven), 173;
(Schumann), 237;
(Chopin), 263;
(Liszt), 314;
(Tschaikowsky), 332;
(Grieg), 327f;
(Brahms), 247f;
(Rachmaninoff), 334.
Pianoforte études, (Czerny), 44, 64, 182;
(Clementi), 121;
(Chopin), 258;
(Liszt), 301, 313f;
(Scriabin), 335.
Pianoforte music, (orchestral style in), 193;
(influence of song in), 194, 254.
Pianoforte playing, (C. P. E. Bach), 127f;
(Mozart), 142;
(Beethoven), 160f;
(Hummel), 176;
(Field), 179;
(Schubert), 194;
(Chopin), 255;
(Thalberg), 291;
(Liszt), 299f, 301.
Pianoforte quartet, 582, 583.
Pianoforte quintet, 582f, 586ff.
Pianoforte sonata, (Kuhnau), 28;
(development), _89ff_;
(general character of movements), 98f;
(dramatic conception of), 122;
(Haydn and Mozart), 136ff;
(Beethoven), 154ff, 159ff;
(interdependence of movements), 167f, 262f;
(Weber), 187ff;
(Schubert), 195ff;
(after Beethoven), 207;
(Romantic), 208f;
(Schumann), 235;
(Brahms), 240;
(Chopin), 257ff;
(Liszt), 314ff;
(Grieg), 327;
(Rachmaninoff), 334;
(Scriabin), 337;
(d’Indy), 351;
(with violin _ad libitum_), 426.
Pianoforte style, 33, 268, 277.
Pianoforte technique, 68, 132, 268;
(Clementi), 157;
(Beethoven), 162f;
(after Beethoven), 175;
(Weber), 184, 187;
(Schumann), 219;
(Brahms), 247;
(Thalberg), 293;
(Liszt), 301ff;
(Scriabin), 335;
(Alkan), 343;
(Franck), 346;
(d’Indy), 352;
(Debussy), 358f.
Picture music, 214.
Pierné, Gabriel, 353, 604.
Piquot (quoted), 488f.
Pisendel, Johann Georg, 413.
Piva, 469.
Pixis, F. W., 418.
Pizzicato, 378, 387, 448, 588;
(combined with bowed notes), 438;
(Mozart), 505;
(Debussy), 564;
(in string quartet, Schönberg), 571f.
Plain-song, 10, 20.
Playford, John, 395.
_Polka de la reine_, 322f.
Polonaises, 252f;
(Chopin), 282.
Polyphonic style, 9 (footnote), 11, 16, 22, 74, 383, 386, 392, 471;
(organ), 31;
(Chopin), 269, 271;
(Corelli), 397;
(in violin solo sonata), 422.
Polyphony (vocal), 9.
Popularization (of Bach, Beethoven, Chopin), 300.
Porpora, Nicolo, 51.
Portraiture, musical, 55f, 226.
Positions in violin playing, (change of), 384;
(seventh), 431.
Pot-pourri, 310.
Præludium, 469. See also Prelude.
Prætorius, Michael, 375;
(cited), 468, 472.
Preamble, 79, 469.
Prelude, 12, 17, 21, 29, 41;
(Bach), 80;
(Chopin), 264;
(Heller), 321;
(Rachmaninoff), 334;
(Debussy), 361ff.
Program music, 27f, 312.
Proportz, 470.
Puccini, Giacomo, 366.
Pugnani, Gaëtano, 402, 404, 410.
Punto, 600.
Purcell, Henry, 21, 392, 479.
Pythagoras, 2.
Q
Quagliati, Paolo, 381.
Quantz, J. J., 415, 515.
Quartet style, 555f, 565.
Queen Elizabeth Virginal Book, The, 18.
Quintet, (Beethoven), 509;
(clarinet and strings), 599;
(wind instruments and piano), 599;
(with wind instruments), 600, 601.
See also Pianoforte quintet; String quintet.
R
Rachmaninoff, 334, 338.
Raff, Joachim, 321, 322f;
(string quartet), 547.
Rameau, J. P., 8, 61f, 131.
Rappoldi, 445, 451.
Rasoumowsky, Prince, 419, 513.
Ravel, Maurice, 353, 364ff, 564f.
Realism, 27;
(in pianoforte music), 311, 344.
Rebec, 369, 372.
Rébel, 406.
Recitative, 14.
Recoupe, 470.
Regal, 1.
Reger, Max, 321, 466, 598, 604.
Registers, contrast of (in pianoforte music), 277.
Reichardt, J. F., 494.
Reiteration of notes, 47.
Reményi, 445.
Reusser, Esajas, 473.
Revolution. See French Revolution.
_Rhétorique des Dieux_, 26.
Rhythm, (syncopated), 219f;
(mixture of duple and triple, Brahms), 241;
(5/4 time), 258;
(7/8 time), 359;
(rhythmic oddities), 547.
Ricercar, 10, 11, 469.
Richter, Franz Xaver, 112, 413, 487.
Richter, Jean Paul, 218, 321.
Riemann, Hugo, cited, 512, 521.
Ries, Ferdinand, 182.
_Rigoletto_, 309.
Rimsky-Korsakoff, 330f, 555.
Robineau, L’Abbé, 409.
Rode, Pierre, 412, 430, 432, 433f, 451, 456;
(influence on Spohr), 440.
Rogers, Dr. Benjamin, 394.
Rois des ménestriers, 372.
Rois des violins, 372.
Rolla, Alessandro, 437.
Romanticism, 207f, 211, 218, 239, 320, 321.
Rome, 2, 6, 15.
Rondo (Couperin), 17f, 58, 79.
Ropartz, Guy, 598.
Roseingrave, Thomas, 43, 44.
Rosenmüller, Johann, 473.
Rossi, Salomone, 474.
Rossini, 292.
Rounds, 473.
Rubert, Martin, 473.
Rubini, 254.
Rubinstein, Anton, 295, 331;
(trio), 579f.
Rudolph, Archduke, 575.
Ruggeri, 391, 402.
Rugieri, 478.
‘Rule, Britannia,’ 291.
Runs, 383, 430, 448.
Russia (modern composers), 329, 553.
Russian ‘color’ (Beethoven), 515.
Rust, Friedrich Wilhelm, 98, 100f, 117, 129, 416.
Rust, Ludwig Anton, 117.
S
Saint-Foix, 425.
St. Georges, Chevalier de, 407.
St. Germain des Près, Abbey of, 369.
St. Mark’s, Venice, 1.
St. Nicholas Brüderschaft, 371.
St. Peter’s (Rome), 2, 15, 42.
Saint-Saëns, Camille, 341f;
(violin music), 462;
(trio), 581;
(pianoforte quartet), 589;
('cello sonata), 598.
Salieri, 454.
Salomon, Johann Peter, 416, 496.
Salomon concerts (London), 410, 443.
Salon music, 201;
(Chopin), 280f.
Saltarello, 469.
Sammartini, Giovanni Battista, 498, 499.
Santini, Abbé, 44.
Sarabande, 23, 25, 75.
Sarasate, Pablo de, 451, 452, 462, 465.
Satie, Eric, 366f.
Saxophone (in chamber music), 598.
Scale passages, 20;
(harpsichord), 68;
(Clementi), 120.
Scandinavia (pianoforte music), 326ff.
Scarlatti, Alessandro, 7, 38, 42ff, 111.
Scarlatti, Domenico, 8, 19, 38, 41, 42ff, 45, 86, 91, 105ff,
109. 131, 276;
(sonatas), 46ff;
(form), 49;
(compared with Bach), 65.
Schachbrett, 3.
Scharwenka, Philipp, 321.
Scharwenka, Xaver, 321, 323f.
Scheidt, Samuel, 16.
Schein, I. H., 472.
Scherzo, 79;
(in string quartet), 493.
Schmitt, Florent, 365f.
Schobert, Jean, 97, 98, 113, 114, 117, 123, 426, 498.
Schönberg, Arnold, piano music, 324;
(chamber music), 565ff.
Sextet, _Verklärte Nacht_, 565.
First string quartet, 567ff.
Second string quartet, 570f.
Schubart, C. F. D., 417.
Schubert, Franz, 89, 183ff, _193ff_, 206, 209, 254, 367,
547, 577, 590;
(compared with Brahms), 248;
(_Müller-Lieder_ transcription), 296;
(transcriptions of songs of), 306, 307;
(transcription of waltzes), 310;
(violin music), 456;
(string quartet), 536ff;
(octet), 602.
Piano sonata in A major (op. 120), 198.
Piano sonata in D major (op. 120), 195.
Piano sonata in A minor (op. 143), 196f.
‘Wanderer’ Fantasy (op. 15), 198.
Impromptus (first set), 200ff.
Impromptus (second set), 202f.
‘Musical Moments,’ 204ff.
Dances (for piano), 206.
String quartet in G major, 537f.
Trios (op. 99 and 100), 577.
‘Forellen’ quintet, 590.
Schumann, Clara, 133, 300, 584.
Schumann, Robert, 193, 207, 218ff, 254, 333, 367, 439, 440, 547;
(opinion of Mendelssohn), 217;
(compared with Brahms), 248;
(transcriptions of songs of), 306;
(influence on Chopin), 323;
(influence), 329, 349ff, 551;
(violin sonatas), 457f;
(string quartets), 541ff;
(trio), 578;
(pianoforte quintet), 587;
(cello music), 595;
(viola pieces), 598;
(comp. for clarinet, viola and piano), 603.
Fantasy Pieces, 222f.
Kinderscenen, 224.
Carnaval, 225ff.
Davidsbündler Dances, 229.
Papillons, 229.
Faschingsschwank aus Wien, 229.
Abegg Variations, 230.
Symphonic Études, 230ff.
Kreisleriana, 232ff, 273.
Novelletten, 235.
Sonata in F-sharp minor, 235.
Sonata in G minor, 236.
Fantasy, 236.
Pianoforte concerto, 237.
String quartet in A minor, 541.
String quartet in F major, 542.
String quartet in A, 542.
Pianoforte quartet (op. 44), 582.
Pianoforte quartet (op. 47), 582.
Schuppanzigh, Ignaz, 419, 510 (footnote), 513.
Schuppanzigh quartet, 510 (footnote), 521.
Scott, Cyril, 339.
Scriabin, Alexander, 335ff.
Senaillé, J. B., 406.
Sénancourt, 318.
Sensationalism, 294f. See also Virtuoso music.
Septet (with wind instruments), 600.
Serenades, 599.
Serrato, Arrigo, 466.
Sextet, (Beethoven), 509;
(with wind instruments), 600, 601.
Sgambati, Giovanni, 338f;
(pianoforte quintet), 589.
Shedlock, J. S., (cited), 38 (footnote); 43; 50 (footnote);
(quoted on Chopin), 259;
(quoted on Beethoven), 262.
Short forms. See Miniature forms.
Sibelius, 465.
Sibylla, Duchess of Württemberg, 24.
Siciliana, 505.
Simphonia (early use of term), 472.
Simpson, Christopher, 394.
Sinding, Christian, 328f;
(pianoforte quartet), 590.
Concerto in D-flat, 329.
Sinfonia, 79, 475.
Singing allegro, 101, 107, 113.
Singing bass, 60.
Singing melody (in pianoforte playing), 296, 307.
Sinigaglia, Leone, 466.
Skips (violin playing), 430.
Slavic influences (in sonata), 98, 99.
Slawjk, Joseph, 445f.
Smetana, 556f, 561;
(influence), 589.
String quartet, _Aus meinem Leben_, 556f.
Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, 447.
Sokoloff, Nikolas, 555.
Somis, 402.
Sonata, (origin of word), 12;
(Kuhnau), 28;
(so-called), 37, 91;
(Scarlatti), 46ff;
(for violin alone), 409, 421;
(for two violins), 421;
(with figured bass), 426;
(for harpsichord and violin _ad libitum_), 426;
(early use of term), 471, 472;
(in early instrumental music), 474f, 477, 478ff;
(Corelli), 482;
(a quattro), 484.
See also Pianoforte Sonata; Violin sonata; Violoncello sonata;
Trio sonata, etc.
Sonata a quattro (early form of string quartet), 484.
Sonata cycle, 478, 482;
(interchange of movements), 100.
Sonata da camera, 22 (footnote), 385, 396;
(fusion with Sonata da chiesa), 483.
Sonata da chiesa, 12, 385, 396;
(fusion with sonata da camera), 483.
Sonata form, 49, 50, 90f, 104, 484f, 487;
(in string quartet), 490.
See also Triplex form.
Song (influence of, on pianoforte music), 194, 254.
Songs, (variations on), 289;
(transcriptions of), 307.
Songs without Words, 211. See also Mendelssohn.
Sontag, Henriette, 439.
Spain (modern), 339.
Spinet, 5.
Spineta, Giovanni, 5.
Spohr, Ludwig, 412, 418, 430, 438, 440ff;
(string quartet), 535f;
(trio), 577;
(clarinet compositions), 603.
Staccato (violin), 449.
Stamitz, Anton, 418, 432.
Stamitz, Carl, 418.
Stamitz, Johann, 98, 112f, 413, 418, 420, 487, 491, 499.
Stcherbatcheff, Nicholas de, 334.
Steibelt, 182.
Stein, 156, 158.
Stich, 600.
Stillman-Kelley, Edgar (cited), 251.
Stormant, Lord, 502.
Stradivarius, 386 (illus.). See Vol. VIII.
Strauss, Ludwig, 445.
Strauss, Richard, 321, 324;
(influence), 338;
(violin sonata), 465f;
(pianoforte quartet), 590;
('cello sonata), 597f;
(horn concerto), 604.
Streicher, 156, 158.
Striggio, 376.
String quartet (early example of combination), 376;
(early forms of), 475, 477, 484;
(early classics), 486ff;
(Boccherini), 487, 488;
(Haydn), 489ff;
(Mozart), 507f;
(Beethoven), 509ff, 512ff, 534;
(Spohr), 535f;
(Schubert), 536ff;
(Mendelssohn), 539ff;
(Schumann), 541ff;
(Brahms), 545ff;
(Franck), 547ff;
(d’Indy), 551f;
(Chausson), 552;
Dvořák, 559;
(modern), 560ff;
(Debussy), 561ff;
(Ravel), 564f;
(Schönberg), 565f.
String sextet, (Brahms), 543ff;
(Schönberg), 565f.
Strungk, Nicholas Adam, 392, 412.
Studies, 321. See also Études.
Style galant, 58, 75, 502.
Suite, 12ff, 41, 74ff, 93;
(uniformity of key), 25;
(Bach), 70ff;
(Grieg), 327;
(early form of), 469f.
See also Ordres.
Sulponticello, 556.
Süssmayer, 425.
Sutterheim, Baron von, 528.
Symbolical sequence of notes, 218.
Sympathetic vibrations, 356, 363.
Symphonic masterpieces (transcriptions of), 306.
Symphony (term applied to string quartet), 490.
Syncopated rhythms (Schumann), 219f.
T
Taglietti, 478.
Taneieff, Serge, 555.
Tarantella (Heller), 321;
(Dargomijsky), 330.
Tartar le corde, 469.
Tartini, Giuseppe, 122 (footnote), 402, 412, 415, 417,
427, 428, 430.
Tausig, 44, 290.
Technique. See Pianoforte technique; Violin technique.
Telemann, Georg Philipp, 413.
Temperament, equal. See Equal temperament.
Terminology (uncertain, in Renaissance period), 472.
Ternary form, 45. See Triplex form.
Thalberg, Sigismund, 286, 291ff, 449;
(rivalry with Liszt), 299f.
Fantasia on ‘Moses,’ 292ff.
Thayer, 433.
Thematic development, 475, 480.
Thematic metamorphosis, 548.
Themes, 11, 70;
(contrasted), 113;
(second), 476, 477.
Thome, François, 342.
Thomelin, Jacques, 52.
Thumb (use of, in pianoforte playing), 68.
Toccata, 12, 21, 29, 41, 79, 469, 470;
(A. Scarlatti), 38;
(Bach), 81.
Tone color (attempt at, in string quartet), 517, 572.
Tone-painting, 382.
Tonini, 391, 478.
Tordion, 470.
Torelli, Giuseppe, 388f, 399, 413, 483;
(influence on Bach), 422.
Tost, Johann, 496, 535.
‘Touch’ (harpsichord), 6. See also Pianoforte technique.
Touchemoulin, 409.
Tourte, François, 431.
Transcriptions, 296;
(Liszt), 306;
(Mendelssohn’s ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’), 310;
(Schubert’s Waltzes), 310;
(Glinka), 330;
(of Vivaldi’s concertos, by Bach), 422;
(Rode’s Theme and Variations), 434;
(Paganini caprices), 439;
(for lute), 468.
See also Fantasias; Operatic fantasias.
Transitional passages (in sonata), 114.
Tremolo, (pianoforte), 302;
(string instruments), 378, 381, 384, 556.
_Trésor des Pianistes_ (Madame Farrenc’s), 53, 104, 129.
Trills, 32, 430.
Trio, 469;
(Haydn, Mozart), 574ff;
(Beethoven), 576f;
(Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann), 577;
(modern Russian), 579f;
(Arensky, Dvořák, Tschaikowsky), 580;
(modern French), 581;
(wind instruments and piano), 599.
Trio sonatas, 101, 388, 474, 476, 484, 574.
Triplex form, 91, 96, 102, 104ff, 115;
(C. P. E. Bach), 113;
(Beethoven), 163ff;
(Chopin), 260.
See also Sonata form; Ternary form.
Trium, 469.
Trombone (in chamber music), 604.
Troubadours, 9 (footnote), 370.
Tschaikowsky, 331ff, 463f, 553f, 561, 580;
(on Lalo), 462.
Pianoforte concerto in B-flat minor, 332.
Violin concerto, 463f.
String quartet, 553f, 561.
Trio (op. 50), 580.
Tum-tum bass, 177, 191, 287.
Tuning (modified, of violin), 392, 436, 439.
See also Equal temperament.
Turin School (of violin music), 404f.
Turini, Francesco, 475.
Turns, 32.
U
Ucellini, Marco, 385.
Uhland, 252.
V
Valentini, Giuseppi, 402.
Variations, 17, 18, 19, 20f;
(Handel), 87;
(Beethoven), 165, 595;
(Weber), 184f;
(Mendelssohn), 215;
(Schumann), 230f;
(Brahms), 242ff;
(popularity in early 19th cent.), 285;
(Herz), 286f;
(Thalberg), 291;
(in early instr. music), 475;
(Haydn), 475.
Venetian school (violin composers), 399.
Venice, 1.
Veracini, Antonio, 390, 479, 483.
Veracini, Francesco Maria, 401, 483.
Verdi (Rigoletto transcription), 309.
Viadana, 474.
Vicentino, Nicola, 467 (footnote).
Vienna, 89, 371, 502.
Viennese classics, 131ff.
Vieuxtemps, Henri, 412, 446, 448f, 453.
Vinacesi, 391, 478.
Viol, 371, 372.
Viola, 598.
Viola da gamba, 590f.
Viola pomposa, 591.
Viola sonata, 598.
Viola suite, 598.
Violin, 370;
(ancestors of), 368f;
(in 16th cent.), 373f;
(modified tunings), 392.
Violin bow, 382, 385.
Violin concerto, (Torelli), 388;
(Viotti), 405, 411;
(Bach), 422, 423;
(Mozart), 424f;
(Kreutzer), 432;
(Rode), 433;
(Baillot), 435;
(Paganini), 440;
(Spohr), 441;
(de Bériot), 448;
(Joachim Wieniawski), 450;
(modern), 451f;
(Beethoven), 456f;
(Schubert), 456;
(Mendelssohn), 458;
(Brahms), 460;
(Lalo), 461f;
(Tschaikowsky), 463f;
(Glazounoff), 464f;
(Bruch), 465;
(Sibelius), 465;
(Reger), 466;
(modern Bohemian and Italian), 466.
See also Violin solo, sonata for.
Violin études, (Gaviniés), 409;
(Kreutzer), 432.
Violin methods, (Geminiani), 401;
(L. Mozart), 417;
(Conservatoire), 433;
(Baillot), 435;
(Spohr), 442.
Violin music, before Corelli, 379ff;
(English, 17th cent.), 393;
(18th cent.), 396ff;
(19th cent.), 430ff.
Violin playing (in Middle Ages), 371, 372;
(16th cent.), 373;
(popularity of, in 18th cent.), 400f;
(Gaviniés), 409;
(in Germany, 18th cent.), 412f;
(Benda), 415;
(Tartini), 431;
(Paganini), 438f;
(Spohr), 442;
(modern), 452.
See also Violin technique.
Violin solo, concerto for, 399;
sonata for (Gaviniés), 409;
(Handel), 421;
(Bach), 422, 424;
works for, 422.
Violin sonata (evolution), 384;
(G. B. Vitali), 387;
(Biber), 391;
(Corelli), 397ff;
(Albinoni), 399;
(Vivaldi), 400;
(Veracini), 402;
(Tartini), 403;
(Leclair), 407;
(Rust), 416;
(Handel), 421;
(various types), 426f;
(Beethoven), 454ff;
(Schubert), 457;
(Schumann), 457f;
(Brahms), 459f;
(Franck), 461;
(Saint-Saëns, modern French), 462f;
(Grieg), 463;
(Strauss), 465f.
See also Violin solo, sonata for.
Violin technique, (development), 368ff, 373ff;
(18th cent.), 430f;
(Paganini), 438;
(Spohr), 441;
(Brahms-Joachim), 460.
See also Double-stopping; Bowing.
Violinists. See Virtuosi (violin).
Violoncello music, 590ff;
(Beethoven), 592ff;
(Schumann, Mendelssohn), 595f;
(Brahms), 596f;
(Grieg), 597;
(modern), 597f.
Viotti, Giambattista, 402, 404f, 408, 410ff, 428, 430,
431, 433, 488.
Violin concertos, 411.
Virdung, S., 374.
Virginal, 4.
Virginal music, 18.
Virtuosi, (piano), 209, 284, 290;
(violin), 401f, 411, 417, 435ff, 444, 451f.
Virtuosity, 41, 43, 45, 298f.
Virtuoso effects (violin), 401, 448.
Virtuoso music, 165, 177, 276, 288ff, 297, 304, 310, 400,
436, 443, 466, 511.
Virtuoso style, 216, 405.
Vitali, Giovanni Battista, 387, 479.
Vitali, Tommaso Antonio, 383, 388.
Vivaldi, Antonio, 37, 95, 98, 399, 400, 413, 483f;
(influence on Bach), 69, 422.
Vocal music (as chamber music), 467;
(15th-16th cent.), 486ff.
Vocal polyphony, 9.
Vocal style, 12;
(influence on instrumental), 9 (footnote);
(in violin music), 376;
(in instrumental music), 377, 378.
Vogler, Abbé, 191.
Volkmann, Robert (string quartet), 547.
W
Wachs, Paul, 342.
Wagenseil, G. C., 113, 117, 123f, 498.
Wagner, Richard, 132, 133, 251, 442, 459;
(transcription of _Tannhäuser_ overture), 307.
Waldhorn. See Horn.
Walter, Jacob, 386, 422.
Wasielewski, G., 122 (footnote);
(cited), 406, 412, 413, 415, 446.
Variations on a Popular Romanza, (op. 28), 185.
Variations on a Theme in C major (op. 7), 185.
Variations (op. 40), 186.
Variations on a Bohemian Melody (op. 55), 186.
Piano sonata in C major (op. 42), 188.
Piano sonata in A-flat major, 188ff.
Piano sonata in D major, 189.
Invitation to the Dance, 190f.
Konzertstück in F minor, 191f.
Weber, Carl Maria von, 132, 183ff, 206, 208, 209, 267, 350, 367;
(_Preciosa_ transcription), 296;
(clarinet compositions), 602f.
Weiss, Amalie, 451.
Weiss, Franz, 510, footnote.
Weitzmann (cited), 137.
Well-Tempered Clavichord. See Bach.
‘We're a' noddin',’ 285.
Whole-tone scale, 355, 359f.
Wieck, Clara. See Clara Schumann.
Wieniawski, Henri, 447, 450.
Wihtol, Joseph, 334.
Wilhelmj, August, 443.
Wind instruments (in chamber music), 598ff;
(combinations of), 604.
Woldemar, 436.
Women violinists, 404.
Worms, 371.
Wranitzky, Anton, 419.
Wyzewa, 425.
Y
Ysäye, Eugène, 461.
Z
Zacconi, Ludovico, 375.
Zanata, 391, 478.
Zinke. See Cornetto.
Zmeskall von Domanowecz, Nicolaus, 492, 518.
Zweelinck, 16, 21.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ART OF MUSIC - VOL. 7 ***
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