Forgotten Rivals of Great Composers
by Lorna Gill
Beethoven, the Unrivaled
When we come to the day of the
tempestuous Beethoven, and those years of significant and colossal work in his
art, we see him with no opportunity for even a hearing of his efforts, while the
Viennese flocked to the operas of the versatile Italian, Rossini. In his
indignation, Beethoven would send no more new compositions to the managers of
Vienna.
Beethoven, however, had no very
serious rival to contend with in the sense that Handel and Gluck had. Probably
his most serious rival in the operatic field was Carl Maria von Weber, whose
criticisms of Beethoven were not always just. Beethoven also was somewhat
suspicious of Hummel, who was famous as a piano composer at the time Beethoven
was writing his many piano sonatas. Nevertheless, the trouble appears to have
been due to a misunderstanding, for both composers were very good friends during
Beethoven's later days. Beethoven suffered more from the ignorance of the public
than from any direct efforts to belittle him on the part of lesser rivals.
Daniel Steibelt
Grove's Dictionary describes
Steibelt as "a musician now almost entirely forgotten, but in his own day
so celebrated as a pianoforte player and composer that many regarded him as the
rival of Beethoven." He was born in Berlin in 1756. His father was a
manufacturer of pianos and his early education is said to have been received
from somewhat mediocre sources. In 1789 he journeyed to Paris, where he became
the reigning virtuoso. After the production of a comparatively unsuccessful
opera, "Romeo and Juliet", Steibelt was indiscreet enough to sell two
of his own compositions which he had previously published as new. The publisher,
quite naturally, resented this breach of etiquette, and even went so far as to
accuse Steibelt of stealing. Things grew unpleasant for the unscrupulous
composer and he removed to England. In London he wrote his Pianoforte Concerto
in E (No. 3). This contained a Rondo known as the "Storm Rondo". Like
the "Battle of Prague", this was attended with such astonishing
popularity that it was played "in all the drawing rooms of England".
The works of Beethoven could make little progress in a country swept by the
whirlwind which this now extinct piece produced. In England Steibelt was
extremely successful as a teacher. His preference for English pianos and the
fact that he married an English woman increased his popularity. His wife was an
accomplished performer upon the tambourine, and Steibelt wrote pieces with a
tambourine accompaniment, which we are told were actually performed in public in
London. It is possible that had Beethoven been willing to write a bass drum
obbligato to hi pianoforte sonatas he might have had a more immediate and
favorable reception for his works by the great army of the untutored who demand
novelties.
In 1799 Steibelt decided to tour
Germany. In Vienna he found that the friends of Beethoven were armed against any
possible rival. This led Steibelt to send Beethoven a challenge for an open
contest. Beethoven accepted, and, according to the plaudits of the audience and
the opinions of musical people, Steibelt's defeat was final and complete. He
never challenged Beethoven again. Failing to arouse the interest he had expected
to arouse in German, he returned to Paris bearing the manuscript of the Score of
Haydn's "Creation". He demanded 3600 francs (about $700) for his share
in the translation of the text of the "Creation". The
"Creation" was produced in Paris, Christmas Eve, 1800, and was so
phenomenally successful that all the vaudeville theatres immediately produced
parodies upon it. Notwithstanding the success of "The Creation",
Steibelt's unsavory past made it uncomfortable for him to remain in Paris, and
he returned to London in 1805. Here his immediately regained his popularity. The
remainder of his life was divided between Paris, London and St. Petersburg. As a
man Steibelt was vain and bombastic. As a composer he was superficial and trite.
Consequently, the gates of obscurity opened wide to him when he died in St.
Petersburg in 1823. No man bore the stigma of plagiarism more openly. His most
widely know pianoforte work of merit is his "Etude", a collection of
studies. Steibelt's life is an excellent illustration of how the public may be
deceived by the pretensions of an artificial and insincere composer.
Though the rivalries of opera
writers occupy the most conspicuous place in musical history, storms of less
severity have beaten about the heads of all the great composers and virtuosos,
whose endeavors or talents have caused them to rive above their contemporaries.
When the great Polish composer and pianist Frederic Chopin arrived in Paris, he
consulted a musician who was then considered the foremost piano teacher of the
gay metropolis. This man was the now little known Kalkbrenner. The bitter and
taciturn Heine described Kalkbrenner as "a gouty old gentleman, looking
very much like a bon bon that had been in the mud." Friedrich Kalkbrenner,
with the arrogance of his ignorance, assured Chopin that he had no method, that
his playing was full of "unconstitutional effects". Kalkbrenner tried
hard to induce Chopin to take a three years' course under him. In a letter
pertaining to his reception by Kalkbrenner, Chopin wrote as follows,
"Although I was in a fair way, he regretted that when he ceased to play
there would be no disciple of the grand old school of piano playing left."
Chopin, the "Aerial" of pianists decided, fortunately for his future
fame, that he did not wish to be an imitation of Kalkbrenner. Some of Chopin's
biographers say that Kalkbrenner's attitude was prompted by jealousy, that he
wished to keep him out of the way, that he feared him as a rival as all Paris
was already entranced with the poetry and originality of his playing, and was
making comparisons unfavorable to Kalkbrenner, but it is not altogether likely
that this was the case.
Friedrich Wilhelm Kalkbrenner
Kalkbrenner ws born in Berlin in
1784. Kalkbrenner was almost as prolific as Steibelt. During his time his
position as a piano teacher in Paris was supreme. He was of Hebrew extractoin,
and his father, who was a musician of talent, supervised his early education. In
1798 he entered the Paris Conservatoire and after four years' course he
succeeded in winning a first prize in pianoforte playing and composition. In
1813 he went to Berlin and made the acquaintance of Haydn, Hummel, Clementi, and
Albrechtsberger. In 1814 he went to London and remained in the English
metropolis for nearly ten years. In 1824 he settled in Paris and became a member
of the celebrated firm of piano manufacturers known as Pleyel and Company. Here
Kalkbrenner succeeded in amassing a fortune, as he was a keen business man.
Chopin realized that although Kalkbrenner's compositions were enormously popular
they were not to be compared with his own concert of his first Ballade.
Nevertheless, Kalkbrenner's influence was so great and his position with the
musical public of Paris so strong that Chopin did not dare to ignore him.
Consequently Chopin attended some of the class meetings of Kalkbrenner's pupils,
and even went so far as to dedicate one of his concertos to Kalkbrenner. The
concerto is in the repertoires of all the great pianists of the world today, but
the compositions of Kalkbrenner are rarely seen outside of the libraries.
Kalkbrenner was extremely vain, and
use every little act to gain publicity for himself. Once he called upon the
editor of a famous Berlin musical journal, and in endeavoring to ingratiate
himself he declared that the wonderful art of improvising was upon the wane and
that after his (Kalkbrenner's) death there would be no remaining musician
capable of improvising in an approved manner. Kalkbrenner then sat down at the
piano and improvised for a quarter of an hour. The editor was amazed and
astonished. He was more amazed and even horrified when upon the next day he
received a bundle of new music from Paris. The first piece was "Effusio
Musica, par Fred. Kalkbrenner", and was note for note the same as the piece
Kalkbrenner has "improvised" upon the previous day. All of
Kalkbrenner's compositions were correctly written but they were dull and
ordinary, despite their artificial gloss.
Although Chopin had many rivals,
including even John Field, (the originator of the Nocturne form, who declared
that Chopin was a talent du chambre) no one envied his success quite as much as
the avaricious and talentless Kalkbrenner. Kalkbrenner died in 1849.
Sigismund Thalberg
Thalberg, the most powerful rival of
both Liszt and Chopin, could not endure the latter's "Pianissimos",
both in his compositions and playing, and always wanted to shout after having
heard him play in order to relieve his nerves. On the other hand, the latter
epitomized Thalberg's style in his description, "Thalberg plays piano and
forte with the pedals, and not with the hands, takes tenths as easily as I do
octaves and wears diamond studs." Thalberg's fame, as dazzling as that of
Liszt and Chopin during his life time, has left no enduring proof of his gift as
a composer because he sacrificed whatever talent he possessed as a composer to
the display of his technique as exploited in his paraphrases, no longer heard.
On the contrary, Liszt, admitted by all at that time to be a great virtuoso, was
scoffed at as a composer, but has left, nevertheless, an original art form in
his symphonic poems, and left transcriptions one or other of which appear upon
almost every program of a modern piano recital.
G.L.P. Spontini
Many other famous rivalries have
existed. Cherubini was intensely jealous of Berlioz, and Berlioz accused
Cherubini of conspiring to ruin him. Likewise Spontini resented the great
success of Weber and of Mendelssohn. But neither Spontini nor Cherubini can be
called forgotten, although their compositions are somewhat rarely performed
today. Cherubini's religious compositions retain their prestige, although his
other compositions are not now so well known. "La Vestale" the most
celebrated opera of Spontini has recently been given in some European music
centers with great success. In fact, Dr. Phillip Spitta, writing in Grove's
Dictionary, devotes sixteen pages to the momentous life of the Italian composer
who made notable and separate careers for himself in Italy, France and Germany.
Spontini's life read like a character novel. He was born at Majoloti, Italy, in
1774 and lived until 1851. His musical educations was received in the
conservatoires of Naples. After his graduation his success was almost immediate,
and before 1803, when he went to Paris, he was recognized as one of the foremost
Italian composers of his time. In Paris, however, Spontini found it somewhat
more difficult to win popular favor. He commenced to model his works after those
of the German masters, and the result was that his one act opera,
"Milton", was a pronounced success. Later came "La Vestale",
upon which his chief claim for fame now rests. His next opera "Fernand
Cortez" was considered by musicians more finished than "La Vestale".
But Spontini was not satisfied. He aspired to even greater attainments. He wrote
another work, entitled "Olympie" based upon Voltaire's text. This did
not meet with great success in Paris until it had been given at least six times.
King Frederick William III, of Prussia, upon one of his visits to Paris, became
acquainted with Spontini's operas, and was so charmed by them that he left
nothing undone to attract Spontini to Berlin. This was not accomplished until
1820, when the Italian composer went to the Prussian capital with a salary
considered enormous in those days, and with powers and distinctions enough to
gratify the vanity of any ordinary mortal. Spontini was naturally despotic, and
when given a band of the most competent singers, players and actors obtainable,
together with unlimited power, he commenced a musical reign which has seldom
been equaled in its severity and comprehensiveness. Nothing short of absolute
perfection could satisfy Spontini, and his rule and success were absolute.
Suspicious, vain, bad tempered and jealous, Spontini was not the man to look
kindly upon rivalry of any kind. His opera "Olympie" was performed in
1821. Three months had been spent in rehearsals, and the production was so
extravagant that even the kind objected. The presentation was a huge popular
success, but alas! a short lived one, for after only five weeks had passed a new
composer with a new opera came before the Berlin public. This newly found genius
was von Weber, and the startling innovations and original themes in his "Der
Freischutz" were so amazing that Spontini's ambitions to rule the operatic
world were dashed down in a few weeks. The public was soon divided into two
parties, one party representing the more cultured people of Berlin supporting
von Weber, and the other, representing the nobility, supporting Spontini. At one
time the expression of public opinion was so pronouncedly against Spontini that
the king was obliged to call upon his censor to suppress views which he feared
might induce the super sensitive Spontini to leave Germany. "Olympie"
ceased to be a drawing card, and the opera house at most of the performances was
partly filled by the circulation of free admission tickets. Spontini's other
works, composed in Berlin, failed to revive his reputation. His last years were
spent in Italy, where he died in 1851, leaving all his property to the poor of
his native town. Mendelssohn also thought that Spontini strove to prevent the
success of his opera, "The Marriage of Camacho", but the work of the
two composer's was so very different that they could not in any way be
considered rivals.
Wagner's Struggles
The last great struggle in music
took place with Wagner's efforts to gain a hearing and assert his artistic aims
and standards. As is well known, he suffered long years of poverty,
disappointment and vilification before the final recognition of his genius. In
1840 he sought Meyerbeer and asked for an introduction to Pillet, director of
the Paris Opera House, as he wished to talk over his proposed plot of the
"Flying Dutchman" with the latter. At the meeting Pillet asked him to
prepare his sketches. Wagner set to work and finished them in a few day, left
them in Pillet's hands and regarded them as accepted. What was his astonishment,
upon his next meeting with Pillet, to hear him remark that he know of a good
composer to whom he had promised a good plot for a libretto, and that the
"Flying Dutchman" seemed to fill all the requirements. The protests of
the enraged Wagner were of no avail; all the satisfaction that Pillet would give
was that he would allow the matter to remain in abeyance.
The climax was reached some time
after when Pillet calmly announced that he had given the sketch of the
"Flying Dutchman" to the composer Dietsch. Wagner had no powerful
friends to plead his cause. Meyerbeer was out of town. He was so poor that he
was finally obliged to take Pillet's offer of five hundred francs. With
undaunted spirit, however, he set to work and finished his own music of the
"Flying Dutchman" in seven weeks, though he failed to get any manager
to accept it.
This was not the last of Dietsch. In
1860, when the first faint glimmer of success promised the reward of genius,
Wagner, through the influence of Princess Metternich, received a command from
the Emperor to produce "Tannhauser" and "Lohengrin".
Preparations were made on a vast scale; the chance of Wagner's life seemed at
hand. Rehearsals, however, did not progress smoothly, for no other than Dietsch
was conductor at the Opera House. Wagner did all in his power to get rid of him
without success, and their relations ended in open rupture. Dietsch, bent upon
Wagner's ruin, knowing that the Jockey club was to be present on the opening
night, and knowing their disappointment if deprived of their favorite ballet,
organized them into an opposition movement. Disgraceful scenes followed; the
Jockey Club became so noisy and untractable that Wagner was obliged to
discontinue the performance, and retired defeated after three productions.
"Where are the snows of
yester-e en?" Where are the Dietschs, the Buononcinis, the Piccinis?
"Not for one generation are masterpieces born." Handel has gone on
triumphing through the centuries. Gluck's work contained the germ that has
inspired generations. Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin and Wagner opened new
paths and gave a new voice to music, and so live, while their forgotten rivals
content to write the music of a day, an hour, to satisfy the fleeting fancy of
the public, and bearing no message of advancement to the future, perish in the
graves of oblivion they had fought so fruitlessly to avoid.
The deciding hand of Fate is not
always just. Worthy works are often cast into a wrongful oblivion. As the sands
of centuries sift down into the ruins of ancient peoples and bury the records of
their artistic efforts until the explorers of another age reclaim them for the
edification of civilization, so have many worth musical works been lost for the
present generation. In the main, however, real worth triumphs and mediocrity
falls.
The Etude Magazine
October 1910