Variationen G
COMPOSER:
Kreutzer
PUBLISHER:
Editions BIM
PRODUCT TYPE:
Book [Softcover]
INSTRUMENT GROUP:
Trumpet, Cornet or Flugelhorn
His life Kreutzer's upright Swabian parents saw to it that he received a monastic education (from 1789 in the Benedictine abbey of Zwiefalten and from 1796, because of the disturbances of war, in the more remote Premonstrate abbey of Schussenried) before sending him against his will to study law at
Specifications
Composer | Kreutzer |
Publisher | Editions BIM |
Instrumentation | Trumpet and Piano |
Product Type | Book [Softcover] |
Instrument Group | Trumpet, Cornet or Flugelhorn |
ISMN | 9790207009142 |
No. | BIMTP27A |
Description
His life
Kreutzer's upright Swabian parents saw to it that he received a monastic education (from 1789 in the Benedictine abbey of Zwiefalten and from 1796, because of the disturbances of war, in the more remote Premonstrate abbey of Schussenried) before sending him against his will to study law at the University of Freiburg in 1799. However, upon his father's death in 1800, Kreutzer was free to pursue his musical bent. During his school years he had already learned to play the piano and the organ besides clarinet and oboe (later, violin), and already in Freiburg he performed with friends his small one-act opera, Die lächerliche Werbung. Between 1801 and 1804 he is to be found in various places in Switzerland and in Constance. In 1804 he settled in Vienna, where he was probably a composition pupil of Albrechtsberger and made his living by giving music lessons. From 1810 to 1812 he traveled all through Europe as piano accompanist to one Franz Leppich, who demonstrated the panmelodicon, a semi mechanical musical instrument of his own invention. The last stage of this journey was Stuttgart, where Kreutzer accepted the position of court conductor vacated by Danzi, remaining until 1816. Between 1818 and 1822 he occupied a similar position in Donaueschingen, but since he felt himself to be geographically isolated there, even during this tenure he sought out other musical centers in the hope of finding a stable position. After the success of his opera Libussa at the Karntnertor Theater in Vienna in December 1822, he accepted a conductor's position there. He kept it until 1827, returning from 1829 to 1832 after a two-year sojourn in Paris. Then he changed over to the Theater in der Josefstadt, where he remained until 1840.
The Variations in G for the Chromatic Trumpet were probably written during this period, between 1828 and 1832.
In 1840 Kreutzer left Vienna, in order to accompany his elder daughter Cäcilie, a singer, on a concert tour. In 1840-1841 he had his last fixed position, that of Municipal Music Director in Cologne. After various other concert tours, during which he unsuccessfully tried to obtain positions in Belgium and in Paris, from 1845 onwards he travelled with his younger daughter Marie, also a singer, to her engagements in Frankfurt an der Oder, Graz, and Detmold. In 1848 he followed her to Riga. There he died after a stroke, which he had suffered only a few days after learning that she had been released from her engagement because of breaking down during a performance.
The Work
In 1984 the instrumental parts of the Variations in G came to light in an unexpected place: in the archive of the town band in St. Ulrich/Groden (South Tyrol). How did they get there, and from where? The piece can be traced back to Prague: some of the parts were written on music paper manufactured by "Gottlieb Haase Söhne in Prag". According to Herbert Perathoner (St. Ulrich), the parts may have been brought from there to St. Ulrich in 1918 by Johann Malknecht and Luis Moroder, when the former was appointed town music director (the municipal musical establishment at that time being an orchestra, with strings and winds, instead of the town band it is today). A second possibility is that Christian Delago (of St. Ulrich) brought the parts with him from Lienz between 1894 and 1898. However that may be, the Variations in G are one of the earliest solo compositions ever written for the newly invented valved trumpet. It may have been written in 1828, when in Prague a certain Mr. Chlum played variations on the "chromatic trumpet, invented by Mr. Kail". loser Kail (1795-1871), while a horn player at the Vienna Court Opera, had in 1823 patented a two valved trumpet, together with the instrument- maker Joseph Riedl (d. 1840). In 1825, Kail accepted the positions of first hornist in the orchestra of the Prague national opera and of teacher of valved instruments at the Prague conservatory, which had been founded in 1811. Between 1826 and 1829 he perfected his invention by adding a third valve, among other improvements. In 1828 Chlum had his performance. Did he play Kreutzer's variations? Or was the work in question the Variations for the Trumpet in F, composed by the conservatory's director, Friedrich Dionys Weber (1766-1842)? We do not know. (Both works have a similar form, are not playable without a 3rd valve, and end with a rousing Polacca.) A later possible date of composition is the period between November 1831 and February 1832, when Kreutzer's operas Die Jungfrau and Der Lastträger an der Themse were performed in Prague.
The Instrument
Kreutzer's variations were written for the trumpet in D. That instrument is not to be confused with today's short valved D trumpet pitched an octave higher. The earliest valved trumpets - like the natural instruments from which they were developed - were generally pitched in low G or F and could be crooked to lower keys, normally E, m, D, C, Band m. Although the "Romantic trumpet" with its dark tone, which sounds like a cross between that of a horn and a trombone, is extinct today and has only recently been resurrected, it is possible to play most of the works written for it without any trouble on today's m or C trumpet. "We don't always have to eat caviar" is a saying in the culinary arts. And in the art of trumpet-playing? Certainly: "We don't always have to play the Haydn concerto"! In our time, Haydn's masterpiece is all too often prescribed by desperate teachers - without any better ideas for repertoire - on their unknowing and undeveloped pupils. Works like Kreutzer's Variations now provide a delightful alternative: the piece can help develop one's sense of the Classic-Romantic style, containing pleasing melodies and technical situations of only moderate difficulty, without posing the problems of the high register as does Haydn's work.