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Eugen d'Albert

 
Artist: Eugen d'Albert
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: Germany
  • Born: April 10, 1864 in Glasgow, Scotland
  • Died: March 03, 1932 in Riga, Latvia
  • Genres: Opera

Biography

Pianist and composer Eugen d'Albert was a key figure in German post-Romanticism, born to German parents in Glasgow, Scotland. His father, Charles Louis Napoléon d'Albert, was a popular orchestra leader in the U.K. who specialized in light music. D'Albert began his musical training under his father, continuing it with Sir Arthur Sullivan and others. In 1881, d'Albert went to Weimar to study with his idol, Franz Liszt, whose impact on d'Albert's work both as a pianist and a composer proved crucial. Armed with endorsements from Liszt, Clara Schumann, and Anton Rubinstein, d'Albert went on to an enormously successful career as a concert pianist, which lasted for decades. His Piano Concerto No. 1, composed in 1884, was probably the first post-Romantic piano concerto and is one of the most ambitious composed before that of Ferruccio Busoni. Like Liszt, d'Albert was a prolific transcriber of non-original works, and in his time d'Albert's editions of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach were held in the same regard as Busoni's.

By the early 1890s, d'Albert began to turn his compositional activity away from the keyboard in favor of opera, and he scored his first hit, Die Abreise, in 1898. On November 15, 1903, d'Albert's masterwork, the opera Tiefland, opened in Prague. Tiefland's was an alluring and innovative mixture of Italian verismo and Viennese operetta, and proved a success beyond d'Albert's wildest hopes, although he would never again match it. D'Albert devoted his remaining compositional activity to opera, and his worklist contains a number of interesting looking projects that await revival. Notable entries would include d'Albert's opera of Die Toten Augen (1912) written with the notoriously decadent novelist Hannes Heinz Ewers, the music drama Der Golem (1926) and the Zeitoper Die schwarze Orchidee (1928), which like Brecht and Weill's Der Dreigroschenoper incorporated the style of continental jazz. D'Albert's final opera, Mister Wu, was left unfinished at his death and was completed by conductor Leo Blech.

Portly, and short in stature, Eugen d'Albert was nonetheless quite a ladies' man and married six times. His most famous marriage was a brief and stormy union to the renowned Spanish concert pianist Teresa Carreño. D'Albert left behind a prodigious amount of recordings and piano rolls, both of his original compositions and those of others, which regrettably remain largely un-documented as of this writing. D'Albert's posthumous reputation has suffered, owing to his deeply felt pro-German sentiments and his apparent unwillingness to adapt to twentieth century trends. D'Albert was not the first to jump on stylistic bandwagons, but even late in life he was able to stylistically move forward in his music. As to the first complaint, and its implied association with National Socialist values, d'Albert never had to face the prospect of accepting or rejecting Nazism, as he died the year before Hitler came to power. Although d'Albert's place in music history is not yet properly evaluated, it is useful to see him as somewhat similar to Richard Strauss, a conservative, but a somewhat eclectic late Romantic. Tiefland remains popular in German-speaking lands and has kept d'Albert's name in circulation even during times of low or non-existent critical approval of his work; there is certainly no marginalizing its tremendous power, beauty, and effectiveness. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide

Discography

Eugen D'Albert

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Eugen D'Albert

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The Centaur Pianist: Complete Studio Recordings, 1910-1928

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The Great Pianists, Vol. 6: Eugène d'Albert

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Eugen d'Albert in 1904

Eugen Francis Charles d'Albert (10 April 1864 – 3 March 1932) was a Scottish-born German pianist and composer.

Educated in Britain, d'Albert showed early musical talent and, at the age of seventeen, he won a scholarship to study in Austria. Feeling a kinship with German culture and music, he soon emigrated to Germany, where he studied with Franz Liszt and began a career as a concert pianist. D'Albert repudiated his early training and upbringing in England and considered himself German.

While pursuing his career as a pianist, d'Albert focused increasingly on composing, producing 21 operas and a considerable output of piano, vocal, chamber and orchestral works. His most successful opera was Tiefland, which premiered in Prague in 1903. His successful orchestral works included his cello concerto (1899), a symphony, two string quartets and two piano concertos. In 1907, d'Albert became the director of the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, where he exerted a wide influence on musical education in Germany. He also held the post of Kapellmeister to the Court of Weimar.

D'Albert was married six times, including to the pianist-singer Teresa Carreño, and was successively a British, German and Swiss citizen.

Contents

Biography

D'Albert was born in Glasgow, Scotland, to an English mother, Annie Rowell, and a German-born father of French and Italian descent, Charles Louis Napoleon d'Albert, whose ancestors included the composers Giuseppe Matteo Alberti and Domenico Alberti.[1] D'Albert's father was a dancer, pianist and music arranger who had been ballet-master at the King's Theatre and at Covent Garden.[2] D'Albert was born when his father was 55 years old. The Musical Times wrote in 1904 that "This, and other circumstances, accounted for a certain loneliness in the boy's home-life and the years of his childhood. He was misunderstood, and 'cribbed, cabined, and confined' to such an extent as to largely prejudice him against the country which gave him birth."[3]

D'Albert was raised in Glasgow and taught music by his father until he won a scholarship to the new National Training School for Music (forerunner of the Royal College of Music) in London, which he entered in 1876 at the age of 12.[3] D'Albert studied at the National Training School with Ernst Pauer, Ebenezer Prout, John Stainer and Arthur Sullivan. By the age of 14, he was winning public praise from The Times as "a bravura player of no mean order" in a concert in October 1878. He played Schumann's piano concerto at the Crystal Palace in 1880, receiving more encouragement from The Times: "A finer rendering of the work has seldom been heard."[4][5] Also in 1880, d’Albert arranged the piano reduction for the vocal score of Sullivan's sacred music drama The Martyr of Antioch, to accompany the chorus in rehearsal.[6] He is also credited with writing the overture to Gilbert and Sullivan's 1881 opera, Patience.[7]

For many years, d’Albert dismissed his training and work during this period as worthless.[8] The Times wrote that he "was born and educated in England, and won his earliest successes in England, although, in a freak of boyish impetuosity, he repudiated some years ago all connexion with this country, where, according to his own account, he was born by mere accident and where he learnt nothing."[9] In later years, however, he modified his views: "The former prejudice which I had against England, which several incidents aroused, has completely vanished since many years."[3]

Career

‎In 1881, Hans Richter invited d’Albert to play his first Piano Concerto, which was "received with enthusiasm".[3] In the same year d’Albert won the Mendelssohn Scholarship, enabling him to study in Vienna, where he met Johannes Brahms, Franz Liszt and other important musicians who influenced his style.[10] D'Albert, retaining his early enthusiasm for German culture and music ("hearing Tristan und Isolde had a greater influence on him than the education he received from his father or... at the National Training School for Music")[1] changed his first name from Eugène to Eugen and emigrated to Germany, where he became a pupil of the elderly Liszt in Weimar.[11]

d’Albert aged 20

In Germany and Austria, d’Albert built a career as a pianist. Liszt called him "the young Tausig", and d’Albert can be heard in an early recording of Liszt works. He played his own Piano Concerto with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in 1882, the youngest pianist who had appeared with the orchestra.[3] D'Albert toured extensively, including in the United States from 1904 to 1905. His virtuoso technique was compared to that of Busoni.[12] He was praised for his playing of J. S. Bach's preludes and fugues and of Beethoven's sonatas.[13] "As an exponent of Beethoven, Eugen d'Albert has few, if any, equals."[3] Gradually, d’Albert's work as a composer occupied his time more and more, and he reduced his concert playing.[11] He was the recipient of a number of dedications, most notably of Richard Strauss's Burleske in D minor, which he premiered in 1890.[1][10]

D'Albert was a prolific composer. His output includes a large volume of successful piano and chamber music and lieder. He also composed twenty-one operas, in a wide variety of styles, which premiered mostly in Germany. His first, Der Rubin (1893) was an oriental fantasy; Die Abreise (1898), which established him as an opera composer in Germany, was a one-act domestic comedy; Kain (1900) was a setting of the biblical story; and one of his last operas, Der Golem, was on a traditional Jewish theme.[13] His most successful opera was his seventh, Tiefland, which premiered in Prague in 1903. When Thomas Beecham introduced the opera to London, The Times observed, "the scoring owes more than a little to the discipline of Sullivan; there is also a curiously English fragrance".[14] Tiefland played in opera houses throughout the world and has retained a place in the standard German and Austrian repertoire, with a production at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, in November 2007. According to biographer Hugh Macdonald, it "provides a link between Italian verismo and German expressionist opera, although the orchestral textures recall a more Wagnerian language."[11] Another stage success was a comic opera called Flauto solo in 1905. D'Albert's most successful orchestral works included his cello concerto (1899), a symphony, two string quartets and two piano concertos. "Though not a composer of profound originality... he had an unfailing sense of dramatic appropriateness and all the resources of a symphonic technique to give it expression and was thus able to achieve success in so many styles".[13]

D'Albert edited critical editions of the scores of Beethoven and Bach, transcribed Bach's organ works for the piano and wrote cadenzas for Beethoven's piano concertos. In 1907, he succeeded Joseph Joachim as director of the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, in which capacity he had a wide influence on musical education in Germany. He also held the post of Kapellmeister to the Court of Weimar.[13]

Personal life and death

Grave of d'Albert at the cemetery of Morcote

D'Albert's friends included Richard Strauss, Hans Pfitzner, Engelbert Humperdinck, Ignatz Waghalter and Gerhart Hauptmann, the dramatist. He was married six times and had eight children. The first wife was Louise Salingré. The second, from 1892 to 1895, was the Venezuelan pianist, singer and composer Teresa Carreño, herself much married and considerably older than d’Albert. D'Albert and Carreño were the subject of a famous joke: "Come quick! Your children and my children are quarrelling again with our children!"[15] The line, however, has also been attributed to others. His later wives were mezzo-soprano Hermine Finck, who originated the role of the witch in Humperdinck's Hänsel und Gretel; actress Ida Fulda; Friederike ("Fritzi") Jauner; and Hilde Fels. His last companion was a mistress, Virginia Zanetti.[11]

In 1914, d’Albert moved to Zürich and became a Swiss citizen. He died in 1932 at the age of 69 in Riga, Latvia, where he had travelled for a divorce from his sixth wife. In the weeks preceding his death, d'Albert was the subject of attacks by the press in Riga concerning his personal life.[16] D'Albert was buried in the cemetery overlooking Lake Lugano in Morcote, Switzerland.

Works

Operas

See List of operas by d'Albert

Orchestral works

  • Piano Concerto No. 1 in B minor, Op. 2 (1884)
  • Symphony in F major, Op. 4 (1886)
  • Esther, Op. 8 (1888)
  • Piano Concerto No. 2 in E major, Op. 12 (1893)
  • Cello Concerto in C major, Op. 20 (1899)
  • Aschenputtel. Suite, Op. 33 (1924)
  • Symphonic Prelude to Tiefland, Op. 34 (1924)

Keyboard

  • Suite in D minor for piano, Op. 1 (1883) Musical score
  • Eight Piano pieces, Op. 5
  • Waltzes for piano, four hands, Op. 6 Musical score
  • Piano sonata in F sharp minor, Op. 10 (1893)
  • Klavierstücke, Op. 16

Chamber works

  • String Quartet No. 1 in A minor, Op. 7 (1887)
  • String Quartet No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 11 (1893)

Vocal music

  • Der Mensch und das Leben, Op. 14 (1893)
  • Seejungfräulein, Op. 15 (1897)
  • Wie wir die Natur erleben, Op. 24 (1903)
  • Mittelalterliche Venushymne, Op. 26 (1904)
  • An den Genius von Deutschland, Op. 30 (1904)
  • d'Albert also wrote total of 58 lieder for voice and piano, published in 10 volumes

Recordings

As pianist, d'Albert did not record extensively, although his recordings represent a wide range of music. They include his own Scherzo, Op. 16; Capriolen, Op. 32; Suite, Op. 1, Gavotte and Minuet; and piano arrangements from his opera Die Toten Augen. He made several Beethoven recordings, including the piano sonatas 18 and 21 (Waldstein), and the Spring sonata for violin and piano (with Andreas Weissgerber). A selection of Chopin pieces were recorded in the 1910s and 1920s, with Etudes, Polonaises and Waltzes represented. Perhaps surprisingly, his teacher Liszt is not strongly represented among d'Albert’s recordings, though he committed "Au bord d'une source" from Années de pèlerinage (1st year) to disc in 1916. Brahms, Mozart, Schubert and Weber also feature in his discography.[17]

Eugen d Albert.png

As a composer, d'Albert has been more widely represented on record in recent years than previously. Some modern recordings include:[17]

  • String Quartets No. 1 in A minor, Op. 7, and No. 2 in E flat, Op. 11
    • Sarastro Quartet
  • Piano Sonata in F sharp minor, Op. 10; Klavierstücke, Op. 16; Heft 1 and Heft 2, Serenata and Capriolen Fünf schlichte Klavierstücke
    • Piers Lane

Media

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Williamson, John. "Albert, Eugen d'", Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, accessed 13 October 2008
  2. ^ This link shows piano music by Charles d'Albert of dance arrangements of numerous Gilbert and Sullivan pieces.
  3. ^ a b c d e f The Musical Times, Vol 45, No 741, 1 November 1904, pp. 697-700
  4. ^ The Times 17 October 1878, p. 4
  5. ^ The Times, 8 February 1881, p. 8
  6. ^ Information about The Martyr of Antioch
  7. ^ Biographer Michael Ainger wrote that on the evening of 21 April 1881, "Sullivan gave his sketch of the overture to Eugene d'Albert to score. D'Albert was a seventeen-year-old student... and winner of the Mendelssohn Scholarship that year" (Ainger, p. 195). David Russell Hulme studied the handwriting in the manuscript score of Patience and confirmed that it is that of Eugene, not of his father Charles (as had erroneously been reported by biographer Arthur Jacobs), both of whose script Hulme sampled. (Hulme, David Russell, Doctoral Thesis The Operettas of Sir Arthur Sullivan: a study of available autograph full scores, 1985, University of Wales, pp. 242-43. The Thesis is available from academic libraries including The British Library Document Supply Centre, Boston Spa, Wetherby W. Yorks, Ref # DX171353, and Northern Illinois University, Call# :ML410.S95 H841986B).
  8. ^ Mitchell, Mark and Allan Evans Extensive notes on d'Albert, Arbiter of Cultural Traditions website (2004)
  9. ^ The Times, 25 May 1886, p. 10
  10. ^ a b Kennedy, Michael (ed.) " Albert, Eugen d'", The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. Oxford Music Online, accessed 13 October 2008
  11. ^ a b c d Macdonald, Hugh. "D'Albert, Eugen Francis Charles (1864–1932)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 11 October 2008
  12. ^ The Musical Times, Vol 102, No 1422 (August 1961), pp. 489-90: Artur Schnabel said that if Busoni and d’Albert had been combined in one, the result would have been one of the greatest musicians of all times, "for d'Albert had all the raw material and Busoni all the refinement."
  13. ^ a b c d The Times obituary, 4 March 1932, p. 19
  14. ^ The Times, 1 October 1910, p. 13
  15. ^ see, e.g., Walker, Alan (1997). Franz Liszt: The final years, 1861-1886. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. pp. 423, footnote 14. ISBN 0-8014-8453-7. http://books.google.com/books?id=BWL6fBaKHzcC&pg=RA1-PA422&lpg=RA1-PA422&dq=%22your+children+and+my+children+are%22+%22our+children%22+albert&source=web&ots=kaWOBH-2Gb&sig=eihZNEBNJEMnim9LnJszrH0-fsM. 
  16. ^ Waghalter, Ignatz. Aus dem Ghetto in der Freiheit (Marienbad, Czechoslovakia, 1936)
  17. ^ a b Arnest, Mark. "Eugene d'Albert: Discography", (2006)

References

  • Ainger, Michael (2002). Gilbert and Sullivan – A Dual Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Fincher, L. (ed.), Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart: Personenteil, 2nd edn, 1 (Kassel, 1999)
  • Pangels, Charlotte. Eugen d'Albert: Wunderpianist und Komponist: eine Biographie. (Zürich; Freiburg i Br.: Atlantis Musikbuch-Verlag, 1981). ISBN 3-7611-0595-9.
  • Raupp, Wilhelm. Eugen d'Albert. Ein Künstler- und Menschenschicksal. (Leipzig: Koehler und Amelang, 1930).
  • Sadie, S (ed.) The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 vols. (1992)

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