Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Melchior Franck

 
Artist: Melchior Franck
 
  • Period: Baroque (1600-1749)
  • Country: Germany
  • Born: 1579
  • Died: June 01, 1639 in Coburg

Biography

Melchior Franck was one of the most important German composers of the beginning of the Baroque era. He sought a way to reconcile the elaborate character of the Catholic motet to Lutheran worship, and wrote large amounts of sacred and instrumental music.

His father, Hans, was a painter. He may have been the brother of a minor composer named Johannes Franck. Since Christian Demantius was the Kantor of Zittau from 1597 to 1604, Franck may have studied with that composer. By 1600, Franck was in the choir of St. Anna's Church, Augsburg. In 1601, he became a teacher at St. Egidien's Church in Nuremberg, which aroused a lifetime interest in teaching. The composer Hans Leo Hassler was also present in Nuremberg and either formally taught him or at least strongly influenced him in the Netherlandish style of motet writing and in Venetian antiphonal writing. Around the beginning of 1603, Franck accepted the position of concertmaster to Prince Johann Casimir of Saxe-Coburg, who had a strong interest in music and provided a situation that was ideal for Franck, who began to write and publish prolifically. He married in 1607, though details are not known, but by 1634, his wife and two of their children (a son and a daughter) had died.

The onset of the Thirty Years War also marred Franck's final decade. Coburg was not involved directly in the war, but its economy was shattered. Prince Johann Casimir died in 1633 and his successor, Prince Johann Ernst, had to economize and cut back drastically on the size and salaries of the princely Kapelle. Franck's finances took so strong a hit that he even complained about them in prefaces to his books of music.

Franck was part of bringing German music into the Baroque era. In some ways, it is more conservative than the music of contemporary Italians or of Schütz. However, he was adventurous in experimenting with ways to use the new concept of basso continuo. He wrote some of the finest Protestant German music of the time. He argued in an essay at the start of his book Contrapuncti (1602) that, in emulation of the elaborate polyphony of Catholic music, the simple chorale tunes of the Lutheran worship could be ornamented for the appreciation of the educated and for the glory of God. At the same time, he wrote his versions of the motet conservatively. Since the Lutheran church stressed congregational singing, he took care to avoid unusual dissonances and difficult leaps in any of the parts, which move in step-wise motion as much as possible. Even so, all the motets in the Contrapuncti are actually fully formed fugues. Franck also published 13 secular vocal collections, which also include purely instrumental dance pieces. Franck's music is expressive and a true synthesis of beauty and simplicity. It was exceptionally popular and appreciated for the evident care the composer took to make singing it as easy as possible. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Music Encyclopedia: Melchior Franck
Top

(b Zittau, c 1579; d Coburg, 1 June 1639). German composer. He was in a church choir in Augsburg, c 1600, and moved to Nuremberg in 1601, working at St Egidien's Church. Soon after he became Kapellmeister at the Coburg court. He remained there for the rest of his life, though the depredations of the Thirty Years War reduced the Kapelle and Franck's situation. He was however one of the leading German Protestant composers of his time, publishing more than 40 collections of motets in the period 1601-36, with over 600 works. Nearly all are for choir, performable with or without instruments; only four collections require continuo. Franck typically used simple chorale tunes as the basis of his motets, which follow a straightforward style, with some fugal writing and carefully worked-out counter-point, but also much homophonic writing; he occasionally used word-painting. He also published many books of secular music, including quodlibets and several sets of convivial songs and dances.



 
Wikipedia: Melchior Franck
Top

Melchior Franck (c. 1579 – June 1, 1639) was a German composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras. He was a hugely prolific composer of Protestant church music, especially motets, and assisted in bringing the stylistic innovations of the Venetian School north across the Alps into Germany.

Contents

Life

Details of his early life are sparse, as is common for composers of the time. He was born in Zittau, and possibly studied with Christoph Demantius there, and also later with Adamus Gumpelzhaimer in Augsburg. By 1601 he was in Nuremberg, as a music teacher; there he met Hans Leo Hassler, and learned from him both the Venetian polychoral style and the polyphonic style of the high Renaissance, both of which he incorporated into his own composition.

In 1602 he took a position as Kapellmeister in Coburg to Prince Johann Casimir, and he remained in Coburg for the rest of his life. For the earlier portion of this time, the situation was ideal for him; he was supported by his patron, and had the resources necessary to carry on his composing. Unfortunately the Thirty Years' War devastated the region around Coburg; in addition to the military depredations, the typhus brought by the armies depopulated the entire region and ruined the economy. Franck was fortunate in being able to make a living throughout this terrible period as a musician, unlike his contemporary at Halle, Samuel Scheidt, who lost his Kapellmeister post. Unfortunately, though, Franck's wife and two of his children died.

Works

Franck was a popular composer, and wrote an enormous amount of music, including more than 40 books of motets for a total of over 600 motets alone; in addition he wrote secular songs, including quodlibets, psalm settings, bicinia, tricinia, instrumental dances and numerous miscellaneous pieces.

His motets are varied in style. Many are chorale motets, an exclusively Protestant variation of the motet, and these are written in German. Almost all use the late Renaissance idiom of Lassus, with carefully controlled dissonance and smoothly flowing polyphony. Some are simple and homophonic, and pay unusually close attention to text setting (interestingly, this was also a trend in the music of the concurrent Catholic Counter-Reformation, and represented a reaction against the music of the previous generations). Others are written in the polychoral style related to the Venetian practice, with the important difference that there is no spatial separation of the choirs: the antiphonal parts are all within the group. However the most unusual is a collection from 1602 called Contrapuncti, which are early examples of fugues. They are strictly contrapuntal, and include real answers; occasionally the points of imitation use stretto. Each successive point of imitation uses as its text the successive verse of the chorale being set.

Even though most of his motets use frankly Renaissance contrapuntal idiom, he often used the basso continuo, a relatively recent innovation of the early Baroque, and also used instrumental doublings of the vocal parts.

Franck was a conservative composer who was contemporary with the more famous, and much more progressive, Heinrich Schütz; however his works were popular and often reprinted during his lifetime.

External links

References

  • Article "Melchior Franck", in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0-393-09745-5
  • The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, 8th ed. Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky. New York, Schirmer Books, 1993. ISBN 0-02-872416-X

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Melchior Franck" Read more