試す 金 - 無料
Joseph Haydn
BBC Music Magazine
|September 2023
The father of the symphony and the string quartet deserves to be remembered for his still underappreciated operas too, says George Hall
When we think of Haydn, what comes to mind? Maybe the two late, great oratorios: The Creation and The Seasons. Or his vast number of symphonies, or his string quartets, or the masses. Not, perhaps, the baryton trios (of which there are more than 125); nor, for that matter, the operas, though again there are plenty. To a degree Haydn's operas - and those by a host of his late-18th-century contemporaries, successful in their day but obscure in ours - have been sidelined due to our understandable fascination with Mozart's and, to a lesser degree, our admiration of Gluck's. Many composers of the Classical period specialised in opera. Though in his enormous and comprehensive output, Haydn could be said - paradoxically-to have specialised in everything, he would have regarded his operas as representing an important strand of his work.
Haydn's life in professional music began, aged eight, as a treble at Vienna's St Stephen's Cathedral. He managed to escape 'il coltello' (the castrating knife) before his voice broke, so in his early teens he entered upon the career of a practical musician in the musically hyperactive city of Vienna itself. After meeting the leading composer Nicola Porpora (1686-1768) - also a vocal teacher of renown (the castrato Farinelli was one of his pupils) - Haydn became the Italian's musical assistant, and was able to familiarise himself with the world of opera at the highest level. He would also get to know Gluck and Pietro Metastasio, the most admired librettist of the day. When scarcely out of his teens, Haydn's own operatic debut came with the commissioning of Der krumme Teufel (The Limping Devil), a Singspiel (see panel, left) for the playwright and man-of-the-theatre Johann Felix von Kurz - known as Bernardon. Performed at the Kärntnertortheater in 1753 when Haydn was 21, its score has sadly disappeared, as is the case with many of his operas.
このストーリーは、BBC Music Magazine の September 2023 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
BBC Music Magazine からのその他のストーリー
BBC Music Magazine
Hiss and make-up
From boos to vegetables, opera stars have had to put up with all sorts being aimed in their direction over the centuries
8 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
A vivid and intimate portrait of Mahler
Anna Lucia Richter brings striking depth and expressive insight to the composer's song-settings
2 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
It's all in the genes
Is it a bonus or a burden to be the musical child of musical parents?
7 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Banff Canada
Spectacular views and equally stunning string quartet performances are on Jeremy Pound's agenda as he heads to the Canadian Rockies
3 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Morten Lauridsen
Terry Blain explores the life of a self-imposed recluse whose magical O Magnum Mysterium beguiles millions of listeners each Christmas
6 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
In good faith
Composer Roxanna Panufnik and writer Jessica Duchen tell Amanda Holloway how they have joined forces for a new choral work that looks well beyond Christmas for its festive celebrations
8 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Westward Ho!
Composer Alex Ho is part of a growing community of musicians combining their British and Chinese heritage in fascinating ways
7 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Music & mercy
explores Venice's Ospedale della Pietà, the girls' orphanage where Vivaldi taught and composed
7 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Jingle hell!
As the Christmas season approaches, the BBC Music Magazine team share the festive tunes that make our hearts sink
9 mins
Christmas 2025
BBC Music Magazine
Bach's recycled choral music brings festive cheer to Leipzig
Shout, exult, arise, praise these days! Glorify what the Almighty today has done!' Early on the morning of 25 December 1734, these words resounded from the choir stalls of the Thomaskirche, Leipzig, to a jubilant accompaniment of festive timpani, pealing trumpets and scampering violins. Seated at a keyboard, the church's director of music Johann Sebastian Bach marshalled the musicians in a performance of the cantata Jauchzet, frohlocket! Auf, preiset die Tage, which preceded the sermon in the morning service.
3 mins
Christmas 2025
Translate
Change font size
