divendres, 1 d’abril del 2022

ASPLMAYR, Franz (1728-1786) - Quartetto concertante Ex D (1769)

Daniel Niklas Chodowiecki (1726-1801) - Interior scene with concert


Franz Asplmayr (1728-1786) - Quartetto concertante Ex D, Op.2 (1769)
Performers: Quatuor à cordes Oistersek de Cologne
Further info: 4 Quatuors Rococos

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Austrian composer and violinist. He probably received his first musical instruction from his father, a dancing-master. After his father's death he found employment by 1759 as secretarius and violinist to Count Morzin during Haydn's tenure as music director. He was by then an established composer, with works published in Paris perhaps as early as 1757. He married in 1760, and after the disbanding of Morzin's musical establishment in 1761 he worked as ballet composer for the Kärntnertortheater in Vienna, succeeding Gluck. There is no primary evidence that he was an imperial court composer and member of the Hofkapelle, as often reported. When Gassmann replaced him as ballet composer Asplmayr continued as a professional violinist, meanwhile composing substantial quantities of instrumental music. His activities as a composer of dance music led to a collaboration with the choreographer J.-G. Noverre (from 1768) and Noverre's successor Gaspero Angiolini, resulting in his writing music during the 1770s for at least ten major dramatic ballets, nine of which survive; also extant are scenebooks of Iphigénie en Tauride and Alexandre et Campaspe de Larisse (A-Ws) and a scene synopsis of Acis et Galathée (Wn). The most famous of these ballets, Agamemnon vengé, achieved international acclaim. Asplmayr also composed the music for the first German-language melodrama in 1772 (on a translation of Rousseau's Pygmalion) and a Singspiel, Die Kinder der Natur, for the first season of the German Nationaltheater at the Burgtheater. 

He was a founding member of the Tonkünstler-Societät, serving as an elected officer, and was a member of the quartet, also including Alois Luigi Tomasini, Pancrazio Huber and Joseph Weigl, that first performed Haydn's op.33 in 1781. His career then began to decline, and after an illness he died in poverty. Asplmayr was an innovative composer, even an experimental one. His principal fame came as the result of his collaboration with Noverre. Agamemnon vengé, based on characters from Greek antiquity, contains 39 numbers as well as symphonies before each act. In addition to the usual set pieces there are passages of highly programmatic music to accompany mimed episodes. Asplmayr's Die Kinder der Natur was the most substantial of the earliest Viennese Singspiele. Although the music is excellent, the work suffered from an exceptionally bad libretto and disappeared from the repertory. Asplmayr's instrumental music is equally interesting. He composed more than 40 string quartets and over 40 symphonies. Several of the string quartets look forward to the style of Haydn's op.9. The symphonies, two of which appeared under Haydn's name, represent the Viennese mainstream styles of the 1760s and 70s. They are particularly advanced with respect to harmony and developmental techniques. Asplmayr also composed string trios, of which two were attributed by Hoboken to Haydn, as well as a great many divertimentos for strings, wind partitas, sonatas, concertinos and pieces of dance music. He has yet to find his place in the history of the Viennese Classical period.

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