Haydn, (Franz) Joseph (1732-1809), Austrian composer,
recognized as a dominant force in the development of the musical style of the
classical era (circa 1750-circa 1820).
Of humble origins, Haydn was born in the village of Rohrau, near Vienna, on
March 31, 1732. When eight years old he was accepted into the choir school of
Saint Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna, where he received his only formal
education. Dismissed from the choir at the age of 17, he spent the next several
years as a struggling free-lance musician. He studied on his own the standard
textbooks on counterpoint and took occasional lessons from the noted Italian
singing master and composer Nicola Porpora. In 1755 Haydn was engaged briefly by
Baron Karl Josef von Fürnberg, for whom he apparently composed his first string
quartets. A more substantial position followed in 1759, when he was hired as
music director by Count Ferdinand Maximilian von Morzin. Haydn's marriage in
1760 to Maria Anna Keller proved to be unhappy as well as childless.
Career at Esterháza
The turning point in Haydn's fortunes came in 1761, when he
was appointed assistant music director to Prince Pál Antal Esterházy; he
became full director, or Kapellmeister, in 1762. Haydn served under the
patronage of three successive princes of the Esterházy family. The second of
these, Pál Antal's brother, Prince Miklós József Esterházy, was an ardent,
cultivated music lover. At Esterháza (Hungarian Eszterháza), his vast summer
estate, Prince Miklós could boast a musical establishment second to none, the
management of which made immense demands on its director. In addition to the
symphonies, operas, marionette operettas, masses, chamber pieces, and dance
music that Haydn was expected to compose for the prince's entertainment, he was
required to rehearse and conduct performances of his own and others' works;
coach singers; maintain the instrument collection and music library; perform as
organist, violist, and violinist when needed; and settle disputes among the
musicians in his charge. Although he frequently regretted the burdens of his job
and the isolation of Esterháza, Haydn's position was enviable by 18th-century
standards. One remarkable aspect of his contract after 1779 was the freedom to
sell his music to publishers and to accept commissions. As a result, much of
Haydn's work in the 1780s reached beyond the guests at Esterháza to a far wider
audience, and his fame spread accordingly.
After the death of Prince Miklós in 1790 his son, Prince Antal, greatly reduced
the Esterházy musical establishment. Although Haydn retained his title of
Kapellmeister, he was at last free to travel beyond the environs of Vienna. The
enterprising British violinist and impresario Johann Peter Salomon lost no time
in engaging the composer for his concert series in London. Haydn's two trips to
England for these concerts, in 1791-92 and 1794-95, were the occasion of the
huge success of his last symphonies. Known as the "Salomon" or
"London" symphonies, they include several of his most popular works:
Surprise (no. 94), Military (no. 100), Clock (no. 101), Drum Roll (no. 103), and
London (no. 104).
In his late years in Vienna, Haydn turned to writing masses and composed his
great oratorios, The Creation (1798) and The Seasons (1801). From this period
also comes his "Emperor's Hymn" (1797), which later became the
Austrian national anthem. He died in Vienna, on May 31, 1809, a famous and
wealthy man.
Evaluation
Haydn was prolific in nearly all genres, vocal and
instrumental, sacred and secular. Many of his works were unknown beyond the
walls of Esterháza, most notably the 125 trios and other assorted pieces
featuring the baryton, a hybrid string instrument played by Prince Miklós. Most
of Haydn's 19 operas and marionette operettas were written to accommodate the
talents of the Esterháza company as well as the tastes of his prince. Haydn
freely admitted the superiority of the operas of his young friend Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. In other categories, however, his works circulated widely, and
his influence was profound. The 107 symphonies and 68 string quartets that span
his career are proof of his ever-fresh approach to thematic materials and form,
as well as of his mastery of instrumentation. His 62 piano sonatas and 43 piano
trios document a growth from the easy elegance suitable for the home music
making of amateurs to the public virtuosity of his late works.
Haydn's productivity is matched by his inexhaustible originality. His manner of
turning a simple tune or motive into unexpectedly complex developments was
admired by his contemporaries as innovative. Dramatic surprise, often turned to
humorous effect, is characteristic of his style, as is a fondness for folklike
melodies. A writer of Haydn's day described the special appeal of his music as
"popular artistry," and indeed his balance of directness and bold
experiment transformed instrumental expression in the 18th century.
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