|
entry Sept 2008
Sigismund
Thalberg (1812-1871)
I am obsessed with
obscure musicians. (Click here for a separate
series of items about them.) If you think that
Sigismund Thalberg is not obscure, then you are no doubt a pianist and
so
erudite that you probably even pronounce that word correctly. There are
many
things I didn’t know about Thalberg. One is that there were—and maybe
even
still are—so many other persons named “Sigismund”—i.e. archdukes, and
princes
and even one totally fictitious character, Wilhelm Gottsreich
Sigismond von
Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, a fictional king
of
Bohemia in the
Sherlock Holmes tale, "A Scandal in Bohemia.” (The
name has various
spellings, and, indeed, the large marble statue in the Villa Comunale
in Naples
is of ‘Sigismondo
Thalberg.’ The statue was dedicated in Sept. 1879; the work is by the
prominent
northern Italian sculptor Giulio
Monteverde (1837-1917).
Also, I wasn’t sure where he lived. A number
of sources say
he moved to Naples
in the last years of his life into a house he bought in the Posillipo
section
of the city, where he died. That is wrong. He lived and passed away in
the
building at viale Calascione
n. 5 in the Pizzofalcone section of the
city
(there is a plaque—photo, below—on the building and a monument to
Thalberg in the
courtyard). It not far from the Nunziatella
military academy, nowhere
near
Posillipo. I also did not know of the Sigismund
Thalberg International Study
Center
in Naples
dedicated to his music. With that, I confess that what I really didn’t
know
was…who he was. (If you are a pianist and are furious at my ignorance,
what can
I say? Stop reading and go practice.)
Thalberg was
born near Geneva
in 1812, studied music in Vienna,
was obviously a prodigy, and by 1830 had embarked on the challenging
career of
a touring concert pianist. All reports of his skill claim that he had
no rival
except Franz Liszt, the flamboyant genius who wrote music that only
Franz Liszt
could play. (And then Sigismund Thalberg.) (Both performers took full
advantage of the great advances in piano construction around 1830 in
Paris. They played passages that would have been physically impossible
on
the slower action keyboards of a few years earlier.) They even had a
piano duel
in Paris
in 1837. Thalberg
was not given to the histrionic gestures of Franz Liszt. Thalberg sat
up
straight and just played. If you believe the critics, Liszt won the
duel. If
you believe the public, Thalberg won.
Thalberg’s claim to any wisp of fame rests
not just on his
skill as a pianist, but apparently as an innovator in piano technique,
uniting
in his own original compositions (almost 100 of them) melody and
accompaniment
by keeping the melody centered with the thumbs and spreading arpeggios
out to
both sides, producing a highly technical effect. His admirers claim he
invented
it; rival Liszt said that pianists had been doing that for a long time
before
Thalberg and would still be doing it long after Thalberg. Even Robert
Schumann
said that Thalberg was all glitter and no substance, but Thalberg had
his
defenders—Mendelssohn, for example. I have just listened to Thalberg’s Grand Fantasy, op. 63, performed by that
young Ukrainian angel of music, Valentina Lisitsa. It is in the form of
a theme
followed by variations, each more technical than the one before. At the
end,
you have the feeling that you have just heard/seen the world’s greatest
display
of fireworks, and I cannot imagine anyone playing it better than
Lisitsa did.
But I was strangely unmoved by the music.
For 25 years after the Liszt duel, Thalberg
was adored by audiences
in Europe and the New World (he played in both Brazil
and the United
States).
From 1856-58, he played 56 concerts in New York, 13 in Philadelphia, 15
in
Boston and some others in Chicago and Washington, D. C. Importantly, he
put on
free concerts for young people in the northeastern United States and
arranged
for affordable editions of his works to be made available. Especially
well-liked were his variations on such popular chestnuts as "Home Sweet
Home" and "Yankee Doodle." He
was also the author of an influential method book for the
piano.
Depending on who you read, he was either responsible for introducing
quality
piano music (often operatic music scaled down for his own “theme and
variations”
treatment) in the United
States, or he delayed
it by overselling his own pyrotechnical music at the
expense of the masters of the past, such as Beethoven and Mozart. (That
was a
problem in Europe, as well. People
really did like razzle-dazzle music, and
grudgingly gave ground only because performers such as Liszt kept
beating them
over the head with great music from the past.) Be all that as it may,
Thalberg’s
own compositions have not withstood the judgment of history. (Not that
such
judgment is always correct—by a long shot.)
Towards the end of his life, Thalberg moved
to Naples
with his wife,
Francesca, who was the daughter of the famous Neapolitan operatic
basso, Luigi
Lablache. They moved into Daddy-in-law’s house for a while, out in
Posillipo,
which is where that part comes in. They then moved into town to be
closer to
the musical action (viale Calascione is a ten-minute walk from the San
Carlo
opera house). There was some talk of Thalberg becoming a professor at
the Naples
conservatory, but
that never came to pass.
to main index
to
music portal
|