Ignace
Joseph Pleyel
IPleyel
continues to be known today as a composer of didactic music:
generations of beginning violin and flute students, for example,
learn to play the numerous duets he wrote for those instruments.
If you would like to play 6 of his opus 24 violin duets with me, call 602-256-2830. Ask for Jordan--violin play.
Ignace
Joseph Pleyel French pronunciation: [plɛjɛl],German
pronunciation:[ˈplaɪ̯.l̩];
(18 June 1757 – 14 November 1831) was an Austrian-born French
composer and piano builder of the Classical
period.
Early years
He
was born in Ruppersthal in
Lower Austria, the son of a schoolmaster named Martin Pleyel. He was
the 24th of 38 children in the family.[1] While
still young, he probably studied with Johann
Baptist Vanhal,
and from 1772 he became the pupil of Joseph
Haydn in Eisenstadt.
As with Beethoven,
born 13 years later, Pleyel benefited in his study from the
sponsorship of aristocracy, in this case Count
Ladislaus Erdődy(1746–1786).
Pleyel evidently had a close relationship with Haydn, who considered
him to be a superb student.
Among
Pleyel's apprentice work from this time was a puppet opera Die
Fee Urgele,
(1776) performed in the marionette theater at the palace
of Eszterháza and
in Vienna. Pleyel apparently also wrote at least part of the overture
of Haydn's opera Das
abgebrannte Haus,
from about the same time.
Pleyel's
first professional position may have been as Kapellmeister for
Count Erdődy, although this is not known for certain. Among his
early publications was a set of six string
quartets,
his Opus 1.
Pleyel
Museumand
his birthplace, Ruppersthal, Lower Austria
In the
early 1780s, Pleyel visited Italy, where he composed an opera
(Ifigenia in Aulide) and works commissioned by the King of
Naples.
Strasbourg 1783–1795
Attracted
to the benefits associated with an organist position, Pleyel moved
to Strasbourg,
France in 1783 to work alongside Franz
Xaver Richter the maître
de chapelle at
the Strasbourg Cathedral.[2] The
Cathedral was extremely appealing to Pleyel as it possessed a full
orchestra, a choir, and a large budget devoted to
performances.[3] After
establishing himself in France, Pleyel voluntarily called himself by
the French version of his name, Ignace. While he was the assistant
maître de chapelle at Strasbourg Cathedral, he wrote more works than
during any other period in his musical career (1783–1793).[4]At
the cathedral, he would organize concerts that featured
his symphonies
concertantes and
liturgical music.[5] After
Richter's death in 1789, Pleyel assumed the function of full maître
de chapelle. In 1788 Pleyel married Françoise-Gabrielle Lefebvre,
the daughter of a Strasbourg carpet weaver. The couple had four
children, the eldest being their son Camille.
Maria Pleyel, née Moke (1811–1875), the wife of Camille, was one
of the most accomplished pianists of her time.
In
1791, the French
Revolution abolished
musical performances in church as well as public concerts. Seeking
alternative employment, Pleyel traveled to London, where he led the
"Professional Concerts" organized by Wilhelm
Cramer. Pleyel inadvertently played the role of his
teacher's rival, as Haydn
was at the same time leading the concert series organized by Johann
Peter Salomon.
Although the two composers were rivals professionally, they remained
on good terms personally.
Just like
Haydn, Pleyel made a fortune from his London visit. On his return to
Strasbourg, he bought a large house, the Château d'Ittenwiller in
nearby St. Pierre.
With
the onset of the Reign
of Terror in
1793 and 1794, life in France became dangerous for many, not
excluding Pleyel. Pleyel was brought before theCommittee
of Public Safety a
total of seven times due to the following: his foreign status, his
recent purchase of a château, and his ties with the Strasbourg
Cathedral.[6] He
was subsequently labeled a Royalist collaborator. The outcome of the
Committee's attentions could easily have been imprisonment or even
execution. With prudent opportunism, Pleyel preserved his future by
writing compositions in honor of the new republic. All were written
in Strasbourg at times surrounding the Terror. Below are the pieces
composed with dates of publication and details:[7]
- La Prise de Toulon ("The capture of Toulon") for solo and 3 voice choir with piano accompaniment. (19 February 1794)
- Hymne de Pleyel chanté au Temple de la Raison ("Hymn sung in the Temple of Reason") for choir with piano accompaniment. (1793 or 1794; dates disputed)
- Hymne à l'Être Suprême ("Hymn to the Supreme Being") two part cantata (performed 8 June 1794)
- La Révolution du 10 août ("The Revolution of August 10") for soloists, choir, and orchestra (10 August 1794)[8]
Most
of these compositions debuted at the Strasbourg Cathedral. However,
during the Terror, churches were outlawed and the Strasbourg
Cathedral was known as the Temple
de l'Être Suprême (Temple
of the Supreme Being). He became a naturalized French citizen and
thus came to be known as Citoyen (citizen) Pleyel.[9]With
his involvement in artistic propaganda and loyalism to the new
regime, Pleyel can be seen as the ultimate musical champion of
Strasbourg republicanism.[10]
In
addition to composing the above works for the Strasbourg public,
Pleyel also contributed to the Parisian music scene during the
Revolution. One example is Le
Jugement de Pâris,
a pantomime-ballet by Citoyen (Citizen) Gardel and performed with
Pleyel's music (along with that of Haydn, and Étienne
Méhul)
on 5 March 1793.[11]
Pleyel as businessman
Pleyel
moved to Paris in 1795. In 1797 he set up a business as a music
publisher ("Maison Pleyel"), which among other works
produced a complete edition of Haydn's string quartets (1801), as
well as the first miniature scores for study (the Bibliothèque
Musicale,
"musical library"). The publishing business lasted for 39
years and published about 4000 works during this time, including
compositions by Adolphe
Adam, Luigi
Boccherini, Ludwig
van Beethoven, Muzio
Clementi,Johann
Baptist Cramer, Johann
Ladislaus Dussek,Johann
Nepomuk Hummel and Georges
Onslow.
Pleyel
visited Vienna on business in 1805, meeting his now elderly mentor
Haydn for a final time and hearing Beethoven play.
In
1807, Pleyel became a manufacturer of pianos; for more on the Pleyel
piano firm, see below.
Old age
Pleyel
retired in 1824 and moved to the countryside about 50 km outside
Paris. He died in 1831, apparently quite aware that his own musical
style had been fully displaced by the new Romanticism in
music.[citation
needed] He
was buried in Père
Lachaise Cemetery in
Paris.
Pleyel's music
Pleyel
was prolific, composing 41 symphonies, 70string
quartets and
several string
quintets and
operas. Many of these works date from the Strasbourg period; Pleyel's
production tailed off after he had become a businessman.
Recent
scholarship has suggested that the theme for the Variations
on a Theme by Joseph Haydn,
byJohannes
Brahms,
opus 56a, was probably composed not by Haydn but by Ignaz Pleyel.
Reputation and assessment
Pleyel
is one instance of the phenomenon of a composer (others
include Cherubini, Meyerbeer,
andThalberg)
who was very famous in his own time but presently obscure. Keefe
(2005) describes a "craze for his music c. 1780–1800",
and quotes a number of contemporary witnesses to this surge. For
instanceFrançois-Joseph
Fétis wrote,
"What composer ever created more of a craze than Pleyel? Who
enjoyed a more universal reputation or a more absolute domination of
the field of instrumental music? Over more than twenty years, there
was no amateur or professional musician who did not delight in his
genius."[12]
Pleyel's
fame even reached the then-remote musical regions of America: there
was a Pleyel Society on the island of Nantucket off
the coast of Massachusetts,
and tunes by Pleyel made their way into the then-popularshape
note hymnals.
Pleyel's work is twice represented in the principal modern descendant
of these books, The
Sacred Harp.
In
his own time, Pleyel's reputation rested at least in part on the
undemanding character of his music. A reviewer writing in the Morning
Herald of
London (1791) said that Pleyel "is becoming even more popular
then his master [Haydn], as his works are characterized less by the
intricacies of science[13] than
the charm of simplicity and feeling."[14]
Pleyel
continues to be known today as a composer of didactic music:
generations of beginning violin and flute students, for example,
learn to play the numerous duets he wrote for those instruments.
Pleyel pianos
The
piano firm Pleyel
et Cie was
founded by Ignace Pleyel and continued by Pleyel's son Camille
(1788–1855), a piano virtuoso who became his father's business
partner as of 1815. The firm provided pianos used by Frédéric
Chopin,
and also ran a concert hall, the Salle
Pleyel,
in which Chopin performed his first—and also his last—Paris
concerts.
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