Ferenc Erkel (1810-1893)
Opera Transcriptions
The
Hungarian composer, conductor and pianist Ferenc Erkel was born at Gyula in
South-Eastern Hungary. The Erkel family had a long association with Bratislava
(the Hungarian Pozsony), where the name appears in records dating back to the
15th century. Ferenc Erkel's grandfather and father were both musicians, and
the former was invited in 1806 to move with his family to Gyula in the service
of Count Ferenc Wenckheim, an admirer of Beethoven, who was anxious to form his
own musical establishment there. Ferenc Erkel's grandfather was employed by the
Count as a steward and his father assumed the duties of schoolmaster and
conductor of the church choir. The latter married the daughter of a farm
bailiff in the service of the Count, and Ferenc Erkel was the second of the
couple's ten children. As a child Erkel had frequent opportunities to hear
chamber music played by his father, the leader of astring quartet in which
Albert Rosty, head of the county administration, played second violin, with the
viola-player Brunszvik and cellist Josef Wagner. Both Rosty and Wagner were to
be of material assistance to Ferenc Erkel in his later career.
At
the age of twelve Erkel moved to Bratislava to study at the Benedictine school,
where his teachers included the cathedral organist Heinrich Klein and the
pianist Károly Turányi. Bratislava, known in German as Pressburg, was near
enough to Vienna to share something of the cultural life of the time, and here
Erkel had the opportunity to attend concerts, see operas and even hear the
popular Hungarian music of Janós Bihari, who played there at the coronation of
Queen Carolina Augusta in 1825.
In
1827, now aged seventeen, Erkel took employment as music master in the
household of Count Kálmán Csáky at Koloszvár (the modern Romanian town of
Cluj-Napoca), the centre of a district of great importance in the development
of Hungarian theatre and opera. Here, during the course of the next seven
years, he won a reputation for hirnself as a pianist and had his first known
experience as a conductor of opera with a company that moved first to Nagyvárad
and then to Buda, where it formed the basis of the later Hungarian National
Theatre.
Erkel
was quick to establish himself as a leading pianist in the twin cities of the
capital. He spent two years as conductor of the Municipal German Theatre in
Pest and then, with the help of Albert Rosty,was appointed chief conductor of
the Hungarian National Theatre. From 1853 he conducted the concerts of the Hungarian
Philharmonic Society and from 1875 until 1887 was the principal piano teacher
and director of the newly established Academy of Music, of which Liszt, a
regular visitor, was president. Erkel retained his abilities as a performer,
and one year after Liszt's death in 1886 was able to play, at a Liszt birthday
concert, that composer's Fantasy on I Puritani. To celebrate his own eightieth
birthday he played Mozart's D minor Piano Concerto, with his own cadenza. His
last appearance as a conductor was in 1892, when his Second Royal Anthem was
performed. He died in 1893.
Erkel
had a close connection with opera in the years he spent at the Transylvanian
capital of Kolozsvar from 1827 to 1834. The first Hungarian National Theatre
was built there in 1821 and in this theatre Erkel could see operas by composers
such as Rossini, Auber, Boieldieu, Donizetti and Mercadante. It is not known
exactly when he first conducted there, but he was clearly influenced by
contemporary forms of opera from France and Italy. At the same time, in his
search for anational Hungarian musical identity, he had the example of the
military recruiting music of the 18th century, the verbunkos, or, more
properly, ˇ§toborzöˇ¨,. familiar to him through the compositions of Janós
Lavotta, Janós Bihari and Antal Csermák. The verbunkos has a highly
characteristic form, a dance with dotted rhythms and generally in three
sections of increasing rapidity, often with heroic connotations or expressive
of different feelings. The dance has its echoes in the work of Haydn, Beethoven
and Schubert and in the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Liszt. This was the material
from which the composer József Ruzitska forged his Hungarian opera Béla futasa
(Béla's Escape), first performed in Kolozsvár on 26th December, 1822, with enormous
success. It was this example that Erkel was to follow.
In
1835 Erkel moved to Buda with many of the best singers from Kolozsvár
and from Kassa (the modern Slovak Košice), where he was conductor of the
Hungarian Theatre Company at the Castle Theatre. In Pest, facing the
town of Buda on the Danube and with twice the number of inhabitants, a
Hungarian National Theatre was established, the new building opened on 22nd
August, 1837. Erkel was appointed conductor of the opera section on 15th
January, 1838, retaining his position until 1874, when he retired with a
pension. At first he continued the existing repertoire of operas by Rossini,
Hérold and Bellini, as well as the work of Ruzitska, Spontini, Weber, Auber and
Donizetti. Before atternpting an opera of his own, he gained experience in
orchestration with his version of Mercadante's II Giuramento. His own first
opera, Bátori Mária, was first performed on 8th August, 1840.
The
opera Bátori Mária includes a March which Erkel in 1846 transcribed for piano.
Like all marches it is in three sections, with a trio. His second opera,
Hunyadi Laszló, which retains a place in the repertoire, was first staged on
27th January, 1844, from which the composer later made further piano
transcriptions. The opera deals with the fate of László, the son of János
Hunyadi (1387 ? -1456), who defeated the Turks at Belgrade in 1456, a triumph
commernorated by the papal command by Calixtus III to ring the church bells at
noon, a practice still continued. Hunyadi himself died of the plague three
weeks after his victory and jealous rivals saw to it that his eider son László
was put to death. The Death-Song (Hattyúdal) is the song of Hunyadi László in
the condemned cell, as he recalls former happiness, while resigned to his fate,
the music derived from the verbunkos. Erkel published a piano version before
the first performance of the opera, but the present version was the result of
revision in 1846. The Hunyadi March of 1847 did not form part of the opera but
is derived from three sections of that work. It became particularly popular in
a version for military band during the Hungarian War of Independence of 1848
and 1849. The Marche hongroise for piano was published in 1852 and later used
in the opera Erzsébet (Elizabeth) of 1857, in which Erkel collaborated with the
Doppler brothers.
Within
four months of the first performance of his opera Bánk bán on 9th March, 1861,
Erkel had published aseries of transcriptions of excerpts. The Introduction,
from Act I, uses music of a love-scene between the principal characters, in the
style of a slow verbunkos. There is a similar transcription from the comic
opera Sarolta (Charlotte), first staged on 26th June, 1862, with an
introduction in verbunkos style, leading to a czardas: aversion of the Finale
of Act I echoes the style of the Introduction.
In
his next two operas, Dózsa György and Brankovics György, first performed on 6th
April, 1867, and 20th May, 1874, respectively, Erkel expressed his opposition
to the policies of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. With the help of Russia the
Emperor had put down the Hungarian rising of 1848-49, but some compromise
proved necessary after the Austrian defeat in 1859 by French and Italian armies
and the defeat at the hands of Prussia in 1866. This led to the establishment
of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, with the Emperor crowned King of Hungary on
8th June, 1867, two months after the first performance of Erkel's seventh
opera, which deals with the story of a popular uprising. Dózsa György was in
1514 appointed general to command the Hungarian armies against the Turks. He is
joined in his camp by his beloved Rose and his friend Barna, from whom he
learns of the treacherous behaviour of the nobles, who compel those left behind
to work in the fields, in place of those fighting. The result is a widespread
peasant revolt. Rose, however, is rejected by Dózsa, who falls in love with a
beautiful noblewoman, whom Barna, fearing his friend's distraction from the
cause of the peasants, plans to kill. Rose heroically takes the place of the
noblewoman and is killed in her stead. In her Song Rose, disguised in the
clothes of her rival, awaits her own death, recalling her love and foreseeing
Dózsa's reaction to her sacrifice .
In
Brankovics György Erkel again took issue with official policy. The
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy was traditionally pro-Russian , but the Hungarians
tended rather to favour Turkey, a country that had refused to hand over
Hungarian revolutionaries who had taken refuge on her territory after 1849. Set
in the years between 1439 and 1457, the plot deals with the death of the
Serbian prince of the title. Erkel's son Sándor published in 1875 a piano
transcription of six excerpts from the opera, in which there are Hungarian,
Serbian and Turkish elements. The Marcia and the Serbian dance, Kolo, are from
the first act, followed by a short recitative and a Romanza, in which Mara, the
hero's daughter, dreams of her Turkish hero. A short Allegro, a Moderato and an
Andante lead to a large Ensemble from the end of Ac t II. A sad Arioso from Act
III leads to a cheerful final Coro, a chorus of female voices in the original
opera.
István
Kassai
István
Kassai was born in Budapest in 1959 and was admitted to the Bartók Conservatory
at the age of ten. In 1972 he was first prize-winner in the Czechoslovakian
International Youth Piano Competition. He then went on to study under Pál
Kadosa at the Ferenc Liszt Academy and won first prize in the Hungarian
Broadcasting Company's Piano Competition. In 1982 Kassai was granted his diploma
by the Academy later going on to win first prize in the Debussy International
Piano Competition. Having won a scholarship to study at the European
Conservatory of Music in Paris he gained a master diploma with the highest
distinction in 1984. Since 1987 he has been one of the pianists of the Cziffra
Foundation.