Johann Strauss Snr Edition Vol. 4
[1] Schwarz'sche Ball-Tanze, Op. 32, (im Saale zum Sperl
Cotillons nach beliebten Motiven aus der Oper: Die Stumme von Portici)
(Schwarz Ball Dances at the Sperl, Cotillons, after
favourite melodies from the opera La muette de Portici)
In the 1830s the distinguished actor Carl Schwarz
(1768-1838) from the Imperial Court Theatre organized at least two society
balls every Carnival for his colleagues on the Vienna stage, his friends and
acquaintances. Schwarz always chose the best ball-rooms in proper rotation,
together with music directors. For his ball at the Sperl it was the turn of
Johann Strauss, who dedicated a new composition to the organizer and presented
it at his own benefit ball on 25th November 1829 at the Sperl, together with
his Charmant Waltz, The Composer's Best Fancy. The work was carefully chosen.
At society balls great store was set by figure dances, prepared by
dancing-masters and arranged for the ball evening.
Contredanses came into fashion in Vienna in the eighteenth
century. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart too did not disdain to write such compositions
for balls at the Redoutensaal at which he himself was a keen dancer. In his
ball-dances for Carl Schwarz, Johann Strauss put together five sections in
triple time, each with a trio, and after the fifth section a long coda. He took
the melodies from the music written by Daniel François Auber for his opera La
muette de Portici (The Mute Girl from Portici), first performed at the Grand
Opera in Paris on 2nd February 1828. Always up-to-date in his music, Strauss
presented important melodies from the opera in his Cotillons before the first
performance of the opera at the Josephstadt Theatre in Vienna on 9th April
1829.
[2] Charmant-Polka (Charming Polka)
Johann Strauss's Charmant Polka is the first of five polkas
preserved in the Vienna City and District Library. It appeared with the
Charmant Waltz in the collection The Composer's Best Fancy, Op. 31, in 1829. It
is conceivable that the polka was performed for the first time together with
the waltz at the Catherine Ball, a benefit for Strauss, on 25th November 1829
at the Sperl.
The composer was particularly interested in presenting
himself to the public at the Sperl as a versatile musician and composer.
Although this unpublished polka is not especially striking, it predates the
arrival of the Bohemian polka in Vienna by ten years. The latter were first
presented in Vienna in 1839 by the Prague conductor Perger. From then onwards
Strauss wrote only polkas following the Prague model. The first work in the latter
series, which continued until 1849 (Alice Polka, Frederica Polka) was the Sperl
Polka, Op. 133, of 1842.
[3] Vive la Danse! Walzer, Op. 47 (Vive la Danse! Waltz)
In the middle of the catastrophic year of 1831, Johann
Strauss organized a summer festival for his benefit at the Dommayer in
Hietzing. The Viennese were still living happy and carefree lives, despite the
threat of an outbreak of cholera approaching Vienna from Poland. Friends of
Strauss's music took every opportunity to hear and dance to the Waltz King's
new compositions. To this end a festival was announced at Dommayer's to
celebrate Strauss and enjoy his new waltzes.
The novelty of the occasion is perfectly expressed in the
title Vive la Danse!. Strauss had written a charming waltz which, after a short
introduction, consisted of five numbers and an expressive and almost rollicking
coda. The skipping melody of the first part immediately puts the listener under
its spell with its infectious good humour. The subsequent well-crafted waltz
numbers, consisting of sixteen- and eight-bar periods, increased the success of
the new composition. The summer festival at Dommayer's brought the composer,
who presented his work with inimitable verve and elan, complete success.
The waltz Vive la Danse! was also triumphant six years
later, when Strauss presented the work at the Gymnase musical in Paris to a
public that included the greatest contemporary masters of French music: Adam,
Auber, Cherubini, Halevy, Meyerbeer and the dance-master Philippe Musard, among
whom Strauss achieved unanimous approval and full recognition.
[4] Fortuna-Galopp, Op. 69 (Fortuna Galop)
Since Strauss had taken over the music at the Sperl in October
1829, the establishment run by Johann Georg Scherzer in the Leopoldstadt had
been at the height of its popularity. One of the consequences was that on 9th
January 1834, Scherzer had to extend the Sperl by opening the Fortuna Room. It
was a spacious ball-room, splendidly fitted out and Strauss, of course, played
on the opening evening. The event was crowded and Strauss, as was expected,
brought with him a new composition. It was a cheerful galop, with the title
Fortuna Galop.
The new work had immediate success and was danced with
enthusiasm, as far as was possible in the overcrowded room. Strauss had thought
up a rapid galop with, after four introductory bars and an energetic signal for
the dance to begin, two sixteen-bar sections with electrifying melodies. After
the usual da capo, came a novelty, a 22-bar coda that forced the unaccustomed
dancers to a special feat of endurance.
It goes without saying that the new Fortuna Polka was
immediately popular and had to be played at all the subsequent balls in the
Fortuna Room. The publisher Tobias Haslinger was able to offer the piano
version of the work on 5th February 1834, and one may take it that he did good
business with the Fortuna Polka. A few years later the Krenn publishing-house
brought out a new edition by Max Schonherr. This version, too, won immediate
popularity.
[5] Heiter auch in ernster Zeit, Walzer, Op. 48 (Cheerful
too at a Serious Time)
In the years 1830 and 1831 the people of Vienna were haunted
by several disasters. In February 1830 the Danube, then a single channel in
Vienna, burst its banks and submerged the surrounding districts under a metre
of water. Johann Strauss's family, too, had to take refuge.
In the summer of 1831 a cholera epidemic from the
Polish-Russian war zone spread to Austria, and moved without impediment from
Cracow to the densely populated districts on the Danube. In August it was
apparent that cases of cholera would occur in Vienna. Primitive remedial
measures were sought in vain to keep the epidemic away, and the prayers and
consolatory texts that appeared in the Wiener Zeitung were of no use. Far too
late the Emperor Franz I ordered the construction of drainage channels to hold
back, as far as possible, the centre of the epidemic.
In this situation Johann Strauss organized at the Sperl an
evening entertainment 'in aid of those in distress or in need of help in the
present circumstances' and repeated there on 24th August 1831, when the
disaster was announced, the waltz that he had first offered at his benefit
summer festival at the Sperl under the title Wien, wie es ist (Vienna, as it
is), to which he now gave the title Cheerful too at a Serious Time.
This charming, heartening work, which had been greeted in
the summer with great public enthusiasm, had to preserve its magic. It was once
again met with decided approval. During this really serious period, when the
Wiener Zeitung regularly published announcements of the victims of the
epidemic, the sick and the dead, the thrilling energy and positive mood of this
music was absolutely necessary.
It served the same purpose too in 1846 when a business
crisis was announced in Austria and the news reached Vienna of men starving in
the provinces. Johann Strauss took the waltz out of the archive and again put
it on his musicians' desks. Then, once again it provided a positive mood,
comfort and inspiration. The Strauss motto is always valid, 'Cheerful too at a
Serious Time'.
[6] Original Parademarsch (Wiener Bürger-Marsch Nr. 1)
(Original Parade March: Vienna Citizens' March No. 1)
In 1832 Johann Strauss was appointed bandmaster of the
Honourable First Citizens Regiment. This was a great distinction. The regiment
counted 6600 men and presented an imposing sight when it marched out on parade
or for Corpus Christi with its music.
In 1832 Johann Strauss received from the regiment only a
payment for participation in the Corpus Christi procession. On this occasion,
at any rate, the Original Parade March without opus number was provided, and
the music was copied by the copyist Franz Flatscher, dated 1833. In this year
Strauss received an honorarium for 'three parades with the band'. It is not
certain at which of these parades he had this march performed. At all events it
is a joyful, cheerful work that, performed at a lively tempo, was first played
after the ceremonial parade.
Whatever happened, the Original Parade March was and is an
interesting, really Straussian piece, certainly received with appreciation.
[7] Das Leben ein Tanz oder Der Tanz ein Leben! Walzer, Op.
49
(Life a Dance or Dance a Life! Waltz)
In early autumn 1831 cholera broke out in Vienna and the
suburbs with full force. The official Wiener Zeitung regularly published the
number of sick and dead. The epidemic first diminished with the beginning of
the cold season.
On 23rd November 1831, Johann Strauss promptly organized at
the Sperl the traditional Catherine Ball, which also marked the end of the
year's dance entertainments. Since these balls were generally well attended,
Strauss chose this evening for his benefit. For this occasion he composed a
particularly highly-treasured waltz to which he gave the title Life a Dance or
Dance a Life!. After a 23-bar introduction he moved into a waltz in a steady
rhythm, as much as to signify that life in Vienna was again cheerful and light-hearted.
This five-part work, ending with an effective coda, was one
of the composer's masterpieces. The whole magic of Biedermeier Vienna is
expressed in its melodies. At the first performance the work was received with
enthusiasm and often repeated. Strauss's son Johann used the first waltz melody
from Life a Dance in his little potpourri Music from the Raimund Period, that he conducted
in the German Volkstheater on the occasion of the unveiling of the memorial to
the actor, playwright and theatre-director Raimund. He understood very well
that his father had expressed the whole magic of the Biedermeier in his Opus
49.
[8] Launen-Polka (Caprice Polka)
It may be assumed that the early Caprice Polka, which is
preserved as No. 3 of the five polkas in the Vienna City and District Library,
was written together with the Vienna Caprice Waltzes, Op. 6, in 1827. The
simple structure of the composition suggests that it belongs to the earliest
works of the young composer. It shares this connection with the Charmant Polka,
composed and performed in 1829 together with the Charmant Waltz, part of The
Composer's Best Fancy.
Nevertheless the Caprice Polka is a pleasing work that
differs markedly from the Bohemian polkas that Johann Strauss wrote from 1842,
(for example the Sperl Polka, Op. 133) following the Prague pattern. The polka
as a couple round-dance has, to be sure, a precursor that could have been
established in the 1820s. Johann Strauss was able to follow this tradition,
before the Bohemian polka became known in Vienna from 1839. In this respect the
Caprice Polka is an interesting contribution to the history of Austrian
dance-music.
[9] Cotillons nach beliebten Motiven aus der Oper Die
Unbekannte (La Straniera), Op. 50
(Cotillons on favourite melodies from the opera La
Straniera)
Hardly had the Court Opera by the Karntnerthor introduced
the opera La Straniera to the Vienna public on 24th
November 1831 (the first performance of Vincenzo Bellini's work had taken place
at La Scala, Milan, on
14th February 1829), but Johann Strauss was already in the ball-rooms
with his Cotillons. The first performance of the Cotillons must have taken
place before the première of the opera at the Court Opera, since the publisher
Tobias Haslinger was able to announce the publication of the work on 25th
November 1831.
Strauss's music starts without introduction, launching into
the first of five triple-time numbers, of which four have a trio. Strauss knew
well enough why he had to hurry so much with the performance and publication of
his Cotillons. His friend Joseph Lanner also brought out in late autumn 1831
his Cotillons under the title Bekannte Tone einer Unbekannten (Known Music of
an Unknown), full of melodies from the opera (the piano version was announced
on 3rd February 1832).
Since Bellini's opera soon disappeared from the stage, the
Cotillons of neither composer had a long life, but they were certainly welcome
for the ball season of 1832. In the waltz business it was important to be
up-to-date. Strauss and Lanner both understood this very well.
[10] Venetianer-Galopp, Op. 74 (Venetian Galop)
Johann Strauss performed his Venetian Galop on 21st July
1834 at the repetition of his successful festival of 1833, A Night in Venice,
in the Imperial Augarten. It was a gamble to repeat a festival that had
attracted many people, but Strauss and his assistant 'Lamperl-Hirsch' were not
disappointed. Once again there was a large and satisfied attendance.
The Venetian Galop had, at this night among the scenes of
Venice, great and deserved approval and lively acceptance. The work, which
starts with four energetic bars and the delicate sound of the castanets before
the galop proper begins, has Strauss's verve and thus enlivens both the dances
and those who hear it.
The success of the piece persuaded the publisher Tobias
Haslinger to issue the galop on 18th November 1834 both in a piano edition and
for orchestra. Later, however, it was only seldom played.
[11] Hof-Ball-Tanze, Walzer, Op. 51 (Court Ball Dances)
Ihro Majestat Anna Maria Carolina, der jüngeren Konigin von
Ungarn gewidmet
(Dedicated to Her Majesty Anna Maria Carolina, Queen of
Hungary)
In 1831 Anna Maria of Sardinia was married to the Crown
Prince, the epileptic Ferdinand, who had already been crowned King of Hungary.
It was certainly no love-match. All those concerned, as well as the people of
Vienna, were clear that Anna Maria of Sardinia, who was already 28, was offered
as a victim in this marriage, but she had nothing to regret. Ferdinand may not
have been in full command of his intellectual powers, but he made up for this
deficiency by his good nature. Furthermore he had a marked understanding of
music. In 1832 Queen Anna Maria took part in the Court Ball in Vienna. Johann
Strauss, who was entrusted for the first time with the music of the ball, took
the opportunity to dedicate his Court Ball Dances Waltz to her. Presumably the
waltz was played at the ball. The first public performance was on 29th February
of leap year 1832 at the Sperl.
The first part of the waltz, in the seldom used key of E
major, offers a cheerful melody of three quavers and a crotchet in the interval
of an octave and is one of the composer's most original inspirations. Since the
subsequent five waltz sections and the coda include amusing and carefully
instrumented melodies, the Court Ball Dances belong to the most interesting,
favourite works of Johann Strauss. They contributed already in 1832 to his later
nickname of 'Waltz King'.
[12] & [14] Galopp Nr. 1 und Nr. 2 aus Die Stumme von
Portici
(Galop Nos. 1 and 2 from La muette de Portici)
The opera La muette de Portici was first performed in Vienna
at the Josephstadt Theatre on 9th November 1829. This followed the first
performance of the work at the Paris Grand Opera on 29th February 1828, after
the delay of a year. Since Auber's work was a complete success, perhaps the
strict censorship of the system created by the State Chancellor Prince
Metternich had prevented a prompt transfer of the work.
The two Galops, No. 1 in D major and No. 2 in G major, are
both without an introduction and are orchestrated very simply with a third
violin in place of a viola. They were composed and performed very soon after
the first performance of the opera in Vienna. An exact date of the first
performance cannot be ascertained, since in 1829 the first performances of
compositions of the still little known conductor Strauss were not reported in
the newspapers. That would soon change. With the galops from La muette de
Portici it was not so long. It may be supposed that the Galops were danced with
enthusiasm at the latest at Carnival 1830. They have the requisite verve and
dash.
[13] Bajaderen-Walzer, Op. 53, (Sr. koniglichen Hoheit dem
durchlauchtigsten Herrn Carl Ludwig, Herzoge von Lucca, Infant von Spanien
ec.ec in tiefster Ehrfurcht gewidmet)
(Bayadère Waltz, dedicated to His Royal Highness the Most
Serene Charles Louis, Duke of Lucca, Infante of Spain, etc, etc., in deepest
respect)
Daniel François Esprit Auber's opera Le dieu et la bayadère
reached the Vienna Court Opera Theatre at the Karntnerthor on 3rd February
1832. The interesting figure of the Indian temple dancer, who, following
tradition, was also a prostitute, aroused the interest of opera-goers. Since it
was difficult for the Court Opera in the prudish years of the Emperor Franz I
to bring a bayadère onto the stage, Auber's opera had no lasting success.
Auber's music, in spite of this, won through. Johann Strauss did not miss the
opportunity to compose a Bayadère Waltz. The work was played at many balls in
Carnival 1832, as well as at the Philharmonic Society Ball on 15th February, at
which Strauss and his musicians played the dance music.
Strauss's Bayadère Waltz, consisting of a twelve-bar
introduction, four waltz sections with trios and an interesting coda that
repeats the melodies of the first waltz, is at least near Auber's melodies. For
his contemporaries the relationship between the melodies of Strauss's Bayadère
Waltz and Auber's was obvious. Already in 1832 this fact was discussed, when
the appearance of the waltz in Tobias Haslinger's edition was announced in the
Wiener Zeitung on 19th May. The canny publisher had already, in March 1832,
presented Strauss's Bayadère Galop, Op. 52, to the Philharmonic. It must be
acknowledged that Tobias Haslinger contributed to the fame of his composer
Johann Strauss, whose compositions he exported to many countries.
Later the Bayadère Waltz disappeared from dance repertoire
and from the programmes of Strauss concerts. That was a shame, as the original
melodies of the first waltz alone had certainly also pleased later generations
of music-lovers.
Franz Mailer
English version by Keith Anderson
Music for the repertoire recorded on this CD is available
for hire at Musikverlag Doblinger, Vienna
The editions used on this recording are from the Christian
Pollack Archive