Sonatas op. 13 & op. 20
Variations sur un thème d’Armide de Gluck op. 57
Fantasie: La Contemplazione op. 107 No. 3
La bella capricciosa, una pollaca op. 55
Christoph Hammer, pianoforte
One of the early 19th century’s most famous piano
virtuosi was Johann Nepomuk Hummel. He was already famed as Vienna’s leading pianist when
Carl Czerny wrote an enthusiastic commentary on Hummel’s art, summarizing the quarrel
between Beethoven and Hummel supporters:
“If Beethoven’s playing is characterized by its immense power, unheard-of bravura and
fluidity, Hummel’s playing, in contrast, is the prototype of the highest purity and
clarity, the most graceful elegance and delicacy (…)”
Christoph Hammer has achieved
major fame as a specialist for historical keyboard instruments.
He is internationally known as a soloist, Lied accompanist and chamber musician. He
has also been the musical director of the baroque orchestra “Neue Hofkapelle München”
since 1996, with whom he appears increasingly as conductor. In 2002, Christoph Hammer
was awarded the Cultural Prize of the State of Bavaria for his great service in
promoting early music. In 2003, he founded and acted as musical director of the
“Residence Festival Munich”. A recording of the opera Catone in Utica by Giovanni
Ferrandini, conducted by Christoph Hammer, has also been released by OehmsClassics.
The Purpose of the Musical Arts
To move the heart, to gladden the spirit and
delight the ear: This is their destiny.
Dry affectation alone is sole pedantry and
does only the eye good; however: The tasteful
coupling of art with sentiment and grace increases
the attractiveness of the musical arts,
gives them gravity and dignity, and leads the
artist to the true goal.
(J. N. Hummel)
Johann Nepomuk Hummel was born on November
14, 1778 in Bratislava, then called
Preßburg. As a boy, his enormous natural
musical talent was already apparent. When
his father moved to Vienna in 1786 to accept
the position of music director at the Theater
an der Wieden, he took Johann to audition
with the famous Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
who immediately accepted the boy as a pupil
for no fee whatsoever. The youngster lived in
Mozart’s house for almost two years, paying
neither food nor lodging, and met all of Vienna’s
important musicians through his teacher.
At Mozart’s recommendation, Johann Nepomuk’s
father took him on a highly successful
concert tour from 1788 to 1792. The two
traveled throughout Europe visiting all major
musical centers. Hummel wrote his first compositions
during these four years. Later writing
about his life to Joseph Sonnleithner, Hummel
says,
“In 1793, when I was 15 years old, I
returned to Vienna, studied counterpoint with
Albrechtsberger and afterward enjoyed Salieri’s
instruction in composing for voice, aesthetic
views and musical philosophy overall
(…). Because I was already the top performer
in Vienna, I concerned myself much more with
instruction (…). From 1794 until 1814, I didn’t
play any more in Vienna (…); only in my circle
of friends and musical patrons did I play my
musical fantasies. During these years, I wrote
compositions for almost all genres…”
At Joseph Haydn’s recommendation
– Hummel had met him in 1791 in London and
studied organ with him in 1795 – Hummel was
appointed kapellmeister at the court of Prince
Nikolaus Esterházy in 1804. Hummel lost this
position in 1811, however, because he paid
more attention to composing and to the Vienna
music scene than to his proscribed tasks.
A major concert tour through Germany in 1816
finally gave Hummel the fame and recognition
he deserved. He was asked to become the kapellmeister
in Stuttgart (a short intermezzo)
before accepting his last kapellmeister position
in 1819 in Weimar, where he then remained.
He continued to undertake long concert tours
to Russia, Poland, France and England, dying
on October 17, 1837 in Weimar.
“No real piano virtuoso of the present can or
may ignore Hummel’s main works, if he is to
have a broad education.” (Franz Liszt)
Of the major piano virtuosi living at the beginning
of the 19th century, Hummel was among
the most famous and recognized in all of Europe.
His piano method, published in 1828, was
one of the most authoritative schools. Even in
his early Vienna years, Hummel was considered
to be the city’s most important pianist.
Carl Czerny reports in his journal:
“What a
master I heard there! Although I had so often
had the opportunity to hear Gelinek, Lipawsky,
Wölffl and even Beethoven, the playing of this
so unimposing man opened new worlds for
me. Never had I heard such brilliantly difficult
passages, such purity, elegance and delicacy
of elocution and such tasteful imagination.”
It was quite true that Hummel’s relationship
to the fortepiano founded a new school of
piano playing in regard to technical demands
as well as sensitivity to tone, articulation and
dynamics – a school situated between Classicism
and Romanticism. Music-lovers were
highly divided when it came to discussions
about Hummel as opposed to the great titan,
Beethoven. Czerny described the antagonism
quite succinctly:
“If Beethoven’s playing is
characterized by its immense power, unheard-
of bravura and fluidity, Hummel’s playing,
in contrast, is the prototype of the highest
purity and clarity, the most graceful elegance
and delicacy, with all difficulties calculated to
arouse the greatest amazement through the
combination of the Mozartian manner with
the Clementian school so suited for the piano."
This made it obvious that Hummel was the superior
performer, and soon, the two masters
had gathered their supporters, who fought
each other with all available means. Hummel’s
followers accused Beethoven of mistreating
the fortepiano, said that he had absolutely no
purity and clarity of tone, that his use of the
pedal only resulted in confused noise and
that his compositions were unsuccessful attempts,
were unnatural, lacked melody – and
in addition to this, were irregular. Beethoven’s
party, on the other hand, said that Hummel had
absolutely no real imagination, that his playing

was as monotonous as a hurdy-gurdy, that he
held his fingers more like spider legs, and that
his compositions were only reworked motives
of Mozart and Haydn.
“If Beethoven had been born twenty-five
years later, he would have had to cede all
fame to Hummel, who was the first instrumental
composer of his epoch.” (Fétis)
Hummel was not only an influential interpreter
or improviser at the piano; his compositions
were in great demand throughout Europe and
influenced the greatest composers of his time,
including Moscheles, Field, Chopin, Mendelssohn
and even Wagner. His oeuvre was
later crowded out of the limelight, however, as
the works of Beethoven achieved increasing
fame. Ferdinand Hiller, a student of Hummel,
once reported a conversation he had had with
Hummel, in which the latter confessed that
it was a very serious moment for him when
Beethoven appeared on stage.
“Should I try
to walk in the footsteps of such a genius?!”
– said Hummel.
“For a while, I didn’t know
what to do. Finally, I said to myself: the best
thing is for you to remain true to your nature.”
And Hummel’s nature was the mixture of classicistic
tradition, early virtuosity and salon-like
agreeability. His major piano sonatas and concertos
are supplemented by numerous variations,
caprices, rondos, phantasies, dances
and works for various occasions. Hummel’s
compositions show that his style is very closely
tied to the sound and musical possibilities of
the pianofortes he knew in Vienna, with their
light, fluid, elegant piano style.
Hummel’s Piano Sonata in E-flat Major
op. 13 was printed in early 1805. Just as
Beethoven had, Hummel dedicated this first
major sonata to his mentor Joseph Haydn, to
whom he thanked his first appointment at the
Esterházy court. Especially remarkable in this
sonata is the main theme of the first movement,
introduced in the manner of a chorale
and specifically designated sostenuto quasi
organo. When it returns in the coda, it is designated
Alleluja. Hummel’s second Grand Sonata
in F minor op. 20 followed in 1807. The
Polacca op. 55 is a typical genre piece, written
during the years 1811–1815 and published
under the title La Bella Capricciosa. The Variations
in F Major op. 57 were written during
the same period and based on a theme from
Gluck’s Armide. The Bagatelle “Fantasie: La
Contemplazione” op. 107 No. 3 is taken from
a collection of six bagatelles which Hummel
published in 1825 and dedicated to Princess
Auguste of Weimar.
The two sonatas on this recording were
performed on a copy of a five-octave fortepiano
made by Anton Walter (Vienna, ca. 1800);
all remaining pieces were played on a copy of
a six-octave fortepiano made by Joseph Brodmann
(Vienna, ca. 1815). Both instruments
were built by Robert Brown of Oberndorf, near
Salzburg, Austria.
Christoph Hammer
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler
Christoph Hammer
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler
Photos:
Booklet: Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien
Cover: Goethe-Museum Düsseldorf