Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T00:25:28.004Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Music in the Viennese Popular Theatre of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Peter Branscombe*
Affiliation:
St. Andrews University
Get access

Extract

When in 1710 or 1711 Joseph Anton Stranitzky's company of German actors took over the recently built Theater nachst dem Karntnertor in Vienna they established a tradition of plays with music that was to last for a century and a half. They were themselves heirs to various traditions—most notably the companies of strolling players (englische Comödianten) that had been popular in German lands from Shakespeare's time, but also assimilating features from the commedia dell'arte and the Parisian théâtres de la foire, and imitating (and frequently parodying) the Italian court opera, as well as developing even further the extensive comic scenes and intermezzi both of the opera and of the Jesuit drama. Music was an important component in the Viennese Jesuit dramas and the theatres de la foire, and collections like the Engelische Comedien und Tragedien … of 1620 and Liebeskampf oder Ander Theil der Engelischen Comoedien und Tragoedien … of 1630, containing the tunes as well as the words of a number of songs, indicate the extent to which music was readily available for ambulant troupes in seventeenth-century Germany. Parallel to the use of music in German plays at this time is the extent and nature of the comic scenes in operas and Jesuit dramas in Vienna. J. B. Adolph's carnival play of 1700, Carnisprivium proscriptum, with music by J. B. Staudt, includes three large-scale musical sequences, a light-hearted German song in praise of the joys of angling, and also a vernacular parody of a Latin lament. During the reign of Amalteo as court poet, and even more during that of Minato (1669–98), comic scenes and dialect interpolations reached such a height that the reforms of Zeno and Metastasio became entirely necessary. One example of Minato's methods must serve for many: in the Minato/Draghi La lira d'Orfeo of 1683 Orpheus is by no means Euridice's only admirer. When he leaves her after a tiff, she is forced to admit: ‘Lassa! Perdendo vo tutti gli Amanti’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1972 The Royal Musical Association and the Authors

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Vienna, Nationalbibliothek, codex 9810,6th play.Google Scholar

2 Scene 6: copy of libretto in Vienna, Nationalbibliothek.Google Scholar

3 Die Musik in der Wiener deutschen Stegreifkomödie’, Studien zur Musikwissenschaft, xii (1925), 20.Google Scholar

4 Die Alt-Wiener Volkskomödie, Vienna, 1952, p. 233.Google Scholar

5 Vienna, Archiv des Ministeriums des Innern, IV, M. 6, 1709, Nr. 17; quoted by C. Glossy, ‘Zur Geschichte der Wiener Theatercensur’, Jahrbuch der Grillparzer-Gesellschaft, vii (1897), 244.Google Scholar

6 Wiener Haupt- and Staatsaktionen, ed. R. Payer von Thurn (Schriften des Literarischen Vereins in Wien, x & xiii), Vienna, 1908–10, i, p. xxvii.Google Scholar

7 Teuber, O., Das K. K. Hofburgtheater seit seiner Begruendung (Die Theater Wiens, ii/1), Vienna, 1896, pp. 2728.Google Scholar

8 A. von Weilen, Das Theater, Vienna, 1917, p. 110.Google Scholar

9 E.g. one reproduced in von Weilen, op. cit., p. 104.Google Scholar

10 Wiener Haupt- und Staatsaktionen, ii. 8788.Google Scholar

11 Op. cit., p. 235.Google Scholar

12 Wiener Haupt- und Staatsaktionen, i. 167.Google Scholar

13 Ibid., ii. 208.Google Scholar

14 Teuber, op. cit., p. 28.Google Scholar

15 Libretto in bound volume of Bernardoniaden, Vienna Stadtbibliothek.Google Scholar

16 Raab, F., Johann Josef Felix von Kurz, genannt Bernardon, Frankfurt, 1899, p. 109.Google Scholar

17 Shelf-mark 22200 A.Google Scholar

18 By implication therefore not necessarily also of the ‘Intermezzo, intitolato: Il vecchio ingannato’.Google Scholar

19 Hadamowsky, F., ‘Das Spieljahr 1753/54 des Theaters nachst dem Kärntnerthor und des Theaters nächst der k.k. Burg’, Jahrbuch der Gesellschaft für Wiener Theaterforschung, xi (1959), 56.Google Scholar

20 Vienna, 1757, unpaginated.Google Scholar

21 Both texts are preserved in the Vienna Stadtbibliothek.Google Scholar

22 Shelf-mark 19062 and 19063; the contents of the first volume have been published by R. Haas, Denkmäler der Tonkunst in Österreich, lxiv (1926).Google Scholar

23 Studien zur Musikwissenschaft, xii (1925), 5862.Google Scholar

24 Ed. H. C. Robbins Landon, London, 1963.Google Scholar

25 Only at this time were clarinets, included in two numbers in the score, available in the Esterházy orchestra. See H. C. Robbins Landon, ‘Haydn's Marionette Operas and the Repertoire of the Marionette Theatre at Esterház Castle’, Haydn Yearbook, i (1962), 154–5.Google Scholar

26 See Landon, op. cit., pp. 168–89.Google Scholar

27 J. von Sonnenfels, Brufe uber die Wienerische Schaubühne (Wiener Neudrucke, vii), Vienna, 1884, iv. 13.Google Scholar

28 Part II, chapter 4; the ‘Donauweibchen’ is localized as the ‘Saalnixe’.Google Scholar

29 Statistisches Jahrbuch der Stadt Wien fur das Jahr 1883, Vienna, 1885, p. 20.Google Scholar

30 No place of publication named; pp. 4344.Google Scholar

31 Two in the Vienna Nationalbibhothek, shelf-marks S.m. 25397 and S.m. 6727, one in the Vienna Stadtbibliothek, shelf-mark H 2184 C and one in the possession of the author.Google Scholar

32 Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf. Lebensbeschreibung, ed. N. Miller, Munich, 1967, pp. 229–30.Google Scholar

33 Briefe eines Eipeldauers an seinen Herrn Vetter in Kakran (Vienna, 1794), ed. E. von Paunel (Denkwurdigkeiten aus Alt- Österreich, xvii and xviii), Munich, 1917–18, i. 248.Google Scholar

34 Wiener Theater-Almanack fur das Jahr 1794, pp. 175–6.Google Scholar

35 Die Gesänge aus Raimunds Märchendramen, ed. A. Orel (F. Raimund, Samtliche Werke, vi), Vienna, 1924, pp. xviii-xix.Google Scholar

36 Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, shelf-mark St. Th. 365.Google Scholar

37 Erinnerungen aus Alt-Wien, Vienna, 1923, p. 36.Google Scholar

38 This section of my paper, here drastically reduced, will be the subject of a separate study.Google Scholar