- Giacomo Meyerbeer
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Giacomo Meyerbeer[1] (5 September 1791 – 2 May 1864) was a noted German opera composer, and the first great exponent of "grand opera." At his peak in the 1830s and 1840s, he was the most famous and successful composer of opera in Europe, yet he is rarely performed today.
Contents
Biography
Early years
He was born to a Jewish family in Tasdorf (now a part of Rüdersdorf), near Berlin with the name Jacob Liebmann Beer. His father was the enormously wealthy financier Jacob Judah Herz Beer (1769-1825) and his much-beloved mother, Amalia Liebmann Meyer Wulff (1767-1854) also came from the wealthy elite. Their other children included the astronomer Wilhelm Beer and the poet Michael Beer.
Beer's first keyboard instructor was Franz Lauska, a pupil of Johann Georg Albrechtsberger and a favoured teacher at the Berlin court.[2] Beer also became one of Muzio Clementi's pupils while Clementi was in Berlin, and old Clementi himself, although he had long given up teaching, was so much struck, during a visit to Berlin, with the promise displayed in the boy's performance as to consent to give Beer lessons. Beer made his public debut in 1801 playing Mozart's D minor Piano Concerto in Berlin. The Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung reported: 'The amazing keyboard playing of young Bär (a Jewish lad of 9), who carried off the difficult passages and other solo parts with aplomb, and has fine powers of rendition even more rarely found in one of his age, made the concert even more interesting'.[3]
Throughout his youth, although he was determined to become a musician, Beer found it difficult to decide between playing and composition. Certainly other professionals in the decade 1810-1820, including Moscheles, considered him amongst the greatest virtuosi of his period.
Study in Italy and change of name
Beer, as he still was, studied with Antonio Salieri and the German master and friend of Goethe, Carl Friedrich Zelter. Realizing that a full understanding of Italian opera was essential for his musical development, however, he went to study in Italy for some years, during which time he adopted the first name "Giacomo." The "Meyer" in his surname he adopted after the death of his great-grandfather. It was during these years in Italy that he became acquainted with, and impressed by, the works of his contemporary Gioachino Rossini.
Recognition
The name Giacomo Meyerbeer first became known internationally with his opera Il crociato in Egitto — premiered in Venice in 1824 and produced in London and Paris in 1825; incidentally the last opera ever to feature a castrato. But Meyerbeer became virtually a superstar with Robert le diable (with libretto by Eugène Scribe and Casimir Delavigne), produced in Paris in 1831 and regarded by some as the first grand opera, although this honour rightly belongs to Auber's La muette de Portici.
The fusion of dramatic music, melodramatic plot, and sumptuous staging proved a sure-fire formula, which Meyerbeer would go on to repeat in Les Huguenots (1836), Le prophète (1849), and L'Africaine, (produced posthumously, 1865). All of these operas held the international stage throughout the 19th century, as did the more pastoral Dinorah (1859).
Meyerbeer, who had settled in Paris, left for Berlin in 1842 to take the post of court music director, but he returned to Paris in 1849.
Wealth and faith
Meyerbeer's immense wealth (increased by the success of his operas) and his continuing adherence to his Jewish religion set him apart somewhat from many of his musical contemporaries. They also gave rise to malicious rumours that his success was due to his bribing musical critics. Richard Wagner (see below) accused him of being interested only in money, not music.
Meyerbeer was, however, a deeply serious musician and a sensitive personality. He philosophically resigned himself to being a victim of his own success: his extensive diaries and correspondence — which survived the turmoil of 20th century Europe and are now being published; 6 volumes so far out of 7 — are an invaluable source for the history of music and theatre in the composer's time. Meyerbeer was interred in the Berlin Jewish cemetery in Schönhauser Allee, amongst other members of the Beer family.
Meyerbeer and Richard Wagner
The vitriolic campaign of Richard Wagner against Meyerbeer was to a great extent responsible for the decline of Meyerbeer's popularity after his death in 1864. This campaign was as much a matter of personal spite as of racism - Wagner had learnt a great deal from Meyerbeer and indeed Wagner's early opera Rienzi (1842) has, facetiously, been called 'Meyerbeer's most successful work'. Meyerbeer supported the young Wagner, both financially and in obtaining a production of Rienzi at Dresden.
However, Wagner resented Meyerbeer's continuing success at a time when his own vision of German opera had little chance of prospering. After the May Uprising in Dresden of 1849, Wagner was for some years a political refugee facing a prison sentence or worse in Saxony. During this period when he was gestating his Ring cycle, he had few sources of income apart from journalism and benefactors, and little opportunity of getting his own works performed. The success of Le prophète sent Wagner over the edge, and he was also deeply envious of Meyerbeer's wealth. After Meyerbeer's death Wagner reissued his 1850 essay Das Judenthum in der Musik (Judaism in Music), in 1868, in an extended form, with a far more explicit attack on Meyerbeer. This version was under Wagner's own name - for the first version he had sheltered behind a pseudonym - and as Wagner had by now a far greater reputation, his views obtained far wider publicity.
These attacks on Meyerbeer (which also included a swipe at Felix Mendelssohn) are regarded by Paul Lawrence Rose as a significant milestone in the growth of German anti-Semitism.[4]
Vernon Dobtcheff played Giacomo Meyerbeer, (a relatively minor role), in the 1983 film Wagner.
Modern productions of Meyerbeer
Meyerbeer's costly operas, requiring grand casts of leading singers, were gradually dropped from the repertoire in the early 20th century. They were banned by the Nazi regime because the composer was Jewish, and this was a major factor in their further disappearance from the repertory. However, the operas are now beginning to be regularly revived and recorded, although (despite the efforts of such champions as Dame Joan Sutherland, who took part in performances of, and recorded, Les Huguenots) they have yet to achieve anything like the huge popular following they attracted during their creator's lifetime.
Amongst reasons often adduced for the dearth of modern productions are the scale of Meyerbeer's more ambitious works and the cost of mounting them, as well as the alleged lack of virtuoso singers capable of doing justice to Meyerbeer's demanding music. However, recent successful productions of some of the major operas at relatively small centres such as Strasbourg (L'Africaine, 2004) and Metz (Les Huguenots, 2004) show that this conventional wisdom is not unchallengeable.
List of operas
Title First performance Location Notes Jephtas Gelübde 23 December 1812 Munich Wirt und Gast 6 January 1813 Stuttgart Das Brandenburger Tor 1814 Berlin Romilda e Costanza 19 July 1817 Padua Semiramide riconosciuta March 1819 Teatro Regio, Turin Libretto by Gaetano Rossi, after Pietro Metastasio.[5] Emma di Resburgo 26 June 1819 Venice, San Benedetto Margherita d’Anjou 14 November 1820 Milan L'Almanzore Probably composed 1820-21 intended for Rome but unperformed there. While it is believed to have been unfinished it is also possible that it is an earlier version of L'esule di Granata L'esule di Granata 12 March 1822 Milan Il crociato in Egitto 7 March 1824 La Fenice, Venice Frequently revised by Meyerbeer Robert le diable 21 November 1831 Paris Opéra, Salle Le Peletier Les Huguenots 29 February 1836 Paris Opéra, Salle Le Peletier Sometimes staged during the 19th century under other titles such as The Guelfs and the Ghibellines or The Anglicans and the Puritans (see the Wikipedia article on the opera) Ein Feldlager in Schlesien 7 December 1844 Hofoper, Berlin Revised as Vielka, Vienna, 1847-02-18 Le prophète 16 April 1849 Paris Opéra, Salle Le Peletier L'étoile du nord 16 February 1854 Opéra-Comique, Paris Partly based on the earlier Feldlager in Schlesien, revised in Italian, London, Covent Garden, 19 July 1855 Dinorah ou Le pardon de Ploërmel 4 April 1859 Opéra-Comique, Paris Revised in Italian as Dinorah, Covent Garden, London, 26 July 1859 L'Africaine 28 April 1865 Paris Opéra, Salle Le Peletier Posthumous Media
Recordings
- A Meyerbeer discography (updated whenever an additional opera by Meyerbeer is issued on CD)
- Recordings of Meyerbeer's operas as listed on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk/
References
- Notes
- Sources
- Becker, Heinz and Gudrun (1989). Giacomo Meyerbeer, a Life in Letters. London.
- Huebner, Steven (1992). "Meyerbeer, Giacomo". In Sadie, Stanley. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4: 366–371. London: Macmillan. ISBN 9781561592289.
- Kaufman, Tom (Autumn 2003). "Wagner vs. Meyerbeer". Opera Quarterly 19 (No. 4).
- Letellier, Robert (2005). Meyerbeer Studies: A Series of Lectures, Essays,and Articles on the Life and Work of Giacomo Meyerbeer. New Jersey: Rosemont Publishing.
- Letellier, Robert (2008). A Meyerbeer Reader. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars.
- Meyerbeer, Giacomo (1960 -). Briefwechsel und Tagebücher. Berlin and New York.
- Meyerbeer, Giacomo; Letelier, Robert (editor and translator) (1999-2004). The Diaries of Giacomo Meyerbeer. Madison and London.
- Zimmermann, Reiner (1998). Giacomo Meyerbeer, eine Biographie nach Dokumenten. Berlin.
External links
- Meyerbeer Fan Club site at meyerbeer.com
- Article by David Conway on 'Meyerbeer the Jew' on his site dedicated to Jewish musicians
- Meyerbeer cylinder recordings, from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara Library
- Free scores by Giacomo Meyerbeer at the International Music Score Library Project
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "Meyerbeer, Giacomo". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- "Meyerbeer, Giacomo". Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
Berlin Staatsoper General Music Directors Johannes Wesalius (1572) • Johannes Eccard (1609) • Nikolaus Zangius (1612) • William Brade (1618) • Johann Friedrich Agricola (1759) • Johann Friedrich Reichardt (1775) • Bernhard Anselm Weber (1816) • Gaspare Spontini (1820) • Giacomo Meyerbeer (1842) • Otto Nicolai (1848) • Robert Radecke (1871) • Joseph Sucher (1888) • Richard Strauss (1899) • Leo Blech (1913) • Erich Kleiber (1923) • Clemens Krauss (1935) • Herbert von Karajan (1941) • Joseph Keilberth (1948) • Erich Kleiber (1951) • Franz Konwitschny (1955) • Otmar Suitner (1964) • Daniel Barenboim (1992)
Berlin Staatsoper Intendants Carl Heinrich Graun (1742) · Johann Friedrich Reichardt (1775) · August Wilhelm Iffland (1796) · Carl von Brühl (1815) · Gaspare Spontini (1819) · Giacomo Meyerbeer (1842) · Theodor Küstner (1847) · Botho von Hülsen (1851) · Bolko von Hochberg (1886) · Georg von Hülsen-Haeseler (1903) · Franz Winter (1918) · Max von Schillings (1919) · Heinz Tietjen (1925) · Ernst Legal (1945) · Heinrich Allmeroth (1952) · Max Burghardt (1954) · Hans Pischner (1963) · Günter Rimkus (1984) · Georg Quander (1992) · Peter Mussbach (2003) · Ronald Adler (2008, commissioner) · Jürgen Flimm (2010)
Categories:- German Jews
- Opera composers
- Romantic composers
- German composers
- Music in Berlin
- Burials in Berlin
- Jewish classical musicians
- Jewish composers and songwriters
- Jewish German history
- People from the Margraviate of Brandenburg
- 1791 births
- 1864 deaths
- People from Märkisch-Oderland
- 19th-century German people
- Honorary Members of the Royal Philharmonic Society
- Music directors of the Berlin State Opera
- General directors of the Berlin State Opera
- Members of the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art
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