- Paul Hofhaimer
Paul Hofhaimer (
January 25 ,1459 – 1537) was an Austrianorganist and composer. He was particularly gifted atimprovisation , and was regarded as the finest organist of his age by many writers, including Vadian andParacelsus ; in addition he was one of only two German-speaking composers of the time (Heinrich Isaac was the other) who had a reputation in Europe outside of German-speaking countries.Life
He was born in
Radstadt , nearSalzburg . Sources are somewhat contradictory on his early life, with Vadian asserting that he was self-taught, and theNuremberg humanist Konrad Celtis saying that he acquired his technique at the court of Emperor Frederick III. Hofhaimer went toInnsbruck in 1478, and so impressed Archduke Sigismund ofTyrol that he was given a lifetime appointment as court organist in 1480. He almost certainly knew Heinrich Isaac well while he was in Innsbruck, since Isaac became court composer there later that decade.In 1489 he began serving Maximilian I as organist, but he did this in addition to his Innsbruck service. In 1498, after several years of travel, during which time he visited the Saxon court of Elector
Frederick the Wise , he moved toPassau , and in 1507 he moved toAugsburg , where he could be closer to Maximilian. Maximilian and the king of Poland made him a knight and nobleman in 1515, conferring on him the title of "First Organist to the Emperor". Hofhaimer's last move was toSalzburg , where he remained as organist atSalzburg Cathedral until his death.Music and influence
Hofhaimer was a spectacularly gifted improviser, and witnesses attested to his unequaled gift; he could play for hours, never repeating himself: "one would wonder not so much how the ocean gets all the water with which to feed the rivers, but how this man gets the ideas for all his melodies."ref|1 Not only was he a performing musician, though, he was the teacher of an entire generation of German organists: and the famous school of German organists of the Baroque era can trace much of its lineage to Hofhaimer. In addition, some of the organists he trained went on to Italy, for example
Dionisio Memno , who became organist at St. Mark's inVenice , and there passed on technique learned from Hofhaimer to the organists who were part of the earlyVenetian school .While he was most prolific as a composer for organ, little of that music has survived in its original form. Most of the surviving works are either German songs in three or four voices, or arrangements (
intabulation s) of them for either keyboard orlute . The large quantity of surviving copies of his songs from different locations in Europe, usually in arrangements, attests to their popularity. The handful of pieces for organ which have survived show Hofhaimer's gift for composing polyphonic lines around acantus firmus .His German lieder are typical of the time, and usually in
bar form , with one section being polyphonic and the other being more chordal. He rarely used the smooth polyphonic texture then being cultivated by the Franco-Flemish composers such as Josquin or Gombert, a style he probably first encountered in Innsbruck with the music of Isaac.Hofhaimer was also well known as an organ consultant, and frequently advised on the building and maintenance of organs.
References and further reading
* Manfred Schuler, "Paul Hofhaimer", "The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians", ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
*Gustave Reese , "Music in the Renaissance". New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
* Luscinius, quoted by Manfred Schuler in New Grove article; paraphrased.
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