- Friedrich Chrysander
Karl Franz Friedrich Chrysander (
July 8 ,1826 -September 3 ,1901 ) was a German music historian and critic, whose edition of the works ofGeorge Frideric Handel and authoritative writings on many other composers established him as a pioneer of 19th-centurymusicology .Born at
Lübtheen , inMecklenburg-Schwerin , Chrysander was the son of amiller . He earned aDoctorate inPhilosophy from theUniversity of Rostock in 1853. He then focused his studies on music, and in an obituary for Chrysander in October 1901, the "Musical Times" said of him that:"From the beginning he assumed the role of an historian in rigorously defending the right and claims of musical masterpieces of a distant past to a legitimate and faithful reproduction, i.e., without modernising, and without instrumental or vocal additions." [ [http://www.musicaltimes.co.uk/archive/misc/chrysander.html "Karl Franz Friedrich Chrysander"] --October 1901 obituary from "The Musical Times." (This is also the source for Chrysander's birth and death dates and the facts cited above about his early life.)]
Between 1858 and 1902, the "
Händel-Gesellschaft " or "German Handel Society" edition of Handel's collected works was published, and this was almost entirely the work of Chrysander; [Winton Dean, "The New Grove Handel." NY: Norton, 1982, p. 116. ISBN 0393300862.] however,Julius Rietz prepared the first volume (with results that were much to Chrysander's dissatisfaction), [ [http://www.hoasm.org/X/HandelScores.html "Handel's Scores,"] at WBAI'S "Here Of A Sunday Morning" website.] and Max Seiffert also assisted with some of the later editing. [ [http://gfhandel.org/edition.htm "Editions of Handel's Music"] from gfhandel.org; October 1901 obituary from "The Musical Times."] Early in the publication of the edition, the publisher dropped out of the project, after which Chrysander set up an engraving shop at his home and produced subsequent volumes himself. Additionally, he sold fruits and vegetables raised in his garden as a way of bringing in further income during the publication years. ["Editions of Handel's Music," "op. cit.."]The quality of some of the editing has been challenged in subsequent decades, with one writer calling the "Händel-Gesellschaft" edition "anything but complete and reliable" ["Handel's Scores," "op. cit.."] and another criticizing Chrysander's "arbitrary selection of material in the more complex works and his failure to explain his methods." [Dean, "New Grove Handel," p. 117.] Nevertheless, this publication, which produced over 100 volumes of music, is acknowledged to have been a remarkable achievement for its day. ["Editions of Handel's Music," "op. cit.."] Chrysander is also credited with rediscovering the autograph score of
Johann Sebastian Bach 's "Mass in B Minor ," which he then sold to the Royal Library inBerlin , generously doing so only for the same sum that he himself paid for it. [October 1901 obituary from "The Musical Times."]He also edited the music of many other composers, including (in collaboration with
Johannes Brahms ) the collected harpsichord music of François Couperin le Grand, published from 1871 to 1888. [ [http://www.lichtensteiger.de/couperin01.html Ralph David Lichtensteiger, "François Couperin le Grand"] at lichtensteiger.de.]Notes
Further reading
* [http://www.musicaltimes.co.uk/archive/misc/chrysander.html "Karl Franz Friedrich Chrysander"] --The October 1901 obituary on Chrysander from "The Musical Times."
*Ferdinand Pfohl : "Friedrich Chrysander". (Hamburg-)Bergedorf, Köster & Wobbe, 1926 (in German)External links
* [http://www.zeno.org/Musik/M/Chrysander,+Friedrich/G.F.+H%C3%A4ndel Chrysander's biography of Händel, unabridged text (in German)]
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