CHAPTER XV
THE HARP AS AN ORCHESTRAL
INSTRUMENT
All along through the ages
the harp has been associated with the human voice as an accompaniment,
but it was not untillight the year 1719 that it began to be seriously
considered in the of an orchestral instrument. Of course,
as has been mentioned in a previous chapter, Monteverde, in his
Orfeo, produced in 1608, employed a double harp, whilst
the Portuguese Band that came with Catherine of Braganza to London,
in 1662, consisted of pipes and harps.
Early in the eighteenth
century, we read of the harp being employed as a chamber instrument,
as distinct from an accompaniment to the voice. Such a thing as
an independent part for the harp was as yet undreamed of, as the
instrument merely played in unison with the singer, just as in
the case of the violin. Imperfect as was the invention of hooks
or crooks, it certainly opened up immense possibilities
for the harp, and so, from the year 1701 attempts were made by
various composers to elevate this instrument to the dignity of
an honoured place in the orchestra.
Among the
great masters of the first half of the eighteenth century, Handel
deserves the gratitude of all harpists for the introduction of
the harp into his orchestra scores. In his great oratorio of Esther, produced
at Canons for the Duke of Chandos, in 1720, and
performed in public, with stage accessories,
at the Haymarket, on May 2nd, 1732, Handel employs the
harp with much effect. A glance at the score reveals
the fact that the composer uses the harp in combination
with the theorbo-lute, as an accompaniment to the song
: "Breathe soft, ye winds.''
Passing over some minor
composers who scored for the harp towards the middle
of the eighteenth century, Florian Leopold Gassman
(born in 1723), chapel-master at Vienna,
must not be forgotten. Gassman was
a good harpist, and composed some works of
more than average merit for his instrument. Becoming
proficient on the pedal harp, he wrote some music for
it (and also four instrumental quartets) in which the harp passages are
skilfully treated. He is best
known as the teacher of Salieri, and died at Vienna in 1774.
J. B. Krumpholz, of Prague,
the friend of Haydn and Beethoven, was not only a remarkable
Hungarian harpist, but was also a harp-maker and composer for
his instrument. His improvements in the harp were very considerable,
and, in 1785, he designed a harp for Naderman the elder, at Paris. His efforts
to improve the harp culminated in a new form of instrument with
swell pedal, which was approved of by the Academie, in 1787. He
taught at Paris from 1769 to 1773, and was in much request as
a teacher. His death occurred in 1790, the unfortunate man having
drowned himself in the Seine, driven to madness by the infidelity
of his wife.
However, it is as a writer
for his instrument that we wish to arrest the reader's attention.
Gerber gives a long list of his compositions, some of which are
still occasionally heard. They comprise six grand concertos, thirty-two
sonatas with violin accompaniment, duets for two harps, a quartet
for harp and strings, and symphonies for harp and small orchestra—also
harp variations on an andante by Haydn.
Louis Adam (born in Alsace, December 3rd, 1758) electrified
Paris in 1776 by his two symphonies—concertantes for the harp,
piano, and violin—the first of their kind that had appeared. These
compositions were given at the Concerts Spirituels, and were marvellous
for a boy of seventeen. Adam may be said to have given the harp
an assured place in the orchestra by these two symphonies. After
many years of teaching and composing, he was appointed professor
at the Conservatoire, in 1797; and he was also a most successful
teacher of the piano.
His pupils included Kalkbrenner, De la Moine, Herold
père et fils, Chaulien, etc.; and in 1802 he published
an excellent Méthode Nouvelle pour le Piano. After forty-six
years as professor, he retired in 1843, and died in Paris, on
April 11th, 1848, leaving a son, Adolphe Charles (1803-56), who
was even more famous—best remembered as the composer of the rollicking
opera Le Postilion de Longjumeau.
The great Mozart recognised
the value of the harp as a factor in the orchestra. In May
1778 he composed a Concerto for Flute and Harp, specially written
for the Duc de Guisnes and his daughter, the former being "a respectable
player on the flute," as Mozart himself wrote, and his daughter
a splendid harpist. This Concerto is only of moderate difficulty,
but is sparkling, and might well be revived by some of our musical
societies.
Dussek's compositions for the harp derive an added interest
from the fact that he played the harp very well. Curiously enough,
he scored for the Harmonica (a form of musical glasses invented
by an Irishman, Richard Pockrich), as did also Mozart. However,
unlike Mozart, he loved the harp, and taught it to his wife, Sophia
Corri. He came to London in 1790, and settled down as a teacher
and composer.
Among his many compositions for the harp are numerous
sonatas and sonatinas, many of them being set with violin and
violoncello accompaniment. He also wrote several harp duets as
well as duets for harp and pianoforte.
Although P. Meyer of Strasburg
(born in 1737) is principally remembered for his improvements
in the harp, as previously alluded to, he also composed for the
instrument. From his close study of the capabilities of the pedal
harp, he was able to further its development by some clever compositions.
He was one of the earliest to publish the first principles of
the instrument, in his Méthode de la Harpe, a work which
held its ground for over half a century—based as it was on scientific
rules. His sonatas for the harp are of more than average merit,
whilst his concertos are also well written. He was the first to
write fugues for the harp—anticipating De Marin.
Urged by some English acquaintances,,
in Paris to visit London, he came over
to England in 1771, and was in such demand as a
teacher of the pedal harp—an instrument
not long introduced to London society—that
he settled down there for five years. Owing to the American War
he returned to Paris, but found himself eclipsed by Krumpholz.
He then turned his attention to composing operas, but with indifferent
success, and he returned to London in 1784. Having given up the
role of virtuoso on the harp, he established a good teaching connection,
and died in London in 1819, aged eighty-two. His two sons, Philippe
and Frederick, were also skilled performers on the harp, and composed
much ephemeral music for that instrument.
Steibelt composed some
acceptable sonatas and duos for the harp, and a Turkish rondo
for harp, with violin and tambourine ad lib. He
was in London from December 1796
to 1799, and died at St. Petersburg,
in September 1823. His Grand Concerto
for the Harp, with orchestral accompaniment, was once
very popular.
Johan Georg Nageli (1768-1836)
arranged many of his popular songs for harp and harpsichord—including
the well-known "Life let
us cherish", published at Zurich in 1794.
CHAPTER XVI
IRISH HARPERS IN THE MID-EIGHTEENTH
CENTURY.
Some years before the death
of O'Carolan, bardic conventions were held, due to the patriotic
zeal of the Rev. Charles Bunworth, previously alluded to. Though
partaking more of the nature of a literary than a musical assembly,
these "bardic sessions" were attended by a number of harpers.
Meetings were held at Charleville, Co. Cork, at the house of John
claragh MacDonnell, the Irish poet, but the principal place of
meeting was at Bruree, Co. Limerick. These conventions of bardic
minstrelsy served to keep alive the language and music of ancient
Ireland.
Early in the eighteenth century,
an Irish harper named Maguire, of Co. Fermanagh, settled in London, and, like his
contemporary Heffernan, kept a tavern. From
1725 to 1756 Maguire's tavern was most popular, and was the rendezvous of many of the
Ministry, including the Duke of Newcastle. Finding himself neglected
in 1756, owing to his patriotic views, he died brokenhearted
a short time afterwards. A brother-harper had the following distich
engraven on Maguire's harp:
"Cur Lyra funestas
edit percussa sonores?
Sicut omissun sors Diadema gemit!"
About the same time, or
a little later, flourished Hugh Kelly, a yeoman-harper, who, though
blind, was a splendid player. Being related to Count Taaffe, he
was treated more as a friend and companion than as a professional
visitor by the nobility of Connacht. Among his many pupils, Arthur
O'Neill may be numbered. He died of fever, whilst still in the
prime of life, and, at his own request, was buried in the tomb
of O'Carolan.
Jerome Duigenan, born in
1715, was a native of Leitrim, and was not only
an accomplished performer on the harp, but also
a good classical scholar. His patron,
Colonel Jones, M.P., in 1740, backed him for
a trial of skill against a Welsh harper on their respective instruments.
This harp contest came off on the floor of the Irish House of
Commons, in Dublin, and the decision was unanimously given in favour
of Duigenan, who accordingly was handed over the stakes. He
died in 1775.
Dominick Mongan, like Hugh
O'Neill, was a "gentleman harper", and was blind from his infancy. Born
in County Tyrone in 1715, he was not only an able performer on the harp,
but an all-round musician, being thoroughly
conversant with the works of Corelli, Handel,
Geminiani, and other masters. Some of his
melodies are sung to the present day. His son, Charles
Mongan, became Protestant Dean of Clonmacnoise, and
subsequently Bishop of Limerick, but changed his
name to Warburton.
|
More remarkable than any of these was Denis O'Hampsey,
who lived to be an ultra-centenarian. Born near Garvagh, Co. Derry,
in 1697, he studied the harp under Bridget O'Cahan, John C. Garragher,
Loughlin Fanning, and Patrick O'Connor. During ten years,
commencing in 1715 (when he was presented with a valuable harp,
made by Cormac O'Kelly in 1702), O'Hampsey travelled through Ireland
and Scotland. In 1745 he made a second journey to Scotland,
and played at Edinburgh for Prince Charlie. During his many years'
residence in that country, he popularised many Irish airs, which
were subsequently claimed as Scotch, notably "Robin Adair." He
played at the Belfast Harp Festival in 1792, and Bunting tells
us that the aged minstrel plucked the strings of his harp in the
old style, with long nails, and that his rapid execution was unapproached.
He died in 1807, aged 110. The foregoing illustration is that
of his "travelling" harp, as O'Hampsey reserved his O'Kelly harp
for special occasions. It is copied from the engraving which appears
as the frontispiece of Bunting's second volume, published in 1809.
Charles Byrne and Daniel
Black were also famous harpers in 1750, and both appeared at the
Belfast Harp Meeting in 1792. Patrick Quin was of a slightly later
date, and his favourite harp—known as the "Castle Otway " harp—is
still preserved.
As was to be expected,
the Jacobite period furnished hundreds of harp tunes, set to songs
in praise of the Old and the Young Pretenders.
"The-Blackbird" is still very popular, the name symbolising James
III, and so are "Roisin dubh," "Graine Maol," "Caitilin ni hualhuallachain",
"Druimfhionn donn dilis." Of the seven men of Moidart, four of
the seven were Irish. It was only in 1765, when James Charles
died in Rome, that the Stuart cause was regarded as hopeless,
and the end came in January 1788, with the death of Prince Charlie.
CHAPTER XVII
SOME OLD-TIME VIRTUOSI
Madame Krumpholz, wife
of Johann Baptist Krumpholz, was a most distinguished harpist,
even excelling her husband. Born at Metz, about
the year 1755, she became a pupil of her future
husband, whom she married
in 1780. However, in 1788, she eloped with another man to London,
where she made her début, at Hanover Square Rooms, on June 2nd,
1788, afterwards appearing at various concerts, including Haydn's
benefit, and at Drury Lane. Her execution on the harp was surprising,
and it is said that "she made the instrument sound almost like
an Aeolian harp." From 1790 to 1800 she was in much request
at concerts, and often performed with Dussek his beautiful duos
concertantes for harp and pianoforte. She retired in 1803.
Louis Cardon,
born at Paris in 1747, was an esteemed harpist,
and published a method for the harp in 1785. He
settled down to teaching in 1786, but, on the outbreak of the
French Revolution, fled to Russia. His Art
de jouer la Harpe appeared in 1805, and he died the following
year.
Marie Martin Martel, Viscomte
de Marin, born at St. Jean de Luz, near Bayonne, in 1768, studied
music under his father, and had
violin lessons from Nardini. His harp-master
was Hochbrucker, but he very soon surpassed that ingenious harpist.
At Rome, in 1783, he astonished all by his fugue extempore playing,
and by performing Bach's and Jommelli's fugues at first sight
on the harp. Although he entered the army in 1784, he quitted
it two years later as captain of dragoons. In London, for many
seasons between the years 1790 and 1805, his harp performances
were much esteemed, and Clementi arranged some of his solos
for the pianoforte.
Madame Dussek (Sophia Corri)
was born at Edinburgh, in 1775, and made her ddbut as a vocalist
in London in 1788. In
1792, she married J. L. Dussek, who taught her
the harp and piano. From 1795 to 1800 she performed
with her husband at the principal music meetings. After her
husband's death, in 1812, she took unto herself a second husband,
John Alvis Moralt, and devoted herself mainly to teaching, appearing
occasionally as a harpist. Madame Dussek-Moralt composed some
agreeable pieces for the harp, which at one time had a certain
vogue. One of her best-known pupils was her daughter, Olivia
Dussek (born in London, in 1797), who was alike a good executant
on pianoforte and harp—making her first appearance at the Argyle
Rooms in 1809, at the age of twelve. She also wrote a few pieces
for harp and piano, as well as some songs. After her marriage
to Mr. Buckley, she was appointed organist of Kensington Parish
Church, and died in 1847.
Guillaume Pierre Antoine
Gatayes was born at Paris, in 1774, and was a distinguished
harpist as well as composer. His
playing was of a high order of merit, and
his harp studies and fantasies (1799-1826) were
once popular. He died at Paris in 1846.
<
Hereditary genius was manifest in
the case of Naderman fils, who was
born at Paris, in 1780. Likehis father, he early evinced an
interest in the harp, and in time became a skilled
harpist. He composed numerous concertos, duos, and
fantasies for the harp, including a very popular Trio for three
harps, or two harps and piano, op. 57. His younger brother,
Henri, was also a harpist, and composed some music for his instrument.
F. J. Naderman fils died in 1835.
Among English harpists of
this epoch, Thomas Billington held a high
place. Born at Exeter, in 1754, he studied the harp and
piano with such success that in 1780
he entered on the musical profession in London.
As early as 1778 he published some pieces for the harp and piano,
but was seen to better advantage in his songs and ballads. He
died at Tunis, in 1832.
Jean Elouis was much in
evidence as a virtuoso on the harp between the years 1790-1812. He
belonged to the French school, and published
many pieces for his instrument. In
1808 he came to London, and toured a great
deal in the provinces, exhibiting the powers of Erard's grand
double-action harp. One of his pupils was Henri Horn, who accompanied
him to Scotland and Ireland. On June 29th, 1810, Elouis scored
a great success in Dublin, being assisted by Paul Alday, Dr.
Cogan, Spray, Logier, and Willman. He settled as harp teacher
in Edinburgh. Kirchoff enjoyed much popularity at this epoch
in Denmark and Russia. Other artists were Petouart, David, Budd,
Vernier, Ragan, Steil, Seybold, Labarre, the Misses Ashe, and the Misses Sharp.
CHAPTER XVIII.
WELSH HARPERS OF THE EIGHTEENTH
CENTURY
David
Owen (Davydd y Gareg-wen). John Parry of Ruabon. Evans the harper.
Edward Jones of Llanderfel. Thomas Jones. John Randies. Revival
of the Eisteddfod. Richard Roberts. John Parry of Denbigh.
Welsh writers tell of
the fame of David Owen (Davydd y Gareg-wen),
who was highly esteemed as a harper and composer in the
years 1720-52. The popular air
"The Rising of the Lark" is attributed to him.
Among the Welsh harpers
of the mid-eighteenth century, John Parry of Ruabon was a typical
specimen of the old school. He was bard to Sir Watkin W. Wynne,
of Wynnstay, and in addition to being an excellent performer,
was a composer and a collector of old airs. It is said that
Handel admired his playing very much, and that his appearance
in London suggested to Gray the finale of his poem "The Bard."
Parry's local fame was
very great, and he roamed about a good deal in search of old
Welsh airs. His first publication was entitled, Ancient British
Music, which appeared in 1741. He subsequently issued some music
for the harpsichord. However, his best-known work is British
Harmony: being a Collection of Antient Welsh Airs, published
in 1781. He died at Ruabon, October 7th, 1782.
A contemporary of Parry's
was Evans the harper, as he was generally known. It is worthy
of note that Nancy Storace's first appearance was at a concert given
by Evans, at the Haymarket Theatre, on April 15th, 1774, she
being then but eight years of age.
Edward Jones
was even more celebrated than Parry or Evans. He was of
a bardic family, and was born at Llanderfel, Merionethshire,
on Easter Sunday of the year 1752. Having studied the harp
under his father, he came to London in 1775, and was appointed
chief bard to the Prince of Wales in 1783. His performance
on the Welsh harp was in the traditional style, and, like Parry,
he determined to rescue from oblivion many of the folk-melodies of
Wales. Accordingly, his Musical and Poetical Relics
of the Welsh Bards was published in two parts in 1784 and
1789, of which improved versions appeared in 1794; and in
1802 a new edition was published, under the title of The
Bardic Museum. His Musical Trifles, for the harp,
attained considerable popularity; and he also published a collection
of Cheshire melodies in 1803. His death occurred at London on
April 18th, 1824.
Another harper of the Jones
family—Thomas Jones, was a harpist and composer. He was
generally known as "Jones of Gaddesdon," and, in 1788, published
Ten New Country Dances for the Harp, followed by other
ephemeral pieces for the Welsh harp at intervals between the
years 1790 and 1802.
John Randies, the blind
harper and organist, was born in 1760, and studied
under John Parry of Ruabon. His fame was very great
throughout North Wales, and he is mentioned
in Miss Seward's poem of "Llangollen Vale."
He is best remembered, however, as the father of Elizabeth Randies,
the "Cambrian Prodigy," who performed a duet with her father
at the age of four, before King George III. Between the years
1805 and 1808, Randies and his daughter and John Parry made
a tour of the provinces. He died in the autumn of 1823, and
his daughter survived him only a few years.
Meantime,
a movement had been initiated to foster the language and music
of Wales. This was the Gwyneddigion, a society founded
in London, in 1771, which promoted, or rather revived,
the ancient Eisteddfod. This was inaugurated at
Corwen, in 1789; followed by another Eisteddfod at St. Asaph,
in 1790; and at Caerwys, in 1798. At length, through the efforts
of the Cambrian Society, an epoch-making Eisteddfod was held
at Carmarthen, under the presidency of the Bishop of St. David's
in 1819. In the following year, on September 13th and 14th,
an equally successful Eisteddfod took place at Wrexham, when
Richard Roberts, of Carnarvon, who was both blind and lame,
won the silver harp. This Roberts, popularly known as the "blind
minstrel of Carnarvon," was an excellent performer on the harp,
and made many profitable concert tours. He resided for a time
in Dublin, where he published, in 1829, a work entitled Cambrian
Harmony, a collection of Welsh, airs. In 1832 he played
the harp for the late Queen (then Princess) Victoria, at Beaumaris;
and he died in June 1855.
John Parry of Denbigh,
"Bardd Alaw," was born at Denbigh, February 18th,
1776, and was band-master of the Denbigh Militia from 17971807. He
published sonatas for the harp, as well as An Account of
the Rise and Progress of the Harp, and a collection of Welsh
airs for the harp; and was alike a master of the harp, violin,
piano, clarinet, and double flageolet. In 1820 he conducted
the Eisteddfod held at Wrexham; and in 1821 at a Gorsedd, he
was given the degree of Bardd Alaw, or Master of Melody.
At Brecon, in 1822, he was responsible for the musical arrangements,
and the Cambrian Society accorded him a benefit concert at Freemasons'
Hall, London, on May 14th, 1826. He conducted the Eisteddfod
held at Denbigh in 1828, at which the Duke of Sussex was present;
and, in 1831, was appointed Treasurer of the Royal Society of
Musicians. At his farewell concert, given in June 1837, he sang
his own song, "Jenny Jones" (introduced to the public a year
previously by Charles Mathews), accompanied on the harp by his
son, John Orlando Parry. His Welsh Harper was issued in two
volumes (1839-48), being a revised and enlarged edition of Jones's
Relics. Parry died April 8th, 1851.
Since the year 1858 the
Eisteddfodau are an annual institution in Wales, and admirably
serve to keep alive Welsh music, although their distinctive
national character has for some years past been more or less
obsessed by the commercial spirit pervading the choral competitions,
and by the selection of works that cannot be classed as Welsh.