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Chamber music and society in the 19th century

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During the 19th century, with the rise of new technology driven by the Industrial Revolution, printed music became cheaper and thus more accessible while domestic music making gained widespread popularity. Composers began to incorporate new elements and techniques into their works to appeal to this open market, since there was an increased consumer desire for chamber music.[1] While improvements in instruments led to more public performances of chamber music, it remained a type of music to be played as much as performed. Amateur quartet societies sprang up throughout Europe, and no middling-sized city in Germany or France was without one. These societies sponsored house concerts, compiled music libraries, and encouraged the playing of quartets and other ensembles.[2] In European countries, in particular Germany and France, like minded musicians were brought together and started to develop a strong connection with the community. Composers were in high favor with orchestral works and solo virtuosi works, which made up the largest part of the public concert repertoire.[3] Early French composers including Camille Saint-Saëns and César Franck.[4]

Apart from the "centeral" Austro-Germanic countries, there was an occurrence of the subculture of chamber music in other regions such as Britain. There chamber music was often performed by upper- and middle-class men with less advanced musical skills in an unexpected setting such as informal ensembles in private residence with few audience members.[5]In Britain, the most common form of chamber music compositions are the string quartets, sentimental songs and piano chamber works like the piano trio, in a way depicts the standard conception of the conventional “Victorian music making”.[6] In the middle of the 19th century, with the rise of the feminist movement, women also started to receive acceptability to be participated in chamber music.

Thousands of quartets were published by hundreds of composers; between 1770 and 1800, more than 2000 quartets were published, and the pace did not decline in the next century. Throughout the 19th century, composers published string quartets now long neglected: George Onslow wrote 36 quartets and 35 quintets; Gaetano Donizetti wrote dozens of quartets, as did Antonio Bazzini, Anton Reicha, Carl Reissiger, Joseph Suk, and others to fill an insatiable demand for quartets. In addition, there was a lively market for string quartet arrangements of popular and folk tunes, piano works, symphonies, and opera arias.

But opposing forces were at work. The middle of the 19th century saw the rise of superstar virtuosi, who drew attention away from chamber music toward solo performance. Frédéric Chopin and Franz Liszt presented "recitals" – a term coined by Liszt – that drew crowds of ecstatic fans who swooned at the sound of their playing. The piano, which could be mass-produced, became an instrument of preference, and many composers, like Chopin and Liszt, composed primarily if not exclusively for piano.

The ascendance of the piano, and of symphonic composition, was not merely a matter of preference; it was also a matter of ideology. In the 1860s, a schism grew among romantic musicians over the direction of music. Many composers tend to express their romantic persona through their works. By the time, these chamber works are not necessarily dedicated for any specific dedicatee. Famous chamber works such as Fanny Mendelssohn D minor Piano Trio, Ludwig van Beethoven's Trio in E-flat major, and Franz Schubert's Piano Quintet in A major are all highly personal. [4] Liszt and Richard Wagner led a movement that contended that "pure music" had run its course with Beethoven, and that new, programmatic forms of music–in which music created "images" with its melodies–were the future of the art. The composers of this school had no use for chamber music. Opposing this view was Johannes Brahms and his associates, especially the powerful music critic Eduard Hanslick. This War of the Romantics shook the artistic world of the period, with vituperative exchanges between the two camps, concert boycotts, and petitions.

Although amateur playing thrived throughout the 19th century, this was also a period of increasing professionalization of chamber music performance. Professional quartets began to dominate the chamber music concert stage. The Hellmesberger Quartet, led by Joseph Hellmesberger, and the Joachim Quartet, led by Joseph Joachim, debuted many of the new string quartets by Brahms and other composers. Another famous quartet player was Vilemina Norman Neruda, also known as Lady Hallé. Indeed, during the last third of the century, women performers began taking their place on the concert stage: an all-women string quartet led by Emily Shinner, and the Lucas quartet, also all women, were two notable examples.

References

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  1. ^ Ross, April Marie (2015-08). "A Guide to Arranging Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Century Harmoniemusik in an Historical Style". UNT Digital Library. Retrieved 2021-04-07. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Bashford, Christina (2003), Stowell, Robin (ed.), "The string quartet and society", The Cambridge Companion to the String Quartet, Cambridge Companions to Music, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–18, doi:10.1017/ccol9780521801942.002, ISBN 978-0-521-80194-2, retrieved 2021-04-09
  3. ^ Lott, Marie S. (2008) Audience and style in nineteenth-century chamber music, c. 1830 to 1880. University of Rochester, Eastman School of Music, ProQuest Dissertations Publishing.
  4. ^ a b Radice, Mark A. (2012). Chamber music: An essential history. The University of Michigan: The University of Michigan Press. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-472-02811-5.
  5. ^ Bashford, Christina (2010). "Historiography and Invisible Musics: Domestic Chamber Music in Nineteenth-Century Britain". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 63 (2): 291–360. doi:10.1525/jams.2010.63.2.291. ISSN 0003-0139.
  6. ^ Bashford, Christina (Summer 2010). "Historiography and Invisible Musics: Domestic Chamber Music in Nineteenth-Century Britain". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 63.