Der krumme Teufel

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Operas by Joseph Haydn

Der krumme Teufel (1751)
La canterina (1766)
Lo speziale (1768)
L'infedeltà delusa (1773)
Il mondo della luna (1777)
La vera costanza (1779)
L'isola disabitata (1779)
La fedeltà premiata (1781)
Orlando paladino (1782)
Armida (1784)
L'anima del filosofo (1791)

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Der krumme Teufel ("The Limping Devil", ca. 1751) was Joseph Haydn's first opera. The music is lost, though a libretto survives.

The opera was in the genre of Singspiel, with spoken dialogue rather than recitative.[1] It was intended as a vehicle for Johann Joseph Felix Kurz, who under the stage name "Bernardon" was a leading comic actor at the time in Vienna, whose troupe performed at the Kärntnertortheater.

Haydn wrote the opera at a very early stage of his career. Having recently lost his soprano voice, and hence his job as a chorister at St. Stephen's Cathedral, Haydn was maintaining a precarious existence as a freelance musician. One way he supplemented his income was as a street serenader, which was how he came to get his first operatic commission. The story is told as follows in the early biography of Haydn by Georg August Griesinger (1810), who based his account on Haydn's reminiscences in old age:

"Once he went to serenade the wife of Kurz, a comic actor very popular at the time and usually called Bernardon. Kurz came into the street and asked for the composer of the music just played. Hardly had Haydn, who was about nineteen years old, identified himself when Kurz urged him strongly to compose an opera for him."[2]

Another contemporary biographer who interviewed Haydn was Albert Christoph Dies (1810). His version of the tale (in which Haydn is said to be 21, not 19) characteristically embellishes that of Griesinger, giving details of how the comic actor conducted the interview:

"'You sit down at the piano [said Kurz] and accompany the pantomime I will act out for you with some suitable music. Imagine now Bernardon has fallen into the water and is trying to save himself by swimming.' Then he calls his servant, throws himself flat on the stomach across a chair, makes the servant pull the chair to and fro around the room, and kicks his arms and legs like a swimmer, while Haydn expresses in six eight time the play of waves and swimming. Suddenly Bernardon springs up, embraces Haydn, and practically smothers him with kisses. "Haydn, you're the man for me! You must write me an opera!" So began Der krumme Teufel. Haydn received twenty-five ducats for it and counted himself rich indeed.

According to Dies, "This opera was performed twice to great acclaim, and then was forbidden because of offensive remarks in the text." However, the work was performed again in 1752, and a revised version, "Der neue krumme Teufel" ("The new limping devil") was successfully performed in 1757.

Peter Branscombe reconstructs the musical ensembles from the surviving libretto, indicating it was a fairly ambitious work: there were "32 arias as well as a duet, a trio, three choruses and one ambitiously large-scale ensemble movement".[3] The opera also included a pantomime.[4]

James Van Horn Melton suggests that Haydn went on to compose further works for Kurz, all now lost:

"It is now generally believed he composed the music for numerous other Kurz burlesques as well. Extant scores from Kurz's stage point to Haydn as composer of at least three other farces, Bernardon auf der Gelseninsel (Bernardon on the isle of mosquitoes, 1754), Der auf das neue begeisterte und belebte Bernardon (Bernardon revived, 1754), and Leopoldl, der deutsche Robinson (Leopoldl, the German Robinson Crusoe, 1756?), since they contain passages similar to those found in other Haydn works. The finale of Haydn’s keyboard sonata in A major (Hoboken XVI. 5), for example, has as its theme an almost literal quotation from the aria "Wurstl, mein Schatzerl, wo wirst Du wohl seyn" in Leopoldl, der deutsche Robinson."[5]

Der krumme Teufel, and the colloboration with Kurz more generally, helped enabled the early career success of Haydn, who by 1757 was no longer a struggling freelancer but a Kapellmeister with his own orchestra to direct; see Count Morzin.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Branscombe 1975
  2. ^ Translations of Griesinger and Dies from Gotwals, cited below.
  3. ^ Branscombe 1975
  4. ^ The libretto says, "The music of the comic opera, as well as of the pantomime, is composed by Mr. Joseph Haydn" ("Die Musique sowohl von der Opera-Comique, als auch der Pantomime ist componiret von Herrn Joseph Heyden"; Branscombe 1975).
  5. ^ Melton 2004, 265

[edit] References

  • Branscombe, Peter (1971) The Singspiel in the Late 18th Century," The Musical Times226-228.
  • Branscombe, Peter and Caryl Clark, "Haydn", article in the Grove Dictionary of Opera, online version. Copyright 2007, Oxford University Press.
  • Dies, Albert Christoph (1810) Biographical Accounts of Joseph Haydn, Vienna. English translation by Vernon Gotwals, in Haydn: Two Contemporary Portraits, Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Griesinger, Georg August (1810) Biographical Notes Concerning Joseph Haydn. Leipzig: Breitkopf und Härtel. English translation by Vernon Gotwals, in Haydn: Two Contemporary Portraits, Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Melton, James Van Horn (2004) "School, Stage, Salon: Musical Cultures in Haydn’s Vienna," The Journal of Modern History 76 (June 2004): 251–279