Sigismond Thalberg[1] (January 8, 1812 – April 27, 1871) was a composer and one of the most distinguished virtuoso pianists of the 19th century.
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Sigismond Thalberg was born in Pâquis near Geneva, Switzerland, on January 8, 1812. According to his birth certificate, he was the son of "Joseph Thalberg" and "Fortunée Stein", both from Frankfurt-am-Main, but the names in the birth certificate are now regarded as fictitious. For reasons of Thalberg's illegitimate birth, during his lifetime it was common use not to call his parents true names. François-Joseph Fétis, in the article "Thalberg" in his Biographie universelle des musiciens (1863), therefore wrote that Thalberg was son of a Prince „M.. D..“ and a Baroness „W...“.
The identity of Thalberg's mother as Baroness Maria Julia Wetzler von Plankenstern was disclosed 1871 by L. R. von Kohlenegg (Poly Henrion) in an article for the paper Ueber Land und Meer and 1882 by Constant von Wurzbach in the eighth volume of his Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Österreich. As excuse for their being indiscreet both authors wrote that the Baroness herself had always admitted that Sigismond Thalberg was her son. She wore a ring on one of her thumbs and told people who had asked her about it, that the ring had been given to her by Thalberg's father after she had given birth to the child. She was born Julia Bydeskuty von Ipp, from a Hungarian family of a lower rank of the nobility. In 1820 she married Baron Alexander Ludwig Wetzler von Plankenstern.[2]
Concerning the identity of Thalberg's father, contemporaries were convinced that he was either Prince Franz Joseph von Dietrichstein or his younger brother Count Moritz. Liszt, who met both in Vienna in April 1838, referred to the Prince as Thalberg's father in a letter to Marie d'Agoult of April 14, 1838.[3] In fact, Prince von Dietrichstein held several further titles besides. According to the Gothaische genealogische Adelskalender, he was also Freiherr von Thalberg and could therefore be called Franz Joseph von Thalberg. Sigismond Thalberg, during his stays in Vienna, lived at Prince von Dietrichstein's home.[4] From this it can be refuted that he had invented or sustained a colourful legend of descent from a prominent family.[5] In a sense, his father Prince von Dietrichstein, i. e. Franz Joseph von Thalberg, had given his true name in the birth certificate. The meaning of the mother's recorded name "Fortunée" is "The Happy". Prince von Dietrichstein could not marry her because he had already married Alexandrine Countess Schuwalow on July 16, 1797. In January 1812 he may have thought of a fictitious married couple D. and F. Stein, resulting in the parentage on the birth certificate for Thalberg.
Little is known about Thalberg's childhood and early youth. Nearly all authors wrote that his mother had brought him to Vienna at the age of 10. If this is true, Thalberg arrived there the same year in which the 10-year old Franz Liszt arrived with his parents in order to take piano lessons from Carl Czerny. However the authors gave no sources from which their statement can be verified. According to Thalberg's own account, he attended the first performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony on May 7, 1824, in the Kärntnerthortheater.[6] It therefore can only be established that Thalberg lived mainly in Vienna since that time.
It is frequently stated that Thalberg studied piano under Czerny or Johann Nepomuk Hummel, but there is no evidence in source material for this. In Czerny's Lebenserinnerungen Thalberg is not even mentioned. According to Fétis in the article in his Biographie universelle des musiciens, Thalberg denied having studied under Czerny or Hummel. Thalberg mentioned August Mittag instead, first bassoonist at the Hofoper in Vienna, but this might have been meant as a joke. Baroness von Wetzler, his mother, who according to Wurzbach was occupied with his education during his childhood and early youth, was a brilliant amateur pianist. It may be therefore that she gave him his first instruction at the piano.
In spring 1826 Thalberg studied with Ignaz Moscheles in London. Moscheles, according to a letter to Felix Mendelssohn of August 14, 1836, had the impression that Thalberg had already reached a level at which no further help would be needed in order to become a great artist.[7] Thalberg's first public performance in London was on May 17, 1826.[8] In Vienna on April 6, 1827 he played the first movement, and on May 6, 1827, the Adagio and the Rondo of Hummel's concerto in B Minor.[9] After then, Thalberg performed regularly in Vienna. His repertoire was mainly classical, including concertos by Hummel and Beethoven. He also performed chamber music. In the year 1828 his Op. 1, a fantasy on melodies from Carl Maria von Weber's Euryanthe, was published.
In 1830 Thalberg met Mendelssohn and Frédéric Chopin in Vienna. According to some of their letters, they both got the impression that Thalberg's main strength was his astonishing technical skills.[10] Further information can be found in the diary of the 10-year old Clara Wieck. She had heard Thalberg on May 14, 1830, at a concert which he gave in the theatre of Leipzig. He had played his own Piano Concerto op.5 and a fantasy of his own. Two days before, Clara Wieck had played the first solo of the 2nd Concerto of John Field to him, and, together with him, the first movement of a four handed Sonata of Hummel. According to her diary, it was written by her father Friedrich Wieck at this time, Thalberg had played "sehr fertig" ("very accomplished"). His playing was clear and precise, also very strong and with expression, but did not make enough effect.[11]
In the early 1830s Thalberg studied counterpoint under Simon Sechter, who later taught Anton Bruckner. As a result, canons and fugues can be found in some of Thalberg's fantasies of this time. An example is his Fantasy, Op. 12, on melodies from Bellini's opera Norma. The fantasy has a rather long introduction and after this two main parts. For the first of them Thalberg took a march-theme and made variations of it. The second variation is a canon. For the second main part Thalberg took a lyrical theme and made a fugue on the theme. In the finale, the themes of both parts are united.
Thalberg's Norma-fantasy was published in 1834 and became very popular after some years. But after publication, it was initially regarded by some as irritating to find counterpoint in a fantasy on popular operatic melodies. An ironic review by Robert Schumann in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik 2 (1835), p. 178, is an example. Another example can be found in the Parisian paper Le Pianiste of January 5, 1835, p. 40.[12] Thalberg changed his composing style, omitting most of the counterpoint, and was successful with this. Several of his works in his new style, among them the Deux Airs russes variés Op.17, were enthusiastically praised even by Schumann.[13]
In November 1835 Thalberg arrived in Paris. He performed on November 16, 1835, at a private concert of the Austrian ambassador Count Rudolph Apponyi. On January 24, 1836, he took part in a concert of the "Society of the Paris Conservatoire concerts", playing his "Grande fantaisie" op.22. Thalberg was praised by many of the most prominent artists, among them Rossini and Meyerbeer.
Chopin didn't share his fellow artists' enthusiasm. After hearing Thalberg play, in Vienna, Chopin wrote: " He plays splendidly, but he's not my man. He's younger than I and pleases the ladies - makes potpourris on La Muette - produces his piano and forte with the pedal, not the hand- takes tenths as I do octaves and wears diamond shirt studs.
His début at the Conservatoire concert was in the Revue et Gazette musicale of January 31, 1836, p. 38f, enthusiastically reviewed by Hector Berlioz.
The Parisian Ménestrel of March 13, 1836 wrote:[14]
Moscheles, Kalkbrenner, Chopin, Liszt and Herz are and will always be for me great artists, but Thalberg is the creator of a new art which I do not know how to compare to anything that existed before him ... Thalberg is not only the premier pianist of the world, he is also an extremely distinguished composer.
On April 16, 1836, Thalberg gave his first own concert in Paris, and the success was again sensational. According to Rudolph Apponyi's diary, Thalberg made a profit of 10,000 Francs, and it was a sum which no virtuoso had gained before from a single concert.[15] Thalberg afterwards left Paris, travelling via Brussels to London.
Franz Liszt, who had — until then — regarded himself as Europe's leading piano virtuoso, had heard of Thalberg's successes during the winter 1835-36 in Geneva, in spring 1836 in Lyon, and in Paris. According to his letter to Marie d'Agoult of April 29, 1836, he felt as if he himself were the exiled Napoleon.[16] On January 8, 1837, in the Revue et Gazette musicale, a review by Liszt of some of Thalberg's piano works appeared. The editors of the Revue et Gazette musicale added a remark, they would not share Liszt's opinions and were not responsible for it. Liszt claimed that all of Thalberg's music was completely worthless. He lost many friends and made many enemies with this.[17]
After Thalberg had for a second time arrived in Paris in the beginning of February 1837, a kind of rivalry flowed between him and Liszt, the admirers of the both pianists were to blame for this or the tickets sellers. However, this didn't reflect on Liszt and Thalberg, their paths crossed several times, and their relationship was always cordial. While Liszt was heard in more than a dozen of concerts, Thalberg only gave on March 12, 1837, a concert in the Paris Conservatoire and a further concert on April 2, 1837. To this came on March 31, 1837, a benefit concert to raise money for Italian refugees, where Thalberg as well as Liszt performed.[18] Liszt distributed free tickets, and asked prominent critics to write positive reviews of some of his concerts.[19] But in his later years he admitted that Thalberg had had many more admirers and much more success in Paris than he himself. According to Liszt, his own playing had been a "Tohuwabohu von Gefühlen" ("a complete chaos of emotions"). Czerny, who in spring 1837 had travelled to Paris, was terrified when listening to his former pupil Liszt play.[20] There are contemporary reviews from Paris, in which Liszt got the advice to take Thalberg as a model for his own playing.[21]
In April 1837 Thalberg travelled via Brussels to London again. On May 17, 1837, he gave a concert in London. In The Athenaeum of May 20, 1837, p. 371, the following review appeared:
In keeping our promise of speaking of M. Thalberg after his own Concert, we find it very difficult to avoid entering the column of superlatives and ecstasies, of which, as critics, we have discreet suspicion. But the playing of this wonderful artist does call for the highest possible praise: and we should be glad to know where, at a moment’s notice, we could lay hands upon an epithet or two that should do justice to this prodigious and original mechanical powers: these being tempered and regulated by a just and delicate taste, which make him, beyond all doubt, the most agreeable of all the wonders we ever heard. M. Thalberg seemed to us on Wednesday, to have gained, if that were possible, brilliancy and delicacy, and largeness of hand, since last year: towards the close of the third fantasia he played, which was based upon themes from 'Mose,' he took the 'Preghiera,' and worked it up in a style which held us breathless. The musicians who were unfortunate enough not to be among his audience, will understand us when we say, that the last variation was written in four distinct parts — the air moving steadily onwards in full chords, with glittering, gushing passages, of the richest ornament, carried on at the same time in perpetual motion, and here and there a flight of octaves thrown into the bargain. The applause with which this was greeted was tremendous.
The review is typical for Thalberg who during the following years was always and everywhere praised in such kind. His fantasy op.33 on melodies from Rossini's "Moïse" was one of the most famous concert pieces of the 19th century.[22] The fantasy was published at end of March 1839 and in May 1839 studied by Clara Wieck who was delighted by it.[23] It was afterwards played by many other artists. In 1848 the fantasy was played by Liszt's daughter Blandine.[24]
On February 4, Sigismond Thalberg heard Franz Liszt play in concert for the first time in his life. Thalberg was stupefied on hearing him play. In front of several people he said aloud that he had never heard anything like it.
After Thalberg's stay in London in May 1837, he made a first, short tour, giving concerts in several towns in Great Britain, but he became ill and returned rather soon to Vienna. In spring 1838 he gave concerts in Paris again. A note in the Revue et Gazette musicale of March 4, 1838, p. 104, shows that Thalberg's fame had in the meanwhile grown. He was called "le plus illustre de nos compositeurs" ("the most famous of our composers") now. Thalberg left Paris on April 18, 1838, travelling to Vienna, where on the very day Franz Liszt gave a charity concert for the benefit of the victims of a flood in Hungary.
On April 18, 1838, shortly after his concert, Liszt wrote in a letter to Marie d'Agoult, "Tremendous success", he told Marie. "Recalled fifteen to eighteen times. A packed house. Universal amazement. Thalberg hardly exists at the moment in the memory of the Viennese. Never have I had such a success."[25] The Thalbergites in Vienna (for these comparisons will never end), who prided themselves on their impartiality to begin with, were beginning to be seriously vexed. The reason for this was: In living memory no one had had such a success in Vienna, not even Paganini.
Thalberg invited Liszt for dinner, and the two great pianists dined together on the 28th with Thalberg's father, Prince Moritz Dietrichstein, who told Liszt, that he was delighted to have "Castor and Pollux" together in his home. During the evening, Thalberg remarked to Liszt with admirable candour : " In comparison with you, I have never enjoyed more than a succes d'estime in Vienna". They dined again the next day, after Liszt's concert on April 29, 1838. Liszt and Thalberg were both dinner guests of Mettenich
[26] Until the end of Liszt's stay in Vienna Thalberg did not perform at all.[27] Nevertheless, he was still praised. In a review of Liszt's own charity concert on April 18, 1838, for example, he was described as the winner of the "piano duel" of spring 1837 in Paris.[28]
Liszt left Vienna at end of May 1838 and promised, he would return for further concerts in September. At this time Thalberg was in Vienna again, but for reasons of his private life Liszt did not appear. In October 1838 Thalberg became acquainted with Robert Schumann. Schumann had come to Vienna because he had made plans to settle there. He wanted to negotiate with the publishers Haslinger and Mechetti with respect to possibilities for publication of the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik. In October and November 1838 Schumann visited Thalberg for several times.
According to Schumann's diary, Thalberg played from memory etudes by Chopin, Joseph Christoph Kessler and Ferdinand Hiller. He also played with great skill and inspiration works by Beethoven, Schubert and Dussek, as well as Schumann's Kreisleriana, Op. 16 at sight.[29] On November 27, 1838, Thalberg took part in a charity concert, playing his new fantasy, Op. 40, on melodies from Rossini's opera La Donna del Lago ("The Lady of the Lake" after Walter Scott). At one of his own "Farewell concert"s on December 1, 1838, he played three of his Etudes, Op. 26, his fantasy, Op. 33 on "Moïse" and his Souvenir de Beethoven, Op. 39, a fantasy on melodies from Ludwig van Beethoven's symphonies.[30] As a result, in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik of March 8, 1839, p. 77f, a review by Schumann of the second book of Thalberg's Etudes, Op. 26 appeared. Schumann enthusiastically wrote, Thalberg had actually earned all of the wreaths which were wound for him everywhere. In conclusion, Schumann added, "He is a God when sitting at the piano."
After Thalberg's "Farewell concert" in Vienna, his first long tour commenced. On December 19 and December 21, 1838, he gave two brilliantly successful concerts in Dresden. Besides, he performed twice at the King of Saxon's court. He was richly rewarded by the King and to this received the title of a Royal Saxon chamber virtuoso. In a famous episode Thalberg told the King: "Wait, until you have heard Liszt!"[31] After his stay in Dresden he went to Leipzig, where he gave a concert on December 28, 1838. The concert was attended by Mendelssohn who on the following day, in a letter to his sister Fanny, gave an enthusiastic account. Thalberg had played his fantasy op.40 on Rossini’s "La Donna del Lago" which was praised by Mendelssohn in highest terms.[32] Mendelssohn was since then a friend and admirer of Thalberg.
After a second concert in Leipzig on December 30, 1838, Thalberg travelled to Berlin, to give a series of concerts there. Via Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland), Mitau (now Jelgava) and several further places he afterwards travelled to St. Petersburg. According to contemporary reviews, many of which can be found in the Leipziger allgemeine musikalische Zeitung and in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, he had always and everywhere been praised in superlatives. From St. Petersburg he went on a steamboat to London where he gave further concerts. He then travelled to Brussels, to meet the violinist Charles de Bériot, his friend. In Brussels Thalberg performed for several times in private. According to an account in the Revue et Gazette musicale of August 15, 1839, p. 311, people in Brussels, listening to Thalberg, had had impressions like hallucinations. They could hardly trust their own eyes and ears when he was playing. During this time even Liszt, staying in Italy, was looking respectfully at Thalberg. In an entry from summer 1839 in Marie d'Agoult's diary, it is to be read in Liszt's words that he was content to be regarded as "the second" or "a half of the first", since he would have to share the first prize with Thalberg.[33]
From Brussels Thalberg travelled to the Rhineland. Together with Bériot he gave with overwhelming success a series of concerts. Since fall 1839, a tour in Great Britain was following. After triumphant successes Thalberg returned to London in the beginning of February 1840. It had been announced already one year ago that in spring 1840 Liszt would return to Paris. For this reason Thalberg travelled from London to Paris. Together with Baroness Wetzler, his mother, he arrived in February 1840, awaiting Liszt.
Thalberg had in December 1838, during his stay in Leipzig, already announced that he would take time off after the end of his tour. He did so, and did not perform at any concert during his stay in spring 1840 in Paris. Liszt had for a last time on April 23, 1837, performed at a concert in Paris. He had afterwards left Paris and had lived until November 1839 mainly in Italy. In winter 1839-40, his own career as travelling virtuoso had commenced. Until spring 1840 he had given concerts in Vienna, Pest, Prague, Dresden and Leipzig. In Leipzig Liszt met Mendelssohn, who on March 30, 1840, in a letter to his mother wrote:
Liszt had in several of his letters to Marie d'Agoult described his coming return to Paris, which he imagined as triumphant beginning of a new period of his life. According to his letter of March 11, 1840, it was regarded by him as a point of honour to give a series of concerts in Paris and to earn at least 15,000 Francs from them.[35] But after his arrival in Paris, Liszt actually gave not more than a single concert on April 20, 1840, at the Salons Erard. He did not earn any money, because it was a private concert to which he himself had invited the audience. From his later letters to Marie d'Agoult it is known that it had been she who had told him that he still had many enemies in Paris. For this reason she advised him that he should not take part in any concerts.[36] Liszt's enemies were still remembering his aggressions against Thalberg from the beginning of 1837.
After Liszt's concert, in the Revue et Gazette musicale 1840, p. 285f, a review by Henri Blanchard appeared. The review was in initially praising. But in a later part Blanchard made reference to Molière who, with his naïve genius, had taken some good scenes from works of predecessors to use them in his own works. According to Blanchard, Liszt had in the past dared to enter a fight with Thalberg, the Cesar, Octavian or Napoleon of the piano. In order to gain a small part of Thalberg's crown, Liszt had now adopted the famous thumbs-melody of which all pianists of France were dreaming.
Blanchard's reference to the famous thumbs-melody was reminiscent of a debate in the Revue et Gazette musicale from spring 1837 between Liszt and François-Joseph Fétis, the director of the conservatory in Brussels. Fétis had in an article "M.M. Thalberg et Liszt" in the Revue et Gazette musicale of April 23, 1837, defended Thalberg against Liszt's attacks. In a reply in the Revue et Gazette musicale of May 15, 1837, Liszt had claimed it would be nothing new to his rival's style. Thalberg would only play arpeggios and thumbs-melodies, i. e. large arpeggios, partitioned to both hands, and to this, melodies played with the thumbs, and nothing else. According to Liszt, this kind of playing had been the only cause of Thalberg's success. On April 20, 1840, at the Salons Erard, Liszt played, besides some other pieces, the Etude in A-flat major of his Grandes Etudes, his "Andante finale de Lucia di Lammermoor" and his transcription of Schubert's song "Ave Maria". In extended sections of those pieces his audience was listening to arpeggios and thumbs-melodies, which were now played by Liszt.
Escudier is referring to an article published by Liszt in the Revue et gazette musicale of 8 Jan. 1837. Not unjustly but certainly unwisely- for it gave the impression Liszt was motivated by envy. In the article Liszt described Thalberg's music as mediocre, monotonous, and pretentious. This had antagonized Thalberg's admirers; and the Belgian musicologist F.J Fetis (1784–1871), author of the monumental Biographie universelle des musiciens had come out with an essay (Revue et gazette musicale, 23 Apr.) whose culminating charge against Liszt was; "You are the product of a school which is ending and has nothing further to say; you are not the man of a new school. That man is Thalberg. This is the whole difference between you." (About this judgement, the erroneousness of which became all too apparent even in Fetis' lifetime, the late Bernard Gavoty remarked: " Scarcely would it be possible to poke one's finger more effectively into one's own eye!"
After the end of the Parisian concert season, Thalberg travelled as tourist in the Rhineland. In the beginning of June 1840 he attended a music festival directed by Louis Spohr in Aachen. He got an invitation from the Russian Tsarina and performed at a court-concert in Ems, but this was his only concert during his stay in the Rhineland. According to a note in the Revue et Gazette musicale of August 2, 1840, p. 410, Thalberg's friend, the violinist Charles Auguste de Bériot, would get married two days later in Elsene (Ixelles). His bride was a young lady Maria Huber, born in Vienna, from Germany. She was an orphan and had been adopted by Prince von Dietrichstein, Thalberg's father. It may therefore be presumed that Thalberg wanted to take part in the wedding celebration. During previous visits to the Rhineland he wanted only to relax. He also taught Bériot's son, the pianist Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot.
During the winter 1840–1841, it was now Liszt who made a concert tour in Great Britain. He was frequently compared with Thalberg, who had performed at the same places one year before.
The following review of Liszt's concert on December 8, 1840, in Sheffield is a typical example:[37]
When down at the piano, Liszt appears like one inspired being, and seeming to us lost all around him. Nevertheless we cannot forget Thalberg, who was here last year, at Mr. Dawson’s concert. These two eminent pianists are different in style, and, if we may be excused a simile, Liszt may be compared to a bottle of sparkling champagne, inimitable in brilliancy and Thalberg, to the good old port, full of body and fine flavour. Were we now asked which we should prefer, we should scarcely know what to say; but we think Thalberg the most lasting. His firm, full tone and rich harmonies can never be forgotten.
On December 15, 1840, Liszt wrote a letter to Fétis in Brussels. In a first part he announced that he would travel to Brussels in February 1841 to give concerts. Liszt asked Fétis for some preparations and other kinds of help, and reminded him of their former controversy and suggested reconciliation. In February 1841, Liszt and Fétis met in Brussels and were friends since that time.[38]
After his stay in Brussels and further concerts in Belgium, Liszt went to Paris to give concerts. Until the end of April 1841 he had the impression that he had at last reached the position he desired.[39] In the Revue et Gazette musicale of May 9, 1841, p. 261ff, an essay Etudes d'exécution transcendente by Fétis appeared, in which Liszt was praised for a new composing style he had found. According to Fétis, Thalberg's first appearance in Paris had evoked a crisis for Liszt. Since it had been obvious that Thalberg was the creator of a new kind of art, Liszt had been embarrassed, not knowing what to do. But during his stay in Italy he got an idea. He remembered the lectures on the ordre omnitonique given by Fétis in 1832 which Liszt had attended. As second component he took textures from Thalberg's works. Putting both altogether, Liszt had created his own composing style. He was, in short, harmonically Fétis and pianistically Thalberg. In letters to Fétis of May 17, 1841, and to Simon Löwy of May 20, 1841, Liszt agreed with this.[40]
Thalberg performed in Brussels in fall 1840.[41] He then travelled to Frankfurt-am-Main where he stayed until January 1841. It had been announced that Thalberg would give concerts in Paris again in spring 1841, but he changed his plans. In Frankfurt he took part in a charity concert on January 15, 1841, in favour of the orphan Johanna Körbel, playing his fantasies on "La Donna del Lago" and "Huguenots".[42] But this was Thalberg's only concert appearance in Frankfurt. He was busily composing new works. His Second Don Juan-fantasy op.42 up to the fantasy op.51 on Rossini's "Semiramis" came to existence during this time.
In the second half of January 1841, Thalberg travelled from Frankfurt to Weimar. He performed for three times at the Grand Duke's court and on January 30, 1841, in the Theatre of Weimar. From Weimar Thalberg went to Leipzig, arriving on February 6, 1841. On February 7, 1841, he visited Mendelssohn and on February 8, 1841, Schumann. In the evening of February 8, 1841, he gave an own concert in Leipzig, playing his Second Don Juan-fantasy op.42, his Andante final de Lucia di Lammermoor op.44. his Thême et Etude op.45 and his Caprice op.46 on melodies from Bellini's La Sonnambula.
The concert was in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik 14 (1841), p. 58, enthusiastically reviewed by Schumann. Clara Schumann wrote as entry in the diary:[43]
On Monday Thalberg visited us and played to the delightment beautiful on my piano. An even more accomplished mechanism than his does not exist, and many of his piano effects must ravish the connaiseurs. He does not fail a single note, his passages can be compared to rows of pearls, his octaves are the most beautiful ones I ever heard.
Concerning Thalberg's visit at Mendelssohn's, there is the following account by Mendelssohn's student Horsley:[44]
We were a trio, and after dinner Mendelssohn asked Thalberg if he had written anything new, whereupon Thalberg sat down to the piano and played his Fantasia from the "Sonnambula" then very recently composed, and in MS. This composition is one of the most individual and effective of all Thalberg’s works. At the close there are several runs of Chromatique Octaves, which at that time had not previously heard, and of which peculiar passages Thalberg was undoubtedly the inventor. Mendelssohn was much struck with the novel effect produced, and greatly admired its ingenuity. When we separated for the evening he told me to be with him the next afternoon at 2 o’clock. When I arrived at his study door I heard him playing to himself, and practising continually this passage which had so struck him the previous day. I waited for at least half an hour listening in wonderment to the facility with which he applied his own thoughts to the cleverness of Thalberg's mechanism, and then went into the room. He laughed and said: 'Listen to this, is it not almost like Thalberg?'
After his stay in Leipzig, Thalberg gave concerts in Breslau and Warsaw. He then travelled to Vienna and gave two concerts there. In Vienna it had been Liszt who in winter 1839–1840 had had triumphant successes in a series of concerts. Nevertheless, the two concerts of Thalberg were sufficient to match Liszt's triumphs. In a review in the Leipziger Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung 43 (1841), p. 753f, Thalberg was described as Liszt's only rival. While he was equivalent with Liszt in technical respects, he surpassed that giant in his playing style.
In winter 1841–1842, Thalberg gave concerts in Italy, while Liszt, from end of December 1841 until beginning of March 1842, gave a series of concerts in Berlin. The enthusiasm evoked by Liszt in Berlin is well known as "Lisztomania" and has often been considered as a climax of Liszt's career. But, in fact, Liszt made many enemies, and this for political reasons in connection with the Rhine Crisis of the early 1840s.
In 1840, the French Prime Minister Adolphe Thiers had demanded the return of territories on the west bank of the Rhine from the German federation to France. Although there had been no substantial political effect, since France soon backed down, the Rhine Crisis had a strong impact on the development of patriotic and anti-French emotions in Germany. The Rhine was since then a symbol of German patriotism. There were many poems and songs about the Rhine with decisive nationalistic and anti-French tone. Liszt's "Rheinweinlied", composed in late summer 1841 with words "Der Rhein soll deutsch verbleiben" ("The Rhine shall remain German"), was regarded as one of them. Liszt had also composed his "Das deutsche Vaterland" after Ernst Moritz Arndt who was well known for his strong German patriotic and anti-French attitude. Both pieces had been performed at Liszt's concerts in Berlin, and he had been praised for his true German nationalistic loyalty there.[45]
It was an easy task for Thalberg, to match Liszt's successes in Berlin. In the beginning of April 1842 he wrote in a postcard to a friend in Paris, he would like to give concerts again. He then returned via Marseilles, Toulon and Dijon, arriving on April 11, 1842, in Paris. On the next day he gave his first, and on April 21 his second concert. According to an account by Berlioz, Thalberg made a profit of 12,000 Francs from his first, and of 13,000 Francs from his second concert. The concerts were in the Revue et Gazette musicale reviewed by Henri Blanchard who two years before, in his review of Liszt's concert on April 20, 1840, had nominated Thalberg as Cesar, Octavian or Napoleon of the piano. In spring 1842, Blanchard reached for new superlatives even surpassing his former ones. In his review of Thalberg's second concert he wrote, Thalberg would in 100 years have been canonized, and by all coming pianists be invoked with name of Holy Thalberg. According to the account by Berlioz, at the end of Thalberg's second concert a golden crown was thrown to the stage. Thalberg could since then consider him himself as "Emperor Sigismond".[46]
In addition to his own concerts, Thalberg took part in a concert of Emile Prudent. He afterwards left Paris, travelling via Brussels to London where he was successful in concerts again. According to a note in the Revue et Gazette musicale of July 3, 1841, p. 279, it was expected that Thalberg would after a short stay in Boulogne return to Paris. But in the meanwhile Liszt had arrived in Paris, and Thalberg kept staying in Boulogne. Liszt gave on June 30, 1842, a concert in favour of a travelling opera company from Mainz. At the concert his "Rheinweinlied" was performed with German text. As consequence, Liszt made further enemies in France. At the same time, Thalberg was decorated with the Cross of the French Legion of Honour.[47]
Liszt performed on July 17 and July 20, 1842, at concerts in Liège and on July 24, 1842, at a concert in Brussels. After Liszt had left, Thalberg appeared for a short stay in Brussels.[48] Thalberg then travelled to Vienna where he kept staying until fall 1842. During the second half of November until December 12, 1842, he made a further tour in Great Britain,[49] and in January 1843 he returned to Paris. At end of March 1843 he performed at a private concert of Pierre Erard, but this was his only concert appearance during the present Parisian season.[50]
The atmosphere in Paris was still hostile towards Liszt. An example is Heinrich Heine, who in March 1843 wrote about Thalberg:
His performance is so gentlemanly, so entirely without any forced acting the genius, so entirely without that well-known brashness that makes a poor cover for inner insecurity. Healthy women love him. So do sickly women, even though he does not engage their sympathy by epileptic seizures at the piano, even though he does not play at their overstrung, delicate nerves, even though he neither electrifies them nor galvanizes them
.[51]
Phrases of electrified or galvanized women were commonly used in descriptions of the "Lisztomania". The artist, who was engaging sympathy by epileptic seizures at the piano, was therefore to be understood as an allusion to Liszt.
In winter 1843-44 Thalberg gave concerts in Italy again. At end of March 1844 he returned to Paris, where at the same time also Liszt was expected. Liszt arrived on April 8 and gave on April 16 a first concert, at which he played his Norma-fantasy, published shortly before.
When composing his fantasy, Liszt had put many Thalberg-effects to it. In his later years, he told August Göllerich, one of his pupils:[52]
As I met Thalberg, I said to him: 'Here I have cribbed everything from you.' 'Yes,' he replied, 'there are Thalberg-passages included which are indeed indecent.'
During the time of Thalberg's stay in Paris, Liszt's own Norma-fantasy was missing in the programs of his following concerts. On May 11 and on May 28, 1844, Liszt played the Norma-fantasy by Thalberg instead.[53]
Shortly after Liszt's concert on May 11, 1844, Thalberg left Paris. He travelled to London and gave on May 28, 1844, a concert there. At a further concert in London he played a concerto for three pianos by J. S. Bach together with Moscheles and Mendelssohn.[54] He also took part in a concert of Jules Benedict. In August 1844 he returned to Paris where he stayed until 1845. During the winter 1844–45 he gave a piano course for selected students at the Paris Conservatoire.[55] On April 2, 1845, he gave a concert in Paris, playing his fantasies op.63 on Rossini's "Barbier de Sevilla", op.67 on Donizetti's "Don Pasquale" and op.52 on Auber's "La Muette de Portici", as well as his Marche funèbre variée op.59 and the Barcarolle op.60. The concert was an assured success,[56] and meanwhile Liszt's career in Paris had come to an end. Liszt only performed once, on January 13, 1846, at a soiree of Jules Janin, and he was quite poorly received.[57]
In spring 1848, in Vienna, Liszt met Thalberg once more. On May 3, 1848, Thalberg gave a benefit concert which Liszt attended. According to an account by his pupil Nepomuk Dunkl, Liszt was sitting on the stage, carefully listening and loudly applauding.[58] It was since 11 years the first time he heard his former rival's playing.
In the spring of 1843 Thalberg announced in a letter to a friend that he would travel to North America at the end of August and visit New Orleans, Veracruz and Havana,[59] but he changed his plans. On July 22, 1843, he married Francesca ("Cecchina"), the eldest daughter of Luigi Lablache, first bass at the Théâtre des Italiens in Paris.[60] Instead of travelling to America, Thalberg went with his wife to Italy where they stayed for the winter 1843-44.
In 1855, after Thalberg's operas Florinda and Cristina di Svezia had failed, he realized his former ambition to give concerts in America. From July to December 1855 he performed with overwhelming success in Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires. He returned to Europe, but after a stay of several months in Paris went on the steamboat Africa to North America, where he arrived on October 3, 1856, in New York. Reminiscent of his former rivalry with Liszt, Thalberg had been described in the New York Musical Review and Gazette of July 12, 1856 as "once the greatest living pianist".[61] But it turned out that he was still the most perfect virtuoso ever heard in America.
After Thalberg's debut on November 10, 1856, in New York, a performance marathon ensued, during which he spent eight months giving concerts 5 or 6 days a week. Occasionally he gave two or even three concerts a day. On Sundays, concerts were only allowed if they presented "sacred music", but several times Thalberg did perform on Sundays, playing pieces like his Moïse-fantasy, based on a prayer from Rossini's opera, or his Huguenots-fantasy with the chorale "Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott" as main subject. His Andante op.32 and the Marche funèbre varié op.59 were also allowed.
Thalberg's first American season ended with a concert on July 29, 1857, in Saratoga Springs, NY. On September 15, 1857, he gave another concert in New York, starting his second season. With very few intermissions he was busy until his last concert on June 12, 1858, in Peoria, IL. By then he had visited nearly 80 cities and given more than 320 regular concerts in the United States and 20 concerts in Canada. In addition, he gave at least twenty free concerts for many thousands of schoolchildren. Thalberg also gave a series of solo matinees in New York and Boston at which he played own works as well as chamber music. From 1857, the violinist Henri Vieuxtemps toured with Thalberg. They played works by Beethoven, and Duos composed by Thalberg.
Thalberg's financial success on these tours was unmatched even by Anton Rubinstein and Ignaz Paderewski. He got an average of about $500 per concert and probably made more than $150,000 during his two seasons, the equivalent today of about $3 million.[62] A large part of his appeal on these tours was his unpretentious and unassuming personality; he did not resort to advertising gimmicks or cheap crowd-pleasing tricks, instead offering superbly polished renditions of his own compositions, which had already been well known in America. On rising from the piano, he was always the same quiet, respectable, self-possessed, middle-aged gentleman that he was at the dinner table of his hotel.[63] He played works by Beethoven, among them the sonatas op. 27 no. 2 ("Moonlight") and op.26 ("Funeral March") as well as the first movements of the Third and Fifth Piano Concertos. His cadenza to Beethoven's third concerto was admired. He also played works by Bach, Chopin, Hummel, Mendelssohn and several other composers.[64] The New-York Musical Review and Gazette of July 24, 1858, wrote:
The remark "Thalberg quite unexpectedly closed" referred to the announcement in June 1858 in Chicago that Thalberg would make only one of three scheduled appearances before immediately returning to Europe. In fact, Thalberg did not even perform at that concert, but very hastily left. His wife had arrived from Europe, and there were rumours that he had had a "falling out" with the singer Elena Angri. For this reason, his wife had had been anxious to see him. On April 16, 1858, in New York, Elena D'Angri had given birth to a child who was suspected to be Thalberg's daughter. The girl was called Zaré Thalberg and had on April 10, 1875, in the Royal Italian Opera in London, a very successful debut as Zerline in Mozart's "Don Giovanni".[66] There are newer opinions, however, after which her real name was Ethel Western and she had been born in Derbyshire, England.[67]
The true reason why Francesca Thalberg had left for America in June 1858 and shortly afterwards, together with her husband, very hastily returned to Europe is unknown; because no reliable sources are available. Several authors hint at the death of Thalberg's father in law, Lablache, on January 23, 1858. A further possibility can be found when looking at the family Dietrichstein's fate. In the very summer 1858, a severe problem concerning a successor in the rank of a Prince von Dietrichstein was to be solved.
Prince Franz Joseph von Dietrichstein, Thalberg's father, had a legal son, Joseph von Dietrichstein. Since the rank of a Prince was usually inherited by a son, Joseph von Dietrichstein had been Prince von Dietrichstein since his father's death on July 8, 1854. Prince Joseph von Dietrichstein died on July 10, 1858. He had no son, but four daughters, leaving no male successor. Prince Franz Joseph von Dietrichstein's brother Johann Carl had already died on March 10, 1852, and had not left behind a son either. The rank of a Prince could still be given to Moritz von Dietrichstein, Prince Franz Joseph von Dietrichstein's second brother. Moritz von Dietrichstein had had a son Moritz Johann, but Moritz Johann had died on October 15, 1852. Since Moritz von Dietrichstein was already 77 years old at the time, no further son from his side could possibly be expected. Had the rank of a Prince been given to him, it had expired with his death.[68]
The only male candidate as natural successor in the rank of a Prince von Dietrichstein was therefore Sigismond Thalberg, although his birth had not yet been legalized. He had no son either, but it could at least be hoped that he could still father one in the future. The true reason for Francesca Thalberg's voyage to America may therefore have been that she wanted her husband to return to Europe as soon as possible, so that his relations with family Dietrichstein should be cleared. In the end, the rank of a Prince was given to Alexander Constantin Albert von Mensdorff-Pouilly, who had married Joseph von Dietrichstein's daughter Alexandrine on April 28, 1857.
After Thalberg's return to Europe, he settled in Posillipo near Naples in a villa, which had belonged to Lablache. For the following four years Thalberg lived in silence there. In spring 1862 he gave concerts in Paris and London once again and was as successful as ever. After a last tour in Brazil in 1863[69] he put an end to his career. He suggested taking a position as piano professor at the conservatory in Naples, but it was defeated since an Italian nationality would be necessary. One year later he got an offer from the same conservatory which he refused. He published instructive editions of J. S. Bach's "Well Tempered Clavier" and Muzio Clementi's "Gradus ad Parnassum" but apparently did not compose anymore.[70] When he died on April 27, 1871, he left behind a collection of many hundreds of autographs by famous composers, among them Bach, Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert and others, even Liszt. The collection was sold after Thalberg's death.[71]
Sigismond Thalberg was one of the most famous and most successful piano composers of the 19th century. During the 1830s and the 1840s it was his style that dominated European piano-playing.[72] With very few exceptions, the only critique he experienced was admiration. Everything he did was at once in fashion and was imitated by others.[73] In 1852, Wilhelm von Lenz wrote:
The piano playing of the present day, to tell the truth, consists only of Thalberg simple, Thalberg amended, and Thalberg exaggerated; scratch what is written for the piano, and you will find Thalberg.[74]
Ten years later, in 1862, a London correspondent of the Revue et Gazette musicale wrote:
Expressions like "exaggerated", "twisted" and "tortured" are indicating that some contemporaries were starting to get a feeling of a problematic aspect of Thalberg's fame and his style. They had apparently heard too much of it. It was in this time when Thalberg's career as composer and as virtuoso came to an end.
In the late 19th century, Thalberg was still famous, but mainly for a single piano-effect. Carl Friedrich Weitzmann, in his Geschichte des Klavierspiels (1879), wrote about this.
In a similar kind Lina Ramann, in her Franz Liszt als Künstler und Mensch (1880), wrote:
The following example from the Moise-fantasy has been quoted by many authors as being typical for Thalberg's kind of playing.
Comparing the example with Weitzmann's and Ramann's descriptions, it turns out that the arpeggios are not partitioned to both hands and are not rushing through all octaves. The melody is neither in the medium octave of the keyboard, nor is it played by turns by the thumbs. Inspecting the rest of the fantasy, not a single bar is congruent with the descriptions by Weitzmann and Ramann. In fact, the example with the arpeggios is not even characteristic for the fantasy, since from a total length of 314 bars only less than two dozens are filled with them. A similar result is to be found when studying Thalberg's complete piano works. There is not a single bar to which the descriptions by Weitzmann and Ramann were suiting. Thalberg was insofar famous for a kind of playing which he had strictly avoided and never used.
The paradox shows that Weitzmann and Ramann had no concrete knowledge of Thalberg's works and had not taken his music to look at it. They only believed that his music was of the described kind. But their description had indeed been rather old. After Thalberg's Moise-fantasy had been published at end of March 1839, it was in August 1839 set as compulsory piece for the male participants of the yearly contest at the Paris Conservatoire. In a review in the Revue et Gazette et musicale of August 15, 1839, p. 310, it is to be read concerning the effect in the finale of Thalberg's fantasy,
Searching for an earliest mention of the arpeggios with thumbs-melodies leads to the beginning of Thalberg's rivalry with Liszt. Thalberg had in winter 1836-37 given three own concerts in Vienna and had together with the violinist Henri Vieuxtemps performed at a concert of Franz Göggel. The Moise-fantasy, afterwards an outstanding success, was not mentioned.[78] Apparently, the fantasy did not yet exist.
While Thalberg was still in Vienna, in the Revue et Gazette musicale of January 8, 1837, Liszt's review of some of Thalberg's piano works appeared. Liszt claimed that in the Grande fantaisie op.22 the left hand would always play arpeggios and nothing else besides.[79] The description was polemic and actually false, since in large parts of the piece the left hand plays quite different forms than arpeggios. But thumbs-melodies were not yet mentioned by Liszt.
As response to Liszt's review, in his essay "MM. Thalberg et Liszt"' in the Revue et Gazette musicale of April 23, 1837, Fétis claimed that Thalberg had created a new piano-style by uniting two different schools. While playing brilliant passages, Thalberg simultaneously executed a singing melody. Again, nothing had been said of thumbs-melodies. Only Liszt, in his reply in the Revue et Gazette musicale of May 14, 1837, wrote:
Fétis had written nothing of that kind; and in a letter to the editor of the Revue et Gazette musicale he protested against Liszt's insinuation.[80] But Thalberg had at his concert in the Paris Conservatoire on March 12, 1837, for the first time played his Moise-fantasy. The members of his audience got the impression of a magical effect.[81] They could see that in the finale Thalberg was with his left hand playing a bass and a harmonic accompanying. His right hand was busily occupied with rapid arpeggios. In addition, a broad melody was to be heard. Nobody knew how the apparent impossible was done. There were different attempts for an explanation, and Liszt's guess of the thumbs-melodies was the most successful one.[82] It was Thalberg's fate that exactly this guess, although erroneous, was following him until the end of his life. He could never get rid of it, how hard he ever tried.
While Thalberg was in the late 19th century only recognized as "Old Arpeggio", the imposing command of counterpoint in the fugue-finale of his Norma-fantasy had been forgotten. Liszt, who had taken the combination of cantilena and march for the finale of his own Norma-fantasy and the combination of tarantella and march in Thalberg's fantasy Op.52 on Auber's "La muette de Portici" for his Tarantella di Bravura, was now considered to be the inventor of those effects. Thalberg's Thême et Etude Op.45, in which rapid repetitions are used for the purpose of imitating the vibrato of a human voice, had been famous and most popular in the 1840s,[83] but until the late 19th century also this had been forgotten. The Scherzo Op.31 and the Fantasies Op.40 on "La Donna del Lago" and Op.42 on "Don Juan" had been played by many pianists. In all those works as well as in many others it was nothing included that could remind of arpeggios with thumbs-melodies. Nevertheless, this didn't help Thalberg who was still recognized as the famous arpeggio-virtuoso. The contemporaries of the 19th century only saw that what they wanted to see.
Still another error occurred in connection with the Moise-fantasy. In May 1839 Clara Wieck felt delighted by the melodies treated by Thalberg. Two years before, Liszt had written in his reply to the essay by Fétis, the fantasy had only been successful because of mighty melodies by Rossini. The argument was dangerous with respect to Liszt himself. It had been him whose fame as composer had been very poor since his times as child prodigy. In 1834 he had composed several new works; but every single one of them, as far as he had played it in public, had been declined as incomprehensible fantastic eccentricity. Liszt had especially been criticised for a lack of expressive melodies. During the winter 1835-36 in Geneva he had composed brilliant works instead, taking most popular melodies by Bellini and Rossini. In contrast to this, Thalberg had chosen a different strategy.
As usual case in those times, an operatic fantasy was composed as introduction, variations and finale. The introduction, typically rather short, was called "Fantasy". For this reason the title of some of Thalberg's earlier fantasies had been "Fantaisie et variations". In the Moise-fantasy, however, Thalberg had composed the first half of the piece, i.e. the first 157 bars, with own melodies. He had taken some short motifs by Rossini and very freely treated and extended them. The mighty melodies mentioned by Liszt and by which Clara Wieck felt delighted were in most parts melodies by Thalberg himself. Without Liszt was noticing it, his critique had been a compliment. Thalberg had shown strong capacities of own melodic invention.
The strategy, commencing with an atypical long introduction of own melodies, was kept in Thalberg's subsequent operatic fantasies up to his fantasy Op.67 on Donizetti's "Don Pasquale". In addition to his melodic invention, Thalberg was famous for the well-calculated accumulation of his effects as well as for the sensuous charms of his piano setting. In his best works he gave the impression of a poetic atmosphere, in some cases reminding of Chopin or Schumann. Liszt's point of view, in comparison with it, was a very rare exception.
In the long run, however, others were tempted by the successes of Thalberg's works to inundate the musical world with imitations ad nauseam. Without Thalberg's originality, they copied a handful of effects, above all the famous arpeggios with thumbs-melodies, of which the true inventor had been Liszt in his polemic reply to Fétis. All of this was considered to sound like Thalberg. In the end he was himself identified with most trivial productions of his imitators.[84]
Among the extensive work of Sigismond Thalberg composition is a funeral in the town of Zamora has become the anthem of the town, during Holy Week in Zamora the bands that accompany the "religious sculpture" funeral marches interpreted by different authors, but if one has penetrated deep into the feelings of Zamora is undoubtedly known as "March of Thalberg. It is certainly a symbol of Easter.
See List of compositions by Sigismond Thalberg