Wenzel Krumpholz
Wenzel Krumpholz, or Václav Krumpholz (born at Zlonice, near Prague in 1750, died Vienna May 2, 1817) was a musician who played mandolin and violin. He studied the mandolin at an early age and became one of the most renowned performers on this instrument. At a later date he adopted the violin also, for in 1796 he was one of the first violins in the orchestra of the Court Opera, Vienna.[1]
Krumpholz was the son of a bandmaster in a French regiment who lived in Paris during childhood, learning music from his father. His brother, Johann Baptist Krumpholz, was also a musician, a celebrated harpist and composer.[1]
According to music historian Philip J. Bone, there was a strong friendship between Wenzel Krumpholz and Ludvig von Beethoven. Bone talked about the relationship between Krumpholz and Beethoven in his book The Guitar and Mandolin. He said that Krumpholz's name was "immortalized by his intimacy with Beethoven, who was exceedingly fond of him, and who used to call him in joke mein Narr (my fool)."[1]
He talked about what men in the music business had to say about the Beethoven-Krumpholz friendship: according to Ferdinand Ries, Krumpholz gave Beethoven instruction on the violin when in Vienna and it is most probable he gave instruction on the mandolin. Carl Czerny said in his autobiography, that he it was Krumpholz who had introduced him to Beethoven and that Krumpholz was one of the first to recognise Beethoven's genius, and inspired others with his own enthusiasm.[1][2]
Bone said that Krumpholz frequently played the mandolin to Beethoven and indicated that it influenced Beethoven to write a mandolin piece. He talked about research done by Dominco Artaria, who had bought a Skizzenbook, containing sketches of some of Beethoven's music. Artaria stated in his Aittographische Skizze that Beethoven intended writing a sonata for mandolin and pianoforte for Krumpholz. This composition is the one sketched in Beethoven's note book (preserved as (No. 29,801) in the manuscript department of the British Museum) and it was first made public by Breitkopf and Hartel, Leipzig.[1][3]
On the day following Krumpholz's death, Beethoven composed the Gesang der Mönche from Schiller's William Tell, for three men's voices "in commemoration of the sudden and unexpected death of our Krumpholz." Only two of Krumpholz's compositions were printed.[1]
He taught Jean Joseph Benoit Pollet the mandolin. That same student learned harp from his brother Johann Baptist Krumpholz.
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Philip J. Bone, The Guitar and Mandolin, biographies of celebrated players and composers for these instruments, London: Schott and Co., 1914.
- ↑ [Christopher John Murray, Encyclopedia of the Romantic Era, 1760-1850, p. 246]
- ↑ Ludwig van Beethoven, Skizzenbuch "Engelmann" zu den Diabelli-Variationen op. 120 und der 9. Sinfonie op. 125, Autograph