Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann (14 May 1805 – 10 March 1900) was, together with his son-in-law Niels W. Gade, the leading Danish composer of the 19th century.[1] According to Alfred Einstein, he was ″the real founder of the Romantic movement in Denmark and even in all Scandinavia″.[2] J.P.E. Hartmann was the third generation of composers in the Danish musical Hartmann family.
Danish composer
Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann
Biography
Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann was born and died in Copenhagen, Denmark. He was the son of composer August Wilhelm Hartmann (1775–1850) and Christiane Petrea Frederica Wittendorff (1778–1848), and the grandson of composer Johann Hartmann (1726-1793), who had originally emigrated to Denmark from Silesia. J.P.E. Hartmann himself was largely self taught. Complying with his father's wishes (who wanted to protect him from the uncertainties of a musician's life), he studied the law and consequently worked as a civil servant from 1829 to 1870, whilst pursuing an extensive musical career. By 1824, he became organist at the Garnisons Kirke in Copenhagen, and in 1832, he made a first major impression on audiences with the opera Ravnen.[3] The opera received a long and positive review from Robert Schumann. The libretto was by Hartmann’s lifelong friend Hans Christian Andersen with whom he later cooperated on numerous other works, cantatas, songs, incidental music or operas (among others his popular opera Liden Kirsten). Hartmann also cooperated with most other important Danish writers of his time, such as Henrik Hertz on his opera Korsarerne or with Adam Øhlenschlæger, writing incidental music and overtures to several of his plays, as well as music in the form of both songs and also melodramas for some of his poems (e.g. Guldhornene), and cooperating in writing numerous cantatas.
In 1836, he made a study tour to Germany and France, where he made the acquaintance of Frédéric Chopin, Gioachino Rossini, Luigi Cherubini, Gaspare Spontini and Louis Spohr. In his early musical life, Spohr and the Danish composer Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse were Hartmann's most important mentors, as well as Heinrich Marschner. Further journeys to Germany followed in the next few years, during which he met Mendelssohn, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms and other renowned composers of the time. He also founded the Copenhagen Music Society (Musikforeningen) in 1836, remaining its chairman until the end of his life. In 1843, he transferred from Garnisons Kirke to play the organ for Copenhagen's cathedral, the Vor Frue Kirke, and became the director of the Student Choral Association. He held both these posts until his death.[4] His proverbially gentle character made him very popular, his compatriots organising year on year numerous impressive feasts to celebrate his birthday.
In 1867, after having taught several subjects at the Danish Academy of Music which originally was founded in 1825 by Giuseppe Siboni (1780–1839), Hartmann helped co-establish and also direct the Royal Danish Academy of Music (KøbenhavnsMusikkonservatorium) with Niels Gade (1817–1890) and Holger Simon Paulli (1810–1891).[5][6][7]
J. P. E. Hartmann by August Saabye 1905, Sankt Annæ Plads, Copenhagen
Hartmann's works are characterized by artistic seriousness, dramatic vitality, and in particular, by national coloring. The Nordic elements, which can be discerned in the themes based on folksongs, modulations, and the tendency towards rather dark sounds, emerged strongly after the 1830s. Hartmann united these Romantic influences with a strong control over both form and theme, acquired through his Classical training.[11]
Hartmann's life covered the whole 19th century and his very varied output makes it difficult to slot him in one category. His early works, such as Flute Sonata or a Piano Quartet were still written in Beethoven's lifetime and are naturally in the style of the Viennese classicist period. Influences from the then prevailing German models - Weber, Spohr or Marschner - can also be detected. Much of his later work belongs the generation of Robert Schumann or Felix Mendelssohn. Still his style continued developing over the years. Later compositions, such as the monumental A-Minor piano sonata or some Overtures (Yrsa) bear some similarities with Brahms. And there are pre-modernist accents in many of his latest pieces pointing notably to Carl Nielsen. His work had a strong influence on Scandinavian composers of later generations such as Edvard Grieg, Peter Erasmus Lange-Mueller or Carl Nielsen. His ever increasing originality gave him the nickname of being the «old manprodigy» («Vidunderolding»). Overall, his music displays great diversity, going from humour and poetry to drama and tragedy.[12]
Works
Orchestral
Symphony No. 1 in G minor, Op. 17 (1835)
Symphony No. 2 in E, Op. 48 (1847–48)
Twelve Overtures
Concert overture, Op. 3 (1825)
Sacred overture, Op. 9 (1827)
Ravnen, Op. 12 (1830–32)
Korsarerne, Op. 16 (1832–35)
Hakon Jarl, Op. 40 (1844)
Liden Kirsten, Op. 44 (1844–46)
Concert overture, Op. 51 (1852)
Axel og Valborg, Op. 57 (1856)
Correggio, Op. 59 (1858)
En Efteraarsjagt, Op. 63 (1864, dedicated to Niels W. Gade)
Soerensen, Inger (1999). Hartmann. Et Dansk komponistdynasti (in Danish). Copenhagen: Gyldendal. ISBN87-00-34688-8.
Soerensen, Inger (1999). Hartmann. Et dansk komponistdynasti (in Danish). Copenhagen: Gyldendal. ISBN87-00-34688-8.
Other sources
"Hartmann 3) Johann Peter Emilius" in Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, Leipzig and Vienna: Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts, 1885–92, 4th ed., vol. 8, pp.185–86. (in German)
William Behrend, J.P.E. Hartmann: En Levnedskildring, Gyldendal, 1918, 93 pages
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