Ferruccio Busoni

Ferruccio Busoni (1 April 1866 27 July 1924) (given names: Ferruccio Dante Michelangiolo Benvenuto)[lower-roman 1] was an Italian composer, pianist, conductor, editor, writer, and piano teacher.

Busoni was born in Empoli, the son of professional musicians. Initially trained by his father, he later studied at the Vienna Conservatory and then with Wilhelm Mayer and Carl Reinecke. In the ensuing years, he devoted himself to composing, teaching, and touring as a virtuoso pianist in Europe and the United States. His writings on music were influential; they covered not only aesthetics but considerations of microtones and other innovative topics. His international career and reputation meant that he met and had close relations with many of the leading musicians , artists and literary figures of his time, and he was sought after both as a keyboard instructor and a teacher of composition. He was based in Berlin from 1894 but spent much of World War I in Switzerland.

Busoni was an outstanding (if sometimes controversial) pianist from an early age. He began composing in his early years in a late romantic style, but after 1907, when he published his Sketch for a New Esthetic of Music, he developed a more individual style, often with elements of atonality. His visits to America led to interest in North American indigenous tribal melodies which were reflected in some of his works. His compositions include works for piano, including a monumental Piano Concerto, and transcriptions of the works of others, notably Johann Sebastian Bach which appeared in the Bach-Busoni Edition. He further composed chamber music, vocal and orchestral works, and also operas, one of which, Doktor Faust, was left unfinished at the time of his death. Busoni died in Berlin at the age of 58.

Biography

Early career

Ferruccio Busoni, 1877

Busoni was born in the Tuscan town of Empoli, the only child of two professional musicians, Ferdinando, a clarinettist, and Anna (née Weiss), a pianist. The family shortly afterwards moved to Trieste. A child prodigy, largely taught by his father, he began performing and composing at the age of seven. In an autobiographical note he comments "My father knew little about the pianoforte and was erratic in rhythm, so he made up for these shortcomings with an indescribable combination of energy, severity and pedantry."[2] Busoni made his public debut as a pianist in a concert with his parents at the Schiller-Verein in Trieste on 24 November 1873 playing the first movement of Mozart's Sonata in C Major, and pieces by Schumann and Clementi.[3] Commercially promoted by his parents in a series of further concerts, he was later to say "I never had a childhood."[4] In 1875 he made his concerto debut playing Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 24.[5]

From the ages of nine to eleven, with the help of a patron, Busoni studied at the Vienna Conservatory. His first performances in Vienna were glowingly received by the critic Eduard Hanslick.[6] In 1877 he heard the playing of Franz Liszt, and was introduced to the composer who admired his playing.[7] In the following year he composed a four-movement concerto for piano and string quartet. Leaving Vienna he had a brief period of study in Graz with Wilhelm Mayer, and conducted a performance of his own composition Stabat Mater, Op. 55 in the composer's initial numbering sequence,[8] (BV 119, now lost) in 1879. Others of his early pieces were published at this time, including settings of Ave Maria (Opp. 1 and 2, BV 67) and some piano pieces.[6]

Busoni was elected in 1881 to the Accademia Filharmonica of Bologna, the youngest person to receive this honour since Mozart.[9] In the mid 1880s he was based in Vienna where he met with Karl Goldmark and helped to prepare the vocal score for the latter's 1886 opera, Merlin. He also met with Johannes Brahms, to whom he dedicated two sets of piano Etudes, and who recommended him to undertake study in Leipzig with Carl Reinecke.[6] During this period he supported himself by giving recitals, and also by the financial support of a patron, the Baronin von Tedesco. He also continued to compose, and made his first attempt at an opera, Sigune, which he worked on from 1886 to 1889 before abandoning the project.[10] In a letter he describes how, finding himself penniless in Leipzig, he appealed to the publisher Schwalm to take his compositions. Schwalm demurred but said he would commission a fantasy on Peter Cornelius's opera The Barber of Baghdad for fifty marks down, and a hundred on completion. The next morning Busoni turned up at Schwalm's office, and asked for 150 marks, handing over the completed work: "I worked from nine at night to three thirty, without a piano, and not knowing the opera beforehand."[11]

Helsingfors, Moscow, America 1888-1894

Ferruccio Busoni, c. 1900

In 1888 the musicologist Hugo Riemann recommended Busoni to Martin Wegelius, director of the Institute of Music at Helsingfors, (now Helsinki, Finland, then part of the Russian Empire), for the vacant position of advanced piano instructor. This was Busoni's first permanent post.[12] Amongst his close colleagues and associates there were the conductor and composer Armas Järnefelt, the writer Adolf Paul, and the composer Jean Sibelius, with whom he struck up a continuing friendship.[13] Paul described Busoni at this time as "a small, slender Italian with chestnut beard, grey eyes, young and gay, with ... a small round cap perched proudly on his thick artist's curls".[14] Between 1888 and 1890 Busoni gave about thirty piano recitals and chamber concerts in Helsingfors;[15] amongst his compositions at this period were a set of Finnish folksongs for piano duet Op. 27.[16] In 1889, visiting Leipzig, he heard a performance on the organ of JS Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor (BWV 565), and was persuaded by his pupil Kathi Petri (the mother of his future pupil Egon Petri, then only 5 years old), to transcribe it for piano. Busoni's biographer Edward Dent writes that "This was not only the beginning of [his] transcriptions, but ... the beginning of that style of pianoforte touch and technique which was entirely [Busoni's] creation."[17] Returning to Helsingfors, in March of the same year Busoni met his future wife, Gerda Sjöstrand, the daughter of Swedish sculptor Carl Eneas Sjöstrand, and proposed to her within a week. For her he composed Kultaselle (Finnish: To the beloved) for cello and piano, (published 1891 without opus number, BV 237).[18]

In 1890 Busoni published his first edition of works of JS Bach (the two- and three-part Inventions).[19] In the same year he won the prize for composition, with his Konzertstück (Concert Piece) for piano and orchestra Op. 31a (BV 236), at the first Anton Rubinstein Competition, initiated by Anton Rubinstein himself at the St. Petersburg Conservatory.[20] As a consequence he was invited to visit and teach at the Moscow Conservatoire. Gerda joined him in Moscow where they promptly married.[21] His first concert in Moscow, when he performed Beethoven's Emperor Concerto, was warmly received. But living in Moscow did not suit the Busonis for both financial and professional reasons; he felt excluded by his nationalistically-inclined Russian colleagues. So when he received an approach from William Steinway to teach at the Boston New England Conservatory of Music he was happy to take the opportunity, particularly as the conductor at that time of the Boston Symphony Orchestra was Arthur Nikisch, whom he had known since 1876, when they performed together at a concert in Vienna.[22]

Busoni's first son, Benvenuto (known as Benni) was born in Boston in 1892, but Busoni's experience at the Boston Conservatory proved unsatisfactory. After a year he resigned from the Conservatory and launched himself into a series of recitals across the Eastern USA.[23]

Berlin 1893-1913: "A new epoch"

Cartoon drawn for his wife by Busoni of his 1904 USA tour: "Map of the West of the United States showing the long and dolorous Tour, the anti-sentimental journey of F.B., 1904, Chicago"
Busoni in 1913

In April 1893 Busoni was present at the Berlin premiere of Giuseppe Verdi's opera, Falstaff. The result was to force on him a re-evaluation of the potential of Italian musical traditions which he had so far ignored in favour of the German traditions, and in particular the models of Johannes Brahms and the orchestral techniques of Liszt and Richard Wagner.[24] He immediately began to draft an adulatory letter to Verdi (which however he never summoned the courage to actually send), in which he addressed him as "Italy's leading composer" and "one of the noblest persons of our time", and in which he explained that "Falstaff provoked in me such a revolution of spirit that I can ...date the beginning of a new epoch in my artistic life from that time."[25]

In 1894 Busoni settled in Berlin, which he henceforth regarded as his home base, except during the years around World War I. His earlier feelings about the city had been unsympathetic: in an 1889 letter to Gerda he had described it as "this Jewish city that I hate, irritating, idle, arrogant, parvenu."[26][lower-roman 2] The city was swiftly growing in population and influence at this period and determined to stake itself as the musical capital of the united Germany;[32] but as Busoni's friend the English composer Bernard van Dieren points out "international virtuosi who for practical reasons chose Berlin as their abode were not so much concerned with questions of prestige", and for Busoni the city's development as "the centre of the musical industry [was to] develop an atmosphere which [Busoni] detested more than the deepest pool of stagnant convention."[33]

Berlin proved an excellent base for European tours. As in the previous two years in the USA Busoni had to depend for his living on exhausting but remunerative tours as a piano virtuoso; in addition at this period he was still remitting substantial amounts to his parents, who continued to depend on his income. As a recitalist Busoni's programming and style initially raised concerns in some of Europe's musical centres. His first concerts in London, in 1897, met with mixed comments. The Musical Times reported that he "commenced in a manner to irritate the genuine amateurs [i.e. music lovers] by playing a ridiculous travesty of one of Bach's masterly Organ Preludes and Fugues, but he made amends by an interpretation of Chopin's Studies (Op. 25) which was of course unequal but, on the whole, interesting".[34] In Paris the critic Arthur Dandelot commented "this artist has certainly great qualities of technique and charm", but strongly objected to his addition of chromatic passages to parts of Liszt's St. François de Paule marchant sur les flots.[35]

However Busoni's international reputation swiftly rose and he frequently concertized in Berlin, the other European capitals and in European regional centres (including Manchester, Birmingham, Marseilles, Florence, and many German and Austrian cities) throughout this period, as well as returning to America for four visits between 1904 and 1915:[36] his wandering life led van Dieren to call him "a musical Ishmael" (after the Biblical wanderer).[37] The musicologist Anthony Beaumont considers Busoni's six Liszt recitals in Berlin of 1911 as "the climax of Busoni’s pre-war career as a pianist".[38]

Busoni's performing commitments somewhat stifled his creative capacity during this period; in 1896 he wrote "I have great success as a pianist, the composer I conceal for the present."[39] His monumental Piano Concerto (which, in five movements, lasts over an hour and includes in its last movement an offstage male chorus) was written between 1901 and 1904.[40] In 1904 and 1905 Busoni wrote his Turandot Suite as incidental music for Carlo Gozzi's play Turandot.[41] A major project undertaken at this time was the opera Die Brautwahl, based on a tale by E. T. A. Hoffmann, first performed (to a luke-warm reception) in Berlin in 1912.[42] Busoni also began to produce the solo piano works in which his maturer style was clearly revealed, including the Elegies (BV 249, 1907), the suite An die Jugend (BV 252, 1909) and the first two piano sonatinas (BV 257, 1910 and BV 259, 1912).[43]

In a series of orchestral concerts in Berlin between 1902 and 1909, both as pianist and conductor, Busoni particularly promoted contemporary music from outside Germany. (He avoided contemporary music, except for his own, in his solo recitals).[44] The series, which was held at the at the Beethovensaal (Beethoven Hall), included German premieres of music by Edward Elgar, Sibelius, César Franck, Claude Debussy, Vincent D'Indy, Carl Nielsen and Béla Bartók. The concerts also included premieres of some of Busoni's own works of the period, amongst them, in 1904, the Piano Concerto, in which he was the soloist and the conductor was Karl Muck, in 1905 his Turandot Suite, and in 1907 his Comedy Overture.[45] Music of older masters was included, but sometimes with an unexpected twist - for example Beethoven's Third Piano Concerto with the eccentric first movement cadenza by Charles-Valentin Alkan (which includes references to Beethoven's Fifth Symphony).[46][47] The concerts aroused much publicity but generated aggressive comments from critics. Couling suggests the programming of the concerts was "generally regarded as a provocation".[48]

During the period Busoni undertook teaching at masterclasses at Weimar, Vienna and Basel. In 1900 he was invited by Duke Karl-Alexander of Weimar to lead a masterclass for fifteen young virtuosi. This concept was more amenable to Busoni than teaching formally in a Conservatory: the twice-weekly seminars were successful and were repeated in the following year. Pupils included Maud Allan, who later became famous as a dancer and remained a friend.[49] His experience in Vienna in 1907 was less satisfactory, although amongst his more rewarding pupils were Ignaz Friedmann, Leo Sirota, Louis Gruenberg, Józef Turczyński and Louis Closson; the latter four were dedicatees of pieces in Busoni's 1909 piano album An die Jugend. However, arguments with the Directorate of the Vienna Conservatoire, under whose auspices the classes were held, soured the atmosphere.[50] In the autumn of 1910 Busoni gave masterclasses and also carried out a series of recitals in Basel.[51]

In the years before World War I, Busoni steadily extended his contacts in the art world in general as well as amongst musicians. Arnold Schoenberg, with whom Busoni had been in correspondence since 1903, settled in Berlin in 1911 partially as a consequence of Busoni lobbying on his behalf. In 1913 Busoni arranged at his own apartment a private performance of Schoenberg's Pierrot Lunaire which was attended by, amongst others, Willem Mengelberg, Edgard Varèse, and Artur Schnabel.[52] In Paris in 1912 Busoni had meetings in Paris with Gabriele D'Annunzio who proposed collaboration in a ballet or opera.[53] He also met with the Futurist artists Filippo Marinetti and Umberto Boccioni;[54] the latter was later (1916) to paint a portrait of him, one of the artist's last works.[55]

Before and after World War I (1913-1920)

Following a series of concerts in Northern Italy in Spring 1913, Busoni was offered the directorship of the Liceo Rossini in Bologna. He had recently moved to an apartment in Viktoria-Luise-Platz in Schöneberg, Berlin, but took up the offer nonetheless, intending to spend his summers in Berlin. The posting was not however a success; Bologna was a cultural backwater, despite occasional visits from celebrities such as Isadora Duncan, his piano pupils were untalented, and he had constant arguments with the local authorities. After the outbreak of World War I in August 1914, he asked for a year of absence to play an American tour; in fact he was never to return. Virtually his sole permanent achievement at the school was to have modernized its sanitary facilities.[56] He had however during this time composed another concertante work for piano and orchestra, the Indian Fantasy. The piece is based on melodies and rhythms from various American Indian tribes; Busoni derived them from a book he had received from his former pupil, the ethnomusicologist Natalie Curtis Burlin during his 1910 tour of the USA. The work was premiered with Busoni as soloist in March 1914 in Berlin.[57]

From June 1914 to January 1915 Busoni was in Berlin: as the native of a neutral country (Italy) living in Germany, the outbreak of war did not at first greatly concern him. During this period he began to work seriously on the libretto for his proposed opera Doktor Faust. In January 1915 he left for a concert tour of the USA, which was to be his last visit there. During this time he continued work on his Bach edition, including his version of the Goldberg Variations.[58] On his return to Europe Italy had entered the War, and he therefore chose to base himself from 1915 in Switzerland. Here in Zürich he found local supporters in Volkmar Andreae, conductor of the Tonhalle Orchestra, and Philipp Jarnach. His friend José Vianna da Motta also taught piano at Geneva at this time. Andreae arranged for Busoni to give concerts with his orchestra.[59] Jarnach, who was 23 when he met Busoni in 1915, became Busoni's indispensable assistant, among other things preparing piano scores of his operas - Busoni referred to him as his "famulus".[60] While in America Busoni had already carried out further work on Doktor Faust and had written the libretto of his one-act opera Arlecchino - [61] He completed Arlecchino in Zürich and, to provide a full evening at the theatre, reworked his earlier Turandot into a one-act piece. The two were premiered together in Zürich in May 1917.[62]

In 1916 whilst visiting Italy, Busoni met with the Futurist artist Umberto Boccioni who painted his portrait; Busoni was deeply affected when a few months later Boccioni was killed (in a riding accident) whilst on military training, and published a strongly anti-war article.[63] An expanded re-issue of Busoni's 1907 work A New Esthetic of Music let to a virulent counter-attack from the German composer Hans Pfitzner and an extended war of words.[64] Busoni continued to experiment with microtones; in America he had obtained some harmonium reeds tuned in third-tones, and he claimed that he "had worked out the theory of a system of thirds of tones in two rows, each separated from each other by a semitone".[65]

Although Busoni met with many other artistic personalities who were also basing themselves in Switzerland during the war (including Stephan Zweig and James Joyce - the former noting Busoni's extensive drinking)[66] he soon found his circumstances limiting. After the end of the war, he again undertook concert tours in England, Paris and Italy.[67] When his former pupil Leo Kestenberg, now an official at the ministry of Culture in the German Weimar Republic, invited him to return to Germany, with the promise of a teaching post and productions of his operas, he was very glad to take the opportunity.[68]

Last years (1920-1924)

Commemorative plaque at site of Busoni's apartment in Schöneberg, Berlin

In 1920 Busoni returned to the Berlin apartment at Viktoria-Luise-Platz 11, Berlin-Schöneberg, which he had left in 1915. He was now in a state of declining health. Although he continued to give concerts his main concern was to complete Doktor Faust, the libretto of which had been published in Germany in 1918. In 1921 he wrote "Like a subterranean river, heard but not seen, the music for Faust roars and flows continually in the depths of my aspirations".[69]

In Berlin Busoni was at the heart of the musical world of the Weimar Republic era. His works, including his operas, were regularly programmed. He continued to perform whilst his health allowed it; problems of hyperinflation in Germany meant that he needed to undertake tours to England. His last appearance as a pianist was in Berlin in May 1922, playing Beethoven's Emperor Concerto.[70] Amongst his composition pupils in Berlin were Kurt Weill, Wladimir Vogel and Robert Blum, and he also during these last years had contact with Edgard Varèse, Igor Stravinsky, Hermann Scherchen and others.[71]

Busoni died in Berlin on 7 July 1924, officially from heart failure, although inflamed kidneys and overwork also contributed to his death.[72] Doktor Faust remained unfinished at his death and was premiered posthumously in Berlin in 1925 in a completion made by Jarnach.[73] Busoni's Berlin apartment was destroyed in an air-raid in 1943, and many of his possessions and papers were lost or looted. A plaque at the site commemorates his residence. Busoni's wife Gerda died in Sweden in 1956. Their son Benni, who despite his American nationality had lived in Berlin throughout World War II, died there in 1976. Their second son Lello, an illustrator, died in New York in 1962.[74]

Music

Compositions

Opus numbers

Busoni gave many (but not all) of his works opus numbers; some numbers apply to more than one work (after the composer dropped some of his earlier works from his acknowledged corpus). Nor are the composers's numbers all in temporal order.[75] The musicologist Jürgen Kindermann has prepared a thematic catalogue of his works and transcriptions which is also used, in the form of the letters BV (for Busoni Verzeichnis, German:Busoni Index: sometimes the letters KiV for Kindermann Verzeichnis are used) followed by an identifier, to identify his compositions and transcriptions. The identifier B (for Bearbeitung, German: arrangement) is used for Busoni's transcriptions and cadenzas - e.g. BV B 1 refers to Busoni's cadenzas for Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4.[76]

Early compositions

In 1917 Hugo Leichtentritt suggested that the Second Violin Sonata Op. 36a (BV 244), completed in 1900, "stands on the border-line between the first and second epochs of Busoni."[77] Van Dieren however asserts that in conversation Busoni "made no such claims for any work written before 1910. This means that he dated his work as an independent composer from the piano pieces An die Jugend...and the Berceuse in its original version for piano." (These works were actually written in 1909).[78] The Kindermann Busoni Verzeichnis (BV Index) lists over 200 compositions in the period to 1900, met with very rarely in the contemporary repertoire or in recording, mostly featuring piano, either as solo instrument or accompanying others, but also including some works for chamber ensemble and some for orchestra, amongst them two large-scale suites and a violin concerto.[79]

The first decade of the 20th century is described by the pianist Alfred Brendel as being for Busoni "a creative pause" after which he "finally gained an artistic profile of his own" as opposed to the "easy routine which had kept his entire earlier production on the tracks of eclecticism."[80] During this period appeared his Piano Concerto, Op. 39, one of the largest such works ever written both in terms of duration and of resources. Dent comments "In construction [the Concerto] is difficult to analyse...on account of the way in which themes are transferred from movement to another. The work has to be considered as a whole, and Busoni always desired it to be played straight through without interruption."[81] The press reaction to the premiere of the Concerto was largely outraged: the Tägliche Rundschau complained of "Noise, more noise, eccentricity and licentiousness"; another journal opined that "the composer would have done better to stay within more modest boundaries."[82] The other major work during this "creative pause" was the Turandot Suite. Busoni employed motifs from Chinese and other oriental music in the suite, though, as Leichtentritt points out, the Suite is "in fact the product of an Occidental mind, for whom the exact imitation of the real Chinese model would always be unnatural and unattainable...the appearance is more artistic than the real thing would be."[83] The Suite was first performed as a purely musical item in 1905; it was used in a production of the play in 1911, and was eventually transformed into a two-act opera in 1917.[84]

Busoni and Bach

Cover of first edition of Busoni's edition of Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, 1894

1894 saw the publication in Berlin of the first part of Busoni's edition of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach for the piano; the first book of The Well-Tempered Clavier.[85] This was equipped with substantial appendices, including one "On the Transcription of Bach's Organ Works for the Pianoforte". This was eventually to form a volume of the Bach-Busoni Edition, an undertaking which was to extend over thirty years. Seven volumes were edited by Busoni himself; these included the 1890 edition of the Two- and Three-Part Inventions.[86] [lower-roman 3] Busoni also began to publish his concert piano transcriptions of Bach's music, which he often included in his own recitals. These included some of Bach's chorale preludes for organ, the organ Toccata and Fugue in D minor, and the Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue.[88] These transcriptions go beyond literal reproduction of the music for piano and often involve substantial recreation, although never straying from the original rhythmic outlines, melody notes and harmony.[89] This is in line with Busoni's own concept that the performing artist should be free to intuit and communicate his divination of the composer's intentions.[90] Busoni adds tempo markings, articulation and phrase markings, dynamics and metronome markings to the originals, as well as extensive performance suggestions. In his edition of Bach's Goldberg Variations (BV B 35), for example, he suggests cutting eight of the variations for a "concert performance", as well as substantially rewriting many sections. Kenneth Hamilton comments that "the last four variations are rewritten as a free fantasy in a pianistic style which owes far more to Busoni than to Bach."[91]

On the death of his father in 1909, Busoni wrote in his memory a Fantasia after J. S. Bach (BV 253); and in the following year came his extended fantasy based on Bach, the Fantasia Contrappuntistica.[92]

"Sketch of a New Esthetic for Music"

Busoni wrote a number of essays on music. A significant publication, which set out the principles underlying his performances and his mature compositions, is the "Entwurf einer neue Ästhetike der Tonkunst (Sketch of a New Esthetic of Music)", first published in 1907, a collection of reflections which are "the outcome of convictions long held and slowly matured." The "Sketch" asserts that "The spirit of an artwork ... remains[s] unchanged in value through changing years" but its form, manner of expression and the conventions of the era when it was created "are transient and age rapidly"; and contains the maxim that "Music was born free; and to win freedom is its destiny".[93] It therefore takes issue with conventional wisdom on music, caricatured by Busoni as the constricting rules of the "lawgivers".[94] It praises the music of Beethoven and JS Bach as the essence of the spirit of music ("Ur-Musik") and says that their art should "be conceived as a beginning, and not as an unsurpassable finality."[95] Busoni asserts the right of the interpreter vis-a-vis the purism of the "lawgivers". "The performance of music, its emotional interpretation, derives from those free heights whence descended Art itself ... What the composer's inspiration necessarily loses through notation, his interpreter should restore by his own."[96] He envisages a future music that will include the division of the octave into more than the traditional 12 semitones.[97] However, he asserted the importance of musical form and structure: His idea of a 'Young Classicism'[lower-roman 4] "aimed to incorporate experimental features in "firm, rounded forms"...motivated each time by musical necessity." (Brendel).[99]

Mature compositions

Sketch by Busoni of the structure of his Fantasia Contrappuntistica, 1910.

Writing in 1917 , Hugo Leichtentritt described Busoni's mature style as having elements in common with those of Sibelius, Claude Debussy, Alexander Scriabin, and Arnold Schoenberg, noting in particular his movement away from traditional major and minor scales towards atonality.[100]

The first landmarks of this mature style are the group of piano works published in 1907-1912 (the Elegies, the suite An die Jugend and the first two piano sonatinas) and Busoni's first completed opera, Die Brautwahl; together with the rather different Bach homage, the 1910 Fantasia contrappuntistica, Busoni's largest work for solo piano. About half an hour in length, it is essentially an extended fantasy on the final incomplete fugue from Bach's The Art of Fugue. It uses several melodic figures found in Bach's work, most notably the BACH motif. Busoni revised the work a number of times and arranged it for two pianos.

Busoni also drew inspiration from North American indigenous tribal melodies drawn from the studies of ethnomusicologist, Natalie Curtis, which informed his Indian Fantasy for piano and orchestra of 1913 and two books of solo piano sketches, Indian Diary.

In 1917 Busoni wrote the one-act opera Arlecchino (1917) as a companion piece for his revision of Turandot as an opera. He began serious work on his opera Doktor Faust, in 1916, leaving it incomplete at his death. It was then finished by his student Philipp Jarnach, who worked with Busoni's sketches as he knew of them. In the 1980s Antony Beaumont created an expanded and improved completion by drawing on material to which Jarnach did not have access.

In the last seven years of his life Busoni worked sporadically on his Klavierübung, a compilation of exercises, transcriptions, and original compositions of his own, with which he hoped to pass on his accumulated knowledge of keyboard technique. It was issued in five parts between 1918 and 1922, and a second edition was published posthumously in 1925.

Editions, transcriptions and arrangements

Apart from his work on the music of Bach, Busoni edited and transcribed works by other composers. He edited three volumes of the 34-volume Franz Liszt Foundation's edition of Liszt's works, including most of the etudes, and the Grandes études de Paganini. Other Liszt transcriptions include his piano arrangement of Liszt's organ Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam" (BV B 59) (based on a theme from Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera Les Huguenots) and concert versions of two of the Hungarian Rhapsodies.[101]

Busoni also made keyboard transcriptions of works by Mozart, Franz Schubert, Niels Gade and others in the period 1886-1891 for the publisher Breitkopf und Härtel.[102] Later, during his earliest contacts with Arnold Schoenberg in 1909, he made a 'concert interpretation' of the latter's atonal Piano Piece, Op. 11, No. 2 (BV B 97) (which greatly annoyed Schoenberg himself).[103]

Busoni's own works sometimes feature incorporated elements of other composers' music. The fourth movement of An die Jugend (1909), for instance, uses two of Niccolò Paganini's Caprices for solo violin (numbers 11 and 15), while the 1920 piece Piano Sonatina No. 6 (Fantasia da camera super Carmen) is based on themes from Georges Bizet's opera Carmen.

Pianist

Busoni at the piano, c.1895

Brendel opines that "Busoni's piano-playing signifies the victory of reflection over bravura" after the more flamboyant era of Liszt. He cites Busoni himself: "Music is so constituted that every context is a new context and should be treated as an "exception". The solution of a problem, once found, cannot be reapplied to a different context. Our art is a theatre of surprise and invention, and of the seemingly unprepared. The spirit of music arises from the depths of our humanity and is returned to the high regions whence it has descended on mankind."[104]

Sir Henry Wood was surprised to hear Busoni playing passages in a Mozart concerto, written as single notes, with two hands in double octaves; at which Donald Tovey proclaimed Busoni "to be an absolute purist in not confining himself strictly to Mozart's written text", that is, that Mozart himself could have taken similar liberties. The musicologist Percy Scholes wrote that "Busoni, from his perfect command over every means of expression and his complete consideration of every phrase in a composition to every other phrase and to the whole, was the truest artist of all the pianists [I] had ever heard."[105]

Recordings

Audio recordings

Busoni's recorded output on gramophone record was very limited, and many of the original recordings were destroyed when the Columbia factory burnt down. Busoni mentions recording the Gounod-Liszt Faust Waltz in a letter to his wife in 1919. However, this recording was never released. He never recorded any of his own works.

Piano rolls

Busoni made a considerable number of piano rolls, and a small number of these have been re-recorded onto vinyl record or CD. These include a 1950 recording by Columbia Records sourced from piano rolls made by Welte-Mignon including music of Chopin and transcriptions by Liszt. The value of these recordings in ascertaining Busoni's performance style is a matter of some dispute. Many of his colleagues and students expressed disappointment with the recordings and felt they did not truly represent Busoni's pianism. Egon Petri was horrified by the piano roll recordings when they first appeared on vinyl and said that they were a travesty of Busoni's playing.[106] Similarly, Petri's student Gunnar Johansen who had heard Busoni play on several occasions, remarked, "Of Busoni's piano rolls and recordings, only Feux follets (no. 5 of Liszt's Transcendental Etudes) is really something unique. The rest is curiously unconvincing. The recordings, especially of Chopin, are a plain misalliance".[107]

Legacy

Busoni's impact on music was perhaps more through those who studied piano and composition with him, and through his writings on music, rather than through his compositions, of whose style there were no direct successors. However, Alfred Brendel has opined: "Compositions like the monstrously overwritten Piano Concerto...obstruct our view of his superlative late piano music. How topical still - and undiscovered - are the first two sonatinas...and the Toccata of 1921...Doktor Faust, now as ever, towers over the musical theatre of its time."[108]

The Ferruccio Busoni International Piano Competition was initiated in Busoni's honour in 1949, to commemorate the 25th anniversary of his death.[109]

Notes and References

Notes
  1. The names were chosen by his father to reflect Dante Alighieri, Michelangelo Buonarrotti and Benvenuto Cellini; but "in later life, Ferruccio, feeling that all these names involved too formidable a responsibility", quietly dropped them.[1] The spelling version 'Michelangelo' is sometimes found for his third given name; the spelling 'Michelangiolo' is given by (amongst others) Dent, who consulted with Busoni's wife and family in writing his life of the composer.
  2. In the context of the time, this need not be read as aggressive antisemitism. Factors in Busoni's life indicate placing this in context include: Busoni's great-great-grandfather on his mother's side was in fact half-Jewish (although he may not have been aware of this);[27] Busoni used Jewish melodies to characterize a Jewish character in his opera Die Brautwahl;[28] when during World War I Busoni took a stand against German aggression, Hans Pfitzner took the occasion to call his views "a manifestation of the international Jewish movement" against Germany;[29] in 1920 Busoni referred to his pupil Kurt Weill as "a very fine Jew, who will certainly make his way".[30] On the other hand, in protest at German hyper-inflation in 1923, he rewrote for concert performance an aria from Das Brautwahl, "The Gruesome Tale of the Jew Coiner Lippold", and naïvely expressed surprise when performance was turned down on the grounds of its anti-Semitic implications.[31]
  3. Busoni's work was also included in a 25-volume comprehensive "Busoni Edition" of Bach's keyboard works, the other volumes of which were undertaken by Petri and Bruno Muggelini.[87]
  4. Busoni's concept of 'Young Classicism' (in his original German 'Junge Klassizität') should be distinguished from the later inter-war movement of Neoclassicism, although his interest in musical form may have influenced the latter.[98]
References
  1. Dent (1933), pp. 7—8.
  2. Dent (1933), p.16.
  3. Dent (1933), p.17.
  4. Couling (2005) pp. 14–16
  5. Beaumont (2001) §1
  6. 1 2 3 Wirth (1980), p. 508
  7. Walker (1996), p. 367.
  8. See section Opus numbers in this article.
  9. Dent (1933), pp. 41—42.
  10. Couling (2005), pp. 70—1.
  11. Kogan (2010), p. 10.
  12. Wis (1977), p. 251.
  13. Wis (1977), p. 256.
  14. Wis (1977), p. 255.
  15. Wis (1977), pp. 267-269.
  16. Wis (1977), p. 258.
  17. Dent (1933), p. 86.
  18. Wis (1977), pp. 259—261.
  19. Dent (1933), p. 103
  20. Taylor (2007), p. 218.
  21. Wis (1977), p. 264.
  22. Couling (2005), p. 128.
  23. Dent (1933), pp. 97—100
  24. Dent (1933), pp. 115—117.
  25. Beaumont (1987), pp. 53—54.
  26. Couling (2005), p. 143.
  27. Couling (2005), p. 352.
  28. Knyt (2010) p. 233
  29. Kogan (2010), p. 101.
  30. Couling (2005), p. 330.
  31. Beaumont (1987), pp. 371, 374.
  32. Couling (2005), pp. 148—9.
  33. van Dieren (1935), p. 35.
  34. Scholes (1947), p. 318.
  35. Roberge (1996), p. 274.
  36. Couling (2005), pp. 166—73, pp. 183—8, pp. 215—6.
  37. van Dieren (1935), p. 44.
  38. Beaumont (n.d.), §1.
  39. Dent (1933), p. 105, p. 113.
  40. Beaumont (1985), p. 61.
  41. Beaumont (1985), p. 76.
  42. Beaumont (1985), p. 116.
  43. Beaumont (1985), p. 101, p.148, p.178.
  44. Wirth (1980), p. 509.
  45. Dent (1933), pp. 332—336.
  46. Dent (1933), p. 156
  47. Smith (2000), vol. 2, pp. 178—9.
  48. Couling (2005), p. 192.
  49. Dent (1933), pp. 125—128.
  50. Dent (1933), pp. 160—161; Beaumont (1997), p. 91.
  51. Couling (2005), p. 239.
  52. Beaumont (1985), pp. 26—7, 208.
  53. Dent (1933), pp. 197—8, 201—2.
  54. Dent (1933), p. 203.
  55. Beaumont (1987), p. 236.
  56. Dent (1933), pp. 205—225.
  57. .Beaumont (1985), pp. 190—191.
  58. Dent (1933), pp. 220—223
  59. Dent (1933), p. 229.
  60. Couling (2005), p. 311
  61. Dent (1933), p. 223
  62. Beaumont (1985), p. 219, p. 240.
  63. Dent (1933), p. 231-2.
  64. Couling (2005), p. 306-10.
  65. Couling (2005), p. 292.
  66. Couling (2005), p. 290, p. 311
  67. Dent (1933), pp. 240-247.
  68. Couling (2005), p. 318-322.
  69. Dent (1933), p. 264.
  70. Dent (1933), pp. 265-271; Coulson (2005), p. 337.
  71. Coulson (2005), pp. 335-336.
  72. Coulson (2005), pp. 351-352.
  73. Beaumont (1995), p. 311.
  74. Coulson (2005), pp. 353-354.
  75. Dent (1933), p. 37.
  76. Kindermann (1980)
  77. Leichtentritt (1917), p. 76.
  78. van Dieren (1935), p. 52.
  79. Roberge (1991), pp. 8—63
  80. Brendel (1976), p. 208.
  81. Dent (1933), p. 142.
  82. Couling (2005), pp. 195—196.
  83. Leichtentritt (1917). p. 79.
  84. Dent (1933), pp. 152-3, p. 233.
  85. Dent (1933), p. 348.
  86. Beaumont (1985), pp. 375—376.
  87. see Beaumont (1987), p. 111.
  88. Dent (1933), pp. 318—319.
  89. Leichentritt (1914), p. 88.
  90. Busoni (1907), p. 11.
  91. Hamilton (1998), pp. 66—67.
  92. Beaumont (1985), p.137, p. 160.
  93. Busoni (1911), p. 3.
  94. Busoni (1911), p. 1.
  95. Busoni (1911), p. 4.
  96. Busoni (1911), p. 7.
  97. Busoni (1911), p. 10—12.
  98. See Brendel (1976), pp. 114—115.
  99. Brendel (1976), p. 108.
  100. Leichtentritt (1917), p. 95.
  101. Beaumont (1985), p. 377.
  102. Leichtentritt (1917), p. 72.
  103. See Beaumont (1997), pp. 314—318,
  104. Brendel (1976), p. 211.
  105. Citations and comment from Scholes (1947), p. 318.
  106. Sitsky (1986) p. 329.
  107. Johansen, Gunnar (1979). "Busoni the pianist – in Perspective". The Piano Quarterly, Vol. 28. pp. 46–47.
  108. Brendel (1976), p. 118.
  109. "History of the competition", Ferruccio Busoni International Piano Competition website, accessed 28 April 2015

Sources

  • Beaumont, Anthony (1985). Busoni the Composer. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-13149-2. 
  • Beaumont, Anthony, ed. (1987). Busoni: Selected Letters. New York:Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-06460-8
  • Beaumont, Anthony (2001). "Busoni, Ferruccio (Dante Michelangelo Benvenuto)". Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 9 February 2016.  (subscription required)
  • Bertoglio, Chiara (2012). Instructive Editions and Piano Performance Practice: A Case Study. Saarbrücken: Lambert Academic Publishing. ISBN 978-3-8473-2151-4
  • Brendel, Alfred (1976). Musical Thoughs and After-Thoughts. London: Robson Books. ISBN 0-903895-43-9. 
  • Busoni, Ferruccio (1911). Sketch of a New Esthetic of music. Translated by Th. Baker. New York: G. Schirmer. OCLC 13835974. 
  • Couling, Della (2005). Ferruccio Busoni: "A Musical Ishmael". Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810851423. 
  • Dent, Edward J. (1933). Ferruccio Busoni: A Biography, London: Oxford University Press. (Reprint: London: Ernst Eulenberg, 1974) ISBN 0-903873-02-8
  • Hamilton, Kenneth (1998), "The virtuoso tradition", in Rowland, David, The Cambridge Companion to the Piano, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 57–74, ISBN 9780521479868 
  • Hamilton, Kenneth (2008). After the Golden Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517826-5. 
  • Kindermann, Jürgen (1980). Thematisch-chronologisches Verzeichnis der Werke von Ferruccio B. Busoni. Studien zur Musikgeschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts, vol. 19. Regensburg: Gustav Bosse Verlag. ISBN 3-7649-2033-5
  • Knyt, Erinn E. (2010). ""How I Compose": Ferruccio Busoni's Views about Invention, Quotation, and the Compositional Process". The Journal of Musicology 27 (2): 224–264. JSTOR 10.1525/jm.2010.27.2.224.  (subscription required)
  • Kogan, Grigory (2010). Busoni as Pianist. Translated by Svetlana Belsky. Rochester: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-335-5. 
  • Leichtentritt, Hugo (1917). "Ferruccio Busoni as a Composer". The Musical Quarterly 3 (2): 69–87. 
  • Roberge, Marc-André (1996). "Ferruccio Busoni et la France". Revue de Musicologie 82 (2): 269–305. JSTOR 947129.  (subscription required)
  • Roberge, Marc-André (2015). Opus Sorabjianum. v. 1.13. Québec: Marc-André Roberge.  Online book only. Accessed February 18, 2016.
  • Scholes, Percy A. (1947). The Mirror of Music 1844-1944. London: Novello and Company. OCLC 634410668. 
  • Sitsky, Larry (1986). Busoni and the Piano: The Works, the Writings, and the Recordings. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313236712
  • Smith, Ronald (2000). Alkan: The Man, The Music (2 vols in 1). London: Kahn and Averill. ISBN 9781871082739
  • Stevenson, Ronald (1987). "Book review: Ferruccio Busoni -Selected Letters translated and edited by Antony Beaumont.". Tempo (New Series, 163): 27–29. JSTOR 945689.  (subscription required)
  • Taylor, Philip S. (2007). Anton Rubinstein: A Life in Music. Bloomingdale and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253348715. 
  • van Dieren, Bernard (1935). Down among the Dead Men. London: Humphrey Milford (Oxford University Press). OCLC 906126003. 
  • Vogel, Wladimir (1968). "Impressions of Ferruccio Busoni". Perspectives of New Music 6 (2): 167–173. JSTOR 832359.  (subscription required)
  • Walker, Alan (1996). Franz Liszt. Volume 3: The Final Years 1861-1880. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 9780394525426. 
  • Wirth, Helmut (1980). "Busoni, Ferruccio (Dante Michelangelo Benvenuto)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 3. London: Macmillan. pp. 508–512. ISBN 0-333-23111-2. 
  • Wis, Roberto (1968). "Busoni and Finland". Acta Musicologica, 49 (2): 250–269. JSTOR 932592.  (subscription required)

Further reading

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