The music of Franz Joseph Haydn (1732–1809) is so technically superb, so widely imitated, and so rich in quality and quantity that almost since the moment of its creation it has exemplified the Classical style.
More than any other single composer, it was Haydn who created the Classical-era symphony. And his 68 string quartets? They are the standard by which all other Classical string quartets were and are judged. No less an expert than Mozart wrote that it was from Haydn that he had learned how to write quartets.
And yet this gentle, creative dynamo, who penned more than 1,000 works over a 50-year career and remained musically vital well past middle age, is all too often thought of as an aged figure surpassed and overshadowed by Mozart and Beethoven.
A Father, Not a Fossil
Not so, as Professor Robert Greenberg shows. The musicians who worked for Haydn called him "Papa" not because he was a fossil, but because of his unfailing kindness to them in an age when professional musicians were often treated poorly.
In truth, Haydn is one of the most original and influential composers of all time. He was the only musical contemporary whom Mozart admired. You learn from Professor Greenberg about the artistically fruitful friendship that grew between Mozart and Haydn.
He taught Beethoven. You can learn about the more troubled dealings Haydn had with Beethoven—whose Ninth Symphony, nonetheless, would be unimaginable without the influence of Haydn's Creation, the towering 1798 oratorio in praise of God's generosity, that crowned Haydn's career.
The Beauty of The Creation
In the culminating lectures of the series, you'll learn how The Creation perfectly expresses Haydn's rich inner world and personality: His childlike wonder, purehearted sensual joy, and genial humor mix seamlessly with profound faith, great nobility of expression, and genuine religious devotion.
In Haydn's works, the demands of popular entertainment and lofty aesthetic theory blend smoothly. Each piece strikes a new and finely judged balance between limpid accessibility and the integrity of compositional craft.
To know the man behind such works is to see Haydn's extraordinary achievement not merely as a technical feat or a display of pure talent—though surely these are involved—but as the work of a whole person, a triumph of generosity and the human spirit.
Haydn: A Brief Biography
Haydn was born on March 31, 1732, in an ethnically diverse part of Austria, near the Hungarian border. His music expressed this ethnically diverse environment.
When he was almost six years old, Haydn's soprano voice attracted his first music teacher, Johann Franck, a school principal and choir director in the town of Hainburg.
Young Haydn was sent off to Franck's school at that tender age. He was subjected to a rigorous and harsh life (thrashings were common), but he was also exposed to an extraordinary amount of music. He was taught the rudiments of music theory, singing, and keyboard and string playing, for which he remained grateful to Franck for the rest of his life.
At age eight, Haydn's musical ability attracted the attention of Georg Reutter, choir master at the Cathedral of St. Stephen's in Vienna, the most important church in the most important city in German-speaking Europe. For the next nine years, as a choirboy at the cathedral, he was exposed to the best music in Europe at that time. He learned to compose slowly and painstakingly through practical experience and hard work.
After his voice broke, Haydn was turned out of St. Stephen's to fend for himself in the great city of Vienna. He eked out a living by teaching, accompanying, singing, playing the organ and violin, and composing dance music.
In 1758, Haydn hit professional and financial pay dirt. He was hired by Count Morzin to be court music director and composer. With an orchestra at his disposal, it was for Count Morzin that Haydn wrote his first symphonies, among many other works.
Unqualified Musical Success
Haydn's musical development was an unqualified success, but his marriage to Maria Anna Keller was not. Maria Anna was, we are told, an ugly, quarrelsome, bitter woman who could not have children. Haydn would regret his marriage for the rest of his life, and his ultimate estrangement from his wife led to discreet affairs with women.
Haydn worked hard for the Esterházy family, and the opportunities his position gave him were enormous. At the magnificent palace of Esterháza in the Hungarian countryside, Haydn had the time he needed to develop his craft. The court orchestra played virtually everything he wrote, and his employer, Prince Nicholas Esterházy ("the Magnificent"), who had succeeded his brother Paul Anton, encouraged Haydn to experiment in every genre.
Some critics disliked the mixture of the serious and the comic in Haydn's music. But as time went on, Haydn acquired an international celebrity that far outweighed any criticism. Among his admirers was the much younger Mozart, for whom Haydn had a mutual regard. The two became great friends. Haydn's six String Quartets, op. 33, inspired Mozart to write six quartets of his own, and he dedicated them to Haydn.
In 1790, Haydn's employer Prince Nicholas died, and Haydn found himself free to leave Esterháza. The impresario Johann Peter Salomon took him to London, where Haydn immediately became the toast of the town. For this visit and his subsequent visit in 1794, he wrote his greatest symphonies, the London symphonies.
When he returned to Vienna in 1795, it was a far more "Haydn-friendly" place. A new Esterházy prince, Nicholas II, came into Haydn's life, and he liked old-style church music. Haydn's great masterworks of these years are the oratorios The Creation and The Seasons.
After completing The Seasons in April 1801, Haydn's health began to fail. With characteristic generosity he wrote a will that included everybody from his closest relatives to a shoemaker.
The last great moment of Haydn's public life occurred on March 27, 1808, when The Creation was performed at the university in Vienna in honor of his 76th birthday. The illustrious audience included the composers Beethoven, Salieri, and Hummel, as well as the highest aristocracy.
Haydn's audience knew he was approaching his death, and the performance became an almost mystical event. In one touching moment, Princess Esterházy saw Haydn shiver and covered his shoulders with her shawl. Soon other ladies followed suit until he was completely covered.
Haydn never appeared in public again. He died "blissfully and gently" on May 31, 1809.
Works you'll hear in the lectures are excerpted from:
Symphony no. 45 in F-sharp Minor (Farewell) (1772)
String Quartet in C Major, op. 33, no. 3 (The Bird) (1781)
String Quartet in E-flat Major, op. 33, no. 2 (The Joke) (1781)
Symphony no. 92 in G Major (1789)
Symphony no. 94 in G Major (Surprise) (1792)
Symphony no. 102 in B-flat Major (London) (1794)
Symphony no. 104 in D Major (final London symphony) (1795)
Piano Trio in F-sharp Minor (1794)
Trumpet Concerto (1796)
String Quartet, op. 76, no. 3 in C Major (The Emperor) (1797)
Robert Greenberg
San Francisco Performances
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Robert Greenberg, Ph.D., is music historian-in-residence with San Francisco Performances. A graduate of Princeton University, Professor Greenberg holds a Ph.D. in Music Composition from the University of California, Berkeley, and has seen his compositions—which include more than 45 works for a wide variety of instrumental and vocal ensembles—performed all over the world, including New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Los Angeles, England, Ireland, Greece, Italy, and the Netherlands.
He has served on the faculties of the University of California at Berkeley, California State University at Hayward, and the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, and has lectured for some of the most prestigious musical and arts organizations in the United States, including the San Francisco Symphony, the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the Van Cliburn Foundation, and the Chicago Symphony. For The Teaching Company, he has now recorded more than 500 lectures on a range of composers and classical music genres. His many honors include three Nicola de Lorenzo Composition Prizes and a Koussevitzky commission from the Library of Congress. He has been profiled in various major publications, including The Wall Street Journal; Inc. magazine; and the London Times.
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读完三分之一时,我简直要被其中对“灵感”与“技艺”之间辩证关系的论述给迷住了。这本书并没有落入那种将伟大作曲家神化的窠臼,相反,它非常坦诚地揭示了天才光环背后那些不为人知的挣扎和刻苦的打磨。我记得其中一个章节详细对比了两位不同时代作曲家的草稿本——一位倾向于一气呵成的灵感迸发,另一位则像一位精密的钟表匠,反复推敲每一个对位和声部,直到达到近乎完美的逻辑自洽。这种对比的呈现方式极其高明,它没有直接评判谁优谁劣,而是引导读者去思考:在那个音乐语言尚处于快速演化期的年代,不同的创作路径如何共同构建了欧洲古典音乐的宏伟殿堂。书中的语言风格在这里变得更加私人化和富有感染力,仿佛作者是一位经验丰富的导师,正耐心地为你拆解一个复杂的谜题,让你既敬佩大师的成就,又为他们所付出的心血感到震撼。它成功地将“创作”这个抽象的概念,具象化为一种需要意志力、知识储备和审美直觉的艰巨劳动。
评分这本书的排版和插图设计也值得称赞。它不是那种典型的学院派死板读物,在必要的乐谱摘录旁边,总能穿插一些当时流行的油画、建筑素描,甚至是当时乐器制造厂的广告复刻件。这些视觉元素并非简单的点缀,它们构成了理解音乐语境的重要辅助线索。例如,在讨论某个协奏曲的华彩段落时,作者紧接着展示了一幅当时流行的洛可可风格室内装饰图,那种繁复、轻盈、充满装饰性的美学趣味,立刻在你脑海中为音乐的特征搭好了背景。这种跨媒介的解读方式,极大地拓宽了我的理解维度,让我意识到音乐的“风格”从来不是孤立存在的,它是与当时的主流审美、物质文化、甚至哲学思潮相互渗透的结果。我开始尝试用“看”的方式去“听”音乐,用“听”的方式去“看”那个时代的生活图景,这种感官的联通带来了非常愉悦的阅读体验,也使得原本枯燥的风格分析变得生动有趣。
评分随着阅读的深入,我逐渐感受到作者在处理历史争议性问题时的克制与深度。面对音乐史上那些常常引发口水战的“谁是原创者”、“谁模仿了谁”的争端,这本书采取了一种非常成熟的“多声部”叙事策略。它不是简单地站队,而是会细致地梳理出每一方观点的历史渊源和论证逻辑,甚至会引用一些当代学者已经推翻但当时极具影响力的理论。这种处理方式的益处在于,它培养了读者批判性思维,让我明白了历史不是一个单一的叙事,而是一个由无数相互竞争的解释构成的复杂场域。这种开放性的探讨,让我对那些历史上的“定论”保持了一种健康的怀疑和探究欲。它教会我,去欣赏一部伟大作品,不仅仅要了解它写了什么,更要理解围绕它存在过哪些不同的“听法”和“评价体系”。
评分这本厚重的书,光是拿到手里,就能感受到它沉甸甸的分量,纸张的质感也透着一股典雅的书卷气。我本以为这是一本纯粹的音乐理论专著,毕竟“大师”这个词听起来就带着一种高高在上的学术气息。然而,当我翻开第一页,被吸引住的却是那些细腻入微的笔触,它们描绘的不是枯燥的音符排列,而是作曲家们在那个特定历史时期所处的社会环境,他们如何与宫廷、教会、以及新兴的市民阶层进行微妙的互动。书中对那个时代音乐赞助制度的探讨尤其精彩,它清晰地揭示了艺术创作如何被现实的经济基础所塑造。比如,作者对交响曲早期发展阶段的分析,不再仅仅关注结构上的创新,而是深入挖掘了面向大众的剧院和沙龙文化如何催生了更具戏剧张力和可听性的音乐语言。这种将艺术史与社会史紧密结合的叙事方式,让原本可能显得晦涩的古典音乐研究变得鲜活起来,仿佛能透过文字的缝隙,嗅到十八世纪维也纳空气中弥漫的尘土与香水味。我发现自己不再是被动地接受知识,而是在和作者一起,像一个历史侦探一样,去重新审视那些耳熟能详的音乐作品,探寻其诞生的土壤。
评分最后一部分关于音乐的传播和接受史的分析,对我触动最深。它不再聚焦于创作端,而是转向了“听众”的演变。书中描述了从贵族宴会厅到公共音乐厅,再到如今的录音室成品,音乐在听众那里经历了怎样的“意义折旧”或“意义增值”的过程。尤其有趣的是,作者对比了首演时观众的反应和几个世纪后现代观众的反应,揭示了音乐作品的“生命力”在于它能不断适应和被重新诠释的能力。例如,某个被创作时被认为是“离经叛道”的作品,在后世如何被奉为圭臬,而反观当时风靡一时的流行小品,如今却销声匿迹。这种对时间维度下艺术生命周期的洞察,让这本书的价值远远超出了对某个特定作曲家的研究,它更像是一部关于“艺术不朽性”的哲学探讨。合上书页时,我感觉自己不仅对音乐史有了更清晰的认识,对艺术本身也多了一份谦卑和敬畏。
评分2010.3.7 补完 听完才发现以前果然听过了... 不过我还是很爱Haydn. Professor Greenberg is so engaging and passionate.
评分2010.3.7 补完 听完才发现以前果然听过了... 不过我还是很爱Haydn. Professor Greenberg is so engaging and passionate.
评分2010.3.7 补完 听完才发现以前果然听过了... 不过我还是很爱Haydn. Professor Greenberg is so engaging and passionate.
评分2010.3.7 补完 听完才发现以前果然听过了... 不过我还是很爱Haydn. Professor Greenberg is so engaging and passionate.
评分2010.3.7 补完 听完才发现以前果然听过了... 不过我还是很爱Haydn. Professor Greenberg is so engaging and passionate.
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