Article contents
Gottfried van Swieten Patron of Haydn and Mozart
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 1962
Extract
The Picture of Gottfried van Swieten which is found in musical literature can scarcely be described as wholly favourable. It has long been recognised that his tastes in music influenced Mozart profoundly, but his close-fistedness has been blamed for contributing to the composer's poverty, and finally for giving Mozart only the cheapest possible funeral. In his dealings with Haydn, Swieten is acknowledged as the leader of that group of the nobility which sponsored the Creation and the Seasons, but this credit is more than balanced by criticism of his libretti to the two oratorios. At the best, it would seem, van Swieten's presence in Vienna was a mixed blessing.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1962
Footnotes
The author would like to thank the members of Birmingham University who played in the orchestra which recorded the van Swieten symphony.
The musical examples from Mozart's Suite in C major, and Haydn's Seasons were transferred from gramophone records onto magnetic tape by courtesy of the World Record Club, Ltd., and E.M.I. Records, Ltd., without whose permission such re-recording would have constituted an infringement of copyright.
References
1 See Deutsch, O. E., Mozart, die Dokumente seines Lebens, Kassel, 1961, P. 75–6.Google Scholar
2 The Letters of Mozart and hιs Family, tr. & ed. E. Anderson, London, 1938, p. 1192.Google Scholar
3 ibid., p. 1194.Google Scholar
4 Joseph Weigl, Autobiographic, Vienna Nationalbibliothek, MS. S.m. 3347.Google Scholar
5 K. 404a & 405.Google Scholar
6 See Schmid, E. F., ‘Gottfried van Swieten als Komponist’, Mozart Jahrbuch, 1953, 15ff.Google Scholar
7 Johann Baptist Schenk, ‘Autobiographischc Skizze’, Studιen zur Musikwissenschaft, xi (1924), 77f.Google Scholar
8 The Public Advertiser, June 14th, 1769, &c.Google Scholar
9 Autobiographιc des Vice Hof-Kapellmeιsters Joseph Weigl, Vienna Nationalbibliothek, MS. S.m. 8952, f. IV.Google Scholar
10 letter of 6 June 1786, Vienna Nationalbibliothek, Codex 9718, f. 89–90.Google Scholar
11 See Adler, S., Dιe Unterrιchtsverfassung Kaiser Leopolds II, Vienna & Leipzig, 1917.Google Scholar
12 Anderson, op. cit., p. 1200–2.Google Scholar
13 ibid., p. 1384.Google Scholar
14 See Holschneider, A., ‘Die “Judas-Macchabaus”-Bearbeitung der österreichischen Nationalbibliothek’, Mozart Jahrbuch, 1960, pp. 173–182.Google Scholar
15 See Pohl, C. F., Joseph Haydn, in (completed by H. Botstiber), Leipzig, 1927, pp. 126ff and 177f; and E. Olleson, ‘Haydn in the diaries of Count Karl von Zinzendorf’, Haydn Yearbook, ii (1963)Google Scholar
16 H. C. Robbins Landon, The Collected Correspondence of Joseph Haydn, London, 1959, p. 20.Google Scholar
17 Österreichische Monatsschrift, Prague & Vienna, iii. 64ff.Google Scholar
18 See Sandberger, A., ‘Zur Entstehungsgeschichte von Haydns “Sιeben Worten des Erlosers am Kreuze”’, Jahrbuch der Musikbιbliothek Peters, 1903, PP. 45–59.Google Scholar
19 Abert, H., W. A. Mozart, Leipzig, 1919–21, ii. 413.Google Scholar
20 Morath, A., ‘Dιe Pflege der Tonkunst durch das Furstenhaus Schwarzenberg’, Das Vaterland, xlii (Vienna, 1901) No. 68, pp. 1–4.Google Scholar
21 Van Swieten's suggestιons are printed in Pohl, op. cit., iii. 358–9, and M. Friedlander, ‘Van Swieten und das Textbuch zu Haydns “Jahreszeiten”’, Jahrbuch der Musikbιblιothek Peters, 1909, pp. 47–56.Google Scholar
22 H. C. Robbins Landon, The Collected Correspondence of Joseph Haydn, London, 1959, p. 197.Google Scholar
23 Letter to Bernhard von Pelser of 7 November 1795; Vienna Stadtbibliothek, MS. I.N. 8715.Google Scholar
24 Abert, op. cit., ii. 90–91.Google Scholar
25 Seeger, H., ‘Zur musikhistorischen Bedeutung der Haydn-Biographic von Albert Dies (1810)’, Beiträge zur Musikwissenschaft, 1959/iii, 31.Google Scholar
26 Allgemeine Musikalische Zeitung, v. col. 476.Google Scholar
27 Excerpts from the first movement of thιs symphony are printed ιn R. Bernhardt, ‘Aus der Umwelt der Wiener Klassiker, Freiherr Gottfried van Swieten’, Der Bär, Jahrbuch von Breitkopf & Hartel, 1929/30, pp. 164ff.Google Scholar
- 3
- Cited by