Ferdinando Paer

Ferdinando Paer; lithograph by
François Delpech (1778-1825)

Ferdinando Paer (1 July 1771  3 May 1839) was an Italian composer known for his operas and oratorios. He was of Austrian descent and used the German spelling Pär in application for printing in Venice,[1] and later in France the spelling Paër.[2][3]

Life and career

He was born in Parma into a family of Austrian descent. His grandfather Michael Pär was a regimental band member from Peterwardein (today Petrovaradin, part of Novi Sad).[4][5] His father Giulio Paer was a trumpeter with the Ducal Bodyguards and also performed at church and court events, his mother was Francesca Cutica.[6] He was named Ferdinando after Duke Ferdinand of Parma by Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Duke Ferdinand's wife. He studied the theory of music under the violinist Ghiretti, a pupil of the Conservatorio della Pietà de' Turchini in Naples. His first Italian opera, Circe, was given in Venice during carnival 1792; others rapidly followed, and his name was soon famous throughout Italy. In 1797, he went to Vienna, where his future wife, the singer Francesca Riccardi, had obtained an engagement. There he became music director of the Kärntnertortheater until 1801, where he produced a series of operas, including his Camilla (1799) and his Achille (1801). In 1802 he was appointed composer to the court theatre at Dresden, the Morettisches Opernhaus, where his wife was also engaged as a singer, and in 1804 the lifetime appointment of Court Kapellmeister was bestowed upon him by Elector Frederick August.

His opera Leonora (1804) is based on the same story as Beethoven's Fidelio, first produced as Leonora the following year. Beethoven had a high opinion of Paer, once jesting that the funeral march in Achille was so fine he "would have to compose it".[7]

In 1807 Napoleon, while in Dresden, took a fancy to him and took him with him to Warsaw and Paris at a salary of 28,000 francs. He composed a bridal march for Napoleon's wedding to Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma (a religious ceremony that took place on 2 April 1810).[7]

In 1809 he composed his most famous opera, Agnese, a dramma semiserio per musica in two acts. Its success spread throughout Europe, and it was performed at the most important theatres (Milan, Naples, Rome, Vienna, London and Paris). It had a deep influence on the following generations of composers and aroused the admiration of many celebrated musicians and musical critics such as Stendhal, Berlioz, Castil-Blaze and Chopin. The primary reason for this success is most certainly the high quality of the music involved, but the dramaturgical structure also presents significant material such as the mad scene involving Agnese's father Uberto (bass).

In 1812, he succeeded Spontini as conductor of the Opéra-Italien in Paris. He retained this post after the Restoration while accepting those of chamber composer to the king and conductor of the private orchestra of the Duke of Orléans. In 1823, he retired from the Opéra-Italien and was succeeded by Rossini. It was around this time that he taught composition to the young Franz Liszt. In 1831, he was elected to the Académie des Beaux-Arts, and in 1832 was appointed conductor of the royal orchestra of King Louis Philippe. In 1824, he was parodied by Daniel Auber in the role of Signor Astucio in Le concert à la cour. He died at 67 in Paris in 1839.

Paer wrote a total of 55 operas, in the Italian Classical styles of Paisiello and Cimarosa. His other works, including several religious compositions, cantatas, many songs and a short list of orchestral chamber pieces, are worthy of further study and performance. Some consider his music highly imaginative and melodic, while others hear his most famous work, Leonora (due to its setting by Beethoven for his only opera a year later), as mere dull formula-writing. One of his pupils was Ferdinando Orlandi.

Works

References

  1. Wolfram Ensslin: Die italienischen Opern Ferdinando Paërs, Vol. 1, p. 17, 2003. "..bezeichnet, einen Titel, den er nach folgendem Antrag im Juli 1792 auch offiziell führen durfte: Si degnò V.A.R. di accordar al Mro Ferdinando Pär Umilimo servo, Suddito, [...], nello scorso carnevale, di poter far imprimere nell'opera ..."
  2. Hector Berlioz, David Cairns: The Memoirs of Hector Berlioz, 2002, p. 612. "Paer also tried to undermine Spontini's success in Paris. Auber parodied him as Signor Astucio in his opera Le concert à la cour. The name Paer does not require the diaeresis in Italian, but he himself adopted it when he settled in France."
  3. Revue de Paris, p. 7, 1843. "La musica, tutta nuova, sara del celebre signor Ferdinando Pär, maestro di cappella al servizio del S. A. IL, dit le livret. Certaines partitions, écrites par d'habiles compositeurs pour de semblables solennités champêtres, ne méritent souvent ...
  4. Wolfram Ensslin: Die italienischen Opern Ferdinando Paërs, Vol. 1, 2003, p. 15. "Kann man dieser Eintragung bereits die Namen seiner Eltern, Giulio Pär und Francesca Cutica sowie seines Großvaters Michael Pär entnehmen, so finden sich nähere Angaben über die Abstammung väterlicherseits in einem Artikel von Castil-Blaze.."
  5. Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Vol. 12, p. 2174. Friedrich Blume, Ludwig Finscher - 2004. "Ferdinandos Großvater Michael Pär, gebürtig aus dem österreichischen Peterwardein (heute Novi Sad, Kroatien), hatte an der Spitze eines Musikkorpsregiments seine Heimatstat verlassen und sich in Parma niederlassen."
  6. Giuliano Castellani: Ferdinando Paer: Biografia, Opere e Documenti degli Anni Parigini
  7. 1 2 "Paer, Ferdinando", Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th ed, 1954, Vol VI, p. 487

Sources

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