Johann Kaspar Mertz Explained

Joseph Kaspar Mertz (17 August 1806 – 14 October 1856) was a guitarist and composer from the Austrian Empire.

Biography

Caspar Joseph Mertz (baptised Casparus Josephus Mertz)[1] was born in Pressburg, now Bratislava (Slovakia), then the capital of the Kingdom of Hungary and part of the Austrian Empire. He never used his full name when performing or on his publications, preferring only the initials "J. K.". The name "Johann Kaspar" first appeared in the German guitar journal "Der Guitarrefreund" in 1901 and since that time has been incorrectly repeated.[2] In 1900 J. M. Miller used the name "Joseph K. Mertz" for his publication of three previously unpublished manuscripts of Mertz in Three Compositions For Guitar.[3]

He was active in Vienna (c.1840–1856), which had been home to various prominent figures of the guitar, including Anton Diabelli, Mauro Giuliani, Wenceslaus Matiegka and Simon Molitor. As virtuoso, he established a solid reputation as a performer. He toured Moravia, Poland, and Russia, and gave performances in Berlin and Dresden. In 1846 Mertz nearly died of an overdose of strychnine that had been prescribed to him as a treatment for neuralgia. Over the following year he was nursed back to health in the presence of his wife, the concert pianist Josephine Plantin whom he married in 1842. Some speculation may lead one to the conclusion that listening to his wife performing the romantic piano pieces of the day during his period of recovery may have had an influence on the sound and unusual right hand technique he adopted for the Bardenklänge (Bardic Sounds) op. 13 (1847).

Mertz's guitar music, unlike that of most of his contemporaries, followed the pianistic models of Liszt, Chopin, Mendelssohn, Schubert and Schumann, rather than the classical models of Mozart and Haydn (as did Sor and Aguado), or the bel canto style of Rossini (as did Giuliani). Though the date of his birth indicates that that was the logical influence, since Sor was born in 1778, Aguado in 1784 and Giuliani in 1781 while Mertz in 1806, a difference of about 25 years.

The Bardenklänge are probably Mertz's most important contribution to the guitar repertoire (a series of character pieces in the mould of Schumann), together with the great fantasias La rimembranza, Pensée fugitive and Harmonie du soir, considered a trilogy,[4] [5] the most technically demanding pieces written by Mertz, clearly inspired by Liszt's piano music.The portrait of J. K. Mertz first appeared on the cover of Erwin Schwarz-Reiflingen's 1920 book Altmeister der Gitarre: Johann Kaspar Mertz. There was no attribution for the source, but in Schwarz-Reiflingen's commentary he mentions the duo 'Fantasie aus der oper "Elisier d'amour' came as a previously unpublished manuscript from Edward Bayer, Jr., son of the well-known guitarist Edward Bayer. It is possible, yet unconfirmed, that the portrait could also have come from the estate of Edward Bayer.[6] The grayscale reproductions of the portrait have all come from a photo the Japanese guitar collector Jiro Nakano took in the 1970s from a copy of Altmeister der Gitarre: Johann Kaspar Mertz in the collection of Morishige Takei. It was provided to Astrid Stempnik for her dissertation by Masami Kimura.[7] Originals of this book are only known to exist in the Takei Collection (at the Kunitachi College of Music, Tokyo, Japan), Bickford Collection (at California State University, Northridge) and The Danish Music Museum.

Selected compositions

Guitar solo

Guitar duo

(all written for terz guitar and guitar)

Chamber music

Songs

Bibliography

Selected recordings

External links

Sheetmusic

Notes and References

  1. Astrid Stempnik: Caspar Joseph Mertz: Leben und Werk des letzten Gitarristen im österreichischen Biedermeier (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1990).
  2. Book: Kimura, Masami. Tárrega and Mertz. DGA Editions. 2018. 978-0-9883876-6-9. Dallas. 59.
  3. Book: Kimura, Masami. Tárrega and Mertz. DGA Editions. 2018. 978-0-9883876-6-9. Dallas. 73.
  4. Book: Mario Dell'Ara. Manuale Di Storia Della Chitarra, Vol.1. Berben.
  5. For the first time recorded as trilogy by Giuseppe Chiaramonte, Mertz: Fantasias for solo guitar, Label: Brilliant Classics, 2019
  6. Book: Torosian, Brian. J. K. Mertz Opern-Revue, Op. 8 Nos. 1-8 Volume I. DGA Editions. 2006. 978-0-9776926-1-3. San Antonio. 9–10.
  7. Book: Kimura, Masami. Tárrega and Mertz. DGA Editions. 2018. 978-0-9883876-6-9. Dallas. 63–64.
  8. See under 'Songs' for another opus 13.
  9. CD Notes for Barden-Klänge, Graziano Salvoni, Brilliant Classics 94473, 2014
  10. "[...] the remaining ones either not original works by Mertz or arbitrarily inserted into a later edition." (label information)