Dorothea von Ertmann explained

Dorothea von Ertmann (born Dorothea Graumann; 3 May 1781 – 16 March 1849) was a German pianist.

Biography

Dorothea Graumann was born in Frankfurt and married Stephan von Ertmann, an Austrian infantry officer, in 1798. The couple moved to Vienna, where Dorothea Ertmann began taking lessons with Ludwig van Beethoven; he called her his "Dorothea-Cecilia". He dedicated his Piano Sonata No. 28 (in A major, Op. 101, composed in 1816) to her, and she may also have been the intended recipient of his Immortal Beloved letters. Her only child, Franz Carl, died at a young age in March 1804.[1] While she was in mourning, Beethoven invited her to his home and improvised on the piano for her for an hour in order to comfort her, saying "We will now talk to each other in tones".[2] Ertmann premiered his Cello Sonata No. 3 on 5 March 1809 with Nikolaus Kraft.[3] [4] She and her husband moved to Milan in 1820, where she was visited by Felix Mendelssohn, but after her husband's death in 1835 she returned to Vienna where she died.

Ertmann gave a number of public concerts and was most noted for her performance of Beethoven's compositions: Alexander Thayer said that "all contemporary authorities agree, [she was] if not the greatest player of these works at least the greatest of her sex".[5] Anton Schindler suggested that "she grasped intuitively even the most hidden subtleties of Beethoven's works with as much certainty as if they had been written out before her eyes".[6] He also said that "without Frau von Ertmann, Beethoven's music would have disappeared even sooner from the repertory" because she created a musical salon dedicated to preserving his style against the rise of newer, more "fashionable" composers.[7]

The German opera singer and teacher Mathilde Marchesi, née Graumann, was her niece.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Solomon, Maynard. Maynard Solomon

    . Maynard Solomon. Late Beethoven: Music, Thought, Imagination. 2003. University of California Press. 9780520237469. 298.

  2. Book: Beattie, Donald and Delayna. Beethoven: Library of Piano Works. 2001. Belwin-Mills. 9780757981814. 8.
  3. Book: Thayer, Alexander. Alexander Wheelock Thayer

    . Alexander Wheelock Thayer. Thayer's Life of Beethoven. 1991. Princeton University Press. 9780691027173. Forber, Elliott. Krehbiel, Henry. Henry Edward Krehbiel. 467.

  4. Book: Watson, Angus. Beethoven's Chamber Music in Context. 2012 . Boydell. 9781843837169. 162.
  5. Book: Thayer, Alexander. Thayer's life of Beethoven. 1991. Princeton University Press. 9780691027173. Forber, Elliott . Krehbiel, Henry. 412.
  6. Book: John Warrack

    . Ertmann, Dorothea von. Grove Music Online. Warrack, John. John Warrack. Oxford University Press.

  7. Book: Parakilas, John. Bomberger, E. Douglas. Piano Roles: A New History of the Piano. 2001. Yale University Press. 9780300093063. 109. 2nd. registration.