Cherubini, Luigi
1760-1842
One of the great modern masters of counterpoint and
the earliest of the modern Italian composers, who has justly been styled
"The last and noblest Roman in the purely classical style of music."
Was at an early age instructed in music by his father, who was cymbalist at the
Pergola Theatre at Florence, in which city Cherubim was born. He began to study
harmony when he was only nine and his progress was rapid, and after studying under
various teachers he was sent to Bologna and Milan by Duke Leopold II., of
Tuscany (the future Emperor Leopold III.), who defrayed the expenses of his
education and enabled him to become the pupil of the great Sarti. At thirteen
he wrote a mass and a stage intermezzo for a theatre in Florence. Under Sarti's
direction he confined himself to church music, but, in 1780, began to compose
dramatic works and his first opera, Quinto Fabio, was produced in that year.
After the production of this opera he brought out seven others in various
cities in Italy. In 1784, he went to London, where he brought out two operas,
but they were not successful. In Turin he wrote and produced his successful
opera, Ifigenia in Aulide, and returning to Paris, in 1787, he was made composer
to the King, and the next year his first French opera, Demophon, was produced.
This was Cherubim's initial step in the work of founding a grand style of
French opera and it was not a success, because it was written above the heads
of the public of that time. Dramatic music was an unknown quantity when
Cherubini appeared, and his efforts to improve the music of his time were so
discouraging that he shortly after returned to the light style made popular by
Cimarosa and Paisiello. In 1791 he wrote Lodoiska, in which he returned to his
old ideals as expressed in Demophon, and this work caused a thorough revolution
in the style of the French dramatic school. Other composers soon followed the
lead of Cherubini, and he seems to have had an influence for good on the music
of his time. He followed Lodoiska, with Elisa and Medee, but their poor
librettos made them anything but popular. In Les Deux Journees, he found,
however, a text worthy of his music and this opera is generally considered his
masterpiece. In it, he is declared by musicians to have struck the first blow
in the system for annihilating the tyranny of the leading singers in opera, an
accepted Wagnerian theory. In 1805, Cherubini accepted an engagement at Vienna,
where he wrote Faniska. This opera had an almost unprecedented success, Haydn
and Beethoven both declaring that its author was the first dramatic composer of
his time, and for some years it was considered the greatest opera since Mozart.
Cherubini ultimately became very friendly with Beethoven.
When the French took Vienna, Cherubini left the scene
of his triumphs and returned to Paris, but Napoleon had never liked the
composer, whose musical opinions he did not agree with, and for this reason,
Cherubini, humiliated and embittered, retired to the country, and at the house
of the Prince de Chimay devoted himself to the study of botany. One day a mass
was needed for the consecration of a church and he was urged by his friends to
write it. After much thought upon the subject he complied and set to work on
his Mass in F for- three voices and orchestra. With this successful work a new
field was opened to him and a new era began. Although he wrote many operas, he
devoted himself almost entirely from then on to the composition of sacred
music, and in this field he probably did his greatest work. Upon the
restoration of the House of Bourbon he returned to Paris, and, in 1816, he
succeeded Martini as superintendent of the King's music and wrote many masses
for the Royal Chapel. In the same year he was appointed professor of
composition at the Conservatory, and 1822 director. As chief of his famous
school he influenced his pupils to a great extent, but for some reason or
other, he took no lasting hold on the French people. In Germany he was much
more popular and his music was appreciated there as it never was in France. His
adopted country, however, made him a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, afterwards an officer, and honored
him in many other ways. As a man and a musician there was much that was
noteworthy in his career, and musicians at the time generally regretted that he
had no copyists. His influence consisted in the lofty light in which he always
regarded music, but he seems to have just missed being a great musician.
He wrote altogether fifteen Italian operas and
fourteen French operas, and beside those already mentioned the following rank
among his best work, Pimmaglione; Les Abencerages; La Finta; Principessa (opera
buff a) and Giulio Sabine. Cherubini's last work, like Mozart's, was a Requiem
which was first performed at his own funeral. His portrait by Ingres is in the
gallery of the Louvre, Paris. The most exhaustive work on Cherubini is his life
by Edward Bellasis, the title being, Cherubini: Memorials illustrative of his
life. The article on Cherubini in the Biographic universelle by Fetis is also
very complete, as is also an article by Ferdinand Hiller, which was published
in Macmillan's Magazine for July, 1875.
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