Johannes Brahms
Born in Hamburg, Germany, on May 7, 1833, Brahms was the great master
of symphonic and sonata style in the second half of the 19th century. He
can be viewed as the protagonist of the Classical tradition of Joseph
Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.
Early years
Widely considered as the 19th century’s greatest composers and one of
the leading musicians of the Romantic era, Johannes Brahms was born May
7, 1833, in Hamburg, Germany.
He was the second of Johanna Henrika Christiane Nissen and Johann
Jakob Brahms’ three children. Music was introduced to his life at an
early age.
His father was a double bassist in the Hamburg Philharmonic Society
and the young Brahms began playing the piano at the age of seven. By the
time he was a teenager, Brahms was already an accomplished musician and
he used his talent to earn money at local inns, in brothels and along
the city’s docks to ease his family’s often tight financial conditions.
In 1853 Brahms was introduced to the renowned German composer and
music critic Robert Schumann. The two men quickly grew close, with
Schumann seeing in his younger friend great hope for the future of
music. He dubbed
Brahms a genius and praised the “young eagle” publicly in a famous
article.
The kind words quickly made the young composer a known entity in the
music world.
But this music world was also at a crossroads. Modernist composers
such as Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner, the leading faces of the “New
German School” rebuked the more traditional sounds of Schumann.
Theirs was a sound predicated on organic structure and harmonic
freedom, drawing from literature for its inspiration.
For Schumann and eventually Brahms, this new sound was sheer
indulgence and negated the genius of composers such as Johann Sebastian
Bach and Ludwig van Beethoven.
In 1854 Schumann fell ill. In a sign of his close friendship with his
mentor and his family, Brahms assisted Schumann’s wife, Clara, with the
management of her household affairs. Music historians believe that
Brahms soon fell in love with Clara, though she doesn’t seem to have
reciprocated his admiration. Even after Schumann’s death in 1856, the
two remained solely friends.
Over the next several years, Brahms held several different posts,
including conductor of a women’s choir in Hamburg, which he was
appointed to in 1859.
He also continued to write his own music. His output included “String
Sextet in B-flat Major” and “Piano Concerto No. 1 in D Minor.”
Stubborn and uncompromising, Brahms was also known to be brusque and
sarcastic with adults. With children, he showed a softer side, often
handing out penny candy to children he encountered in his neighbourhood
in Vienna. He also enjoyed nature and frequently went for long walks in
the woods.
Brahms remained in Vienna for the rest of his life. Summers found him
travelling extensively throughout Europe, while concert tours also put
him on the road as well. During these performances, Brahms either
conducted or performed strictly his own material.
The wealth of compositions for him to draw from continued to grow in
the 1880s and ‘90s. His work included “Double Concerto in A Minor,”
“Piano Trio No. 3 in C Minor” and the “Violin Sonata in D Minor.” In
addition, he finished “String Quintet in F Major” and “String Quintet in
G Major.”
During his final decade, Brahms wrote several chamber music pieces,
teaming up with clarinetist Richard Muhlfeld for a succession of songs
that included “Trio for Clarinet, Cello and Piano,” as well as “Quintet
for Clarinet and Strings.”
These later years for the composer saw him living a comfortable life.
His music, since 1860 anyway, had sold well and Brahms, far from
flamboyant or excessive, lived a frugal life in his simple apartment. A
shrewd investor, Brahms did well in the stock market. His wealth,
however, was rivalled by his generosity, as Brahms often gave money to
friends and young musical students.
Brahms’ commitment to his craft showed he was a perfectionist. He
often destroyed finished pieces he deemed unworthy, including some 20
string quartets. In 1890 Brahms claimed he was giving up composing, but
the stance was short-lived and before long he was back at it again.
Over his last years, Brahms completed Vier ernste Gesange, which drew
on work from the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. It was a revealing
piece for the composer, damning what was found on earth and embracing
death as a relief from the material world’s excesses and pain.
Brahms himself certainly had death on his mind. On May 20, 1896, his
old friend Clara Schumann passed away after several years of health
problems.
Around this time, Brahms’ own health began to deteriorate. Doctors
discovered that his liver was in poor condition. Brahms gave his last
performance in March 1897 in Vienna. He died a month later, on April 3,
1897, from complications due to cancer.
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