orpheus chor münchen
Gerd Guglhör, LeitungGeorg Joseph Vogler, called Abbé Vogler, was born in
Würzburg in 1749. He became famous as an expert
in music theory, conductor and composer. In 1772,
he accepted a position at the court of Prince Elector
Karl Theodor in Mannheim and later followed his
employer to Munich. From 1786 onwards, he worked
at the court of the kings of Sweden as a conductor.
The orpheus chor münchen closely collaborates
with the Bavarian Radio Broadcasting Company. The
ensemble focuses on choir music from the modern era
and on works from the 17th and 18th centuries.
Abbé Vogler Requiem
The composer Georg Joseph Vogler was
born in Würzburg in 1749 and died in
Darmstadt in 1814. His surviving oeuvre is
largely unknown today, although it comprises
hundreds of works in many genres – symphonies,
concertos, chamber music, operas
and singspiels, masses and oratorios. Vogler
was actually far more than just a composer.
He was noted for his numerous writings on
music theory, directed various court chapels,
taught (his most important pupils were Carl
Maria von Weber and Giacomo Meyerbeer),
worked in the fields of organ building and
acoustics and even performed as an organ
and piano virtuoso.
The son of a violin maker, he initially
studied law at the universities of Würzburg
and Bamberg before joining the court of
Mannheim in 1771, in order to “deepen his
knowledge of music”. Elector Karl Theodor
supported the young musician and granted
him a scholarship to study in Italy. Vogler
visited Padua, Bologna and Rome, where he
received instruction from Hasse and other
teachers, and also took holy orders. Abbé
Vogler was appointed deputy kapellmeister
to the electoral court soon after his return to
Mannheim.
Initially remaining in Mannheim after
the court had moved to Munich, Vogler
established the Mannheim Tonschule, “the
first systematic institute for music”, in which
he accepted pupils without regard to status,
sex or religion and held public lectures that
were published under the title Kenntnisse in
der Tonwissenschaft in 1776.
rom 1780 he spent several years in Paris
and London. He would travel extensively for
the rest of his life, giving concerts and lectures
in music theory wherever he went. Vogler was
appointed first kapellmeister to the Munich
court in 1784, but again embarked on a tour
in March 1785, this time to Germany and
the Netherlands. King Gustav III of Sweden
appointed Vogler director of music to his
court in Stockholm in 1786, but in late 1787
the musician‘s restless nature caused him to
tour for several years through Russia, the
Baltic States, Poland, Germany, Holland and
England, before returning to Sweden and finally,
in June 1800, to Germany.
Vogler was in Munich in 1805/06. Having
developed a system for simplifying organ
building that aimed at deriving the maximum
sound from the most economically designed
structure, he now modified the organ in the
Peterskirche accordingly. He went on to begin
a similar modification of the organ in the
Michaelskirche, where his friend Caspar Ett
worked, but financial straits forced him to
discontinue the work. In 1807 Grand Duke
Ludewig of Hesse appointed Vogler privy
councillor for ecclesiastical affairs at his court
in Darmstadt, from where the musician several
times travelled to Munich to complete
the organs he had begun to build there.
Abbé Vogler won great acclaim in Munich.
As kapellmeister to the Munich court opera,
he composed an opera seria for the Munich
carnival of 1784; Castor et Pollux was revived
in 1806 and found great favour with Crown
Prince Ludwig, at whose instigation Vogler
became a corresponding member of the
Bavarian Academy of Sciences. Extremely
large audiences attended the concerts Vogler
gave on October 16 and 19, 1809 on the new
organ built in accordance with his system in
the Munich Peterskirche; even the court attended
the first concert. The highlights of
his appearances were always programmatic
semi-improvised works. Vogler was famous
for his musical representations of thunderstorms,
earthquakes and the fall of Jericho.
According to the Munich music commentator
Lipowski, he painted with notes as if
with colours, calculated “the musical effect,
concentrated on excellent euphony, the correct
representation of overflowing feelings and true
emotion, combining melody with rich harmony,
and was exceptionally liked”. Profanely
theatrical tone-painting is also found in his sacred
works.
It is possible that Vogler composed his
large Requiem in E flat major during his time
in Munich in 1805/06. When Joseph Haydn
died in Vienna in 1809, Vogler vainly strove
to have the work performed at the funeral.
The Requiem was in fact never performed in
his lifetime, being published four years after
his death. Referred to by Carl Maria von
Weber as “divine”, the work was well liked by
contemporaries but soon forgotten.
Dr. Brigitte Huber
Translation: J & M Berridge