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François-Joseph Fétis

François-Joseph Fétis (French: [fetis]; 25 March 1784 – 26 March 1871) was a Belgian musicologist, composer, teacher, and one of the most influential music critics of the 19th century. His enormous compilation of biographical data in the Biographie universelle des musiciens remains an important source of information today.

François-Joseph Fétis
Born(1784-03-25)25 March 1784
Died26 March 1871(1871-03-26) (aged 87)

Family

Fétis was born in Mons, Hainaut, eldest son of Antoine-Joseph Fetis and Elisabeth Desprets, daughter of a famous chirurgical doctor. He had 9 brothers and sisters. His father was titular organist of the noble chapter of Saint-Waltrude.[1] His grandfather was an organ manufacturer. He was trained as a musician by his father and played at young age on the Choir organ of Saint Waltrude. In October 1806 he married Adélaïde-Louise-Catherine Robert, daughter of the French politician Pierre-François-Joseph Robert and Louise de Keralio, friend of Robespierre. They had 2 sons : most famous was Édouard Fétis, (1812-1909), his eldest son who helped his father with the editions of Revue Musicale and became member of the Royal Academy. In 1866 his wife died, and he had the request to withdraw from the Brussels society and Court. When his father died Eduard inherited his complete library and collection of music instruments.

Career

His talent for composition manifested itself at the age of seven, and at nine years old he was an organist at Saint Waltrude, Mons. In 1800 he went to Paris and completed his studies at the Conservatory under such masters as Boïeldieu, Jean-Baptiste Rey and Louis-Barthélémy Pradher.[2]

In 1806 he undertook the revision of the Roman liturgical chants in the hope of discovering and establishing their original form. In this year he also began his Biographie universelle des musiciens, the most important of his works, which did not appear until 1834.[2]

In 1821 he was appointed professor at the Paris Conservatory. In 1827 he founded the Revue musicale, the first serious paper in France devoted exclusively to musical matters. Fétis remained in the French capital till 1833, when at the request of Leopold I, he became director of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels and the king's chapelmaster.[3] He also was the founder, and, until his death, the conductor of the celebrated concerts attached to the conservatory of Brussels, and he inaugurated a free series of lectures on musical history and philosophy.[2]

Fétis produced a large quantity of original compositions, from the opera and the oratorio to the simple chanson, including several musical hoaxes, the most famous of which is the "Lute concerto by Valentin Strobel", premiered with Fernando Sor as soloist. Carcassi, as well as Sor, participated in the performance. The work is attributed NOT to the Alsascian lutenist Valentin Strobel, but to Jean (Johann) Strobach, a member of a prominent Bohemian family of musicians. This Strobach (fl. 1650–1720) served Leopold I, and there is no evidence that Fetis's score is a hoax. The composition was published in 1698, although no copy is known to have survived, except Fetis' manuscript score, which is in the Royal Conservatory Library in Brussels.[citation needed]

In 1856, he worked closely with Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume in writing a fascinating treatise about Antonio Stradivari (Antoine Stradivari, luthier célèbre). It includes detailed chapters on the history and development of the violin family, old master Italian violin makers (including the Stradivari and Guarneri families) and an analysis of the bows of François Tourte. His interest in instruments can also be gathered from his very substantial collection, which includes the oldest surviving Arab oud.[4]

Fetis had the privilege to have Paganini, Schumann and Berlioz as contemporaries and to work with the violin maker and dealer, Jean Baptiste Vuillaume. Fetis's work provides a unique window into the times and as such is a particularly valuable reference for the modern researcher, dealer and player.

More important perhaps than his compositions are his writings on music. They are partly historical, such as the Curiosités historiques de la musique (Paris, 1850), and the Histoire générale de la musique (Paris, 1869—1876); and partly theoretical, such as the Méthode des méthodes de piano (Paris, 1840), written in conjunction with Moscheles.[2]

While Fétis's critical opinions of contemporary music may seem conservative, his musicological work was ground-breaking, and unusual for the 19th century in attempting to avoid an ethnocentric and present-centered viewpoint. Unlike many others at the time, he did not see music history as a continuum of increasing excellence, moving towards a goal, but rather as something which was continually changing, neither becoming better nor worse, but continually adapting to new conditions. He believed that all cultures and times created art and music which were appropriate to their times and conditions; and he began a close study of Renaissance music as well as European folk music and music of non-European cultures. Thus Fétis built the foundation for what would later be termed comparative musicology.

Fétis died in Brussels. His valuable library was purchased by the Belgian government and presented to the Royal Library. His historical works, despite many inaccuracies, remain of great value for historians.[2]

His pupils included Luigi Agnesi, Jean-Delphin Alard, Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga, Louise Bertin, William Cusins, Julius Eichberg, Ferdinand Hérold, Frantz Jehin-Prume, Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens, Adolphe Samuel, and Charles-Marie Widor. See: List of music students by teacher: C to F#François-Joseph Fétis.

Honours

Academic Honours

Fétis and Berlioz

Some of his criticisms of contemporary composers have become quite famous, as well as the responses that they engendered. He said of Berlioz, "...what Monsieur Berlioz composes is not part of that art which we distinguish as music, and I am completely certain that he lacks the most basic capability in this art." In the Revue musicale issue of 1 February 1835[6] he wrote of the Symphonie Fantastique:

I saw that melody was antipathetic to him, that he only had a faint notion of rhythm; that his harmony, formed by an often monstrous accretion of notes, was nevertheless flat and monotonous; in a word I saw that he lacked melodic and harmonic ideas, and I judged that he would always write in a barbarous manner; but I saw that he had the instinct for instrumentation, and I thought that he could fulfil a useful vocation in discovering certain combinations that others would put to better use than he.[7]

Berlioz, who had proof-read Fétis' editions of the first eight Beethoven symphonies for the publisher Troupenas,[8] commented that

[Fétis had altered Beethoven's harmonies] with unbelievable complacency. Opposite the E flat which the clarinet sustains over a chord of the sixth (D flat, F, B flat) in the andante of the C minor symphony, Fétis had naively written ‘This E flat must be F. Beethoven could not have possibly made so gross a blunder.' In other words, a man like Beethoven could not possibly fail to be in entire agreement with the harmonic theories of M. Fétis.

Troupenas did in fact remove Fétis' editorial marks, but Berlioz was still unsatisfied. He went on to criticize Fétis in one of the monologues of Lélio, ou le Retour à la vie, the 1832 sequel to Symphonie Fantastique:

These young theorists of eighty, living in the midst of a sea of prejudices and persuaded that the world ends with the shores of their island; these old libertines of every age who demand that music caress and amuse them, never admitting that the chaste muse could have a more noble mission; especially these desecrators who dare lay hands on original works, subjecting them to horrible mutilations that they call corrections and perfections, which, they say, require considerable taste. Curses on them! They make a mockery of art! Such are these vulgar birds who populate our public gardens, perching arrogantly on the most beautiful statues, and, when they have soiled the brow of Jupiter, Hercules' arm, or the breast of Jupiter, strut and preen as though they have laid a golden egg.[9]

Not one to be outdone, Fétis may have had the last word in this debate. In the 1845 edition of his treatise La musique mise à la porte de tout le monde, he describes the word "fantastique" saying that "this word has even slid into music. ‘Fantastique' music is composed of instrumental effects with no melodic line and incorrect harmony."

Theoretical work

Although known primarily for his contributions to musicology and criticism, Fétis had effects on the realm of music theory as well. In 1841 he put together the first history of harmonic theory, his Esquisse de l'histoire de l'harmonie. Assembled from individual articles that Fétis published in the Revue et Gazette musicale de Paris around 1840, the book predates Hugo Riemann's more well known Geschichte der Musiktheorie by fifty years. The Esquisse, as the title implies, is a general outline rather than an exhaustive study. Fétis is attempting to show the "facts, errors, and truths" of previous theories and theorists, as he interprets them, in order to provide a solid grounding for other scholars and to prevent subsequent interpretive mistakes.

Fétis' main theoretical work and the culmination of his conceptual frameworks of tonality and harmony is the Traité complet de la théorie et de la pratique de l'harmonie of 1844. This book has influenced later theorists and composers including Paul Hindemith, Ernst Kurth, and Franz Liszt. In the Musik-Lexicon of 1882, Hugo Riemann states that "to [Fétis'] meditations we are indebted for the modern concept of tonality…he found himself emancipated from the spirit of a particular age, and able to render justice to all the various styles of music." Though some other theorists, most notably Matthew Shirlaw,[10] have had decidedly negative views, Riemann's assessment captures the two key features of Fétis' text. Though he did not coin the term "tonality," Fétis developed the concept into its present-day form. He claimed that "tonalité" is the primary organizing agent of all melodic and harmonic successions and that the efforts of other theorists to find the fundamental principle of music in "acoustics, mathematics, aggregations of intervals, or classifications of chords have been futile."[11]

The majority of the Traité complet is devoted to explaining how tonalité organizes music. The primary factor of determining tonality is the scale. It sets out the order of the succession of tones in major and minor (the only two "tonal" modes which he recognizes), the distances which separate the tones, and the resultant melodic and harmonic tendencies.[12] Tonality is not only a governed and conditioned state, but it is a socially conditioned one. Scales are cultural manifestations, resulting from shared experience and education. Nature provides the elements of tonalité, but human understanding, sensibility, and will determine particular harmonic systems.[13] This concept was called a "Metaphysical principle" by Fétis, though Dahlhaus argues that the term is used in this case to denote an anthropological, culturally relative sense in his 1990 book Studies on the Origin of Harmonic Tonality, and theorist Rosalie Schellhous posits that the Kantian term "transcendental" might be more appropriate.[14]

In his comparative work, Fétis attempted "a new method of classifying human races according to their musical systems"[15] following contemporary trends of social darwinism in the emerging fields of ethnology and anthropology.

Harmonic and rhythmic modulation

However, if one wishes to interpret Fétis' metaphysical theory, one of his unique theoretical ideas is laid out in book 3 of the Traité complet, that of harmonic modulation. Fétis argues that tonality has evolved over the course of time through four distinct phases, or ordres:

  • Unitonic – Resulting from plainchant tonality, the unitonic phase consists mainly of consonant triads with no possibility for modulation due to the lack of the tritone between the 4th and 7th scale degrees. This phase is also referred to by Fétis as tonalité ancienne.
  • Transitonic – Order which began with the introduction of the dominant 7th chord into harmonic discourse, sometime between Zarlino and Montverdi. This development is also directly related to the codification of cadential systems and periodic phrase structure.
  • Pluritonic – Modulation is achieved through enharmonic relationships in which one note of a chord is considered the point of contact between different scales. Fétis claims that Mozart was the first to use such modulations as a means of expression. In this order, the diminished 7th and augmented 6th chords become important as they can modulate to several different tonalities.
  • Omnitonic – The final phase of tonality, and one embodied for Fétis by Wagner, where the alteration of the intervals of natural chords and modification by substitution of notes is so complex that it becomes impossible to identify the original chord.[16] This is seen as a period of extremes, and undesirable compared to the moderately chromatic music of Meyerbeer.[17]

Fétis later applied this same system of ordres to rhythm, "the least advanced part of music...[where] great things remain to be discovered."[18] Though he did not publish these theories in any of his treatises, they appear in several articles for the Revue musicale and in some lectures which had a profound impact on Liszt.[19] Though music had not yet made it past the first phase, Unirhythm, by Fétis' time, he argues that composers may be able to "mutate" from one meter to another within the same melodic phrase. Though Liszt may have been an open disciple of the ideas of the Omnitonic and Omnirhythmic, the influence of such thinking can perhaps be seen most clearly in the music of Brahms, where hemiola and mixing of time signatures is a common occurrence.

"Se i miei sospiri"

The Italian art song, "Se i miei sospiri", appeared in a Paris concert organized by Fétis in 1833. Fétis published the piece for voice and strings in 1838 and then again in 1843 for voice and piano with alternate lyrics ("Pietà, Signore"). It is these alternate lyrics with which the piece is now typically associated. Fétis attributed the song to Alessandro Stradella and claimed to possess an original manuscript of the work but never produced it for examination. As early as 1866, musicologists were questioning the authenticity of the song, and when Fétis' library was acquired by the Royal Library in Brussels after his death, no such manuscript could be found. Owing to this and the fact that the style of the piece is inconsistent with Stradella's own period, the authorship of the piece is now typically attributed to Fétis himself. The original Italian text for the song (Se i miei sospiri) was found set to different music by Alessandro Scarlatti in his 1693 oratorio "The Martyrdom of St. Theodosia".[20]

Publications

  • Biographies de Joseph et Michael Haydn (Paris, n.d.)
  • Méthode elementaire et abregée d'harmonie et d'accompagnement (Paris: Petit, 1823)
  • Traité du contrepoint et de la fugue... (Paris: Charles Michael Ozu, 1824)
  • Revue musicale (Paris, 1827–35)
  • Curiosités historiques de la musique, complément nécessaire de la musique mise à la portée de tout le monde (Paris: Janet et Cotelle, 1830)
  • Biographie universelle des musiciens et bibliographie générale de la musique (Brussels, 1833–1844 [8 vols.])
  • Traité du chant en choeur (Paris, 1837)
  • Esquisse de l'histoire de l'harmonie considérée comme art et comme science systématique (Paris, 1840).
  • Traité complet de la théorie et de la pratique de l'harmonie (Paris and Brussels, 1844)
  • Antoine Stradivari, luthier célèbre (Paris, 1856)
  • Histoire générale de la musique (Paris, 1869–76; 5 vls., unfinished)

Notes

  1. ^ F.J. FETIS 1784 - 1871. HET MUZIEKLEVEN VAN ZIJN TIJD. Brussel, Koninklijke Bibliotheek Albert I, 1972/ pag. xxiii
  2. ^ a b c d e   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Fétis, François Joseph". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 294–295.
  3. ^ Damscrhroder, David (1990). Music Theory from Zarlino to Schenker. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press. p. 85. ISBN 0-918728-99-1.
  4. ^ "Alexandria to Brussels, 1839". oudmigrations. 2 March 2016. Retrieved 2016-04-26.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k F.J. FETIS 1784 - 1871. HET MUZIEKLEVEN VAN ZIJN TIJD. Brussel, Koninklijke Bibliotheek Albert I, 1972/ pag. 100
  6. ^ Fétis, Joseph (1 February 1835). "Analyse critique: Épisode de la vie d'un artiste". Revue musicale (in French). Paris. IXme année (5): 33–35.
  7. ^ See also Cone, Edward T., ed. (1971). Fantastic Symphony: An authoritative score; historical background; analysis; views and comments (1st ed.). New York: W.W. Norton. p. 217. ISBN 0-393-09926-1.
  8. ^ "Troupenas". IMSLP. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  9. ^ Fétis, F.-J. Esquisse de L'histoire de l'Harmonie: An English Language Translation of the François-Joseph Fétis History of Harmony. Translated, annotated, and edited by Mary I. Arlin. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press, 1994, p. xxii.
  10. ^ Shirlaw asserts that "anything more ill-considered, more indadequate than Fétis' 'metaphysical' theory of harmony based on the principle of tonality which he himself does not understand, and is unable to explain, it would be difficult to conceive."[full citation needed]
  11. ^ Arlin, Mary I. "Fétis' Contribution to Practical and Historical Music Theory." Revue belge de Musicologie, Vol. 26/27 (1972/1973), p. 106.
  12. ^ Fétis, F.-J. Esquisse de L'histoire de l'Harmonie: An English Language Translation of the François-Joseph Fétis History of Harmony. Translated, annotated, and edited by Mary I. Arlin. Stuyvesant, NY: Pendragon Press, 1994, p. xxiii.
  13. ^ Schellhous, Rosalie. "Fétis's Tonality as a Metaphysical Principle: Hypothesis for a New Science." Music Theory Spectrum, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Autumn, 1991), p. 219-240.
  14. ^ Both the Dahlhaus and Schellhous quotes can be found in: Schellhous, Rosalie. "Fétis's Tonality as a Metaphysical Principle: Hypothesis for a New Science." Music Theory Spectrum, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Autumn, 1991), p. 219-240
  15. ^ Murphy, Kerry (January 2008). "François-Joseph Fétis, Correspondance (review)". Music and Letters. 89 (4): 640–642. doi:10.1093/ml/gcn041. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
  16. ^ Josephson, Nors S. "François-Joseph Fétis and Richard Wagner." Revue belge de Musicologie, Vol. 26/27 (1972-1973), p. 84-89.
  17. ^ Bloom, Peter A. "Friends and Admirers: Meyerbeer and Fétis." Revue belge de Musicologie, Vol. 32/33 (1978-1979), p. 174-187.
  18. ^ Arlin, Mary I. "Metric Mutation and Modulation: the Nineteenth-Century Speculations of F.J. Fétis." Journal of Music Theory, Vol. 44, No. 2 (Autumn, 2000), p. 261.
  19. ^ Móricz, Klára. "The Ambivalent Connection between Theory and Practice in the Relationship of F. Liszt & F.-J. Fétis." Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientarum Hungaricae, T. 35, Fasc. 4 (1993-1994), p. 399-420.
  20. ^ Glenn Paton, John (1991). "26 Italian Songs and Arias: An Authoritative Edition Based on Authentic Sources". Alfred Publishing.

References

Compositions

Ensembles

  • String Quartet No. 1
  • String Quartet No. 2
  • Grand Sextet, Op. 5

Overture

  • Ouverture de concert à grand orchestre

Concerto

Symphony

  • 1862: Symphony No. 1 in Eb-major
  • Symphonic Fantasy for organ and orchestra

Mass

  • Messe di Requiem

Songs

  • Se i miei sospiri

External links

Scores

Texts and books

  • Books with "Fétis" as author (Google Books)
  • Books with occurrences of "Fétis" (Google Books)
  • Texts with occurrences of "Fétis" (archive.org)
  • Biographie universelle des musiciens (2nd edition) at Google Books:
    • Vol. 1, 1860 (478 pages) Aaron – Bohrer (+vol. 2)
    • Vol. 2, 1861 (484 pages) Boildieu – Derossi (+vol. 1)
    • Vol. 3, 1862 (480 pages) Désargus – Giardini
    • Vol. 4, 1862 (491 pages) Gibbons – Kazynski
    • Vol. 5, 1863 (480 pages) Kechlina – Martini (+vol. 6)
    • Vol. 6, 1864 (496 pages) Martini, leP – Pérolle (+vol. 5)
    • Vol. 7, 1864 (548 pages) Perotti – Scultetus (+vol. 8)
    • Vol. 8, 1865 (527 pages) Sebastiani – Zyka (+vol. 7)
  • Biographie universelle des musiciens (supplement by Arthur Pougin) at Google Books:
    • Vol. 1, 1878 (480 pages) Abadie – Holmes
    • Vol. 2, 1880 (691 pages) Holmes, Mlle Augusta – Zwingli
  • Works by François-Joseph Fétis at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by François-Joseph Fétis at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

françois, joseph, fétis, french, fetis, march, 1784, march, 1871, belgian, musicologist, composer, teacher, most, influential, music, critics, 19th, century, enormous, compilation, biographical, data, biographie, universelle, musiciens, remains, important, sou. Francois Joseph Fetis French fetis 25 March 1784 26 March 1871 was a Belgian musicologist composer teacher and one of the most influential music critics of the 19th century His enormous compilation of biographical data in the Biographie universelle des musiciens remains an important source of information today Francois Joseph FetisBorn 1784 03 25 25 March 1784MonsDied26 March 1871 1871 03 26 aged 87 Brussels Contents 1 Family 2 Career 3 Honours 4 Fetis and Berlioz 5 Theoretical work 5 1 Harmonic and rhythmic modulation 6 Se i miei sospiri 7 Publications 8 Notes 9 References 10 Compositions 10 1 Ensembles 10 2 Overture 10 3 Concerto 10 4 Symphony 10 5 Mass 10 6 Songs 11 External links 11 1 Scores 11 2 Texts and booksFamily EditFetis was born in Mons Hainaut eldest son of Antoine Joseph Fetis and Elisabeth Desprets daughter of a famous chirurgical doctor He had 9 brothers and sisters His father was titular organist of the noble chapter of Saint Waltrude 1 His grandfather was an organ manufacturer He was trained as a musician by his father and played at young age on the Choir organ of Saint Waltrude In October 1806 he married Adelaide Louise Catherine Robert daughter of the French politician Pierre Francois Joseph Robert and Louise de Keralio friend of Robespierre They had 2 sons most famous was Edouard Fetis 1812 1909 his eldest son who helped his father with the editions of Revue Musicale and became member of the Royal Academy In 1866 his wife died and he had the request to withdraw from the Brussels society and Court When his father died Eduard inherited his complete library and collection of music instruments Career EditHis talent for composition manifested itself at the age of seven and at nine years old he was an organist at Saint Waltrude Mons In 1800 he went to Paris and completed his studies at the Conservatory under such masters as Boieldieu Jean Baptiste Rey and Louis Barthelemy Pradher 2 In 1806 he undertook the revision of the Roman liturgical chants in the hope of discovering and establishing their original form In this year he also began his Biographie universelle des musiciens the most important of his works which did not appear until 1834 2 In 1821 he was appointed professor at the Paris Conservatory In 1827 he founded the Revue musicale the first serious paper in France devoted exclusively to musical matters Fetis remained in the French capital till 1833 when at the request of Leopold I he became director of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels and the king s chapelmaster 3 He also was the founder and until his death the conductor of the celebrated concerts attached to the conservatory of Brussels and he inaugurated a free series of lectures on musical history and philosophy 2 Fetis produced a large quantity of original compositions from the opera and the oratorio to the simple chanson including several musical hoaxes the most famous of which is the Lute concerto by Valentin Strobel premiered with Fernando Sor as soloist Carcassi as well as Sor participated in the performance The work is attributed NOT to the Alsascian lutenist Valentin Strobel but to Jean Johann Strobach a member of a prominent Bohemian family of musicians This Strobach fl 1650 1720 served Leopold I and there is no evidence that Fetis s score is a hoax The composition was published in 1698 although no copy is known to have survived except Fetis manuscript score which is in the Royal Conservatory Library in Brussels citation needed In 1856 he worked closely with Jean Baptiste Vuillaume in writing a fascinating treatise about Antonio Stradivari Antoine Stradivari luthier celebre It includes detailed chapters on the history and development of the violin family old master Italian violin makers including the Stradivari and Guarneri families and an analysis of the bows of Francois Tourte His interest in instruments can also be gathered from his very substantial collection which includes the oldest surviving Arab oud 4 Fetis had the privilege to have Paganini Schumann and Berlioz as contemporaries and to work with the violin maker and dealer Jean Baptiste Vuillaume Fetis s work provides a unique window into the times and as such is a particularly valuable reference for the modern researcher dealer and player More important perhaps than his compositions are his writings on music They are partly historical such as the Curiosites historiques de la musique Paris 1850 and the Histoire generale de la musique Paris 1869 1876 and partly theoretical such as the Methode des methodes de piano Paris 1840 written in conjunction with Moscheles 2 While Fetis s critical opinions of contemporary music may seem conservative his musicological work was ground breaking and unusual for the 19th century in attempting to avoid an ethnocentric and present centered viewpoint Unlike many others at the time he did not see music history as a continuum of increasing excellence moving towards a goal but rather as something which was continually changing neither becoming better nor worse but continually adapting to new conditions He believed that all cultures and times created art and music which were appropriate to their times and conditions and he began a close study of Renaissance music as well as European folk music and music of non European cultures Thus Fetis built the foundation for what would later be termed comparative musicology Fetis died in Brussels His valuable library was purchased by the Belgian government and presented to the Royal Library His historical works despite many inaccuracies remain of great value for historians 2 His pupils included Luigi Agnesi Jean Delphin Alard Juan Crisostomo Arriaga Louise Bertin William Cusins Julius Eichberg Ferdinand Herold Frantz Jehin Prume Jacques Nicolas Lemmens Adolphe Samuel and Charles Marie Widor See List of music students by teacher C to F Francois Joseph Fetis Honours Edit Kingdom of Belgium Master of the Royal Music 5 Grand Officer in the Order of Leopold 5 Kingdom of the Netherlands Commander in the Order of the Oak Crown 5 Kingdom of Prussia Knight of the Order of the Red Eagle 5 Kingdom of France Officer of the Legion of Honour 5 Academic HonoursMember of the Royal Academy of Science Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium 5 Member of the Academy of Rome 5 Member of the Academy of Berlin 5 Member of the Academy of Vienna 5 Member of the Academy of Stockholm 5 Member of the Academy of London 5 Fetis and Berlioz EditSome of his criticisms of contemporary composers have become quite famous as well as the responses that they engendered He said of Berlioz what Monsieur Berlioz composes is not part of that art which we distinguish as music and I am completely certain that he lacks the most basic capability in this art In the Revue musicale issue of 1 February 1835 6 he wrote of the Symphonie Fantastique I saw that melody was antipathetic to him that he only had a faint notion of rhythm that his harmony formed by an often monstrous accretion of notes was nevertheless flat and monotonous in a word I saw that he lacked melodic and harmonic ideas and I judged that he would always write in a barbarous manner but I saw that he had the instinct for instrumentation and I thought that he could fulfil a useful vocation in discovering certain combinations that others would put to better use than he 7 Berlioz who had proof read Fetis editions of the first eight Beethoven symphonies for the publisher Troupenas 8 commented that Fetis had altered Beethoven s harmonies with unbelievable complacency Opposite the E flat which the clarinet sustains over a chord of the sixth D flat F B flat in the andante of the C minor symphony Fetis had naively written This E flat must be F Beethoven could not have possibly made so gross a blunder In other words a man like Beethoven could not possibly fail to be in entire agreement with the harmonic theories of M Fetis Troupenas did in fact remove Fetis editorial marks but Berlioz was still unsatisfied He went on to criticize Fetis in one of the monologues of Lelio ou le Retour a la vie the 1832 sequel to Symphonie Fantastique These young theorists of eighty living in the midst of a sea of prejudices and persuaded that the world ends with the shores of their island these old libertines of every age who demand that music caress and amuse them never admitting that the chaste muse could have a more noble mission especially these desecrators who dare lay hands on original works subjecting them to horrible mutilations that they call corrections and perfections which they say require considerable taste Curses on them They make a mockery of art Such are these vulgar birds who populate our public gardens perching arrogantly on the most beautiful statues and when they have soiled the brow of Jupiter Hercules arm or the breast of Jupiter strut and preen as though they have laid a golden egg 9 Not one to be outdone Fetis may have had the last word in this debate In the 1845 edition of his treatise La musique mise a la porte de tout le monde he describes the word fantastique saying that this word has even slid into music Fantastique music is composed of instrumental effects with no melodic line and incorrect harmony Theoretical work EditAlthough known primarily for his contributions to musicology and criticism Fetis had effects on the realm of music theory as well In 1841 he put together the first history of harmonic theory his Esquisse de l histoire de l harmonie Assembled from individual articles that Fetis published in the Revue et Gazette musicale de Paris around 1840 the book predates Hugo Riemann s more well known Geschichte der Musiktheorie by fifty years The Esquisse as the title implies is a general outline rather than an exhaustive study Fetis is attempting to show the facts errors and truths of previous theories and theorists as he interprets them in order to provide a solid grounding for other scholars and to prevent subsequent interpretive mistakes Fetis main theoretical work and the culmination of his conceptual frameworks of tonality and harmony is the Traite complet de la theorie et de la pratique de l harmonie of 1844 This book has influenced later theorists and composers including Paul Hindemith Ernst Kurth and Franz Liszt In the Musik Lexicon of 1882 Hugo Riemann states that to Fetis meditations we are indebted for the modern concept of tonality he found himself emancipated from the spirit of a particular age and able to render justice to all the various styles of music Though some other theorists most notably Matthew Shirlaw 10 have had decidedly negative views Riemann s assessment captures the two key features of Fetis text Though he did not coin the term tonality Fetis developed the concept into its present day form He claimed that tonalite is the primary organizing agent of all melodic and harmonic successions and that the efforts of other theorists to find the fundamental principle of music in acoustics mathematics aggregations of intervals or classifications of chords have been futile 11 The majority of the Traite complet is devoted to explaining how tonalite organizes music The primary factor of determining tonality is the scale It sets out the order of the succession of tones in major and minor the only two tonal modes which he recognizes the distances which separate the tones and the resultant melodic and harmonic tendencies 12 Tonality is not only a governed and conditioned state but it is a socially conditioned one Scales are cultural manifestations resulting from shared experience and education Nature provides the elements of tonalite but human understanding sensibility and will determine particular harmonic systems 13 This concept was called a Metaphysical principle by Fetis though Dahlhaus argues that the term is used in this case to denote an anthropological culturally relative sense in his 1990 book Studies on the Origin of Harmonic Tonality and theorist Rosalie Schellhous posits that the Kantian term transcendental might be more appropriate 14 In his comparative work Fetis attempted a new method of classifying human races according to their musical systems 15 following contemporary trends of social darwinism in the emerging fields of ethnology and anthropology Harmonic and rhythmic modulation Edit However if one wishes to interpret Fetis metaphysical theory one of his unique theoretical ideas is laid out in book 3 of the Traite complet that of harmonic modulation Fetis argues that tonality has evolved over the course of time through four distinct phases or ordres Unitonic Resulting from plainchant tonality the unitonic phase consists mainly of consonant triads with no possibility for modulation due to the lack of the tritone between the 4th and 7th scale degrees This phase is also referred to by Fetis as tonalite ancienne Transitonic Order which began with the introduction of the dominant 7th chord into harmonic discourse sometime between Zarlino and Montverdi This development is also directly related to the codification of cadential systems and periodic phrase structure Pluritonic Modulation is achieved through enharmonic relationships in which one note of a chord is considered the point of contact between different scales Fetis claims that Mozart was the first to use such modulations as a means of expression In this order the diminished 7th and augmented 6th chords become important as they can modulate to several different tonalities Omnitonic The final phase of tonality and one embodied for Fetis by Wagner where the alteration of the intervals of natural chords and modification by substitution of notes is so complex that it becomes impossible to identify the original chord 16 This is seen as a period of extremes and undesirable compared to the moderately chromatic music of Meyerbeer 17 Fetis later applied this same system of ordres to rhythm the least advanced part of music where great things remain to be discovered 18 Though he did not publish these theories in any of his treatises they appear in several articles for the Revue musicale and in some lectures which had a profound impact on Liszt 19 Though music had not yet made it past the first phase Unirhythm by Fetis time he argues that composers may be able to mutate from one meter to another within the same melodic phrase Though Liszt may have been an open disciple of the ideas of the Omnitonic and Omnirhythmic the influence of such thinking can perhaps be seen most clearly in the music of Brahms where hemiola and mixing of time signatures is a common occurrence Se i miei sospiri EditThe Italian art song Se i miei sospiri appeared in a Paris concert organized by Fetis in 1833 Fetis published the piece for voice and strings in 1838 and then again in 1843 for voice and piano with alternate lyrics Pieta Signore It is these alternate lyrics with which the piece is now typically associated Fetis attributed the song to Alessandro Stradella and claimed to possess an original manuscript of the work but never produced it for examination As early as 1866 musicologists were questioning the authenticity of the song and when Fetis library was acquired by the Royal Library in Brussels after his death no such manuscript could be found Owing to this and the fact that the style of the piece is inconsistent with Stradella s own period the authorship of the piece is now typically attributed to Fetis himself The original Italian text for the song Se i miei sospiri was found set to different music by Alessandro Scarlatti in his 1693 oratorio The Martyrdom of St Theodosia 20 Publications EditBiographies de Joseph et Michael Haydn Paris n d Methode elementaire et abregee d harmonie et d accompagnement Paris Petit 1823 Traite du contrepoint et de la fugue Paris Charles Michael Ozu 1824 Revue musicale Paris 1827 35 Curiosites historiques de la musique complement necessaire de la musique mise a la portee de tout le monde Paris Janet et Cotelle 1830 Biographie universelle des musiciens et bibliographie generale de la musique Brussels 1833 1844 8 vols Traite du chant en choeur Paris 1837 Esquisse de l histoire de l harmonie consideree comme art et comme science systematique Paris 1840 Traite complet de la theorie et de la pratique de l harmonie Paris and Brussels 1844 Antoine Stradivari luthier celebre Paris 1856 Histoire generale de la musique Paris 1869 76 5 vls unfinished Notes Edit F J FETIS 1784 1871 HET MUZIEKLEVEN VAN ZIJN TIJD Brussel Koninklijke Bibliotheek Albert I 1972 pag xxiii a b c d e One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Fetis Francois Joseph Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 294 295 Damscrhroder David 1990 Music Theory from Zarlino to Schenker Stuyvesant NY Pendragon Press p 85 ISBN 0 918728 99 1 Alexandria to Brussels 1839 oudmigrations 2 March 2016 Retrieved 2016 04 26 a b c d e f g h i j k F J FETIS 1784 1871 HET MUZIEKLEVEN VAN ZIJN TIJD Brussel Koninklijke Bibliotheek Albert I 1972 pag 100 Fetis Joseph 1 February 1835 Analyse critique Episode de la vie d un artiste Revue musicale in French Paris IXme annee 5 33 35 See also Cone Edward T ed 1971 Fantastic Symphony An authoritative score historical background analysis views and comments 1st ed New York W W Norton p 217 ISBN 0 393 09926 1 Troupenas IMSLP Retrieved 1 March 2020 Fetis F J Esquisse de L histoire de l Harmonie An English Language Translation of the Francois Joseph Fetis History of Harmony Translated annotated and edited by Mary I Arlin Stuyvesant NY Pendragon Press 1994 p xxii Shirlaw asserts that anything more ill considered more indadequate than Fetis metaphysical theory of harmony based on the principle of tonality which he himself does not understand and is unable to explain it would be difficult to conceive full citation needed Arlin Mary I Fetis Contribution to Practical and Historical Music Theory Revue belge de Musicologie Vol 26 27 1972 1973 p 106 Fetis F J Esquisse de L histoire de l Harmonie An English Language Translation of the Francois Joseph Fetis History of Harmony Translated annotated and edited by Mary I Arlin Stuyvesant NY Pendragon Press 1994 p xxiii Schellhous Rosalie Fetis s Tonality as a Metaphysical Principle Hypothesis for a New Science Music Theory Spectrum Vol 13 No 2 Autumn 1991 p 219 240 Both the Dahlhaus and Schellhous quotes can be found in Schellhous Rosalie Fetis s Tonality as a Metaphysical Principle Hypothesis for a New Science Music Theory Spectrum Vol 13 No 2 Autumn 1991 p 219 240 Murphy Kerry January 2008 Francois Joseph Fetis Correspondance review Music and Letters 89 4 640 642 doi 10 1093 ml gcn041 Retrieved June 5 2022 Josephson Nors S Francois Joseph Fetis and Richard Wagner Revue belge de Musicologie Vol 26 27 1972 1973 p 84 89 Bloom Peter A Friends and Admirers Meyerbeer and Fetis Revue belge de Musicologie Vol 32 33 1978 1979 p 174 187 Arlin Mary I Metric Mutation and Modulation the Nineteenth Century Speculations of F J Fetis Journal of Music Theory Vol 44 No 2 Autumn 2000 p 261 Moricz Klara The Ambivalent Connection between Theory and Practice in the Relationship of F Liszt amp F J Fetis Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientarum Hungaricae T 35 Fasc 4 1993 1994 p 399 420 Glenn Paton John 1991 26 Italian Songs and Arias An Authoritative Edition Based on Authentic Sources Alfred Publishing References EditThis article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Francois Joseph Fetis New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Compositions EditEnsembles Edit String Quartet No 1 String Quartet No 2 Grand Sextet Op 5Overture Edit Ouverture de concert a grand orchestreConcerto Edit 1869 Flute Concerto in B minorSymphony Edit 1862 Symphony No 1 in Eb major Symphonic Fantasy for organ and orchestraMass Edit Messe di RequiemSongs Edit Se i miei sospiriExternal links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Francois Joseph Fetis Scores Edit Free scores by Francois Joseph Fetis at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Texts and books Edit Books with Fetis as author Google Books Books with occurrences of Fetis Google Books Texts with occurrences of Fetis archive org Biographie universelle des musiciens 2nd edition at Google Books Vol 1 1860 478 pages Aaron Bohrer vol 2 Vol 2 1861 484 pages Boildieu Derossi vol 1 Vol 3 1862 480 pages Desargus Giardini Vol 4 1862 491 pages Gibbons Kazynski Vol 5 1863 480 pages Kechlina Martini vol 6 Vol 6 1864 496 pages Martini leP Perolle vol 5 Vol 7 1864 548 pages Perotti Scultetus vol 8 Vol 8 1865 527 pages Sebastiani Zyka vol 7 Biographie universelle des musiciens supplement by Arthur Pougin at Google Books Vol 1 1878 480 pages Abadie Holmes Vol 2 1880 691 pages Holmes Mlle Augusta Zwingli Works by Francois Joseph Fetis at Project Gutenberg Works by Francois Joseph Fetis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en 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