Artur Schnabel, about 1906
Artur Schnabel (April 17, 1882 August 15, 1951)
was an Austrian-born Jewish
classical pianist,
who also
composed and taught. Schnabel was
known for his intellectual seriousness as a musician, avoiding pure
technical bravura. He is one of the 20th century's important
pianists, whose vitality, profundity and spirituality in playing of
works by
Beethoven and
Schubert, in particular, have been hailed as
exemplars of interpretative penetration.
Quote:
"The notes I handle no better than many pianists.
But the pauses between the notes—ah, that is where the art
resides."
The early years
Born in
Kunzendorf, a small suburb of Bielitz
, Galicia, in the Silesian
part of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire (today Lipnik, Bielsko-Biała
, Poland
), Schnabel
was the youngest of three children born to Isidor Schnabel, a
Jewish textile merchant, and his wife Ernestine (née Labin).
He had two sisters, Clara and Frieda..
The family
moved to Vienna
in 1884,
when Schnabel was two. He began learning the piano at the
age of four, when he took a spontaneous interest in his eldest
sister Clara's piano lessons. His prodigious talent quickly became
evident.
At the age of six he began piano lessons
under Professor Hans Schmitt of the Vienna Conservatory (today the
University of Music and Performing Arts,
Vienna
). At the age of nine, he was accepted as a
pupil by the famous piano pedagogue
Theodor Leschetizky.
The Leschetizky years
Schnabel remained under Leschetizky's tutelage for seven years,
between 1891 and 1897. His co-students of Leschetizky during that
period included
Ossip
Gabrilowitsch,
Mark Hambourg and
Ignaz Friedman.
Initially, for his first year under Leschetizky, he was given
rigorous preparatory technical tuition from
Anna Yesipova (Leschetizky’s second wife and a
famous pianist in her own right) and also from
Malwine Bree who was Leschetizky's assistant.
From age ten, he participated in all Leschetizky's classes.
Following a failed initial approach to
Anton Bruckner, Schnabel studied music theory
and composition under
Eusebius
Mandyczewski. Mandyczewski was an assistant to
Johannes Brahms, and through him Schnabel
was introduced to Brahms' circle and was often in the great
composer's presence. The young Schnabel once heard Brahms play in a
performance of his
first
piano quartet; for all the missed notes, said Schnabel, it "was
in the true grand manner."
Schnabel made his official concert debut in 1897, at the
Bösendorfer-Saal in Vienna.
Later that same year,
he gave a series of concerts in Budapest
, Prague
and Brünn
(today Brno
, Czech
Republic).
The Berlin years
Schnabel
moved to Berlin
in 1898,
making his debut there with a concert at the Bechstein-Saal.
Following
World War I, Schnabel also toured
widely, visiting the United States
, Russia
and England
.
He gained initial fame thanks to orchestral concerts he gave under
the conductor
Arthur Nikisch as well
as playing in
chamber music and
accompanying his future wife, the
contralto
Therese Behr, in
lieder.
In chamber music, he founded the Schnabel Trio with the violinist
Alfred Wittenberg and the cellist
Anton Hekking; they played together
between 1902 and 1904. In 1905, he formed a second Schnabel Trio
with
Carl Flesch (with whom he also
played violin sonatas) and the cellist
Jean Gérardy. In 1914, with the outbreak
of the First World War, Gérardy (a Belgian) left the trio as he
could no longer remain in Germany. He was replaced by
Hugo Becker and this became the third Schnabel
Trio.
Later, Schnabel also played in a quartet with violinist
Bronisław Huberman, composer/violist
Paul Hindemith and the cellist
Gregor Piatigorsky (with whom he
also played and recorded cello sonatas). Schnabel also played with
a number of other famous musicians including the violinist
Joseph Szigeti and the cellists
Pablo Casals and
Pierre Fournier.
He was friends of, and played with, the most distinguished
conductors of the day, including
Wilhelm Furtwängler,
Bruno Walter,
Otto
Klemperer,
George Szell,
Willem Mengelberg, and Sir
Adrian Boult.
From 1925 Schnabel taught at the Berlin State Academy, where his
masterclasses brought him great renown. Among Schnabel's many piano
pupils were
Clifford Curzon,
Rudolf Firkušný, Adrian
Aeschbacher,
Lili Kraus,
Leon Fleisher,
Carlo
Zecchi,
Claude Frank, Leonard
Shure,
Alan Bush,
Nancy Weir, Jascha Spivakovsky,
Eunice Norton,
Henry
Jolles, and radio personality
Karl
Haas. His last and favourite pupil was
Maria Curcio.
The later years
Schnabel, a
Jew, left Berlin in 1933 after the
Nazi Party took control.
He lived in England
for a time while giving masterclasses at Tremezzo
on Lake
Como
in Italy
, before
moving to the United
States
in 1939. In 1944, he became a
naturalized citizen of the United States.
There he
took a teaching post at the University of Michigan
, returning to Europe at the end of World War II. Among his pupils in
Michigan was composer
Sam
Raphling.
He continued to give concerts on both sides of the Atlantic until
the end of his life, as well as composing and continuing to make
records, although he was never very fond of the whole studio
process.
He died in Axenstein, Switzerland
and was buried in Schwyz
,
Switzerland.
Family
Schnabel married Therese Behr in 1905. They had two sons,
Karl Ulrich Schnabel (1909-2001) who
also became a classical pianist and renowned piano teacher, and
Stefan Schnabel (1912-99) who became
a well regarded actor.
Repertoire
Schnabel was best known for his devotion to the core German
composers, especially the Viennese classics of
Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert. He
was also renowned for his playing of works by
Brahms and
Schumann. He also played and recorded works
by
Bach.
However, his repertoire was wider than that. During his young
virtuosic years in Berlin, he played works by other composers
including
Liszt,
Chopin and
Weber. On his early American tours, he
programmed works such as the
Chopin
Preludes and Schumann's
Fantasia in C. Among other works
that he played, as recalled by those such as
Claudio Arrau and
Vladimir Horowitz, who had heard Schnabel
in the 1920s, were Chopin's
E minor Piano Concerto and the
Piano Sonata No.
2 in B-flat minor, and
Weber's
Konzertstück
and Piano Sonata No. 2. Schnabel himself mentioned that he had
played the Liszt
Sonata in B
minor "very often", as well as the Liszt
E-flat piano concerto.
It is not clear why Schnabel dropped those from his performing
repertoire in the 1930s, after his final departure from Germany. He
claimed that it was because he decided that he wanted to play only
"music which is better than it could be performed". However, it has
been suggested by some that "Schnabel, uprooted from his native
heritage, may have been clinging to the great German composers in
an attempt to keep his cultural origins alive".
Schnabel was known for championing the then-neglected sonatas of
Schubert and, even more so, Beethoven, including his more
challenging late works.
While on a tour of Spain
, Schnabel
wrote to his wife saying that during a performance of Beethoven's
Diabelli Variations he
had begun to feel sorry for the audience. "I am the only
person here who is enjoying this, and I get the money; they pay and
have to suffer," he wrote. Schnabel did much to popularize
Beethoven's piano music, making the first complete recording of the
sonatas, completing the set in 1935. This set of recordings has
never been out of print, and is considered by many to be the
touchstone of Beethoven sonata interpretations, though shortcomings
in finger technique mar many performances of fast movements
(
Sergei Rachmaninoff is supposed
to have referred to him as "the great
adagio pianist"). It has been
said that he suffered greatly from nerves when recording; in a more
private setting, his technique was impeccable. He also recorded all
the Beethoven
piano concertos.
Schnabel as composer
Despite his performing repertoire being concentrated largely on the
works of Beethoven, Schubert, Mozart and Brahms, almost all of his
own compositions (none of which are in the active repertoire) are
atonal. (It is interesting, in this
regard, to note that Schnabel was a close friend of
Arnold Schoenberg, his Austrian-American
compatriot, who was famous as a pioneering composer of atonal and
twelve-tone music.)
They are "difficult" yet fascinating and complex works, and are
marked by genuine originality of style. Composers
Ernst Krenek and
Roger Sessions have commented that they show
signs of undoubted genius (see biography of Schnabel by Cesar
Saerchinger). Schnabel's list of compositions eventually included
three
symphonies, a piano concerto, a piano
sonata (premiered by
Eduard Erdmann
at the 1925 Venice ISCM Festival) and five
string quartets, amongst various smaller
works.
In recent years, a number of his compositions (notably championed
by the violinist,
Paul Zukofsky) have
been recorded and made available on CD, including three of his
string quartets, the three symphonies, and piano sonata.
Further reading
Schnabel's book
My Life and Music (reprinted 1988;
Mineola, NY: Dover Publications; ISBN 0-486-25571-9), is a mixture
of autobiography and commentary on a variety of musical
subjects.
Saerchinger,C. Artur Schnabel. London, 1957 (with disc.)
Music and the line of most resistance. Princeton University Press,
1942
External links
References
- The Guardian, 14 April 2009
- Telegraph, 7 April 2009
- Arrau in conversation with Peter Warwick, 31 July 1976
- Harris Goldsmith, Artur Schnabel: Paradigm or
Paradox?, Keynote 3, March 1982
- Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th ed., 1954,
Eric Blom. ed.