.jpg/180px-Johann_Strauss_I_(2).jpg)
Johann Strauss I, etching from
1835
Johann Strauss I (March 14,
1804 – September 25, 1849; ; also Johann Baptist
Strauss, Johann Strauss, Sr.,
Johann Strauss the Elder), born in Vienna
, was an
Austrian
Romantic composer famous for his waltzes, and for popularizing them alongside Joseph Lanner, thereby setting the foundations
for his sons to carry on his musical dynasty. His most
famous piece is probably the
Radetzky
March (named after
Joseph Radetzky von Radetz),
while his most famous waltz is probably the
Lorelei
Rheinklänge op. 154.
Life and work
Johann Strauss was the father of
Johann Strauss II,
Josef Strauss and
Eduard Strauss, who had a son called
Johann Strauss III, born in 1866. He also
had two daughters, Anna, who was born in 1829, and Therese, who was
born in 1831. His youngest son, Ferdinand, who was born 1834, lived
only ten months. Strauss's parents (Franz Borgias Strauss; October
10, 1764 – April 5, 1816) and Barbara Dollmann (December 3, 1770 –
August 28, 1811) were
innkeepers ( ). Strauss
had a
Hungarian Jewish grandfather, Johann Michael Strauss (1720–1800)
who converted to
Catholicism.
Tragedy struck his family as his mother died of 'creeping fever'
when he was seven. When he was 12, his father Franz Borgias Strauss
was discovered drowned, possibly by suicide, in the
Danube river. His guardian, the tailor Anton Müller,
placed him as an apprentice to a
bookbinder Johann Lichtscheidl; Strauss took
lessons in the
violin and
viola in addition to fulfilling his apprenticeship.
Contrary to a story later told by his son, Johann jun., he never
ran away from his bookbinder apprenticeship and in fact
successfully completed it in 1822. He also studied music with
Johann Polischansky during his apprenticeship and eventually
managed to secure a place in a local orchestra of Michael Pamer
which he eventually left in order to join a popular string quartet
known as the
Lanner Quartet formed by his would-be rival
Joseph Lanner and the Drahanek brothers, Karl and Johann. This
string quartet playing Viennese waltzes and rustic German dances
expanded into a small string orchestra in 1824.
He eventually became deputy
conductor of
the orchestra to assist Lanner in commissions after it became so
popular during the
Fasching of 1824 and
Strauss was soon placed in command of a second smaller orchestra
which was formed as a result of the success of the parent
orchestra. In 1825, he decided to form his own band and began to
write music (chiefly, dance music) for it to play after he realized
that he could also possibly emulate the success of Lanner in
addition to putting an end to his financial struggles. By so doing,
he would have made Lanner a serious rival although the rivalry did
not entail hostile consequences as the musical competition was very
productive for the development of the waltz as well as other dance
music in Vienna.
He soon became one of the best-known and well
loved dance composers in Vienna, and he toured with his band to
Germany, the Netherlands
, Belgium
, England,
and Scotland. The conducting reins and management of this
'Strauss Orchestra' would eventually be passed over to the hands of
his sons variously until its disbandment by Eduard Strauss in
1901.
On a trip to France in 1837 he heard the
quadrille and began to compose them himself,
becoming largely responsible for introducing that dance to Austria
in the 1840 Fasching, where it became very popular. It was this
very trip (in 1837) which has proved Strauss' popularity with
audiences from different social backgrounds and this paved the way
to forming an ambitious plan to perform his music in England for
the coronation of
Queen
Victoria in 1838. Strauss also adapted various popular melodies
of his day into his works so as to ensure a wider audience, as
evidenced in the incorporation of the
Oberon overture
into his early waltz, "
Wiener
Carneval" op. 3 and also the French
national anthem "
La Marseillaise" into his "Paris-Walzer" op.
101.
.jpg/180px-Johann_Strauss_I_(1).jpg)
Johann Strauss I, 1837
Strauss
married Maria Anna Streim in 1825 in the parish church of
Liechtenthal in Vienna
. His
marriage was relatively unstable as his prolonged absence from his
immediate family due to frequent tours abroad led to a gradual
alienation and he later took on a mistress, Emilie Trampusch, in
1834 with whom he had six children. This personal decision marked
Anna Strauss's conviction to further
Johann Strauss II's development as a
composer, as Johann Senior had forbidden his sons to undertake
music studies at any point of time. With Johann Senior's open
declaration of his paternity of a daughter born to Emilie, Maria
Anna sued for divorce in 1844, and this effectively allowed Johann
Junior to actively pursue a musical career. Strauss I was a strict
disciplinarian in the Strauss home called 'Hirschenhaus' better
known in Vienna as the 'Goldener Hirsch' (The Golden Stag), and
imposed his will on his sons to pursue careers that were not
musically-related. Likewise, his brother
Josef Strauss was destined for a military
career whereas the younger
Eduard
Strauss was expected to join the
Austrian consulate.
Despite family problems, he also toured the British Isles
frequently and was always prepared to write novelty pieces for many
charitable organizations there. His waltzes were gradually
developed from a rustic peasant dance into one which posterity
would recognize as the
Viennese
Waltz. They were written in three-quarter time with a short
introduction; often with little or no reference to the later chain
of five two-part waltz structure; usually appended with a short
coda and concluded in a stirring finish although his son
Johann Strauss II expanded the waltz
structure and utilized more instruments than his father. While he
did not possess a musical talent as rich as his eldest son's, nor a
business mind as astute, he was among the handful of early waltz
composers along with
Joseph Lanner to
actively write pieces with individual titles —with the view to
boost sales of their sheet music— which enabled music enthusiasts
to easily recognize those pieces . In fact, during his performances
at the Sperl-Ballroom in Vienna, where he established his name, he
actively pursued the concept of collecting a fixed entrance fee
from the patrons of the ballroom instead of the old practice of
passing around a collection plate where income is only guaranteed
by the goodwill of the patrons.

The grave of Johann Strauss I at
Zentralfriedhof in Vienna, Austria.
Johann Strauss II often played his
father's works and openly declared his admiration of them although
it was no secret to the Viennese that their rivalry was intense,
with the press at that time fueling it. Johann Strauss I himself
refused to play ever again at the Dommayer's Casino, which offered
his son his conducting debut, and was to tower over his son during
his lifetime in terms of career advancement, although Strauss II
was to eclipse him in terms of popularity in the classical
repertoire. In 1846, Johann Strauss I was awarded the honorary
title of
K.K. Hofballmusikdirektor (Director of
Music for the Imperial and Royal Court Balls) by Emperor
Ferdinand I.
Strauss died in Vienna in 1849 from
scarlet fever obtained from one of his
illegitimate children. He was buried at the Döblinger cemetery
beside his friend Joseph Lanner.
In 1904, both of their remains were
transferred to the graves of honour at the Zentralfriedhof
. The former
Döblinger Cemetery is now a
Strauss-Lanner Park.
Hector Berlioz
himself paid tribute to the 'Father of the Viennese Waltz' by
commenting that 'Vienna without Strauss is like Austria without the
Danube'.
Works
Waltzes
- Täuberln-Walzer op. 1
Little Doves (1827)
- Döblinger
Réunion-Walzer op. 2 Dobling Reunion Waltz
- Wiener Carneval op. 3
Viennese Carnival (1828)
- Kettenbrücke-Walzer op.
4 Suspension Bridge (1828)
- Gesellschafts-Walzer op. 5
Association’s Waltz
- Wiener Launen-Walzer op. 6
Vienna Fancies Waltz
- Tivoli-Rutsch Walzer op. 39 Tivoli-Slide (1830)
- Das Leben ein Tanz oder Der Tanz ein Leben! Walzer op. 49
Life is a Dance
- Elisabethen-Walzer op. 71
- Philomelen-Walzer op. 82
- Paris-Walzer op. 101 (1838)
- Huldigung der Königin Victoria von Grossbritannien op. 103
Homage to Queen Victoria of Great Britain
- Wiener Gemüths-Walzer op. 116 Viennese Sentiments
(1840)
- Lorelei Rhein Klänge op. 154 Echoes of the Rhine
Loreley (1843)
Polkas
- Seufzer-Galopp op. 9
Sighing
- Chineser-Galopp op. 20 Chinese
- Einzugs-galopp op. 35 Entrance Galopp
- Sperl-Galopp op. 42
- Fortuna-Galopp op. 69
- Jugendfeuer-Galopp op. 90 Young Spirit
- Cachucha-Galopp op. 97
- Indianer-Galopp op. 111 Red Indian Galopp
- Sperl-Polka op. 133
- Beliebte Annen-Polka op. 137 Beloved Anna
- Piefke und Pufke Polka op. 235
Marches
See also
References
- Martin Bjelik: "Biographien von Johann Strauß Vater und Sohn", Wiener
Institut für Strauss-Forschung
- Norbert Rubey: Johann Strauss (Vater) — "ein Musiker von Gottes
Gnaden"?, University of Vienna
External links