Carl Friedrich Weitzmann
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Carl Friedrich Weitzmann (10 August 1808 – 7 November 1880) was a German music theorist and musician.


Life and work

Weitzmann was born in Berlin and first studied violin in the 1820s with Carl Henning and
Bernhard Klein Bernhard Joseph Klein (6 March 1793 – 9 September 1832) was a German composer. Life Klein was born in Cologne. He married Lili Parthey (1800–1829) who was the sister of Gustav Parthey (1798–1872) and the granddaughter of Friedrich Nicol ...
. From 1827 to 1832 he studied composition in Kassel with
Louis Spohr Louis Spohr (, 5 April 178422 October 1859), baptized Ludewig Spohr, later often in the modern German form of the name Ludwig, was a German composer, violinist and conducting, conductor. Highly regarded during his lifetime, Spohr composed ten Sy ...
and
Moritz Hauptmann Moritz Hauptmann (13 October 1792, Dresden – 3 January 1868, Leipzig), was a German music theorist, teacher and composer. His principal theoretical work is the 1853 ''Die Natur der Harmonie und der Metrik'' explores numerous topics, particula ...
. In 1832 he founded a ''Liedertafel'' (a peculiarly German type of male singing society) in Riga (now in Latvia) with
Heinrich Dorn Heinrich Ludwig Egmont Dorn (14 November 1800 or 1804-10 January 1892) was a German conductor, composer, teacher, and journalist. He was born in Königsberg, where he studied piano, singing, and composition. Later, he studied in Berlin with Ludwi ...
. In Revel (now Tallinn, Estonia), he became music director of the opera where he composed three operas. From 1836 he began a ten-year association with the Saint Petersburg court orchestra. At this time he began to collect music books and folksongs. Weitzmann toured in Lappland and Finland (then part of the Russian empire) and performed with orchestras in Paris and London, returning to Berlin in 1848 to research music history and theory. In 1857 he took a teaching position with the
Stern Conservatory The Stern Conservatory (''Stern'sches Konservatorium'') was a private music school in Berlin with many distinguished tutors and alumni. The school is now part of Berlin University of the Arts. History It was founded in 1850 as the ''Berliner Mu ...
(now part of the
Berlin University of the Arts The Universität der Künste Berlin (UdK; also known in English as the Berlin University of the Arts), situated in Berlin, Germany, is the largest art school in Europe. It is a public art and design school, and one of the four research universit ...
). Weitzmann published his first major theoretical work ''Der übermässige Dreiklang'' (the augmented triad) in 1853. In this treatise, he suggested that the minor
triad Triad or triade may refer to: * a group of three Businesses and organisations * Triad (American fraternities), certain historic groupings of seminal college fraternities in North America * Triad (organized crime), a Chinese transnational orga ...
was merely an inversion of the major triad and that both are generated by a common fundamental tone in the middle. Weitzmann's demonstration of the efficacy of each of the four possible perfectly even augmented triads in resolving to six major and minor triads each using single- or double-semitone displacement has been a significant influence on modern neo-Riemannian theorists. In Weitzmann's own lifetime, composer
Franz Liszt Franz Liszt, in modern usage ''Liszt Ferenc'' . Liszt's Hungarian passport spelled his given name as "Ferencz". An orthographic reform of the Hungarian language in 1922 (which was 36 years after Liszt's death) changed the letter "cz" to simpl ...
showed considerable interest in new theories regarding dissonant sonorities, referencing Weitzmann's "Der übermässige Dreiklang" in an analysis of his own Faust Symphony (a composition famously saturated with augmented triads).Todd, R. Larry, "Franz Liszt, Carl Friedrich Weitzmann, and the Augmented Triad" in "The Second Practice of Nineteenth-Century Tonality" ed. William Kindermann and Harald Krebs (Lincoln: 1996), pp. 153–77. This has led to a strong conceptual association between Weitzmann's work and the ''Zukunftsmusik'' ("
Music of the Future "Music of the Future" ("german: Zukunftsmusik") is the title of an essay by Richard Wagner, first published in French translation in 1860 as "La musique de l'avenir" and published in the original German in 1861. It was intended to introduce the libr ...
") for which he attempted to account. Weitzmann later extended his theories to scales, noting how a descending minor scale starting from the fifth degree is an inversion of an ascending major scale. Because his theories relate major and minor, it is called a "dualist" explanation. Later dualist theorists include
Arthur von Oettingen Arthur Joachim von Oettingen ( – 5 September 1920) was a Baltic German physicist and music theorist. He was the brother of theologian Alexander von Oettingen (1827–1905) and ophthalmologist Georg von Oettingen (1824–1916). Biography He ...
and the early work of
Hugo Riemann Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo Riemann (18 July 1849 – 10 July 1919) was a German musicologist and composer who was among the founders of modern musicology. The leading European music scholar of his time, he was active and influential as both a mu ...
. Weitzmann differed from most theorists in his ideas of tuning and
temperament In psychology, temperament broadly refers to consistent individual differences in behavior that are biologically based and are relatively independent of learning, system of values and attitudes. Some researchers point to association of temperam ...
. Most theorists viewed equal temperament as a compromise or a necessary evil. Weitzmann viewed it positively. He looked for acoustical properties of 12-note equal temperament, presumed enharmonic equivalence, and de-emphasized traditional rules of voice leading and treatment of dissonance leading to a theory where any chord can follow another chord. His most lasting contribution to music theory (researched by contemporary American theorist
Richard Cohn Richard Cohn (born 1955) is a music theorist and Battell Professor of Music Theory at Yale. He was previously chair of the department of music at the University of Chicago. Early in his career, he specialized in the music of Béla Bartók, but m ...
) concerns chord relations. Traditionally, a C-major triad was thought to be related most closely to a G-major triad through the
circle of fifths In music theory, the circle of fifths is a way of organizing the 12 chromatic pitches as a sequence of perfect fifths. (This is strictly true in the standard 12-tone equal temperament system — using a different system requires one interval of ...
and traditional tonic-dominant (V-I) resolution. Weitzmann suggested a-minor and e-minor triads were more closely related to C-major because they shared two common notes. This theory elegantly accounted for third relation and common tone progressions in earlier music of Schubert and Beethoven, and it paved the way for later chromatic composers who explored the compositional possibilities of tonal regions related by symmetrical augmented triads and diminished seventh chords.


Works

*''Der übermässige Dreiklang'' (Berlin, 1853) (The Augmented Triad) *''Der verminderte Septimenakkord'' (Berlin, 1854) (The Diminished Seventh Chord) *''Geschichte des Septimen-akkordes'' (Berlin, 1854) (History of Seventh Chords) *''Geschichte der griechischen Musik'' (Berlin, 1855) (History of Ancient Greek Music) *''Harmoniesystem'' (Leipzig, 1860, 2 cd printing 1895) (System of Harmony) *''Die neue Harmonielehre im Streit mit der alten'' (Leipzig, 1860) (The Conflict between New and Old Harmonic Theory) *''Geschichte des Clavierspiels und der Clavierlitteratur'' (History of Piano Playing and Piano Literature) (Stuttgart, 1863, expanded 1879); revised and edited by
Max Seiffert Maximilian Seiffert (9 February 1868 – 15 April 1948) was a German musicologist and editor of Baroque music. Biography Seiffert was born in Beeskow an der Spree, Germany, the son of a teacher. He was first educated at the Joachimsthal Gymna ...
as ''Geschichte der Klaviermusik'' (History of Piano Music) (Leipzig, 1899)


References

* Bowman, Edward Morris (1848–1913): Bowman's-Weitzmann's manual of musical theory (New York: W.A. Pond & co., 1879).http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b3563859 * Wason, Robert W., "Progressive Harmonic Theory in the Mid-Nineteenth Century" in Journal for Musicological Research, vii (1988) pp. 55–90 * Todd, R. Larry, "Franz Liszt, Carl Friedrich Weitzmann, and the Augmented Triad" in "The Second Practice of Nineteenth-Century Tonality" ed. William Kindermann and Harald Krebs (Lincoln: 1996), pp. 153–77 * Cohn, Richard, "Maximally Smooth Cycles, Hexatonic Systems, and the Analysis of Late Romantic Triadic Progressions," in "Music Analysis" xv (1996) pp. 9–40 * Cohn, Richard, "Weitzmann's Regions, My Cycles, and Douthett's Dancing Cubes," Music Theory Spectrum 22 (2000), 89 -103. * Wason, Robert W., "Carl Friedrich Weitzmann" in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie: Oxford, 2001. * Hennig, Dennis, "Weitzmann and the Liszt Machine," Miscellanea Musicologica 16 (1989): 109 - 34. {{DEFAULTSORT:Weitzmann, Carl Friedrich 1808 births 1880 deaths Musicologists from Berlin Pupils of Bernhard Klein Pupils of Moritz Hauptmann Pupils of Louis Spohr German music theorists 19th-century German musicologists Academic staff of the Berlin University of the Arts Scholars from the Kingdom of Prussia