Anton Walter

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Anton Walter. Oil painting by Friedrich Gauermann, 1825 (Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum)

Gabriel Anton Walter (5 February 1752 – 11 April 1826) was a builder of pianos. The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians describes him as "the most famous Viennese piano maker of his time".[1]

Life

Walter was born in Neuhausen auf den Fildern, Germany.[1] The record of his marriage to a widow named Anna Elisabeth Schöffstoss in 1780 indicates that he had moved to Vienna by that time.[2] His earlier surviving pianos are dated to this year.[1]

His piano business was evidently successful. In 1790 he was awarded the status of Imperial Royal Chamber Organ Builder and Instrument Maker.[1] By 1800 he was employing about 20 workmen.[1] In that year he was joined in the firm by his stepson Joseph Schöffstoss, and the pianos came to be labeled "Anton Walter und Sohn" ("and son").[1] The last surviving Walter piano is dated 1825, and he died the following year.[1]

Walter's pianos

Fortepiano by Anton Walter (Vienna, ca. 1810) – Berlin, Musikinstrumentenmuseum

Walter's instruments are classified within the so-called "Viennese" school of piano design. This school originated with Johann Andreas Stein, who built pianos in Augsburg.[1] In Viennese instruments, the head of the hammer is closer to the player than the hinge, and the hammer is made to rise when its short opposite end is caught on a hook. Like all early pianos, those of the Viennese school were of far lighter construction than modern instruments and had a quite distinct sound; for general discussion, see fortepiano.

Walter improved on Stein's design by adding to the action a back check, which caught the hammer on its descent, preventing it from bouncing up and down in lively playing.[1] This innovation was generally adopted by other Viennese makers in Walter's time, and remains standard in the modern piano.[1] Its importance is illustrated by an observation of Palmieri and Palmieri, namely that modern replicas of Stein pianos commonly include a back check even though it is not historically authentic on these instruments.[3]

Walter's career extended over several decades, and his instruments evolved with the times, with ever heavier construction as the piano began its shift from the lightweight Classical-era norm toward its far heavier modern incarnation, achieved by about 1870. It appears that Walter eventually fell behind his competitors (notably Conrad Graf, who built much heavier instruments) and was less successful in the competition among makers during the last years of his career.[citation needed] He died in Vienna, aged 74.

Mozart's instrument

Mozart's Walter, on display in the main hall of the Tanzmeisterhaus, where the Mozart family lived in Salzburg after 1773. The location (now a Mozart museum) is ahistorical; during his lifetime Mozart kept the instrument in his adopted city of Vienna.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart bought a Walter piano in about 1782,[1] and employed it in one of the most important phases of his career, the composition and highly successful premieres of his mature piano concertos (see: Mozart piano concertos). In 1800 (nine years after Mozart's death), this instrument was modified by Walter.[1] It survives today (and is kept in Mozart's birth home in Salzburg), but cannot provide reliable testimony for Mozart's own performance practice, due to Walter's modifications. Most pertinently, we cannot know whether Mozart was able to raise the dampers during playing using a knee lever (the equivalent of the modern damper pedal) or had to make use of a hand stop at keyboard level, which would have necessitated a free hand. A Walter instrument in Nuremberg, dated 1790 by Kottick and Lucktenberg, uses hand stops.[4][5]

Surviving Walter pianos

The following list is not complete and emphasizes instruments on public view.

  • 1780 – Burgenländische Landesmuseum, Eisenstadt, Austria[6]
  • early 1780s – The Mozart instrument, now kept in the composer's birth home in Salzburg[7]
  • 1789 - Musical Instrument Museum in Poznań, Poland (part of the collection of National Museum in Poznań)[8]
  • 1790 – Rector's Palace, Dubrovnik
  • ca. 1790 – Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg (mentioned above in discussion of hand stops). The instrument is veneered in walnut. The museum owns other Walters, including one quite similar to Mozart's.[4]
  • ca. 1800 – Musikinstrumenten-Museum, Berlin[9]
  • 1798 – Villa Cicogna Mozzoni Italy
  • ca. 1800 – Finchcocks collection, Goudhurst, England. A very small portable square piano by Walter & Sohn. Each note has but one string, in contrast to the usual two or three used in most pianos even in Walter's day. The range is C–f3. Kottick and Lucktenberg describe its tone as having a "bell-like quality that never fails to charm."[10]
  • ca. 1810 – Württembergisches Landesmuseum, Stuttgart. This instrument has a 6½ half octave range, an octave and a half more than the standard (F–f) of Mozart's day. It is decorated with "gilded caryatids and grillework and medallions in brass."[11]
  • 1820 – Bach House (Eisenach). A square piano made by Johann Schieve and Walter & Sohn.[12]
  • 1820–1825 – Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. A painting by Wilhelm August Rieder appears to show Franz Schubert playing on this instrument.[9]
  • 1820–1830 – National Museum, Prague. A six-pedal piano described by Kottick and Lucktenberg as "eye-catching ... an elegant and harmonious example of the finest piano making of the time."[13]
  • no date given – Musée de la Musique, Paris[14]

Walter's pianos as models for modern builders

Fortepiano by Paul McNulty, based on a historical instrument by Walter & Sohn, 1805.

In modern times, fortepianos have been constructed by a number of builders for purposes of historically informed performance of 18th century and early 19th century music. For this purpose Walter's instruments have been important, serving as the model for instruments constructed by Philip Belt, Chris Maene, Paul McNulty, Paul Poletti, and Rodney Regier, among others.[15]

References

Notes

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 Latcham (2009)
  2. Latcham (1997, 383)
  3. Palmieri and Palmieri 2003, 13
  4. 4.0 4.1 Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 125)
  5. The issue just described is the subject of sharp scholarly dispute. For the hand-stop position, see Latcham (1997), for knee-levers, see Badura-Skoda (2000).
  6. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 1)
  7. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 2)
  8. See [1]
  9. 9.0 9.1 Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 15, 18)
  10. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 224)
  11. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 130)
  12. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 86)
  13. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 41)
  14. Kottick and Lucktenberg (1997, 60)
  15. These builders found by web search on "Walter piano replica".

Sources

  • Badura-Skoda, Eva (2000) "The Anton Walter fortepiano—Mozart's beloved concert instrument: A response to Michael Latcham." Early Music 28(3):469–473.
  • Kottick, Edward and George Lucktenberg (1997) Early Keyboard Instruments in European Museums. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Latcham, Michael (1997) "Mozart and the pianos of Gabriel Anton Walter." Early Music 25(3):383–400.
  • Latcham, Michael (2009) "Anton Walter". Article in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, online edition. Copyright 2009, Oxford University Press.
  • Palmieri, Robert and Margaret W. Palmieri (2003) Piano: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-415-93796-5.
  • Steblin, Rita (2007), "Anton Walter's Difficult Early Years in Vienna: New Documents, 1772–1779" Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society; vol. 33. 2007, 41–75

External links

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