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Franz Joseph Haydn is the composer who, more than any other, epitomizes
the aims and achievements of the Classical era. Perhaps his most important
achievement was that he developed and evolved in countless subtle ways the
most influential structural principle in the history of music: his
perfection of the set of expectations known as sonata form made an epochal
impact. In hundreds of instrumental sonatas, string quartets, and
symphonies, Haydn both broke new ground and provided durable models;
indeed, he was among the creators of these fundamental genres of classical
music. His influence upon later composers is immeasurable; Haydn's most
illustrious pupil, Beethoven, was the direct beneficiary of the elder
master's musical imagination, and Haydn's shadow lurks within (and
sometimes looms over) the music of composers like Schubert, Mendelssohn,
and Brahms. Part and parcel of Haydn's formal mastery was his famous sense
of humor, his feeling for the unpredictable, elegant twist. In the
Symphony No. 94 ("Surprise") (1791), the composer tweaks those audience
members who typically fall asleep during slow movements with the sudden,
completely unexpected intrusion of a fortissimo chord during a passage of
quietude. Haydn's pictorial sense is much in evidence works like his epic
oratorio The Creation (1796-98), in which images of the cosmos taking
shape are thrillingly, movingly portrayed in tones. By one estimate, Haydn
produced some 340 hours of music, more than Bach or Handel, Mozart or
Beethoven. Few of them lack some unexpected detail or clever solution to a
formal problem. Haydn was prolific not just because he was a tireless
worker with an inexhaustible musical imagination, but also because of the
circumstances of his musical career: he was the last prominent beneficiary
of the system of noble patronage that had nourished European musical
composition since the Renaissance. Born in the small Austrian village of
Rohrau, he became a choirboy at St. Stephen's cathedral in Vienna when he
was eight. After his voice broke and he was turned out of the choir, he
eked out a precarious living as a teenage freelance musician in Vienna.
His fortunes began to turn in the late 1750s as members of Vienna's noble
families became aware of his music, and on May 1, 1761, he went to work
for the Esterházy family. He remained in their employ for the next 30
years, writing many of his instrumental compositions and operas for
performance at their vast summer palace, Esterháza. Musical creativity
may often, it is true, meet a tragic end, but Haydn lived long enough to
reap the rewards of his own imagination and toil. The Esterházys
curtailed their musical activities in 1790, but by that time Haydn was
known all over Europe and widely considered the greatest living composer.
(He himself deferred to Mozart in that regard, and the friendly
competition between the two composers deepened the music of both.) Two
trips to London during the 1790s resulted in two sets of six symphonies
each (among them the "Surprise" symphony) that remain centerpieces of the
orchestral repertoire. Haydn's final masterpieces included powerful choral
works: the Creation and Seasons oratorios and a group of six masses. Haydn
stopped composing in 1803, after which he prefaced his correspondence with
a little musical quotation (from one of his part-songs) bearing the text
"Gone is all my strength; I am old and weak." He died in Vienna on May 31,
1809. ~