Anton Bernhard Fürstenau (1792-1852)
The
most prominent exponent of German Romantic flute-playing
in the first half of the 19th century, A.B. Fürstenau
was the son and flute pupil of Caspar Fürstenau
(177-1819) and the father and teacher of Moritz Fürstenau
(1824-89). After an early career as a traveling virtuoso
alongside his father, he was appointed principal flutist
of the Dresden orchestra by Carl Maria von Weber in
1820.
All his life Fürstenau continued to play the traditional
German keyed flute,
preferring instruments by Wilhelm
Liebel and others, though he allowed his son Moritz
to study the ring-key
flute with Theobald Boehm. However on succeeding
his father in Dresden in 1852 the son had to give up
the new flute and return to the older model, which was
preferred for its ability to blend with the other woodwinds
and its soulful ability to produce a large palette of
tone colors (Modulationsfähigkeit).
A.B. Fürstenau wrote articles about flute-playing
in 1825 and 1838 that tell us much about the special
style and feeling of the time. He also gave extensive
technical directions, especially for the fingering of
the German and Viennese-type keyed flute, in his flute
tutors of 1826 and c1844.
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