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Johann George Tromlitz (1725-1805)
Hi.
This is a picture of me, Johann George Tromlitz
(1725-1805). On
behalf of myself, I would like to welcome you to
my home page.
At the moment I am a member of the exclusive club of
Dead White Males, but a couple of hundred years ago
I lived in Saxony (a part of Germany), where I was a
famous flute player, teacher, composer, instrument-maker
and writer. Back then the World Wide Web was not around,
but, hey, things change.
Further down the page you can read my bio, and a list of articles and books I wrote, and look at pictures
of flutes like the ones I invented and made. You
can also learn about my compositions, but these are frankly not as cool as the other
stuff so I have put that bit right at the end.
Where I am is not yet on-line, so you can't send me
e-mail. If you have any questions you could ask an associate
of mine, Ardal Powell, who might be able
to get in touch with me and get back to you.
BIO of myself, Johann George Tromlitz
(1725-1805)
I was born at Reinsdorf, near Artern, on 8 November
1725, and I died in Leipzig, on 4 February 1805. I married
in 1747 and in 1750 received the degree of Imperial
Public Notary at Leipzig University. I began making
flutes at about this time--just for myself, as I was
not impressed with the ones you could get from German
flutemakers at the time.
In 1754 I became principal flautist of the Grosses
Konzert, a forerunner of the famous Leipzig Gewandhaus
orchestra. The orchestra disbanded during the Seven
Years' War, and I left it in 1776 to spend more time
teaching, writing, and making flutes. I made solo tours
as well, including one to St Petersburg.
People who heard me said I was a really tremendous
player. They mentioned my perfect intonation, brilliance
and precision, and strong, trumpet-like tone. In 1774,
Johann Friedrich Reichardt considered me one of only
four Leipzig virtuosos worth naming. I was one of the
first players to introduce the bravura style of concerto
playing in Germany, with the strong and cutting tone
best suited to this style.
I wrote three books about flute-playing. In
the 1786 Kurze Abhandlung (Short Essay on
Flute- Playing--no English translation of this)
I said how important it was to have clarity of articulation
and expression, and perfect intonation in a system having
both large (5-comma) and small (4-comma) semitones,
(for which both Eb and D# keys invented by Johann
Joachim Quantz in 1726 are essential). I thought it
was about time someone mentioned that performers ought
to have total technical control and be completely emotionally
involved in the music.
Having got warmed up, I then wrote my
Unterricht (The Virtuoso Flute-Player)
(1791). Since there were no good teachers around
(except me, obviously) I decided to write a book that
could be used without one. So I went into a lot of detail
on all aspects of flute-playing: intonation, articulation,
flute maintenance, posture and breathing, dynamics,
ornaments, musical style, cadenzas and aspects of the
flute's construction. I may have gone a bit over the
top in the two chapters on articulation, but even if
they are rather exhaustive--exhausting, even--, they
were the most thorough treatment of this subject in
writing for any instrument and I couldn't really have
said any less if anyone was going to understand me.
I wrote a whole chapter on the trill because I was fed
up with hearing people play trills unevenly and out
of tune. I reduced all these subjects to a set of really
quite brilliant rules, and gave plenty of examples.
This is a picture of my most famous book,
The Virtuoso Flute- Player, in the English
translation by Ardal Powell. It has-- quite correctly,
in my view--been called "lively, informative,
and eminently readable", by Eric Haas. I do not
know Eric, but he obviously knows whereof he speaks,
as, evidently, do Jane Bowers, Edward R. Reilly
(who translated the almost equally cool flute
tutor of Johann Joachim Quantz (1697-1773)), Lisa
Beznosiuk, Niall O'Louglin, Nicholas Swindale,
and Denis Verroust since they have also said highly
gratifying things about the book. Click on the
picture at right if you want to read quotes from
their reviews and order a copy.
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FLUTES invented and made by me, Johann George Tromlitz
(1725- 1805)
When I started off I made two- keyed
flutes (D# and Eb keys), the kind I wrote my
1791 tutor for. I first announced that I was making
flutes with added keys in 1781. Between 1783 and 1785
I developed a C" thumb key and two keys for F. By 1796
I added a second lever for the right index finger to
the thumb Bb key. The 1796 system consisted of
keys for D# and Eb, G# (all developed before
1781), C" for the left thumb (1785), double F (1785),
and double Bb (1796). I did make a C'-foot, but
the flute didn't sound as good as it did with the shorter
D-foot, so I tried to discourage people from having
them. Here's a picture of my coolest type of flute,
which I first announced in 1796.
BTW, if you want to know more about my flutes, you
can read Ardal Powell's article, "The
Tromlitz Flute", in the Journal of the American
Musical Instrument Society Vol. 22 (1996), pp. 89-109.
As it says in this very useful article, I did not make
up the whole system: the Bb, G# and short F had
first been used in England in the 1750s, and the long
F had been invented in 1783 by the father of the young
blind virtuoso, Friedrich Ludwig Dülon, who showed
it to me in the following year. My original contributions
to the key configuration were the long Bb, and
the C"/Bb arrangement for the left thumb, which
I am told was taken up after my death by someone called
Theobald Boehm.
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The Keyed Flute is the English edition, as
you may already have guessed, of my book about
my keyed flutes. Besides a translation of my tutor
and several other interesting shorter texts, the
book has a lot of information about flute making
and playing while I was alive--click on the picture
at left to see review extracts and a table of
contents.
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Having invented this flute, in 1800
I published a book about playing it, über die
Flöten mit mehern Klappen (The Keyed Flute),
as a supplement to the 1791 tutor. I intended my eight-keyed
flute to play scrupulously in tune in all 24 keys with
a full set of major and minor semitones, even when accompanied
by an equal-tempered keyboard. Anyone who takes the
trouble to try it will find that I was right.
Towards the end of my life I played around with another
invention, a chromatic flute with only one key. I gave
up this experiment because I got tired of figuring out
the fingering, but I wrote about it because I thought
someone might come along and finish the job. I believe
it did influence this Boehm person, theone who invented
this metal flute most of you use now.
WRITINGS by me, Johann George
Tromlitz (1725-1805)
Here is a list of my articles and books.
The highlighted entries are English editions of the
tutors I mentioned a bit about before. If you have forgotten
already, click on the title in the listing--it will
remind you, and you can use your Back button
to get back to the list.
`Nachricht von Tromlitz Flöten', ed. J. G. Meusel,
Miscellaneen artistischen Inhaltes 8 (1781), 115-21
`Nachricht von Tromlitz'schen Flöten', ed. C. F. Cramer,
Magazin der Musik, 1. 2 (Hamburg, 1783), 1013-21,
trans. Ardal Powell, `Information on Tromlitz flutes', Traverso 6. 1 (Jan 1994), 1-2
`Neuerfundene Vortheile zur bessern Einrichtung der Flöte',
ed. J. G. Meusel, Miscellaneen artistischen Inhaltes 26 (1785), 104-9
Kurze Abhandlung vom Flötenspielen (Leipzig, 1786)
Ausführlicher und gründlicher Unterricht die Flöte zu spielen
(Leipzig, 1791/R1973, 1985) trans. and ed. Ardal Powell,
The Virtuoso Flute-Player by Johann George Tromlitz
(Cambridge, 1991)
`An das musikalische Publikum', Musikalische Korrespondenz der
teutschen filarmonischen Gesellschaft, 32-4 (10-24 Aug
1791), 252-69
An das musikalische Publikum (Leipzig, 1796/R1982)
über die Flöten mit mehrern Klappen (Leipzig, 1800/R1973, 1991) trans.
and ed. Ardal Powell, The Keyed Flute by Johann George
Tromlitz (Oxford, 1996)
`Abhandlung über den schönen Ton auf der Flöte',
AMZ 2 (Jan 1800) 301-16, translated in trans. and ed.
Ardal Powell, The Keyed Flute by Johann George
Tromlitz (Oxford, 1996), 239-42
`Replik auf die Anfrage, "Sollten nicht unsere Flöten durch
die vielen Klappen sehr verloren haben; und hat jemand
bewiesen, daß diese nöthig waren?"' Kaiserlich-
priviligierter Reichsanzeiger (Gotha, 1800) No. 98, 1271-72
Fingerordnung für meine Flöten zu 3, 5 und 7
Mittelstück und 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 und 6 Klappen, nebst dem
Gebrauch des Register und abgetheilte Propfschraube (Leipzig, n. d.)
COMPOSITIONS by me, Johann George
Tromlitz (1725-1805)
I wrote a few concertos, a collection of unaccompanied
pieces, some little sonatas and rondos for flute and
continuo, and a handful of sonatas for flute and piano.
There's a list of my compositions in Frans Vester, Flute
Music of the 18th Century,(Monteux, 1985), p. 495.
An edition of my Concerto Op. 1 No. 1 in D major (published
by Johann Julius Hummel, Amsterdam, c. 1774) is in Janet
Becker's dissertation, "The Eighteenth Century Flute
Concerto: A Study and Edition of Two Manuscripts from
the Fuerst Thurn und Taxis Hofbibliothek Regensburg
with Reference to Contemporary Treatises" (D.M. diss.,
Northwestern University, 1993; University Microfilms
Order No. 9317256)
I also wrote: 11 Gesänge für Klavier, gedichtet
von Schiller und Hölty. Sammlung deutscher
Gesänge beym Klavier, 1ster Theil (c. 1796), mentioned
in Ernst Ludwig Gerber's Lexicon of 1812/14,
s.v. Tromlitz.
Well, that's about it for my homepage. Glad you made
it this far, and hope you enjoyed it.
Here are some cool links to be going on with.
FOLKERS & POWELL, Makers of Historical Flutes
(inlcuding mine, natch)
Homepage of Ardal Powell, the dude who translated
my books into English
Other Classical and Rococo Composers
'Mozart
and the Troml;itz Flute', an English version of
'Mozart und die Tromlitz-Fl�te', as it appeared inTibia
26.3 (2001)
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