Publisher's Synopsis
The piano treatise of Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837) was written by one of the most renowned and influential pianists and teachers of early the romantic period. This facsimile of Part III of the English edition makes available for the first time in almost two hundred years an important source of information about musical interpretation and performance during the first three decades of the nineteenth century.
Hummel's treatise, which was published in German, French, and English between 1827-1828, and subsequently in Italian, Spanish and American editions, consists of three sections. The first and second deal with matters of musical theory and piano technique, but it is Part III that is of greatest interest to today's performers. In these pages Hummel provides his personal perspective on a wide variety of nineteenth-century practices and techniques. These include the proper execution of trills and other ornaments; rhythmic flexibility and rubato; piano pedaling; the art of improvisation, of which Hummel was a recognized master; and even how to tune the instrument. We are also given an insight into Hummel's aesthetic values and his thoughts on musical interpretation.
The facsimile will be enhanced with extensive commentary by Mark Kroll, the author of the definitive biography of Hummel and an authority on historical performance. He places Hummel's comments within the context of the development of keyboard playing between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and of the other factors that influenced Hummel's approach to interpreting music on the piano.