The Viennese Dance Series for Chamber Ensembles

Johann Schrammel

Soundbite

Nussdorfer March for String Quartet

Johann Schrammel (1850-1893), along with his brother Josef and Anton Strohmayer, created an ensemble and a type of music that was every bit as Viennese as that of the Strauss Family. In 1878, Schrammel, an orchestral violinist, his brother Josef, a Vienna folk music specialist, and the virtuoso guitarist Anton Strohmayer formed a trio. In 1884, the clarinetist Georg Dänzer joined their group and they became known as the Schrammel Quartet. (see left) Both brothers and Strohmayer wrote numerous works--waltzes, marches, polkas and galopps--for this combination. Their  wonderful works, which were based on the folk melodies of old Vienna, became known as "Schrammelmusik". In the German-speaking world and throughout much of Europe, their music achieved the kind of fame which had been accorded the Strauss waltzes. In Vienna, their music was held in the highest regard by the likes of Brahms and Johann Strauss, Jr., both of whom could always be found in the audience, along with many other famous musicians, whenever the Schrammel Quartet gave a public concert. It is fair to say that Schrammelmusik is even more Viennese than the music of the Strausses. Schrammel ensembles--i.e., two violins, a clarinet and the 13 string bass guitar--could regularly be found playing at Heurigens, the wine bars, found on the outskirts of Vienna, so typical of that city and no place else. There, the Viennese drank the new wine at long tables and linked arms singing old Viennese folk melodies to forget the troubles of their daily lives.

There are two theories as to the title of the Nussdorfer March. Nussdorf was a village, and now a suburb, of Vienna to which the Viennese often made day trips to eat and drink in its appealing Heuringer taverns. But more likely, as its melody suggests, it was inspired by the song the Nussdorf Lied by the well-known Viennese folksong writer Carl Lorens. The Nussdorfer March is one of the most famous Schrammel marches ever written and one of the 5 or 6 most famous to come out of Vienna.  Though nearly all of the Schrammels' compositions were written for two violins, clarinet and bass guitar, the tremendous popularity of their music quickly led to arrangements for virtually every kind of small ensemble as well as the piano. While our soundbite is of the original combination, keep in mind that our version is for string quartet, a combination in which this music no doubt was often heard in the cafes of Vienna.

Parts: $10.95

              

 

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