Friedrich Adolf Steinhausen
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Friedrich Adolf Steinhausen (13 July 1859 − 23 July 1910) was a German doctor who was intensively involved with the physical conditions of making music.


Life

Born in
Potsdam Potsdam () is the capital and, with around 183,000 inhabitants, largest city of the German state of Brandenburg. It is part of the Berlin/Brandenburg Metropolitan Region. Potsdam sits on the River Havel, a tributary of the Elbe, downstream of B ...
,Steinhausen studied medicine in Berlin and became chief physician and corps doctor of the
XVI Corps (German Empire) The XVI Army Corps / XVI AK (german: XVI. Armee-Korps) was a corps level command of the German Army before and during World War I. It was assigned to the VII Army Inspectorate, which became the 5th Army at the start of the First World War. It w ...
. Stations of his career were
Hannover Hanover (; german: Hannover ; nds, Hannober) is the capital and largest city of the German States of Germany, state of Lower Saxony. Its 535,932 (2021) inhabitants make it the List of cities in Germany by population, 13th-largest city in Germa ...
. (1903),
Gdańsk Gdańsk ( , also ; ; csb, Gduńsk;Stefan Ramułt, ''Słownik języka pomorskiego, czyli kaszubskiego'', Kraków 1893, Gdańsk 2003, ISBN 83-87408-64-6. , Johann Georg Theodor Grässe, ''Orbis latinus oder Verzeichniss der lateinischen Benen ...
(1907) and
Metz Metz ( , , lat, Divodurum Mediomatricorum, then ) is a city in northeast France located at the confluence of the Moselle and the Seille rivers. Metz is the prefecture of the Moselle department and the seat of the parliament of the Grand E ...
(1908). As a violinist by birth, he dealt with questions of music making at an early age and sought new, scientifically sound forms for the optimal handling of this instrument.His works on piano technique, which are still significant today, were created in collaboration with the pianist
Tony Bandmann Tony Bandmann (17 May 1848 − 3 October 1907) was a German pianist, painter, piano teacher and theorist of piano technique. Life Born in Hamburg, as a student of Ludwig Deppe, Bandmann was one of the first to have a clear theoretical understa ...
. (1848-1907) and were directed against the outdated ideas of regarding this as a pure "finger technique". Steinhausen's more complex, body-related view found numerous supporters, including the physiologist Otto Fischer. (1861-1916) and the piano teachers
Ludwig Deppe Ludwig Deppe (7 November 1828 – 5 September 1890) was a German violinist, composer and conductor, known particularly as a piano teacher. Deppe was born at Alverdissen, Lippe. He studied with Eduard Marxsen in Hamburg and Johann Christian Lobe ...
(1828-1890), whose pupil
Elisabeth Caland Elisabeth Johanna Amelia Caland (13 January 1862 in Rotterdam − 26 January 1929 in Berlin) was a German pianist, piano teacher and theorist of piano technique of Dutch origin. Life Caland was born in Rotterdam. She received her first educa ...
(1862-1929) and
Rudolf Maria Breithaupt Rudolf Maria Breithaupt (11 August 1873 – 2 April 1945) was a German composer and music educator (piano). Life Born in Braunschweig, Breithaupt attended the grammar school in Braunschweig. He studied jurisprudence, then philosophy, psycholog ...
(1873-1945), even if they did not always share all of Steinhausen's views. Steinhausen studied for years the movements of the violinists' shoulder and arm, also on the basis of his practice as an amateur of the instrument. In 1903 he published the fruit of his research in a book published in Leipzig: ''Die Physiologie der Bogenführung auf den Streich-Instrumenten'' (Physiology of the conduct of the bow on stringed instruments). Already in this study there are references to piano technique, to which he dedicated a specific and fundamental treatment in the volume ''Über die physiologischen Fehler und die Umgestaltung der Klaviertechnik'' (On Physiological Errors and the Transformation of Piano Technique), also published in Leipzig in 1905. In the history of piano technique Steinhausen plays an essential role: he illustrated the physiological foundations of the modern "weight technique", which between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries replaced (or at least corrected) the traditional technique based on the "articulation of the fingers" and their "independence" (which was at the time the basis of all the "piano methods", such as the widespread one of Lebert and Stark). Steinhausen's work on piano technique was due to the insistence of the pianist (a pupil of
Ludwig Deppe Ludwig Deppe (7 November 1828 – 5 September 1890) was a German violinist, composer and conductor, known particularly as a piano teacher. Deppe was born at Alverdissen, Lippe. He studied with Eduard Marxsen in Hamburg and Johann Christian Lobe ...
), teacher and painter, Tony Bandmann, who already in 1893 in a study on the formation of piano sound (''Tonbildung und Technik auf dem Klavier'') had stressed the importance of the use of weight and the "shoulder-arm-hand chain". Steinhausen exerted a great influence on numerous pianists, teachers and scholars of piano technique between the 19th and 20th centuries, among them Breithaupt.


The Physiological Basics of the Weight Technique

The technique of the great pianists has very little to do, according to Steinhausen, with the technique that was then theorized in the "methods". The first, based on the use of "weight", is simply the "natural" or "physiological" technique, while the second, which considers the digital movement fundamental, constitutes an artificial and antiphysiological construction. The traditional digital technique aimed at the "articulation" and "independence" of the fingers is based on three erroneous assumptions: it misunderstands the organological characteristics of the piano, distorts the true nature of "exercise", understanding it as merely mechanical "gymnastics", and completely misunderstands the physiological movements that preside over the piano movements, identifying them with the only digital movement Leipzig, 1905, p. 81. In order to obtain from the piano all the rich range of sounds the instrument is capable of, it is necessary instead to use, as great pianists have always done and do, the great muscles of the arm and shoulder, which "occurs without stiffening anything, but in a state of ''relaxation and passivity of the muscles'': The "mass", i.e. the shoulder-arm-hand-drop system, is in fact set in motion by fully exploiting gravity, i.e. the inertial weight ("fall"); the impulse is thus given by a movement of momentum ("Schwungbewegung") of the entire arm mass from the shoulder down; the muscular work (contraction) is therefore of very short duration, it simply gives the impulse and then immediately abandons the mass to its moments of inertia; before and after the impulse there is an identical state of passivity, relaxation and absence of contraction of all the muscles". Playing in a natural way means "carrying" or "unloading" the weight on the fingertips which act as supports. The weight or the "load used in playing" (Spielbelastung) lies between the two purely ''theoretical'' boundaries of the "maximum load". (Maximalbelastung), in which all muscles work actively to unload the shoulder-arm-hand system downwards, and the "zero load" (Nullbelastung), in which the muscular work equal and contrary to the weight of the arm keeps the limb suspended without support and moves it upwards. The experienced pianist is able to use infinite degrees of "weight", dosing each time the amount of weight to be transferred to the fingertips in order to obtain the widest and richest range of sounds Leipzig, 1905, . It is therefore clear that the fingers do not have an independent function at all: they are, first of all, supports. However, in order to transfer the weight from one finger to the other, especially at speed, the ''forearm rotation'' must intervene in order to help the movement of momentum ("Schwungbewegung"). Understanding the essential function of forearm rotation "sweeps away all false precepts about the "articulation" of isolated fingers and the consequent myths of "independence" and "equality" of the fingers. In reality the articulation of the isolated fingers is physiologically impossible; the fingers behave not as hammers, but as spokes of a wheel rotating around the axis of rotation constituted by the elbow-wrist line, so their agility on the fingerboard depends only on the rotation movement of the forearm", they are ''fingertip-rotation'' "on which the mass of the arm momentarily rests and then discharges again into the momentum (Schwung)", Leipzig, 1905, . Steinhausen died in
Boppard Boppard (), formerly also spelled Boppart, is a town and municipality (since the 1976 inclusion of 9 neighbouring villages, ''Ortsbezirken'') in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (Districts of Germany, district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, lying in t ...
at the age of 51.


Work

* ''Studien über Schultergelenkbewegungen'', in ''Archiv für Anatomie und Physiologie'', 1899 * ''Die Physiologie der Bogenführung auf den Streich-Instrumenten''. Leipzig 1903 – 4th ed. by
Arnold Schering Arnold Schering (2 April 1877 in Breslau, German Empire – 7 March 1941 in Berlin) was a German musicologist. He grew up in Dresden as the son of an art publisher. He learned violin at the from which he graduated in 1896. Thereafter he studied v ...
, 1920 * ''Die Gesetze der Bogenführung auf den Streichinstrumenten'', in ''Die Musik'', Jg. 3.4 (volume 12), Erstes Septemberheft 1903,
Digitalisat
* ''Die physiologischen Grundlagen der musikinstrumentalen Technik''. in ''Die Musik'', 1904 * ''Die physiologischen Fehler und die Umgestaltung der Klaviertechnik''., Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1905 – 2nd edition by Ludwig Riemann, 1913
Digitalisat
* ''Ueber Zitterbewegungen in der instrumentalen Technik''. in ''Der Klavier-Lehrer'', Vol. 28, No. 11 of June 1, 1905,
Digitalisat
* Introduction, in Tony Bandmann, ''Die Gewichtstechnik des Klavierspiels''. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1907,
Digitalisat)
* ''Nervensystem und Insolation, Entwurf einer klinischen Pathologie der kalorischen Erkrankungen''.''Nervensystem und Insolation, Entwurf einer klinischen Pathologie der kalorischen Erkrankungen''.
on WorldCat Berlin: Hirschwald, 1910


Literature

* ''
Hugo Riemann Karl Wilhelm Julius Hugo Riemann (18 July 1849 – 10 July 1919) was a German musicologist and composer who was among the founders of modern musicology. The leading European music scholar of his time, he was active and influential as both a musi ...
's Musik-Lexikon'', 10th edition, edited by
Alfred Einstein Alfred Einstein (December 30, 1880February 13, 1952) was a German-American musicologist and music editor. He was born in Munich and fled Nazi Germany after Hitler's ''Machtergreifung'', arriving in the United States by 1939. He is best known for b ...
, Berlin: Max Hesse, 1922, * Mathias Matuschka, ''Die Erneuerung der Klaviertechnik nach
Liszt Franz Liszt, in modern usage ''Liszt Ferenc'' . Liszt's Hungarian passport spelled his given name as "Ferencz". An orthographic reform of the Hungarian language in 1922 (which was 36 years after Liszt's death) changed the letter "cz" to simpl ...
'', Munich: Katzbichler, 1987, .


References


External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Steinhausen, Friedrich Adolf 19th-century German physicians 20th-century German physicians 1859 births 1910 deaths People from Potsdam