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Charles Hommann
(1803-?1872) was a Philadelphia-born musician and composer during the
years in which instrumental music, especially European classical music,
became increasingly prominent in the United States. He was encouraged by
the Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia (to which he was elected a
professional member in 1825), an organization founded in 1820 to aid its
aging musician members and dedicated to "the cultivation of skill and
diffusion of taste in music." The organization's work permeated and
enriched the city's culture, providing, through its orchestral and choral
performing groups and an Academy of Music (1825-31), musical opportunities
for its members and Philadelphians in general.
Society programs indicate
that orchestral performers in the Society's concerts, violinist and
violist Charles Hommann among them, had first-hand knowledge of overtures
and symphonies by prominent late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century
European composers, including Méhul, Romberg, Rossini, Beethoven, Auber,
Paer, Vogel, Mozart, Haydn, Boiéldieu, and Weber. Hommann's surviving
orchestral compositions--two overtures and a symphony--seem a fitting
response to the musical milieu created by the Society and its members.
Although little-remembered today, Hommann was a respected composer in his
day. One of his overtures received a gold medal prize from the
Philharmonic Society of Philadelphia in 1835. Hommann's two other
surviving orchestral works suggest they predate the prize overture. None
were ever published, leaving Hommann's work in relative obscurity.
This edition of Hommann's
three extant orchestral works, accompanied by an essay discussing his
cultural and historical milieu, will bring renewed attention to the
enterprising Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia and make accessible for
study and performance the earliest-known products of an emerging tradition
of notable orchestral works by American composers.
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