

Johann Joseph Fux
Johann Joseph Fux (
German fyːks) (
1660 –
February 13,
1741) was an
Austrian composer,
music theorist and pedagogue of the late
Baroque era. He is most famous as the author of
Gradus ad Parnassum, a treatise on
counterpoint, which has become the single most influential book on the
Palestrina style of
Renaissance polyphony. Almost all modern courses on Renaissance counterpoint, a mainstay of college music curricula, are indebted in some degree to this work by Fux.
Life
Fux was born to a peasant family in Hirtenfeld in
Styria. Relatively little is known about his early life, but likely he went to nearby
Graz for music lessons. In
1680 he was accepted at the Jesuit university there, where his musical talent became apparent; and he was organist at
St Moritz until
1688. Sometime during this period he must have made a trip to
Italy, as evidenced by the strong influence of
Corelli and Bolognese composers on his work of the time.
By the
1690s he was in
Vienna, and attracted the attention of
Emperor Leopold I with some masses he composed; the emperor was sufficiently impressed by them to assist him with his career after this point. In
1698, Leopold hired him as court composer. Fux traveled again to Italy, studying in Rome in
1700; it may have been here that acquired the veneration for Palestrina which was so consequential for music pedagogy.
Fux served Leopold I until his death, and two more Habsburg emperors after that:
Joseph I, and Charles VI, both of whom continued to employ him in high positions in the court. He was famous as a composer throughout this period, his fame being eclipsed only later in the
18th century as the Baroque style passed away. Although his music never regained favor, his mastery of counterpoint influenced countless composers through his treatise
Gradus ad Parnassum (
1725).
Haydn largely taught himself counterpoint by reading it and recommended it to the young
Beethoven.
Mozart had a copy of it that he annotated. The Baroque age in music in Austria ends with Fux.
Works
The
Gradus Ad Parnassum (Step or Ascent to Mount Parnassus) is a theoretical and pedagogical work written in Latin language, which Fux dedicated to Emperor Charles VI in 1725.
It is divided in two major parts. In the first part, Fux presents a summary of the theory on
Musica Speculativa, or the analysis of intervals as proportions between numbers. This section is in a simple lecture style, and looks at music from a purely mathematical angle, in a theoretical tradition that goes back, through the works of Renaissance theoreticians, to the Ancient Greeks. The words of
Mersenne,
Cicero and
Aristotle are among the references quoted by Fux in this section.
The second part, on
Musica Pratica, is the section of this treatise where the author presents his instruction on counterpoint, fugue, double counterpoint, a brief essay on musical taste, and his ideas on composing Sacred music, writing in the Style A Cappella and in the the Recitativo Style. This part is in the form of a dialog, between a master (Aloysius, Latin for Luigi, who is meant to represent Palestrina's ideas) and a student, Josephus, who represents Fux himself, a self-admitted admirer of Palestrina. At the outset Fux states his purpose: "to invent a simple method by which a student can progress, step by step, to the heights of compositional mastery..." and he gives his opinion of contemporary practice: "I will not be deterred by the most passionate haters of study, nor by the depravity of the present time." He also states that theory without practice is useless, thus his book stresses practice over theory.
While
Gradus ad Parnassum is famous as the origin of the term "species counterpoint," Fux was not the first one to invent the idea. In
1610 Girolamo Diruta, a composer of the
Venetian school, published
Il Transilvano, which presented the Renaissance polyphonic style as a series of types: one note against one note, two notes against one note, suspensions, and so forth. Fux's work repeated some of Diruta's, possibly coincidentally, since he is not known to have had a copy: in any event, Fux presented the idea with a clarity and focus which made it famous as a teaching method.
In species counterpoint, as given in Fux, the student is to master writing counterpoint in each species before moving on to the next. The species are, in order, note against note; two notes against one; four notes against one; suspensions (one note against one, but offset by half of the note value); and "florid," in which the other species are combined freely. Once all the species are mastered in two voices, the species are gone through again in
three voices, and then in four voices. (Occasionally in modern counterpoint textbooks the third and fourth species are reversed: suspensions being taught before four notes against one.)
Fux expressed the intention of adding sections on how to write counterpoint for more than four parts, but blamed his poor health for not being able to follow through.
Even though Fux made a number of errors, particularly in his description of third species (four notes against one) in which he allowed for idioms that do not belong to the 16th century, but rather to the 18th, modern counterpoint education is greatly indebted to
Gradus ad Parnassum as the codex of the five species .
Most subsequent counterpoint textbooks have taken Fux as their starting point, from the book by
Albrechtsberger (
Gründliche Anweisung zur Komposition) to
20th century examples such as the book by
Knud Jeppesen (
Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century).
Sources
- Article Johann Joseph Fux, in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
- Johann Joseph Fux, The Study of Counterpoint (Gradus ad Parnassum). Tr. Alfred Mann. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1965. ISBN 0-393-00277-2
- Knud Jeppesen, Counterpoint: The Polyphonic Vocal Style of the Sixteenth Century. New York, Dover Publications, 1992 (Original 1931). ISBN 0-486-27036-X
- Johann Joseph Fux, Gradus Ad Parnassum. Facsimile of the 1725 Vienna edition. Monuments of Music and Music Literature, Broude Brothers, NY, 1966.
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Baroque music describes an era and a set of styles of European classical music which were in widespread use between approximately 1600 and 1750.[1] This era is said to begin in music after the Renaissance and was followed by the Classical music era.
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The Latin phrase Gradus ad Parnassum means "Steps to Parnassus". It is sometimes shortened to Gradus. Mount Parnassus was, by some accounts in Greek mythology, the home of the Muses – the nine goddesses of the arts.
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In music, counterpoint is the relationship between two or more voices that are independent in contour and rhythm, and interdependent in harmony. It has most commonly been identified in Western music, developing strongly in the Renaissance, and also dominant in much of the common
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Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (between 3 February 1525 and 2 February 1526[1] - 2 February, 1594) was an Italian composer of the Renaissance. He was the most famous sixteenth-century representative of the Roman School of musical composition.
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