Franz Jakob Späth (or Spath;[a] c. 1714 – 23 July 1786) was a German keyboard instrument builder. He was born and died in Regensburg, where he worked for most of his life. An organ builder by training, he is known, along with his son-in-law Christoph Friedrich Schmahl, as the most prominent builder of tangent pianos.

Franz Jakob Späth
Bornc. 1714
Regensburg, Bavaria
Died23 July 1786 (aged 71–72)
Regensburg, Bavaria
Occupations
  • Organ builder
  • Piano maker
Known forTangent pianos

Life

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Franz Jakob Späth was the son of the organ builder Johann Jakob Späth [de]. He was likely trained in organ building by his father. He took charge of his father's workshop in 1747. In the same year, he married Johanna Rosina Schessinger. The couple had seven children, three of whom survived childhood.[2]: 203–204 

In 1751, he presented a tangent piano to the Elector of Bonn.[3]: 347  Instead of striking the strings with a pivoted hammer, they are struck with non-pivoting, vertical hammers called tangents.[4]: 80  Ernst Ludwig Gerber reported that the instrument had 30 tone variations, which increased to 50 in 1770.[5]

The piano builder Johann Andreas Stein apprenticed with Späth from 1749 to 1750. Stein's claviorgan of 1781 shows Späth's influence.[6] In 1774, Späth established a piano building firm with his son-in-law Christoph Friedrich Schmahl (1739–1814), who came from a family of organ builders.[7]

Späth died on 23 July 1786. The firm was inherited by Schmahl's son, Christian Carl, but was dissolved after his death.[7]

Instruments

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Organ at the Dreieinigheitskirche

Though widely credited as the inventor of the tangent piano, Späth was not the first to invent the tangent action.[1]: 155 [3]: 394  Jean Marius had proposed a similar mechanism in 1716 to the French Academy of Sciences.[8] Christoph Gottlieb Schröter claimed to have invented an instrument with a similar action in 1717, though it was not announced until 1747 in Lorenz Christoph Mizler's Neu eröffnete musikalische Bibliothek.[3]: 347  One surviving tangent piano from the 18th century was likely built in Späth's lifetime.[9] Schmahl continued to manufacture and sign instruments under his and his father-in-law's name until 1793.[7]

Späth himself never used the term tangent piano (Tangentenflügel), which first appeared in 1791.[1]: 151  He referred to the mechanism as Tangirung and the instrument as Pandaleons Forte-pianos, Pianoforteinstrumente in Flügelform, clavecin d'amour, owing to its expressiveness and dynamic range, or simply Clavier.[4]: 88 

Späth also built harpsichords and harpsichord-pianos. On 10 September 1765, an advertisement for Späth's instruments with the combined fortepiano and harpsichord actions appeared on the Leipziger Zeitung.[2]: 206–207  In 1770, he advertised an instrument with three manuals that combined the Tangirung action with a harpsichord's plucking action.[10]

Späth built the organ in Regensburg's Dreieinigkeitskirche, which was completed in 1758.[9] It was renovated in 1892 by Johannes Strebel. The renovation replaced the principal pipes and added three reed pipe ranks, while preserving the instrument's facade.[11]: 664  It was renovated again in 1966 by Detlef Kleuker. The new organ was prone to faults and had to be repaired often. It was removed in 2009[11]: 668  and was rebuilt by Jürgen Ahrend to better suit Johann Sebastian Bach's music by basing it on Thuringian and Central German organs, which Bach composed for,[12] while preserving Späth's facade.[13] The rebuilding was completed in the summer of 2020.[14] Späth also built the organ in Oswaldkirche in 1753[2]: 204  and planned to build a new organ for the Regensburg Cathedral. After it was vetoed by the bishop, Späth was only instructed to repair the cathedral's old organ.[11]: 657 

Späth's instruments were generally well-regarded. Forkel praised his fortepianos in his 1782 Musikalischer Almanach für Deutschland.[15] In 1777, Mozart wrote to his father that Späth's fortepianos were his favorite, before he was introduced to Stein's.[3]: 387  Carl Ludwig Junker [fr] reported that Beethoven refused to play on an instrument made by Späth. Junker postulated that Beethoven, who played Stein's pianos in Bonn, was not accustomed to playing Späth's pianos.[16]: 162–163 

Notes

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  1. ^ His name is now normally written with an umlaut, but authorities in the past, such as Fétis, Forkel, and Gerber, spelled his name without the umlaut. Mozart was the first to spell his name with an umlaut.[1]: 150–151 

References

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  1. ^ a b c Latcham, Michael (2004). "Franz Jakob Spath and the "Tangentenflügel", an Eighteenth-Century Tradition". The Galpin Society Journal. 57: 150–170. ISSN 0072-0127. JSTOR 25163799.
  2. ^ a b c Badura-Skoda, Eva (2017). The eighteenth-century fortepiano grand and its patrons: from Scarlatti to Beethoven. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253022646.
  3. ^ a b c d Pollens, Stewart (2022). A history of stringed keyboard instruments. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-42199-7.
  4. ^ a b Di Stefano, Giovanni Paolo (2008). "The "Tangentenflügel" and Other Pianos with Non-Pivoting Hammers". The Galpin Society Journal. 61: 79–244. ISSN 0072-0127. JSTOR 25163927.
  5. ^ Gerber, Ernst Ludwig (1812). Neues historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkünstler. Leipzig : A. Kühnel. p. 122.
  6. ^ Latcham, Michael (2001). "Stein, Johann (Georg) Andreas". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  7. ^ a b c Klotz, Hans; Meisel, Maribel; Belt, Philip R.; Klaus, Sabine K. (2001). "Schmahl". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  8. ^ Di Stefano, G. P. (1 February 2011). "The clavecins a maillets of Marius and Veltman: new observations on some of the first pianos in France". Early Music. 39 (1): 35–56. doi:10.1093/em/caq113.
  9. ^ a b Klotz, Hans (2001). "Späth, Franz Jacob". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  10. ^ Latcham, Michael (2001). "Harpsichord-piano". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  11. ^ a b c Topp, Martina (2010). "Die Orgel in der Dreieinigkeitskirche zu Regensburg". Roma quanta fuit. Wißner. pp. 655–678. ISBN 978-3-89639-799-7.
  12. ^ "Bach-Orgel". www.dreieinigkeitskirche.de (in German). Retrieved 16 February 2024.
  13. ^ Ingerthron, Gabriele (6 June 2020). "Diese Orgel ist einzigartig". www.evangelisch.de (in German). Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  14. ^ Schiller, Lea M.; Harmsen, Rieke C. (22 June 2021). "Regensburg: "Dreieinigkeitskirche" - Evangelische Kirche im Dekanat Regensburg | Sonntagsblatt - 360 Grad evangelisch". Sonntagsblatt (in German). Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  15. ^ Forkel, Johann Nikolaus (1782). Musikalischer Almanach für Deutschland auf das Jahr 1782 (in German). p. 201.
  16. ^ Skowroneck, Tilman (2000). "The Keyboard Instruments of Young Beethoven". In Burnham, Scott; Steinberg, Michael P. (eds.). Beethoven and His World. Princeton University Press. pp. 151–192. ISBN 9780691070735.