Published : 2024-08-12

On Chopin Editions as Discrete Sources: The Baudissin-Henkel-Pusch Exemplar of the Etudes, Op. 10

Jeffrey Kallberg

Abstract

While scholarly writing on printed sources of Chopin’s music typically focuses on the class to which that source belongs (say, the second state of the French first edition of the Ballade, Op. 23), this article proposes to tackle the reception history of Chopin through a discrete, individual printed source. The article proposes a brief microhistory of an individual exemplar, to situate it in a network that does not necessarily afford the composer a governing role. The source in question is a copiously annotated exemplar of the Kistner edition of the Etudes, Op. 10. Inscriptions on the title page inform us that Wolf Graf von Baudissin presented it as a gift to Heinrich Henkel in 1838. At some later date, Heinrich Henkel gave it to his daughter Sophie Henkel, who in 1931 presented it to her colleague Henri Pusch. The annotations in the edition help uncover interesting stories, narratives that reveal a largely unrecognized connection between Chopin and an important German diplomat and translator, and that help us understand better how pianists actually engaged with Chopin’s musical texts in the first century of their existence.

Keywords:

Fryderyk Chopin, Wolf Graf von Baudissin, Heinrich Henkel, Sophie Henkel, Henri Pusch, Etudes, Op. 10, Kistner, textual annotations, fingering, corrections of ‘errors’, ‘reading for errors’, musicality, relic, microhistory



Details

Statistics

Authors

Download files

PDF

Citation rules

Kallberg, J. (2024). On Chopin Editions as Discrete Sources: The Baudissin-Henkel-Pusch Exemplar of the Etudes, Op. 10. Chopin Review, (6), 4–25. https://doi.org/10.56693/cr.143

Altmetric indicators



-->

Publisher
Narodowy Instytut Fryderyka Chopina
ul. Tamka 43
00-355 Warszawa
tel.: (+48 22) 44 16 100
About:
Copyright 2022 by Narodowy Instytut Fryderyka Chopina
OJS Support and Customization by LIBCOM
Platform & Workfow by OJS/PKP