Ernst Christoph Dressler


Ernst Christoph Dressler was a German composer, operatic tenor, violinist and music theorist. A self-taught singer and violinist, he became a musician at several courts before he moved to the Court Opera in Vienna and finally to Kassel. He is known for a march on which Beethoven based his first published composition.

Life

Born in Greußen, near Sondershausen in Thuringia, to Christian Ludwig Dressler and Catherine Elizabeth Renner, Dressler studied theology, jurisprudence and German poetry at the universities of Halle, Jena and Leipzig. In Leipzig, he educated himself in playing the violin and in singing. He moved to Bayreuth, where he took lessons from the singer Maria Giustina Turcotti, training his tenor voice, and subsequently worked as a chamber musician, court singer and secretary for Margrave Friedrich Christian. When the margrave died in 1763, Dressler moved to Gotha, and in May 1764 took up similar duties for the Duke of Gotha and his wife Princess Luise Dorothea. He was a talented violinist, composer and writer, in addition to his ability as a tenor. He disapproved of the opera buffa then in vogue at Gotha, and in November 1766 he resigned or was dismissed. In February 1767 he became Kapellmeister to the Prince of Fürstenberg, not at the prince's court at Donaueschingen but at Wetzlar. In 1771, the prince returned to Bohemia; Dressler chose not to go with him. Instead, he worked as a singer at the Imperial Court Opera in Vienna. In 1774, he moved to the court opera in Kassel where he remained until his death.
Dressler married Wilhelmine Christiane Zeitz. Two of their sons also worked for the Kassel Hofkapelle. He died in Kassel on 6 April 1779, aged 44.

Work and legacy

Dressler published two books of songs. His best known composition is a march which was the basis of Ludwig van Beethoven's earliest work, "Nine Variations on a March by Ernst Christoph Dressler", which was published in 1782, three years after Dressler's death.
In his works on music theory, he supported efforts to create a distinct German opera independent of Italian opera. This required the establishment of permanent opera houses in Germany, rare in Germany at the time. He considered Christoph Martin Wieland's 1773 opera Alceste a paradigm of German opera.

Publications

Song collections

  • Melodische Lieder für das schöne Geschlecht. Frankfurt, 1771
  • Freundschaft und Liebe. Nuremberg, 1774

    Music theory

  • Fragmente einiger Gedanken des musikalischen Zuschauers, die bessere Aufnahme der Musik in Deutschland betreffend. Gotha, 1767
  • Gedanken, die Vorstellung der Alceste, ein deutsches ernsthaftes Singspiel, betreffend. Erfurt, 1774
  • Theaterschule für die Deutschen das ernsthafte Singschauspiel betreffend. Hanover, 1777