French family of musicians, publishers and instrument makers.
(1) Jean Henri [Joannes Henricus] Naderman [Nadermann]
(2) (Jean) François Joseph Naderman
DEMF, i
FétisB
GerberNL
HopkinsonD
JohanssonFNP
Review of Ecole ou Méthode raisonnée pour la harpe, AMZ, xxxv (1833), 577
T. aus dem Winkel: ‘Einige Worte über die Harfe mit doppelter Bewegung’, AMZ, xxxvi (1834), 65–71
W. von Metzsch-Schilbach ed.: Briefwechsel eines deutschen Fürsten mit einer jungen Künstlerin (Berlin, 1893)
H.J. Zingel: Harfe und Harfenspiel (Halle, 1932)
L. Barthel: La harpe de Rousseau à Boieldieu: évolution organologique, les partitions de Marie Antoinette, catalogue des auteurs et des ouevres: 1760–1828 (diss., U. of Lyon 2, 1994)
D. Droysen-Reber and others: Harfen des Berliner Musikinstrumenten-Museum (Berlin, 1999)
ANN GRIFFITHS, RICHARD MACNUTT
(b Lichteneau, nr Paderborn, Westphalia, bap. 20 July 1734; d Paris,4 Feb 1799). Publisher and instrument maker. Designated an ouvrier étranger on his arrival, he probably reached Paris in 1762–3. He was awarded a maker’s licence in November 1766 and in 1774 he became a master of his guild, later styling himself ‘Editeur, Luthier, Facteur de Harpes et autres instruments de musique’. One of the most important harp makers of the 18th century, he worked from premises in the Rue d’Argenteuil, where he made many single-action pedal harps equipped with a hook (à crochets) mechanism (see illustration). Highly ornate – carved, gilded and decorated in the Vernis Martin style – they were considered to be the most superior instruments of their time from both the mechanical and constructional points of view. In 1778 Jean Henri was officially appointed harp maker to Marie Antoinette, but of the five extant Naderman harps said to have been her property, only two – the first (1774) in the instrument collection of the Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, and the second (1776) at the Musée de la Musique, Paris – carry definite proof of having been made for her. Both bear labels concealed behind the plaques on their necks on which is written ‘Naderman/Maítre Luthier, ordinaire de Madame/la Dauphine/Rue d’Argenteuil, butte/Saint Roch, à Paris’.
Despite various improvements made by other harp makers, such as Cousineau, who, in 1782, replaced the unsatisfactory crochets with béquilles (see Harp, §V, 7), Naderman continued with his tried and trusted system, concentrating on the ornamentation of the harp. In 1785, however, at the request of Jean-Baptiste Krumpholtz, he produced a short-lived harpe augmentée or harpe à renforcement where the resonance of the harp was improved by placing it on a hollow wooden base. In the same year he fixed a damping mechanism along the length of the centre strip of the soundboard which was operated by an eighth pedal placed to the player’s left (harpe à sourdine). These improvements were followed in 1786 by a harpe à volets, where five shutters placed in the back panel of the harp were operated by another pedal, placed centrally between the pedals operated by the left (D, C, B) and right (E, F, G, A) feet. The improved harp received approval when it was played by Anne-Marie Krumpholtz before the Académie des Sciences et des Beaux-Arts in November 1787. The programme included her husband Jean-Baptiste Krumpholtz’s Sonata no.6, specially written to illustrate the capabilities of the new instrument. This instrument is now housed in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. The only element which was to be permanently retained was the shutters; this idea was also incoroporated into Erard’s harp.
Georges Cousineau and his son Jacques Georges became harp makers to Marie Antoinette in 1783, and after this time the Naderman firm seems to have concentrated its activities more on the publishing side, though it continued to make its single-action harps, albeit in a rather less ornate and exaggerated style. The earliest publishing licence granted to Naderman is dated 7 November 1777, and in conjunction with harp makers Cousineau and Salomon he published Krumpholtz’s Fifth Harp Concerto in 1779. In 1784 Naderman published two of the solo symphonies for harp and small orchestra played by Madame Krumpholtz at the Concert Spirituel. One of Naderman’s earliest catalogues (c1790) lists 43 publications, mainly harp or piano solos (including Krumpholtz’s final six sets of harp sonatas) and ariettes with harp or piano accompaniment. The fullest and the latest of his catalogues that has come to light (c1795) lists about 320 publications, of which more than 200 are for harp or piano in various combinations; most of the remainder are for violin, wind instruments or wind band. Between 1791 and 1799 Naderman published orchestral scores of at least eight operas, including Cherubini’s Lodoïska, Le Sueur’s La caverne (see Le sueur, jean françois, fig.2) and Steibelt’s Roméo et Juliette. These were, however, to remain his most substantial publications, and it was chamber music, especially for harp, that continued to predominate in his output, numerous works being either composed or arranged by his elder son (2) François Joseph. Late in 1796 Naderman took over the business and plates of Boyer, many of whose publications were subsequently reissued under Naderman’s imprint. Most of Naderman’s publications are elegant (with some notably handsome ornamental title-pages in the 1790s); all were printed from engraved plates. After his death, his business was carried on by his widow and sons. In 1835 the publishing house either went out of business or was taken over by G.-J. Sieber..
2 hp concs.; 2 qts, 2 hps, vn, vc; trio, 3 hps; duos and trios, hp, other insts. |
Hp solo: 7 sonatas, variation sets, fantasias, potpourris, other works |
Didactic: Ecole ou Méthode raisonnée pour la harpe (Paris, c1832); Dictionnaire des transcriptions pour s’exercer dans l’art de préluder et d’improviser tant sur la harpe que sur le piano (Paris, n.d.) |
Observations sur la harpe à double mouvement, ou Réponse à la note de M. Prony (Paris, 1815)
Réfutation de ce qui a été dit en faveur des différents mécanismes de la harpe à double mouvement, ou Lettre à M. Fétis en réponse (Paris,1828)
Supplement à la réfutation (Paris, 1829)