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514
ZOPFF.
ZUMSTEEG.

strength was especially concentrated on dramatic forms; but as regards popularity his symphonic poem 'Tell,' the 'Idyllen für kleines Orchester,' and the 'Traum am Rhein' have been most fortunate. Zopff was a careful and prolific writer of critical, theoretical and didactic essays; his 'Theorie der Oper' is a good illustration of the industry with Which he collected and utilised valuable information. He wrote several treatises on the cultivation of the voice, and paid special attention to the cure of defects caused by faulty training. He united lucidity, accuracy, and conscientiousness in his work, with kindness, generosity and hospitality in his social life. For foreigners and strangers he had always a friendly welcome; and the weekly musical parties at his house afforded constant opportunities for the introduction of new artists and new compositions, while a special corner of the 'Neue Zeitschrift für Musik ' was always reserved for notices of rising talent.

Zopff died of heart-disease at Leipzig, July 2, 1883.

ZOPPA, ALLA, i.e. halting, or limping. A term applied to a rhythm in which the second quaver in a bar of 2-4 time is accentuated, as in certain Hungarian pieces. [See Magyar, vol. ii. p. 197b.]

[ G. ]

ZORA. One of the many aliases of Rossini's 'Mose in Egitto,' in which the Bactrians are substituted for the Jews. It was produced at the Royal Italian Opera, Covent Garden, April 20, 1850.

[ G. ]

ZUKUNFTSMUSIK, la musique de l'avenir, the Music of the Future. A journal for 'music to come' is still wanting, writes Schumann[1] as early as 1833, 'Eine, Zeitschrift für zukünftige Musik fehlt noch'—and 'of course,' he continues in his humorous way, 'only men like the old blind Cantor at the Thomas-schule (Bach) or the deaf Capellmeister who rests at Vienna (Beethoven) would be fit editors.' Schumann himself became such an editor in 1834, and during the next ten years his paper, the 'Neue Zeitschrift für Musik,' was mainly instrumental in bringing about a new state of things. Indeed the rapid success of Chopin, Gade, Sterndale-Bennett, Henselt, Heller, etc., with the better part of the contemporary public in Germany, was to a considerable extent due to Schumann's sympathetic and discriminating advocacy. In the hands of his successor, Brendel, the 'Zeitschrift' became the organ of Wagner and Liszt, and particularly of a group of younger men, such as von Bülow, von Bronsart, Draeseke, Cornelius, Tausig, who, from 1850 to 60, gathered round Liszt, at Weimar—the headquarters of the so-called 'musicians of the future.'

In good faith, or with derisive intent, the ambiguous term 'Zukunftsmusik' and the nickname 'Zukunftsmusiker' have been in use since about 1850, when Wagner published 'Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft' (the Art-work of the Future).[2] According to Wagner it was Dr. L. F. C. Bischoff,[3] editor of the Rheinische and the Nieder-rheinische Musik-zeitungen (the now defunct rivals of the Neue Zeitschrift) who first perverted Wagner's idea of the 'art-work of the future' into that of the 'music of the future,' i.e. inartistic music, cacophonous to contemporary ears, but intended by its perpetrators to please a coming generation. Liszt, together with his disciples at Weimar, accepted the nickname Zukunftsmusiker, and delighted in it, 'much as ere while les gueux of Holland adopted the appellative contemptuously applied to them.'[4] Wagner also appears to have accepted the term—at least 'Zukunftsmusik' is the German publisher's title of his interesting 'Brief an einen französischen Freund' (M. Fréderic Villot, 'Curator des musées imperiaux'), which first appeared in French by way of preface to 'Quatre poèmes d'operas traduits en prose française, précédes d'une lettre sur la musique'[5] (sic), and forms a résumé of Wagner's opinions. Berlioz, in his famous attack on Wagner, 'Les concerts de Richard Wagner: la musique de 1'avenir,' in the 'Journal des Débats,' Feb. 1860 (reprinted in Berlioz 'A travers chants') uses it ironically, 'si l'école de la musique de l'avenir,' etc.; whilst Baudelaire in his pamphlet 'Richard Wagner a Paris' (1861), adopts it without reserve.

Some of Wagner's adherents in Germany and in England endeavoured subsequently to limit the use of the term and to define its meaning: with them, 'Zukunftsmusik,' as distinguished from music written in the traditional classical form, is taken to signify music in which the outlines of form are modified by some general poetical idea or some particular programme, as in Liszt's Poèmes symphoniques, or by the progress of the dramatic action, as in Wagner's dramas. Whether such a definition was prompted or sanctioned by Liszt or by Wagner need not be considered here. In any case the term 'Zukunftsmusik' is absurd, and its use has led to much confusion.

[ E. D. ]

ZUMSTEEG, Johann Rudolf, born Jan. 10, 1760, at Sachsenflur, in the Mosbach district of Baden. His father being a valet to Duke Carl of Wirtemberg, he was admitted into the Carl-schule, at 'The Solitude,' near Stuttgart, where he received a good general education, and formed a close friendship with Schiller, also a pupil there. He was originally intended for a sculptor, but the love of music proved too strong, and he studied first the cello, and then composition with Poli, whom he succeeded in 1 792 as Kapellmeister, and director of the Opera. His chief claim to a place in the history of music is that he was the pioneer of the ballad, a form afterwards carried to such perfection by Reichardt, Zelter, and, pre-eminently, Löwe. Zumsteeg's best, and in his day widest known ballads were 'Leonore,' 'Des Pfarrers Tochter von Taubenhayn,' 'Kolma,' 'Die Büsende,' 'Ritter Toggenburg,' 'Elwina,' and

  1. Schumann, Ges. Schriften, i. 49, 1st. ed. 1854.
  2. See the article Wagner, vol. iv p. 367 et seq.
  3. See Bischoff, vol. i. p. 244.
  4. Wagner, Ges. Schriften, viii. 303–306.
  5. Paris, 1861. English translation, London, 1873.