Hieronymus Payer
Quick Facts
Biography
Hieronymus Payer (13 February 1787 in Vienna-Meidling; † 17 August 1845 Ibid) was an Austrian composer and pianist.
Life and career
Hieronymus (Jérome) Payer was the son of a teacher. As a 10-year-old he earned his living as a backup musician and was then hired as an assistant teacher at his father’s. In 1806 he became a conductor in the so-called Meidlinger Summer Theatre, for which he even wrote some small Singspiels. Later he moved to the Innere Stadt Vienna and performed in the Redoutensaal and Theater an der Wien successfully. He was active as a teacher, including of Leopoldine Blahetka.
Payer introduced in 1821 in Vienna for the first time the Physharmonica in a public concert. Three years later he became a conductor in Amsterdam (at the Hoogduitse Schouwburg) and in 1825, in Paris. In 1832 he returned to Vienna as conductor for a short time in the Theater in der Josefstadt. As a pianist he had been compared by his contemporaries with Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Ignaz Moscheles and Ferdinand Ries.
Works (selection)
6 masses and other sacred works, 10 operas and operettas, including;
- Der wilde Jäger, Meidling 1806 or 26. July 1807
- L’arbre creux, Meidling 1808
- Der hohle Baum, Meidling 1810
- Die musikalische Akademie, 1825
- Die Trauer, 1825
- Hochlands Fürsten, 1825 (libretto: Carl Schütz), has also appeared Johann Nestroy
- La croix de feu, 1830
- Instrumental music
- Overtures, concertos, marches, waltzes, piano music, chamber music