Johann Strauss II (1825-1899)
Johann
Strauss the Younger, the most famous and enduringly successful of
nineteenth-century light-music composers, was born in Vienna on 25 October 1825. His
father, Johann Strauss the Elder, was by that time well on his
way to becoming Europe's uncrowned king of dance music; indeed, it was only with Strauss
senior's untimely death in 1849 that the younger man could advance his own musical
standing in his native Vienna.
Building upon the firm musical foundations laid by his father (1804-49) and Joseph
Lanner (1801-43), Johann II (along with his brothers Josef and
Eduard) developed the classical Viennese Waltz to the point where it became as much a
feature of the concert hall as the dance floor. With his abundantly tuneful waltzes,
polkas, quadrilles and marches, Johann II captivated not only Vienna but also the whole of
Europe and America for more than half a century.
The thrice-married 'Waltz King' was
persuaded to compose operetta, not by Offenbach (as often stated), but by his first wife,
the singer Jetty Treffz. Strauss completed sixteen stage works, of which Die Fledermaus
(1874) and The Gypsy Baron (1885) remain the most popular, besides more than five
hundred orchestral compositions - including the most famous of all waltzes, The Blue
Danube (1867). Johann Strauss II died in Vienna on 3 June 1899.