
Hummel's wife: Elisabeth Reckel

The European music world from the late 18th to the mid-19th century was undergoing an extremely dynamic historical transformation, with the patronage system of the court and nobility disintegrating and public concerts and music publishing, primarily for the middle class, becoming the main economic base for musicians. At the same time, from an aesthetic standpoint, it was a period of rapid shift in values, from the rigorous formal beauty and rational harmony established by the Viennese Classical period to the early Romantic period, which sought the expression of individual inner emotions and overwhelming virtuosity (transcendental technique) * .
At the heart of this paradigm shift, J.N. Hummel, as a direct pupil of Mozart, inherited the legitimate lineage of the Classical period while simultaneously playing a crucial role in bridging the gap between his technique and spirit and that of the next generation of Romantic masters. And the person who strongly supported Hummel's career both professionally and personally, deeply engaging with contemporary geniuses such as Beethoven, while also building her own unique artistic network, was his wife, the soprano singer Elisabeth Röckel (15 March 1793 – 3 March 1883).
This time, based on musicological primary sources available to me and recent related news, I would like to examine Elisabeth Reckel's life from birth to her later years, her extensive cultural network in Vienna and Weimar, the details of the fierce academic debate surrounding Beethoven's famous piano piece "Für Elise," and her husband Hummel's musical achievements and the historical legacy they left for posterity, from as many angles as possible. Tracing her footsteps alongside Hummel's life is not merely a biographical pursuit of a musician couple, but an attempt to re-examine the changing social status of artists in 19th-century Europe, the modernization of the music business, and Hummel's place in music history, which has been largely forgotten since Liszt.
1. Elisabeth Reckel's upbringing and early career within the Viennese theater culture

