divendres, 29 d’agost del 2025

SCHWENCKE, Christian Friedrich Gottlieb (1767-1822) - Concerto per il Oboe (1803)

Leopold Pollak (1806-1880) - A little shepherd playing the oboe at the Claudia Aqueduct on the Roman Compagna (1857)


Christian Friedrich Gottlieb Schwencke (1767-1822) - Concerto (C-Dur) per il Oboe (1803)
Performers: Lajos Lеncsés (oboe); Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Bеrlin; Hans Zimmеr (conductor)
Further info: Oboenkonzerte

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German pianist, composer and music editor. Son of the bassoonist and Hamburg town musician, Johann Gottlieb Schwencke (1744-1823), he became a proficient pianist at an early age and performed a concerto by his father in Hamburg in 1779. In 1782 he went to Berlin, where he studied with Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg and Johann Philipp Kirnberger. In 1787-78 he studied at the universities of Leipzig and Halle, and in 1788 succeeded C.P.E. Bach as Hamburg Stadtkantor, a post he held for the rest of his life. He became a contributor to the 'Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung' in 1799. His compositions include incidental music, settings of Klopstock’s Vater unser, performed at the poet’s funeral, and the ode 'Der Frohsinn' (1799), oratorios and cantatas, two piano concertos, an oboe concerto, three piano sonatas (1789), three violin sonatas (1792), six fugues for organ and lieder. His sons Johann Friedrich Schwencke (1792-1852) and Karl Schwencke (1797-1870) were instrumentists and composers. 

dimecres, 27 d’agost del 2025

VOLCKMER, Augustin (1755-c.1820) - Lytania in F

Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - View of Warsaw's Miodowa Street


Augustin Volckmer (1755-c.1820) - Lytania in F. | a | Canto Alto | Tenore Basso | Violino I et II
| Viola obl | Flauto I et II | Cornu I et II | et | Organo.
Performers: La Tempesta; Jakub Burzyński (conductor)

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Polish composer. Little is known about his life beyond his musical education. He received his training with the financial support of a provost named 'Neuhaus' from the Saints Peter and Paul church in Trzebinia. He was also associated with the Nysa Holy Sepulcher Band at Jasna Góra. It is notable that the largest collection of his compositions is not found in the archives of his native Silesia but rather in the Jasna Góra archive, which holds over 30 manuscripts of his works. The nature of his connection to this particular center is still unknown. Most of these compositions were copied for the Jasna Góra chapel in the last quarter of the 18th century, with some manuscripts specifically dated to 1795. These works represent various forms of the vocal and instrumental religious music of that era. The collection primarily includes 7 litanies, 5 masses, 6 arias, 5 duets, and 5 concerted vocal-instrumental motets. Additionally, there are a 'Miserere seu Opera pro Sacro Sepulchro' and a Stabat Mater. The significant number of compositions dedicated to the cult of the Virgin Mary is particularly noteworthy, including seven settings of the Marian antiphon Salve Regina and two settings of Regina caeli. This fact alone suggests a strong connection to the Jasna Góra monastery and warrants further research into the composer's life and work. 

dilluns, 25 d’agost del 2025

PARADISI, Pietro Domenico (1707-1791) - Sonata per il Cembalo (1754)

Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner (1712-1761) - Venezianische Vedute Hinterglas


Pietro Domenico Paradisi (1707-1791) - Sonata (IX, La minore) per il Cembalo (1754)
Performers: Luciano Sgrizzi (1910-1994, harpsichord)

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Italian composer and teacher. A student of Nicola Porpora in Naples, little is known about his early life. The first documented performance of his music was of the opera 'Alessandro in Persia' (1738). The poor reception of this work marked the beginning of a generally unsuccessful career as a composer for the stage. During the 1739-40 season he moved to Venice, where he was employed by the Conservatorio dei Mendicanti. In 1746 he settled in London where his series of operatic failures continued in January of 1747, when his setting of Vanneschi’s Fetonte encountered negative reaction during its nine performances at the King’s Theatre. Charles Burney described the arias as ‘ill-phrased’ and lacking in ‘estro or grace’. Although he continued to supply arias for pasticcio productions at the King’s Theatre, he never met with success as a composer of opera. He achieved some renown in England, however, as a teacher of harpsichord and composition. His most distinguished student was the elder Thomas Linley. By 1770 he had returned to Italy, where he went into retirement. As a composer, his works include six operas, two concertos for keyboard, several symphonies, and a set of '12 Sonate di gravicembalo' (1754) that were considered some of the best of the time when published in London. 

diumenge, 24 d’agost del 2025

RAFF, Joseph Joachim (1822-1882) - Die Tageszeiten (1880)

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793-1865) - Die Pfändung (1847)


Joseph Joachim Raff (1822-1882) - Die Tageszeiten, Op.209 (1880)
Performers: Tra Nguyеn (piano); Sångkrаft Chamber Choir;
Symphony Orchestra of Norrlаnds Opera; Andrea Quіnn (conductor)

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German composer, critic and teacher. His father, a teacher and organist who had fled to Switzerland from the Black Forest to avoid military conscription during the Napoleonic wars, taught him to play the violin and organ and to sing. He was educated at the Jesuit Gymnasium in Schwyz. He later was a schoolteacher in Rapperswill (1840-44), but pursued an interest in music. He sent some of his piano pieces to Felix Mendelssohn (1843), who recommended them for publication; having met Franz Liszt in Basel (1845), he received his encouragement and assistance in finding employment; later was his assistant in Weimar (1850-56), where he became an ardent propagandist of the new German school of composition. He then went to Wiesbaden as a piano teacher and composer, where he married the actress Doris Genast (1837-1912). He subsequently was director of the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt (1877-82), where he also taught composition; students flocked from many countries to study with him, including Edward MacDowell and Alexander Ritter. As a composer, he was a prodigious fecundity, and a master of all technical aspects of composition. He wrote 214 opus numbers that were published, and many more that remained in manuscript. In spite of his fame, his music fell into lamentable desuetude after his death. Any analysis of Raff's music must confront the historical criticisms of his eclecticism and quantity of production. On the one hand, Raff considered himself an independent creator and thus distanced himself from Liszt and Richard Wagner, even though during his time in Weimar he did circumspectly adopt elements of the New German style; on the other hand, he clearly modelled his work on various predecessors. Raff was able to give to his music a strong sense of drive and direction, and his orchestration was quite effective, even though his forces did not normally exceed Ludwig van Beethoven's in size. Raff's stylistic eclecticism is particularly evident in his themes, which tend to be diatonic and brilliant in his faster movements, but often adopt a sentimental salon style in slow movements. Raff's only daughter, Helene Raff (1864-1942), became a painter, writer and pianist of note. Upon her death, Raff's entire estate of musical manuscripts, letters and other literary and familial documents was bequeathed to the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich.

divendres, 22 d’agost del 2025

Corigniani (fl. 1761) - Concerto à Due Liuti Obligati

Eglon van der Neer (1634-1703) - A Lady Playing a Lute in an Interior


Corigniani (fl. 1761) - Concerto à Due Liuti Obligati
Performers: Jürg Mеili (lute); Thamas Schаll (lute)
Further info: Concertos