Georg Matthias Monn (1717-1750)
- Concerto (D-Dur) a 5
Performers: Concіlіum Musicum Wien; Paul Angеrеr (1927-2017, organ & conductor)
Further info: Georg Matthias Monn (1717-1750) - Concerto in D â 5
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Austrian organist and composer. Although born into a musical family,
little is known about the details of his early life, save that he was a
chorister at Klosterneuberg, where he no doubt learned enough about
music to become an organist there around 1731. His other positions were
at the monastery in Melk and subsequently around 1736 at the Karlskirche
in the Viennese suburb of Wieden. He was also active at the Holy Roman
court, where his instrumental music was extremely popular. His life was
cut short prematurely by a lung ailment, probably pneumonia, although he
suffered from ill health his entire life. His most important student
was Johann Georg Albrechtsberger, probably for whom Monn created a
treatise titled Theorie des Generalbasses in Beispielen ohne Erklärung,
which remained unpublished. His works include 16 symphonies, eight
concertos (six for keyboard, one for violin, one for cello, plus another
arrangement of a harpsichord concerto for cello or contrabass),
partitas, three fanfares, and three preludes and fugues for organ. His
style represents the infusion of the homophonic texture, contrasting
themes of the early sonata principle, and fundamental modulatory
patterns that reflect the predominant style of the late 18th century. He
was also one of the first to create the fourmovement symphony by adding
a minuet in one of his works. His brother Johann Christoph Monn
(1726-1782) was also a composer and teacher.
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