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

dimecres, 20 d’agost del 2025

VAN WASSENAER, Unico Wilhelm (1692-1766) - Concertino a quattro violini obligati (1740)

Anonymous (17th Century) - The Paston Treasure (c.1670)


Unico Wilhelm van Wassenaer (1692-1766) - Concertino (V, f-moll) des 'VI Concerti armonici a quattro violini obligati, alto viola, violoncello obligato e basso continuo' (1740)
Performers: Barocco Boreale ensemble

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Dutch composer and statesman. He was born into one of the oldest and most influential families of the Dutch nobility and spent his childhood in his parents' house in The Hague and at Twickel Castle in Delden. He probably studied music with the organist, harpsichordist, composer and theorist Quirinus van Blankenburg in The Hague. In 1707-09 he stayed with his father and three sisters in Düsseldorf at the court of Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine. The strong Italian influences at the court had a major influence on his musical development. On 18 September 1710 Unico Wilhelm was admitted to the University of Leiden to study law. In December 1711 he interrupted his studies to go to Frankfurt for the coronation of the Emperor Charles VI. In June 1713, after completing his studies, he returned to Düsseldorf where his father and sisters had settled. He may have accompanied Arent van Wassenaer Duyvenvoorde on a visit to Britain in 1715-16. He made a grand tour of France and Italy in 1717-18. In 1723 Unico Wilhelm married Dodonea Lucia van Goslinga (the daughter of Sicco van Goslinga), with whom he had three children. While based at the Hague between 1725 and 1740, Unico Wilhelm wrote the six Concerti Armonici. The Concerti armonici, published anonymously in 1740, were printed in London in 1755 as compositions by the violinist and impresario Carlo Ricciotti (c.1681-1756). It has since been established that these were the work of Unico Wilhelm. There is no evidence that Ricciotti wrote any music. The concerti were dedicated to Wilhelm's friend, Count Willem Bentinck. In 1744 he was sent on a diplomatic mission to the French court, and in the autumn of 1744 and again in 1745 he was sent to the court of Clemens August, Elector of Cologne. In 1746 he went again to France, and finally in 1746-47 to Breda for further discussions with the French. Although clearly intelligent, Unico Wilhelm was not a natural diplomat. Unico Wilhelm was a commander of the Bailiwick of Utrecht of the Teutonic Order. He was made coadjutor in 1753, and introduced administrative and managerial innovations. In 1761 he was made Commander of the order. He died in The Hague on November 9, 1766. 

dilluns, 18 d’agost del 2025

RUGE, Filippo (c.1725-c.1767) - Sonata for flauto traverso

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Musikstunde


Filippo Ruge (c.1725-c.1767) (attributed) - Sonata (D Major) for flauto traverso
Performers: Luis Martínez Pueyo (flute); La Guirlande ensemble

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Italian composer and flautist. Nothing is known about his early life or training; he first appears around 1751 in London, where he performed at the public concerts. In 1753 he arrived in Paris, where he made a successful debut performing his own flute concertos as a soloist at the Concerts spirituels. At this time he and his wife, a singer, performed in the famous musical salon of La Pouplinière. After 1755 he organized a series of concerts at his home in the rue Plâtrière, where he also taught music. In July 1755 he published 'Au dessert', a set of six vocal duos, and in August of the same year he took out a 'privilege général' of ten years for instrumental compositions. It is possible that between 1757 and 1761 he entered the service of the Marquis of Seignelay, but his trace disappears from records in 1767, presumably the date of his death. His music, little studied, includes 12 symphonies, six flute concertos, two vocal duets, six canzonetts, 35 flute sonatas, 18 trio sonatas, and 12 duo sonatas. He was an important agent in the diffusion and popularization of Italian music and musical style in 18th-century France.

diumenge, 17 d’agost del 2025

PORPORA, Nicola Antonio (1686-1768) - Letatus a più voci con Istrumenti

Giovanni Paolo Panini (1691-1765) - Carlo III di Borbone visiting the Pope Benedetto XIV in the coffee-house of the Quirinale, Rome (1746)


Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768) - Letatus a più voci con Istrumenti (1744)
Performers: Isabelle Poulеnаrd (soprano); Choeur Éclаts; Les Pаssions; Jean-Marc Andriеu (conductor)

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Italian teacher and composer. Son of a bookseller, Carlo Porpora, and his wife Caterina, he attended the Conservatorio dei Poveri di Gesù Cristo from 29 September 1696. At age 22, he composed his first opera, 'L’Agrippina' (1708), but after that, the presence in Naples of the great Alessandro Scarlatti prevented advancement in the theater. But in 1711, he was employed as maestro di cappella for Prince Philipp Hesse-Darmstadt, then residing as military commander in Naples, and then for the Portuguese ambassador in Rome from June 1713. From 1715 to 1722, he was a teacher at the Conservatorio di San Onofrio. Among his pupils were the poet and librettist Pietro Metastasio, the composer Johann Adolph Hasse, and the celebrated castrati Antonio Uberti (known as “Porporino”), Farinelli, and Caffarelli. His most important teaching post was in Venice at the Ospedale degli Incurabili, the famous music school for girls, from 1726 to 1733. In 1733 he went to London as chief composer to the Opera of the Nobility, a company formed in competition to Handel’s opera company. In London he wrote five operas, among them 'Polifemo', 'Davide e Betsabea', and 'Ifigenia in Aulide', with parts for his remarkable pupil Farinelli. When the Opera of the Nobility and Handel’s company closed, Porpora left England, in 1736. He subsequently taught in Venice and Naples, where he produced several comic operas. In 1747 he was in Dresden and from 1748 to 1751 was chapelmaster there. He went to Vienna in 1752, where he gave composition lessons to the young Haydn, and in 1758 returned to Naples. A revision of his opera 'Il Trionfo di Camilla' (first produced 1740) was given there in 1760 but failed, and Porpora’s last years were spent in poverty. In addition to about 50 operas, he composed a number of oratorios, masses, motets, and instrumental works.

divendres, 15 d’agost del 2025

DE CROES, Henri-Joseph (1758-1842) - Sinfonia in Es-Dur (1782)

Louis Carrogis dit Carmontelle (1717-1806) - Les Gentilshommes du duc d'Orléans dans l'habit de Saint-Cloud


Henri-Joseph de Croes (1758-1842) - Sinfonia in Es-Dur (1782)
Performers: Terra Nova Ensemble; Vlad Weverbergh (conductor)

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Flemish composer. Son of Henri-Jacques de Croes (1705-1786), kapellmeister and director of music at the Royal Court Orchestra in Brussels, he received music lessons from his father. When he was eighteen he joined the service of the Princes of Thurn and Taxis in Regensburg in Bavaria, at first as a violinist (1776-1798) and from 1798 onward, as kapellmeister. Karl Anselm, the fourth prince of Thurn and Taxis (from 1773 to 1797), encouraged court music in the summer residence at Trugenhofen and at the main residence in Regensburg. He continued to develop the ensemble, which had been founded for diplomatic reasons by his father, Alexander Ferdinand, one of the Emperor’s leading representatives. He engaged numerous virtuoso musicians, including the French violinist Joseph Touchemoulin, the Bohemian composer Franz Xaver Pokorný, the oboe player Giovanni Palestrini and flautist Fiorante Augustinelli. Together with the famous Mannheim orchestra and the Esterhazy family’s orchestra in Eisenstadt, the Thurn and Taxis orchestra at Regensburg was among the best of its era. Henri Joseph de Croes married the opera singer Maria Augusta Houdière (?-1806). They had two children, both of whom died in their youth. As a composer, he wrote an opera, seven partias for clarinets and strings, several concertos, two symphonies, and chamber music.

dimecres, 13 d’agost del 2025

NICHELMANN, Christoph (1717-1762) - Ouverture a 4 (1737)

Bernardo Bellotto (1722-1780) - Widok kosciola Bernardynek i kolumny Zygmunta III od strony zjazdu do Wisly


Christoph Nichelmann (1717-1762) - Ouverture B dur | per | due Violini | due Oboi | Viola | Basso continuo (1737)
Performers: Orkiestra Kore

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German composer. His earliest musical education came when he enrolled in the Thomasschule in Leipzig in 1730, studying under Johann Sebastian Bach and Bach’s son Wilhelm Friedemann Bach. In 1733 he moved to Hamburg to seek work as an opera composer, but in 1739 he went to Berlin, where he became part of the Berlin School, studying under Johann Joachim Quantz and Carl Heinrich Graun. He obtained the position as harpsichordist at the Prussian court, and in 1755 he published his treatise 'Die Melodie, nach ihrem Wesen'. A controversy with this work and its successor caused him to request release from the court, and he served the rest of his life as an independent teacher and composer. Among his works were 3 sinfonias, an Ouverture, a Concerto for Violin and Strings, 16 concertos for harpsichord and strings (1740-59), various keyboard pieces, 'Il sogno di Scipione' (serenata, 1745), a Requiem, and 22 Lieder. Although known for his theoretical treatise, Nichelmann was an innovative composer of keyboard works whose style is firmly implanted in 'Empfindsamkeit'.

dilluns, 11 d’agost del 2025

BON DI VENEZIA, Anna (1738-c.1767) - Sonata per il Cembalo (1757)

Tommaso Piroli (1752-1824) - Allegoria della Musica


Anna Bon di Venezia (1738-c.1767) - Sonata (V, si minore) 'Sei Sonate | Per il Cembalo | […] Ernestina Augusta Sophie | Principessa | Di Sachsen Weimar etc:etc: | [...] in età d'anni | dieci sette | Opera secunda' (1757)
Performers: Irene Hegen (cembalo)

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Italian composer and singer. Born as 'Anna Ioanna Lucia, filia Hieronymus Boni et Rosa Ruinetti', she was the daughter of the (Venetian?) scenographer and librettist Girolamo Bon and the Bolognese singer Rosa Ruvinetti Bon. On March 8, 1743, at the age of four, she was admitted to the Ospedale della Pietà in Venice as a student; that she had a surname indicates that she was not a foundling as were most of the Pietà wards, but a tuition-paying pupil (figlia de spesi). She studied with the maestra di viola, Candida della Pietà (who herself had been admitted into the coro in 1707). By 1756, Anna had rejoined her parents in Bayreuth where they were in the service of Margrave Friedrich of Brandenburg Kulmbach; she held the new post of 'chamber music virtuosa' at the court, and dedicated her six op. 1 flute sonatas, published in Nürnberg in 1756, to Friedrich. From the frontispiece we learn that she composed them at the age of sixteen. In 1762, the family moved to the Esterházy court at Eisenstadt, where Anna remained until at least 1765. She dedicated the published set of six harpsichord sonatas, op. 2 (1757), to Ernestina Augusta Sophia, Princess of Saxe-Weimar, and the set of six divertimenti (trio sonatas), op. 3 (1759), to Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria. By 1767, Anna was living in Hildburghausen, Thuringia, with her husband, a singer named Mongeri. 

diumenge, 10 d’agost del 2025

BELICZAY, Gyula (1835-1893) - Messe in F-Dur (1867)

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793-1865) - Am Allerseelentag (1839)


Gyula Beliczay (1835-1893) - Messe in F-Dur, Op.50 (1867) (live recording)
Performers: STELLA kamarakórus; Caritas Collectio Kamarazenekar; Juhász Irén (conductor)
Further info: Masses–F major

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Hungarian composer, pianist, and music writer. His grandfather was a Lutheran pastor, and his father was a wealthy timber merchant. Beliczay began his studies in Komárom, where his musical talent was recognized by church choirmaster Gyula Csáder. From the age of 12, he attended the Lutheran lyceum in Pozsony. Excelling in mathematics, his father initially intended him for an engineering career. While in Pozsony, he also studied piano with Josef Kumlik. Fulfilling his father's wishes, he earned an engineering degree from the Vienna Polytechnic between 1851 and 1857. In 1856, he also obtained a choirmaster's diploma in Vienna. From 1858, he worked as an engineer for the Tiszavidéki Vaspályatársaság (Tisza Railway Company), then based in Vienna. He simultaneously taught at one of the city's conservatories. During his time in Vienna, his composition teachers included Jozef Hofmann, Franz Krenn, and Gustav Nottebohm, and he furthered his piano studies with Carl Czerny and Anton Halm. In the spring of 1871, when the railway company relocated its headquarters to Pest, he moved with it. From 1872, he served as the chief architectural engineer for the Hungarian Royal State Railways. In 1879, he married Anna Tarczalovits (1853–1933), one of his students. In 1888, invited by Ödön Mihalovich, he became a music theory professor at the National Academy of Music in a post he held the rest of his life. Beliczay's musical output included orchestral works, chamber music, piano pieces, sacred music, choral compositions, and songs. Among his writings is 'A zene elemei' (Budapest, 1891). He embraced the Romantic style of Robert Schumann and Felix Mendelssohn, though his uniquely Hungarian compositions were primarily his variations, four-hand piano pieces, and songs. He was recognized as the most renowned Hungarian composer abroad during the last third of the 19th century.

divendres, 8 d’agost del 2025

BRUNETTI, Gaetano (1744-1798) - Sinfonía en Re Mayor

Isidro González Velázquez (1765-1840) - Vista de la plaza de San Antonio frente al Palacio Real de Aranjuez


Gaetano Brunetti (1744-1798) - Sinfonía (9) en Re Mayor, LabB 298
Performers: Camerata Antonio Soler; Gustavo Sánchez (conductor)

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Italian composer and violinist. Born on the Adriatic coast, he received his first instruction in violin from Carlo Tessarini in Urbino before becoming a disciple of Pietro Nardini in Livorno. At the age of 16 or 17 he immigrated to Madrid as a violinist in the Real Capilla and was later appointed in 1767 as instructor of the Prince of Asturia by Carlos III. By 1779 he had become musical director in Aranjuez, but he was recalled to Madrid in 1788 by Carlos IV to lead a family ensemble, the musicos de la real camera, that played exclusively for the court. His music includes incidental music to the comedy Garcia del Castañal, two zarzuelas, an Italian opera buffa, two Masses, a Miserere, three Lamentations, nine concert arias, 32 songs (canciones), 37 symphonies, four concertos, five sinfonia concertantes, 109 pieces of dance music, 18 sextets, 68 string quintets, 62 string quartets, 59 string trios, 23 divertimentos, 78 violin sonatas (and one for viola), and 328 duos. During his lifetime, Brunetti had a reputation for writing dramatic instrumental works that often deviated from conventional formal structures. He also incorporated Spanish melodies and rhythms frequently. He can be considered one of the most popular and important composers resident in Spain during the 18th century. He was survived by a daughter and a son Francesco Brunetti (c.1765-1834), a cellist in the royal chamber orchestra.

dimecres, 6 d’agost del 2025

SCHOBERT, Johann (c.1720-1767) - Concerto I Pour le clavecin

Filippo Falciatore (1728-1768) - Le concert en plein air


Johann Schobert (c.1720-1767) - Concerto (I, F-Dur) pour le clavecin avec accompagnement de deux violons, alto et basse et deux cors de chasse ad libitum... op. XI
Performers: Marcelle Charbonnier (clavecin); Orchestre de chambre de Versailles;
Bernard Wahl (1922-1994, conductor)

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German composer and keyboardist. Nothing is known about his origins or youth; there is differing information on his birth date, which ranges from 1720 to 1740. Gerber’s Historisch-biographisches Lexicon der Tonkünstler, however, gives Strasbourg as his place of birth (though the name occurs in no contemporary Alsatian records), and Schubart in his autobiography claimed Schobert as a kinsman, supposedly from Nuremberg. Schobert first appeared in Paris in 1760, where he began a career as a keyboard virtuoso, eventually publishing 20 sets of works. In 1761 a few of his pieces appeared in the pasticcio Le tonnelier, and in 1765 he unsuccessfully attempted to become a composer of opéra comique with the comedy Le garde-chasse et le braconnier. He found employment with Louis François I de Bourbon, Prince of Conti, however. Throughout his career he achieved some fame for his expressive performances and works, in addition to being a rival of Johann Gottfried Eckard. He died along with his family, a servant, and four friends as a consequence of eating poisonous mushrooms. His musical style was influenced by that of Mannheim, although he was noted for his expressive melodies. His works include 21 violin sonatas, six symphonies, seven trio sonatas, five harpsichord concertos, three keyboard quartets, and several sonatas and miscellaneous works for harpsichord. Schobert greatly influenced Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who admired his music warmly. The work which most impressed the seven-year-old composer seems to have been the D major Sonata of op.3; imitation of this sonata and others can be traced in Mozart’s subsequent Parisian and English sonatas. Movements from Schobert’s sonatas also appear recast in Mozart’s earliest piano concertos. His fascination for Schobert’s music was not merely fleeting: when Mozart was in Paris in 1778 he taught his pupils Schobert’s sonatas, and the A minor Sonata k310, composed in Paris, contains in its Andante an almost literal quotation from a movement of Schobert’s op.17 no.1 that Mozart had already arranged years before in a concerto.

dilluns, 4 d’agost del 2025

MARTINI, Giovanni Battista (1706-1784) - Concerto a quattro (1754)

François Xaver Henri Verbeeck (1686-1755) - Concerto


Giovanni Battista Martini (1706-1784) - Concerto (Re maggiore) a quattro pieno (1754)
Performers: Accademia degli Astrսsі; Federico Fеrri (conductor)

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Italian writer on music, teacher and composer. His father, Antonio Maria Martini, a violinist, taught him the elements of music and the violin and he later learned singing and harpsichord playing from Padre Pradieri, and counterpoint from Antonio Riccieri and Giacomo Antonio Perti. Having received his education in classics from the priests of the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri, he afterwards entered the novitiate of the Conventual Franciscans at their friary in Lago, at the close of which he professed religious vows and received the religious habit of the Order on 11 September 1722. In 1725, though only nineteen years old, he received the appointment of chapel-master at the Basilica of San Francesco in Bologna, where his compositions attracted attention. He established a composition school at the invitation of amateur and professional friends, where a number of well-known musicians received their education. As a teacher, he consistently expressed his preference for the practices of the earlier Roman school of composition. Martini was a zealous collector of musical literature, and possessed an extensive musical library. Burney estimated it at 17,000 volumes; after Martini's death a portion of it passed to the Imperial library at Vienna, the rest remaining in Bologna, now in the Museo Internazionale della Musica (ex Civico Museo Bibliografico Musicale). Most contemporary musicians spoke of Martini with admiration, and Leopold Mozart consulted him with regard to the talents of his son, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The latter went on to write the friar in very effusive terms after a visit to the city. The Abbé Vogler, however, makes reservations in his praise, condemning his philosophical principles as too much in sympathy with those of Fux, which had already been expressed by P. Vallotti. His Elogio was published by Pietro della Valle at Bologna in the same year. In 1758 Martini was invited to teach at the Accademia Filarmonica di Bologna. He died in Bologna. Referred to at his death as ‘Dio della musica de’ nostri tempi’, he was one of the most famous figures in 18th-century music. 

Among Martini's pupils: Grétry, Mysliveček, Berezovsky, his fellow Conventual Franciscan friar, Stanislao Mattei, who succeeded him as conductor of the girls choir, as well as the young Mozart, Johann Christian Bach and the famous Italian cellist Giovanni Battista Cirri. The greater number of Martini's mostly sacred compositions remain unprinted. The Liceo of Bologna possesses the manuscripts of two oratorios as well as three intermezzos, including L'impresario delle Isole Canarie; and a requiem, with some other pieces of church music, are now in Vienna. Litaniae atque antiphonae finales B. V. Mariae were published at Bologna in 1734, as also twelve Sonate d'intavolalura; six Sonate per l'organo ed il cembalo in 1747; and Duetti da camera in 1763. Martini's most important works are his Storia della musica (Bologna, 1757-81) and his Esemplare di contrappunto (Bologna, 1774-75). The former, of which the three published volumes relate wholly to ancient music, and thus represent a mere fragment of the author's vast plan, exhibits immense reading and industry, but is written in a dry and unattractive style, and is overloaded with matter which cannot be regarded as historical. At the beginning and end of each chapter occur puzzle-canons, wherein the primary part or parts alone are given, and the reader has to discover the canon that fixes the period and the interval at which the response is to enter. Some of these are exceedingly difficult, but all were solved by Luigi Cherubini. The Esemplare is a learned and valuable work, containing an important collection of examples from the best masters of the old Italian and Spanish schools, with excellent explanatory notes. It treats chiefly of the tonalities of the plain chant, and of counterpoints constructed upon them. Besides being the author of several controversial works, Martini drew up a Dictionary of Ancient Musical Terms, which appeared in the second volume of GB Doni's Works; he also published a treatise on The Theory of Numbers as Applied to Music. His celebrated canons, published in London, about 1800, edited by Pio Cianchettini, and his unpublished set of 303 canons, show him to have had a strong sense of musical humour.

diumenge, 3 d’agost del 2025

GIANETTINI, Antonio (1648-1721) - Salmi a quattro voci (1717)

Nicolas Vleughels (1668-1737) - Das Gastmahl bei Simon (1727)


Antonio Gianettini (1648-1721) - Salmi a quattro voci (1717)
Performers: Cantar Lοntano; Marco Mеncοbοni (conductor)
Further info: Notti Di Modena

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Italian composer, organist and singer. He went to Venice and sang bass in the choir of San Marco from 1674. He served as organist at SS. Giovanni e Paolo (1676-79), where he was described as a pupil of Carlo Grossi, as well as at San Marco during periods between 1677 and 1686. He left San Marco on 1 May 1686 to take the post of maestro di cappella to the Duke of Modena, which he retained, with interruptions, almost until the end of his life. The duke had to order a large boat to transport Giannettini and his family’s personal effects from Venice. At Modena he was responsible for the selection and payment of musicians, as his correspondence shows, and for organizing the performance of his own and others’ works. He maintained his connections with Venice and during his visits, often at Carnival, he recruited musicians for the duke. In Modena he was called on to produce oratorios and small occasional works more often than operas and he may have composed new music for the 1690 performance in Modena of Giovanni Legrenzi's 'Eteocle e Polinice'. When, during the War of the Spanish Succession, the French occupied Modena in 1702, Duke Rinaldo fled to Bologna, and Giannettini accompanied him. He soon moved on to Venice with his family. During this period he is supposed to have returned to Modena twice as opera director. After the war, in February 1707, he resumed his earlier activities at Modena. From June 1721 was employed as a singer at the Bavarian court at Munich. As a composer, he wrote about 10 operas, of which 'Medea in Atene' (1675) became the best known. His other works included 9 oratorios, many cantatas, 12 motets, a Kyrie a 5, and Psalmi a 4 (1717). He was among the most talented Italian composers of his generation; his works were fairly popular, and two of his operas circulated in Germany.

divendres, 1 d’agost del 2025

FIALA, Josef (1748-1816) - Concerto per due Corni (c.1780)

Johann Heinrich Tischbein (1722-1789) - Hirschjagd in der Karlsaue (1766)


Josef Fiala (1748-1816) - Concerto in Eb | per il | Corno Primo | Corno Secondo Principale |
Due Violini | Due Flauti | Due Corni | Due Viole | e | Basso (c.1780)
Performers: Zdenek Tylsar (1945-2006, horn); Bedrich Tylsar (horn); Prague Symphony Orchestra;
Martin Turnovsky (1928-2021, conductor)

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Bohemian composer, oboist, viola da gamba virtuoso, cellist, and pedagogue. He began his professional career as an oboist in the service of Countess Netolicka. In 1777, he moved to Munich to serve in the court orchestra of Elector Maximilian Joseph. That same year in Munich, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was highly impressed by the wind band Fiala trained, helping him secure a position in 1778 after the Elector's death. In 1785, he moved to Vienna, and in 1786, to Saint Petersburg, where he worked in the court of Catherine the Great. By 1790, he had relocated to Prussia, serving as a viola da gamba player in the court of Friedrich Wilhelm II. Finally, in 1792, he became Kapellmeister in Donaueschingen, where he spent the rest of his life.

dimecres, 30 de juliol del 2025

AULETTA, Domenico (1723-1753) - Concerto di Cembalo

Gaspar van Wittel (1653-1736) - The Darsena, Naples


Domenico Auletta (1723-1753) - Concerto (sol minore) di Cembalo
Performers: Ruggero Gеrlin (1899-1983, clavecin); Ensemble orchestral de L’Oiseau-Lyre;
Louis de Fromеnt (1921-1994, conductor)

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Italian composer and organist. Son of Pietro Auletta (c.1698-1771), he was active in Naples as a composer of sacred music, but nothing is known of any appointments he may have held. Domenico's three sons were also musicians: Raffaele Auletta (1742-1768), composer of a motet 'Alto Olimpo triumfate', of whose life nothing is known; Ferdinando Auletta, a singer, who studied at the Conservatorio della Pietà dei Turchini, 1759-69, with Nicola Fago and Pasquale Cafaro; and the younger Domenico Auletta (?-1796), who was appointed in November 1779, with Domenico Cimarosa, ‘supernumerary’ organist without salary in the royal chapel in Naples and in 1796 second organist (Cimarosa having been promoted to first). The homonymy between father and son poses problems of attribution, especially as regards undated works.

dilluns, 28 de juliol del 2025

VOLCKMAR, Theophil Andreas (c.1684-1768) - Sonata Prima in C

Bartolomeo Bettera (1639-1688) - A vanitas still life with musical instruments, musical notebooks, an armillary sphere, fruit and flowers on a stone ledge before a damask curtain


Theophil Andreas Volckmar (c.1684-1768) - Sonata Prima in C
Performers: Cappella Gedanensis

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German organist and composer. Son of the organist Johann Arnold Volckmar, in 1707, he succeeded his father as organist at the Peter-und-Paul church in Stettin. In 1712, he moved to Danzig (Gdańsk), where he first worked at the Trinity church and, from 1717, at St. Catherine's church. In Danzig, he was considered a modern and virtuosic organ player. However, Volckmar's modern style was not well-received by the Danzig pastors, resulting in his unsuccessful applications for the organist position at St. Mary's church. In 1730, he left Danzig and moved to St. Mary's church in Köslin. In 1733, he returned to Stettin to take up the organist position at St. Nicholas' church. In 1746, he finally was appointed organist at Stettin's largest church, St. James' church, in a post he held until 1767.

diumenge, 27 de juliol del 2025

VIVALDI, Antonio (1678-1741) - Vos invito, barbarae faces

Francesco Guardi (1712-1793) - Venezianisches Galakonzert (1782)


Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741) - Vos invito, barbarae faces, RV 811
Performers: Margherita Maria Sаlа (contralto); Coro e orchestra Ghisliеri; Giulio Prаndi (conductor)

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Italian violinist and composer. He was born the eldest of nine children of Giovanni Battista Vivaldi (1655-1736), a violinist at Basilica San Marco in Venice. He took the tonsure on 18 September 1693, trained for the Roman Catholic priesthood, and was ordained on 23 March 1703. However, a condition that Vivaldi himself described as strettezza di petto (“tightness of the chest”), probably bronchial asthma, had the curious effect of preventing his celebrating the mass from 1706 onward yet allowing his extensive teaching, publishing, and traveling about Italy to oversee his operatic productions. While training for the priesthood, he probably learned the fundamentals of violin from his father and occasionally substituted for him at San Marco. Son Antonio’s performance as an extra violinist at the basilica for Christmas 1696 is his first documented public appearance. Thereafter, he developed into a violinist of international reputation, with technical capacities that founded much of the innovation of his solo violin concertos. Vivaldi’s income as a musician came from three different kinds of activity, which constantly intertwine chronologically: as a salaried violin teacher at the famous Pio Ospedale at the Pietà, as an independent opera composer and impresario, and as a composer of instrumental publications for sale. He was appointed master of violin teaching della Pieta in 1703 by Francesco Gasparini, and his intermittent and at times tumultuous relationship with the governors of the Pietà would last until nearly the end of his life. His duties included teaching the young girls on various string instruments, maintaining the instruments, directing ensembles, and composing music for them. 

In April 1718, he did not apply for reappointment at the Pietà, perhaps because he had been invited to Mantua to compose operas. From 1723 to 1729, Vivaldi composed about 140 concertos for the Pietà on commission and rehearsed them with the girls when he was in Venice. The governors hired him again, this time as maestro di cappella in 1735 but, tiring of his many travels, dismissed him in March 1738. The last transaction between Vivaldi and the Pietà was the sale of 20 concertos in May 1740. His earliest known opera, Ottone in Villa, opened in the city of Vicenza in May 1713. Thereafter, he was associated with the public theater at Sant’ Angelo in Venice. The Hapsburg governor of Mantua, Prince Phillip of Hesse-Darmstadt, appointed him maestro di cappella di camera. From 1733 to 1735, he composed operas for the Teatro Sant’ Angelo and for another Venetian venue, Teatro San Samuele, working with the brilliant young Venetian poet Carlo Goldoni. He was offered a chance to compose operas for the Carnivals of 1737, 1738, and 1739 in Ferrara, but the Archbishop Tommaso Cardinal Ruffo forbad Vivaldi to enter the city, possibly on account of Anna Girò. A chance to perform at Vienna’s Kärntnertortheater seems to have inspired Vivaldi’s last journey in 1740, but the death of Emperor Charles VI in October shut down all the theaters throughout the Carnival period of 1741. Vivaldi stayed on, perhaps too sick or poor to return to Venice. His last documented professional act was the sale of some concertos to one Count Antonio Vinciguerra of Collalto. On 27 or 28 July, he died and was buried as a pauper in the Spittaler Gottsacker, a hospital burial ground in Vienna.

divendres, 25 de juliol del 2025

ERLEBACH, Philipp Heinrich (1657-1714) - Ouverture IV (1693)

Adam Frans van der Meulen (1632-1690) - The Crossing of the Rhine at Lobith on the 16th of June 1672


Philipp Heinrich Erlebach (1657-1714) - Ouverture (IV, d-moll) aus 'VI. Ouvertures, begleitet mit ihren darzu schicklichen Airs, nach französischer Art und Manier eingerichtet und gesetzet' (1693)
Performers: Musica antiqua Köln; Reinhard Goеbеl (conductor)

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German composer. He was one of the leading composers of his time in central Germany, especially of church music and more particularly of cantatas, of which he wrote several hundred. Erlebach probably received his earliest musical training at the East Friesian court. Through the family connections of the ruling house he was sent with a recommendation to Thuringia, where he was employed from 1678 to 1679, first as musician and valet and then, from 1681, as Kapellmeister, at the court of Count Albert Anton von Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. At Rudolstadt he entered a lively musical environment. During his 33 years as Kapellmeister he not only succeeded in making this small establishment into a main centre of musical activity in Thuringia but also made a considerable name for himself in central Germany as a composer. He enjoyed both musical and personal relations with J.P. Krieger, Kapellmeister of the court at Weissenfels, and he paid visits to the ducal court of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and to Nuremberg, where several of his works were printed. In 1705 he took part, as a member of Albert Anton's retinue, in a ceremony of homage to the Emperor Joseph I at Mühlhausen, where, with the Rudolstadt court orchestra, he directed a large-scale ceremonial work, which he had composed for the occasion and which is his only music to survive in an autograph copy. He wrote several pieces for the funerals of Albert Anton (1710) and of his consort (1707). When Albert Anton's son Ludwig Friedrich came to the throne in 1711, the event was celebrated with a number of festival cantatas, all of which Erlebach also composed. In his last years he was revered and sought out above all as a teacher; Johann Caspar Vogler, who also studied with Bach, was one of the many musicians who learnt the rudiments of their craft from him. After his death the Rudolstadt court bought his collection of music from his widow; it included many sacred and secular works that were destroyed by fire in 1735 and are known now only from two extensive catalogues. 

Erlebach composed in nearly all the forms common at the time and was equally successful in instrumental and vocal works. Of his 120 or so instrumental works there survive only six suites, six trio sonatas and a march. The suites show the influence of French orchestral suites, and the trio sonatas that of the Italian sonata da camera; in all these works Erlebach succeeded in uniting foreign formal elements with German features, which can be seen above all in the distinctly folklike nature of some of the melodic material and which also produces sonorities reminiscent of those of vocal music. Erlebach was most prolific as a composer of church music, which was the field in which he began his career as a composer about 1680. His sacred music embraces a cappella motets for four or more voices, concertato psalms and hymns, masses, oratorios (the Christmas, Easter, Resurrection and Whitsuntide stories and pieces for the New Year) and various kinds of cantata. All the oratorios are lost, and only some of their texts are extant. But his best works in the other genres bear witness to his mastery as a composer of church music. His psalm settings, which adhere to the style of the sacred concerto for large forces, are interesting particularly for their colourful harmonies, precisely indicated contrasts of tempo and dynamics and free use of madrigalian motifs: such features, following in the wake of Schütz's achievements, helped to enhance the importance of works of this type, at least in central Germany. Erlebach soon began to specialize as a composer of cantatas. Most of them are lost, but their texts show a logical development from those closely adhering to Gospel passages, through those containing arias and concerto-like textures conceived on soloistic lines, to cantatas based on free texts with recitative and da capo arias, and to solo cantatas with an obbligato instrument.

dimecres, 23 de juliol del 2025

HEBERLE, Anton (c.1780-c.1816) - Concertino pour le csakán (1807)

Rudolf von Alt (1812-1905) - Budapest


Anton Heberle (c.1780-c.1816) - Concertino pour le csakán et trio à cordes (1807)
Performers: Hugo Reyne (flute); La Simphonie du Marais

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Hungarian composer. Refered as the "inventor" of the csakan, very few details are known about his life. Between 1807 and 1811 he probably lived in Vienna, where his works appeared in print through the publishing house Chemische Druckerey. Among them we find the following works for the csakan or flûte douce: 8 volumes of easy pieces, a fantasy, a sonata, a Sonata brillante, all solo works, 2 volumes of small duets, a concertino with string trio and 2 horns ad libitum, and a set of variations with string quartet and two horn. We may assume that he left Vienna in 1812 to settle in Hungary.

dilluns, 21 de juliol del 2025

Unknown composer (18th Century) - Variations for Clarinet

Adrien de Braekeleer (1818-1904) - Home Music Party


Unknown composer (18th Century) - Variations (B-Dur) for Clarinet
Performers: Ludmila Peterková (clarinet); Virtuosi di Praga

diumenge, 20 de juliol del 2025

AUFSCHNAITER, Benedikt Anton (1665-1742) - Missa Sancti Antonii (1712)

Bartolomeo Altomonte (1694-1783) - Virtue and Science triumphant over Vice


Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter (1665-1742) - Missa Sancti Antonii aus 
'Alaudae V ad aram purpurati honoris Victimae sive Sacra V ... op. 6' (1712)
Performers: Nеuе lnnsbruckеr Hofkapеllе; Detlef Brаtschke (conductor)

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Austrian composer. His main appointment was in Passau, where he succeeded Georg Muffat as court Kapellmeister in 1705. He spent his early years in Vienna, where he may have been a pupil of Johannes Ebner (a member of the well-known family of organ players and son of Wolfgang Ebner) whom he declared his model. Apparently he came into contact with members of the Viennese nobility, and he may have been employed at a court. In a letter of 1724 to Prince-Bishop Lamberg, while complaining about the quality of the violinists in Passau, Aufschnaiter claimed to have had in Vienna, where he spent many years, ‘16–18 excellent musicians’ at his disposal. His op.1 (of which no copy is extant) was dedicated to Count Ferdinand Ernst von Trautmannsdorf, who may have been his employer. In 1695 his op.2 appeared in Nuremberg with a dedication to Archduke Joseph (later Emperor Joseph I). Under the title Concors discordia it contains six orchestral suites which show Italian concerto grosso structure but also an apparent French influence; they probably followed the example of Georg Muffat. All that is known of op.3 is that it was dedicated to Emperor Leopold I; no copy is extant. Op.4 consists of eight church sonatas published under the title Dulcis fidium harmonia symphoniis ecclesiasticis concinnata, which appeared in 1703 and were dedicated to the four early fathers of the church and the four evangelists. These are orchestral sonatas for two solo violins (which have complicated double stops), two violins ad libitum, viola, violone and organ; they may have been inspired by Heinrich Biber’s works. From 1705, when he became Kapellmeister at Passau, Aufschnaiter was active as a composer of church music (although he was not officially appointed cathedral Kapellmeister as Muffat had been). His opp.5 and 8 comprise vespers for four voices, strings and continuo instruments (1709, 1728), his op.6 five masses (1712) and his op.7 offertories with two solo violas (1719). In all his church works Aufschnaiter favours a more traditional style similar to the Roman cantata style; there are fewer demanding violin passages and double stops than in his earlier works, and he prefers to please with melodic charm. In his theoretical writings he emphasizes the difference between church, chamber and theatre music.

divendres, 18 de juliol del 2025

BRESCIANELLO, Giuseppe Antonio (1690-1758) - Sinfonia à 4 (1738)

Maximiliaan Blommaert (fl. c.1696) - The private concert


Giuseppe Antonio Brescianello (1690-1758) - Sinfonia à 4 in g-moll, Opera I (1738)
Performers: Ensemble Barocco Sаns Sοuci

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Italian violinist and composer. He first appears in documents when in 1715 the Elector of Bavaria brought him from Venice to Munich as a violinist. In October 1716, after the death of his predecessor Pez, he became musique directeur, maître des concerts de la chambre at the Württemberg court in Stuttgart, and in 1717 chief Kapellmeister. Between 1717 and 1718 he wrote the pastoral opera La Tisbe, which he dedicated to his employer Archduke Eberhard Ludwig. Hoping this opera would be produced at the Stuttgart Opera, Brescianello wrote in his Präparationen that he had suited its melodies to the theatre taste: but that did not gain him a performance. From 1719 to 1721 he had to face heated battles with his rival Reinhard Keiser, who sought unsuccessfully for Brescianello’s position. In 1731 Brescianello became Rath und Oberkapellmeister. When the court’s finances collapsed in 1737, the Stuttgart opera troupe was dissolved and Brescianello lost his post, which spurred him on to increased activity as a composer. In 1738 (according to EitnerQ) he wrote 12 concerti e sinphonie op.1 and other works, and somewhat later ‘18 Piecen fürs Gallichone’. When the regency of the generous artistic patron Duke Carl Eugen began in 1744, Brescianello was reinstated as Oberkapellmeister ‘on account of his particular knowledge of music and excellent competence’, and until his retirement he brought the opera and court music to renewed fame. He was pensioned off on 29 November 1751 according to Sittard, on St James’s Day 1755 according to other sources. His successor was Ignaz Holzbauer, then Jommelli. In his two decades as Kapellmeister, Brescianello helped to put his stamp on the musical life of Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg. His importance lies in his compositions, which mainly follow the conventions of his time (sequences and imitations, influences of the galant style, generally in loosened suite form). Apart from Tisbe, two cantatas and a mass (occasional and commissioned works), Brescianello wrote mainly chamber music using the violin, with which he was most acquainted through his training as a violinist: these works are thus among his most successful. 

dimecres, 16 de juliol del 2025

HEINICHEN, Johann David (1683-1729) - Concerto à 7

Christophe Huet (1700-1759) - Singerie The Dance (c.1739)


Johann David Heinichen (1683-1729) - Concerto (G-Dur) à 7, SeiH 215
Performers: Accademia Bizantina

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German composer and theorist. He was the son of David Heinichen who, after an education at Leipzig's Thomasschule and the university, moved to Krössuln for a lifelong career as pastor. Johann David also attended the Thomasschule Leipzig. There he studied music with Johann Schelle and later received organ and harpsichord lessons with Johann Kuhnau. The future composer Christoph Graupner was also a student of Kuhnau at the time. Heinichen enrolled in 1702 to study law at the University of Leipzig and in 1705-06 qualified as a lawyer (in the early 18th century the law was a favored route for composers; Kuhnau, Graupner and Georg Philipp Telemann were also lawyers). Heinichen practiced law in Weissenfels until 1709. However, Heinichen maintained his interest in music and was concurrently composing operas. In 1710, he published the first edition of his major treatise on the thoroughbass. He went to Italy and spent seven formative years there, mostly in Venice, with great success with two operas, Mario and Le passioni per troppo amore (1713). Mario was staged again in Hamburg in 1716 with the German title, Calpurnia, oder die romische Grossmut. In 1712, he taught music to Leopold, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen, who took him as composer. The same prince would appoint Johann Sebastian Bach Kapellmeister at the end of 1717. In 1716, Heinichen met in Venice Prince Augustus III of Poland, son of King Augustus II the Strong, and thanks to him was appointed the Royal-Polish and Electoral-Saxon Kapellmeister in Dresden. His pupils included Johann Georg Pisendel. In 1721, Heinichen married in Weissenfels; the birth of his only child is recorded as January 1723. In his final years, Heinichen's health suffered greatly; on the afternoon of 16 July 1729, he was buried in the Johannes cemetery after finally succumbing to tuberculosis.

dilluns, 14 de juliol del 2025

ALBICASTRO, Henricus (1661-1730) - Concerti à quatro (1704)

Circle of Jan Miense Molenaer (1610-1668) - A musical gathering


Henricus Albicastro (1661-1730) - Concerti (V, g-moll) à quatro, opera settima (1704)
Performers: Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin; Julian Doyle (conductor)

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German composer and violinist. In 1686, he moved to Leiden, in the Netherlands, where he registered at the University of Leiden as a Musicus Academiae, but his name does not appear in the university's archives. In 1696, a collection of twelve of his trio sonatas appeared, entitled 'Il giardino armonico sacro-profano'. Edited by François Barbry, it was published in Bruges by François van Heurck; no copies of the last six, or of Albicastro's opus 1 or opus 2 from Bruges seem to have survived. In Amsterdam a separate set of opus numbers were published by Estienne Roger: collections of violin sonatas (Opp. 2, 3, 5, 6 and 9), trio sonatas (Opp. 1, 4 and 8), and string concertos (Op. 7) in a Corellian idiom. During the last phases of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1713), he served as a captain of cavalry. He remained active in this position until 1730, when he died in Maastricht. One source erroneously suggests he may have died in 1738. 

diumenge, 13 de juliol del 2025

Gessel (18th Century) - Vater ich will daß wo ich bin

Philippe de Champaigne (1602-1674) - The Adoration of the Shepherds


Gessel (18th Century) - Festo Ascensionis Christi | Vater, ich will, daß wo ich bin, auch die
Performers: Bettina Ranch (alto); Stefan Geyer (bass); Goldberg Baroque Ensemble;
Andrzej Mikołaj Szadejko (conductor)

divendres, 11 de juliol del 2025

DE NEBRA, José (1702-1768) - Sinfonía Octava

Circle of Nicolas Lancret (1690-1743) - A fête champetre


José de Nebra (1702-1768) - Sinfonía Octava en Do mayor
Performers: Los Elementos

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Spanish composer and organist. Born to a family of musicians, he began his musical training under his father José Antonio Nebra (1672-1748), who had settled in Cuenca as cathedral organist and teacher of the choirboys (1711-1729) and later became maestro de capilla (1729-1748). In 1719 José de Nebra became organist at the convent of Descalzas. In 1722 he served in the Osuna household as a musician, and in 1724 he was appointed as one of the organists of the royal chapel in Madrid. By 1751 he had become vice-maestro and a teacher at the Colegio de niños cantores, later serving at the Jeronimos convent as organist. His students include Antonio Soler. Nebra’s focus as a composer was on native Spanish stage works, including the autos sacramentales, zarzuelas, and comedias. His music includes 21 autos sacramentales, 51 theatre works, 40 villancicos, 10 versos, 16 keyboard sonatas, two Masses, 18 Lamentations, four vespers, 16 Salve Reginas, a Requiem, 23 Psalms, 22 hymns, 21 responsories, toccatas, and a number of smaller sacred works. His two brothers were also musicians: Francisco Javier Nebra (1705-1741) was organist at La Seo, Zaragoza (1727-1729) and then in Cuenca (1729-1741), and Joaquín Nebra (1709-1782) was organist at La Seo, Zaragoza, from 1730 until his death. His nephew Manuel de Nebra Blasco (1750-1784) was an organist and composer.

dimecres, 9 de juliol del 2025

LEDESMA, Nicolás (1791-1883) - Stabat Mater (1837)

Henri Lehmann (1814-1882) - Miraculous transport of the body of St.Catherine (1839)


Nicolás Ledesma (1791-1883) - Stabat Mater (1837)
Performers: Paloma Pérez Iñigo (soprano); J. Mecharri (tenor); R. Salaberria (bass);
Orquesta del Festival Internacional de LOIOLA; Javier Bello-Portu (1920-2004, conductor)

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Spanish composer. He was a choirboy at Tarazona Cathedral, where he was taught music by Francisco Javier Gibert and José Angel Martinchique. He later moved to Zaragoza, where he studied the organ with Ramón Ferreñac. From an early age he was organist and choirmaster in various collegiate churches: Borja (1807), Tafalla (1809), Calatayud (where he is known to have been about 1824) and finally Bilbao (1830), where he remained until his death. He was a prolific composer of masses, Lamentations, motets and villancicos. Although his music reflects the bombastic and theatrical tendencies of his age, he had a sound technique and a certain nobility of invention. He was also active with Hilarión Eslava in efforts to renew and purify religious music.

dilluns, 7 de juliol del 2025

RUST, Friedrich Wilhelm (1739-1796) - Sonate in Fis moll (1784)

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Kurfürst Maximilian Joseph von Pfalz-Bayern mit seiner Familie (1799)


Friedrich Wilhelm Rust (1739-1796) - Clavier=Sonate in | Fis moll | componirt | 1784
Performers: Seth Carlin (1945-2016, pianoforte)

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German composer. As a small child he learnt to play the violin, encouraged by his elder brother Johann Ludwig Anton, who was himself considered an excellent violinist. He also learnt the piano, and according to his own account in his autobiography (1775) could play the first part of J.S. Bach’s Das wohltemperirte Clavier from memory when he was 16. After his father’s death in 1751 he lived with his mother and eldest brother in Gröbzig until 1755. A copy that he made of the trio sonata from Bach’s Musical Offering dates from this period; it is now considered lost. He then attended the Lutheran Gymnasium in Cöthen, 1755-58. From 1758 he studied law at Halle-Wittenberg University; he also had lessons with W.F. Bach and in return deputized for him as a church organist. Soon after Rust had completed his studies there, Prince Leopold Friedrich Franz of Anhalt-Dessau sent him to Zerbst to study with Carl Höckh, and then to Berlin and Potsdam (July 1763-April 1764) to study the violin with Franz Benda and keyboard instruments with C.P.E. Bach. In 1765-66 he visited Italy in the prince’s retinue, and there completed his musical training. He then settled in Dessau, where a lively court and civic musical life soon developed under his influence, and he wrote most of his compositions for it. From 1769 he organized regular subscription concerts, with music performed by both court musicians and amateurs, and in 1775 a theatre was founded, a project for which Rust was largely responsible. His achievements were recognized in April 1775, when the prince made him court music director. He married his former singing pupil Henriette Niedhardt in May; the couple had eight children, two of whom became professional musicians. In his lifetime Rust was honoured and esteemed as an instrumentalist and composer; contemporary lexicons and his correspondence with colleagues bear eloquent witness to this. He was also active as a teacher, and trained a series of well-regarded instrumentalists and singers. The surviving instrumental music includes works for clavichord, viola d’amore, harp, lute, and nail violin, the sound of which appealed to his introverted nature. In addition to large-scale vocal works and six stage works he also wrote some 100 lieder, of which 70 have been made usable for modern performance.

diumenge, 6 de juliol del 2025

D'AMBLEVILLE, Charles (1587-1637) - Missa Psallite Domino (1636)

Christophe Nicolas Tassin (c.1600-1660) - Rouen (1636)


Charles d'Ambleville (1587-1637) - Missa Psallite Domino des 'Harmonia sacra, seu vesperae in dies tum dominicos, tum festos totius anni, una cum missa ac litaniis beatae virginis cum sex vocibus' (1636)
Performers: Ensemble Meihua Fleur de Prunus; Chœur du Centre Catholique Chinois de Paris;
François Picard (conductor)
Further info: Musique des Lumières

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French composer. All that is known of his life is that in 1626 he was procureur of the Compagnie de Jésus at Rouen. He left only musical works, from which we may infer that he was director of music of one of the colleges of his order. His Octonarium sacrum (1634) is a set of five-part verses for the Magnificat, using all eight tones; they are fugal and closely resemble similar pieces by Nicolas Formé. Two years later he published his Harmonia sacra in two complementary volumes for four and six voices respectively. It includes works for double choir in a distinctly modern style originating in Italy that had already been adopted in France by several composers. Each volume also contains several masses and motets for a single choir. The double-choir works are for liturgical use and comprise psalms, motets and hymns.