dimecres, 16 d’abril del 2025

NAUMANN, Johann Gottlieb (1741-1801) - Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied

Friedrich Gotthard Naumann (1750-1821) - Johann Gottlieb Naumann


Johann Gottlieb Naumann (1741-1801) - Der 96. Psalm | Singet dem Herrn ein neues φ| â | 2 Clarini. | Tÿmpani. | 2. Corni | 2. Oboi | 2. Flauti | 2. Violini | Viola | Violone | C. A. T. B. | & | Organo (c.1786)
Performers: Bettina Eismаnn (soprano); Elisabeth Wіlke (alto); Werner Gürа (tenor);
Körnеrscher Sing-Verein Dresden; Drеsden Instrumental Concert; Peter Kοpp (conductor)

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German composer and violinist. His earliest education was at a local town school, but he was soon sent to Dresden to the Kreuzschule, where his teacher was Gottfried August Homilius. In 1757 the Swedish violinist Anders Wesstrom took him to Italy, where he received valuable instruction from Giuseppe Tartini in Padua, Padre Martini in Bologna, and Johann Adolph Hasse in Venice. Here his opera 'Il Tesoro insidiato' received such acclaim that he began to receive attention as Hasse’s successor as 'Il caro sassone'. Hasse recommended him as his successor in Dresden in 1764, and his work soon began to achieve considerable success throughout central Europe. In 1776 he was appointed Kapellmeister in Dresden. In 1777 he was commissioned by Swedish king Gustav III to write an opera, 'Amphion', that led to other commissions from the north, including 'Cora och Alonzo' with which the new Royal Opera in Stockholm was inaugurated in 1782. Although his last Swedish work, the nationalist 'Gustaf Wasa', was ready for performance in 1786, he was lured to Denmark to write works for the Danish Opera. In 1792 he married Catharina Magdalena Grodtschilling (1767-1838), the daughter of a Danish admiral. In 1789 he was active in Berlin, and by the time of his death he was probably one of the most respected and popular composers in Europe. As a composer, his works include 21 Masses, 15 Kyries, 13 oratorios, 20 offertories, 19 Marian antiphons, at least three Te Deums, nine vespers, eight Psalm cantatas, over 130 songs, two concertos for keyboard, 25 operas (in Italian, Swedish, and Danish), 16 symphonies, 12 sonatas for glass harmonica, 15 chamber works, and a host of smaller compositions for the voice and chamber ensembles. His music incorporates a mixture of the various late 18th-century styles and forms, always well constructed and dramatically intense. His 'Vater unser' was considered the epitome of German sacred music of the time, while his cantatas were more in the Italian style with fluid melodies and progressive harmony. He had an interest in the glass harmonica, writing a substantial amount of music for this instrument. Johann Gottlieb Naumann can be considered one of the most significant composers of the last half of the 18th century. His brother Friedrich Gotthard Naumann (1750-1821) was a painter, his son Carl Friedrich Naumann (1797-1873) was a mineralogist and geologist, and his grandson Ernst Naumann (1832-1910) was an organist and composer.

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