dilluns, 5 de gener del 2026

STARZER, Joseph (1726-1787) - Divertimento in C-Dur

Cornelis Troost (1696-1750) - Suijpe Steijn (1742)


Joseph Starzer (1726-1787) - Divertimento in C-Dur
Performers: Seattle Trumpet Consort

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Austrian composer and violinist. No details of his musical training are known, but it has been surmised that he studied with court composer Giuseppe Bonno, the teacher of his sister Catharina Starzer. By about 1752 he was a violinist in Vienna's Burgtheater orchestra, where he began his career as a composer of ballets. During the winter of 1758-59, he went to Russia, where he was active at the Imperial court in St. Petersburg; gave concerts and later was made Konzertmeister and then deputy Kapellmeister and composer of ballet music; served as maitre de chapelle et directeur des concerts in 1763. Returning to Vienna about 1768, he composed several notable ballets. With Florian Leopold Gassmann, he helped in 1771 to organize the Tonkiinstler-Sozietat, for which he wrote a number of works. In 1779 he retired as a violinist and in 1785 gave up his duties with the society. Joseph Starzer was one of the leading Austrian composers of his day, winning distinction not only for his ballets but for his orchestral and chamber music; his string quartets have been compared favorably with those of Joseph Haydn. 

diumenge, 4 de gener del 2026

PERGOLESI, Giovanni Battista (1710-1736) - In hac die tam decora (c.1732)

Jean-François de Troy (1679-1752) - The Abduction of Europa (1716)


Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736) - Mottetto a Più voci 'In hac die tam decora' (c.1732)
Performers: Rachel Redmont (soprano); Marta Fumagalli (contralto); Ghislieri Choir & Consort; Giulio Prandi (conductor)

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Italian composer and violinist. Following early training in Jesi under Francesco Santini, he enrolled in the Conservatorio dei Poveri di Gesù Cristo in Naples, where his teachers were Gaetano Greco and Francesco Feo. He began his compositional career composing oratorios, such as the 1731 'La conversion e morte di San Guglielmo'. His first opera, 'Salustia', written for Naples in 1732, was a limited success, but he was appointed as maestro di capella to Prince Ferdinando Colonna Stigliano. Other operatic successes followed, but the most important was his 1733 'Il prigionero superbo' with its two-act intermezzo 'La serva padrona'. This is considered a seminal work in the creation of the buffa. A second appointment at the court of the Duke of Maddaloni in 1734 led to further commissions, such as the opera 'L’Olimpiade', which premiered at the Teatro Tordinona in Rome in 1735. Although this work was initially not a success, Pergolesi’s career was meteoric. His health, however, deteriorated and in 1736 he was confined to the Capuchin monastery in Pozzuoli, where he died from tuberculosis. Although he was only 26, he completed 11 operas and oratorios, two Masses, five cantatas (including Orfeo in 1736), two Salve Reginas, one Magnificat, a set of Marian vespers, and his most famous work, the Stabat mater, which was commissioned by the Confraternità dei Cavalieri di San Luigi di Palazzo shortly before his death (although a later composer, Giovanni Paisiello, claimed it had actually been written around 1730). His instrumental works were few, including four violin sonatas and possibly a violin concerto. Following his untimely death, his reputation spread throughout Europe, and a number of works were falsely attributed to him, such as a set of six concerti grossi (now known to be by Uno van Wassenaer). His Stabat mater was performed widely (in various arrangements), and his Serva padrona was considered the epitome of the new Italian comic style, particularly in Paris, where it served as the center of the Querelle des bouffons. His style emphasizes diatonic melody and triadic harmony, often with good contrasting themes. He was a leading figure in the rise of Italian comic opera in the 18th century.  

divendres, 2 de gener del 2026

BRIXI, František Xaver (1732-1771) - Concerto ex F Organo Principale

Francesco Battaglioli (1725-1796) - Architectural Capriccio


František Xaver Brixi (1732-1771) - Concerto ex F Organo Principale
Performers: Ales Bаrtа (organ); Virtuosi di Prаga; Oldrich Vlcеk (conductor)

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Bohemian organist and composer. Son of Šimon Brixi (1693-1735), he received his musical education at the Piarist Gymnasium in Kosmonosy. His teachers included Václav Kalous, a significant composer. In 1749 he left Kosmonosy and returned to Prague, where he worked as an organist at several churches. In 1759 he was appointed Regens chori (choir director) and Kapellmeister of St Vitus Cathedral, thus attaining, at age 27, the highest musical position in the city; this office he held till his early death. He wrote some 290 church works (of the most varied type), cantatas and oratorios, chamber compositions, and orchestral compositions. He was a prolific composer of music for the liturgy, and wrote more than 100 masses, vespers and motets, among others. He also composed secular music such as oratorios and incidental music, concertos and symphonies. Brixi died of tuberculosis in Prague in 1771, at the age of 39.

dimecres, 31 de desembre del 2025

BACH, Johann Christian (1735-1782) - Suite 'Amadis de Gaule' (1779)

Vijfde blad van de maskerade van de studenten van de Utrechtse hogeschool op 25 juni 1867 voorstellende het bezoek van keizer Maximiliaan van Oostenri


Johann Christian Bach (1735-1782) -: Suite des 'AMADIS | DES GAULES | TRAGEDIE LIRIQUE DE QUINAULT | Reduite En Trois Actes | Dedieé | A Monsieur | DE. CAUMARTIN' (1779), WarB G 39
Performers: hr-Sinfoniеorchеster; Reinhard Goеbеl (conductor)

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German composer. The youngest son of Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), he received his earliest musical training from his father and a cousin, Johann Elias Bach. After serving as a secretary to his father the final year of his father’s life, he moved to Berlin in 1750, receiving further instruction from his brother Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. In 1755 he left for Milan, where he eventually obtained the patronage of Count Agostino Litta. Following study with Padre Giovanni Battista Martini and conversion to Roman Catholicism, he was appointed second organist at the Milan cathedral in 1760. A commission for an opera from the Teatro Regio in Turin the same year, however, altered his fortunes; the work, Cantone in Utica, was a success that led both to commissions throughout Italy and an international reputation as a composer of Italian opera. In 1762 he was invited to London, where he set the opera Orione. Its success and the appointment as Music Master to the Queen allowed him to reside permanently there. A further trip to Paris solidified his ability to publish his music, and, finally, his lodging with compatriot Carl Friedrich Abel resulted in a collaborative concert series beginning in 1764. For the next decade he traveled regularly to Paris where his works were highly esteemed, and in 1772 he was invited to Mannheim to set the opera Temistocle. In 1779 he wrote his first tragédie lyrique for Paris, 'Amadis de Gaule'. Despite the successes, competition with rival concert a difficult economic situation, and ill health led to his early death. Bach can be considered one of the pivotal composers of the age. Unlike his brothers Wilhelm Friedemann Bach and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, he fully immersed himself in the Italian style, creating works that feature clear period lyrical themes, solid harmonic foundations, and distinct formal structures. His orchestration, often using obbligato instruments, is colorful, and Bach used various Mannheim orchestral devices to great effect. He was one of the most popular composers of the period, whose music had circulation throughout Europe, influencing a later generation of composers, such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He was a prolific composer in virtually all genres. His works include 39 operas, three serenatas, an oratorio, seven Mass/Requiem movements, 28 other sacred works, 15 concert arias and cantatas, 45 songs/canzonetts, 34 symphonies, 19 sinfonia concertantes, 28 keyboard concertos, 11 other concertos (violin, flute, oboe, and bassoon), six wind symphonies, 11 marches, a sextet, 13 quintets (string and piano), 20 quartets (string, flute, and piano), 14 trio sonatas, 12 trios (almost all piano trios), 26 violin sonatas, two viola da gamba sonatas, 23 keyboard sonatas (four for keyboard four hands), and numerous miscellaneous pieces for the keyboard and harp. His music has been cataloged according to Terry (T) or Warburton (W or CW) numbers. 

dilluns, 29 de desembre del 2025

DEMIGNAUX, Louis Charles (1731-1809) - Sonata en trio (1774)

Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827) - The dull husband (1789)


Louis Charles Demignaux (1731-1809) - Sonata en trio des 'Sonates en trio pour la harpe,
le clavecin ou le piano forte et violon ... Oeuvre IV' (1774)
Performers: Clara Izаmbеrt (harp); Marie van Rhіjn (harpsichord); Maud Giguet (violin)
Further info: Hommage a La Dauphine

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French composer and double bass player. Born into a family of construction artisans, he rose to prominence as a double bassist for the Musique du roi in Versailles, a prestigious post he held from 1762 until his retirement with a full pension in 1785. A well-integrated member of the royal musical circle, he married Louise Hélène Bernard in 1768, raised four children on the Avenue de Saint-Cloud, and served as a legal guardian to the harpist Philippe Joseph Hinner. Beyond his musical duties, Demignaux enjoyed a close proximity to the court, receiving an annual stipend for presenting the Gazette to Queen Marie Antoinette, a relationship that may have facilitated his protege’s own success. Despite his long-standing royal service leading to his denunciation as a "suspect" during the revolutionary period in 1794, he survived the era and remained active in family life in Paris well into the early 19th century, witnessing the marriages of his children. As a composer, he wrote a small number of chamber pieces, primarily for the harp, as well as songs with accompaniment.