dimecres, 17 de juny del 2026

AGTHE, Carl Christian (1762-1797) - Concerto a Flauto Traverso (c.1780)

Jean Grandjean (1752-1781) - Celebration of Spring


Carl Christian Agthe (1762-1797) - Concerto E. G dur: | Flauto Traverso Principalo: | Violino Primo: | Violino Secondo: | Viola Primo et Secondo: | Oboe Primo: | Oboe Secondo | Cornu Primo: | Cornu Secondo: |
e | Basso è Violoncello (c.1780)
Performers: Gabriele Zucker (flute); Mitteldeutsche Kammerphilharmonie; Gerard Oskamp (conductor)

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German organist and composer. He first learnt music with his grandfather Johann Michael Agthe, Kantor at the Rathsschule, and his great-uncle Andreas Agthe, a local organist; he later continued his musical studies as a choirboy and as a member of the local Stadtpfeiferei. From 1776 to 1782 he was director of music with the Hündelberg theatrical company in Reval (now Tallinn), where he composed his first Singspiele 'Martin Velten' (1778). He then moved to Ballenstedt to join the court orchestra of Prince Friedrich Albrecht of Anhalt-Bernburg as an organist and harpsichordist. There he became known as one of the best organists of his time and, after further studies with Friedrich Wilhelm Rust, as an active composer of Singspiele, songs and instrumental pieces. His best-known work is a setting of August Friedrich Ferdinand von Kotzebue’s 'Der Spiegelritter' (1795), which was first performed by an amateur society in Ballenstedt and several times revived. He also left 11 symphonies, two concertos, and 14 Dances. His son Albrecht Wilhelm Johann Agthe (1790-1873) was a pianist, teacher and composer. 

dilluns, 15 de juny del 2026

SACCHINI, Antonio (1730-1786) - Sinfonia in Re maggiore

Thomas Patch (1720-1782) - Florence, A View of Ponte Santa Trinità Crossing the Arno River


Antonio Sacchini (1730-1786) - Sinfonia in Re maggiore
Performers: Orchestra da Camera di Napoli
Further info: Sinfonie Napolitane

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Italian composer. He was taken by his father at an early age to Naples, where he studied violin under Nicola Fiorenza and composition under Francesco Durante at the Conservatorio Santa Maria di Loreto. In 1756 he composed his first opera, Fra Donato, which launched his career as a composer of opera in Italy. Although he served for several years as an assistant maestro di cappella at the conservatory, he abandoned his teaching profession by 1763 to concentrate on commissions from throughout the country, eventually establishing a reputation as a dramatic and talented composer. In 1768 while in Venice he became director of the Conservatorio dell’Ospedaletto, teaching singing to students such as Nancy Storace. In 1772 he moved to London, where he obtained a great success with his operas but was known for a dissolute lifestyle. This forced Sacchini to travel to Paris in 1781, where he was caught in the middle of the feud between Niccolò Piccinni and Christoph Willibald von Gluck, both of whose partisans condemned him as a member of the other’s faction. In 1786 he produced his most enduring work, Oedip à Colonne, at the request of Marie Antoinette, but his early death from his lifestyle and acute gout prevented him from realizing its success. As a composer, Sacchini was known for his dramatic musical style, particularly in serious opera. He was able to move fluidly between both the Italian and French styles, often using varied forms and progressive harmonic structures. His works include 47 operas, seven oratorios, two symphonies, six string quartets, six trio sonatas, and 12 violin sonatas or lessons, in addition to numerous insertion arias, Masses, motets, Psalms, and other sacred works.

diumenge, 14 de juny del 2026

VIOLA I VALENTI, Anselm (1738-1798) - Missa Alma Redemptoris Mater

Alexandre de Laborde (1773-1842) - Vista interior de la iglesia de Mont-Serrat (1806)


Anselm Viola i Valentí (1738-1798) - Missa Alma Redemptoris Mater
Performers: Escolania de Montserrat; Orquestra d'antics escolans; Ireneu Segarra (1917-2005, conductor)

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Spanish teacher and composer. The eldest son of Francesc Viola's third marriage, his mother's name was Maria Rosa Valentí. He trained at the Escolania de Montserrat under Benet Julià and Josep Antoni Martí. On 20 March 1756, he began his novitiate at the Monastery of Montserrat, where he took his vows in 1757. He then moved to Madrid, where he completed his ecclesiastical and musical studies at the Church of Nuestra Señora de Montserrat, coming under the influence of José de Nebra. He also premiered many of his works there, achieving great success at the royal chapel. Upon returning to Montserrat in 1768, he was appointed master of the Escolania, teaching renowned students such as Fernando Sor, who wrote memoirs detailing the life of his master Anselm Viola, and master of the music chapel, positions he held until his death. As a composer, he wrote instrumental works, sonatas, and other pieces for keyboard instruments, as well as a classical-style concerto for bassoon and orchestra. He composed two masses for voices and orchestra, two Magnificats for six and seven voices (the second with basso continuo), 'Tèrcia i Completes' (both for seven voices with accompaniment), and a Lamentation for alto and orchestra. 

divendres, 12 de juny del 2026

BONPORTI, Francesco Antonio (1672-1749) - Concerto a quattro (c.1715)

Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684-1721) - Les Plaisirs du bal


Francesco Antonio Bonporti (1672-1749) - Concerto a quattro, Op.11 No.8 (c.1715)
Performers: Amsterdams Kamerorkest; André Rieu (1917-1992, conductor)

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Italian priest and composer. He was initially educated in Trento and Innsbruck in philosophical and humanistic subjects appropriate to the clerical vocation he was to follow. In 1691 he was admitted to the Collegium Germanicum in Rome, where he studied theology. While in Rome, he also studied composition under the guidance of Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni and possibly violin (not documented) with Arcangelo Corelli. Bonporti returned to Trent ordained as a priest and obtained a minor office in the cathedral in 1697. There he published his first opus, a set of ten trio sonatas and where on the title-page he called himself ‘gentiluomo di Trento’. He moved to Padua in 1740, lodging in the house of a fellow priest. A final appeal to Empress Maria Theresa in 1746, in which op.12 was enlisted, proved fruitless. He died three years later and was buried in Padua. Bonporti regarded himself as primarily a priest rather than a composer. His output consists in twelve opus, and the foremost of them is his 'Concerti a quattro', Op.11 (c.1715). Such as many italian composers of his time, he based his musical language on Corelli. 

dimecres, 10 de juny del 2026

BOLOGNE, Joseph (1744-1799) - Symphonie concertante (1777)

Pierre-Adrien Pâris (1745-1819) - Architectural Fantasy Ruins of a Circular Temple Seen through a Natural Arch (c.1785)


Joseph Bologne de Saint-George (1744-1799) - Symphonie concertante des 'Second œuvre de | deux | symphonies | concertantes | Pour deux Violons principaux, | deux Violons ripieno, Alto et Basse, | deux Hautbois et deux Cors, | ad Libitum ... Oeuvre IX' (1777)
Performers: Miroslav Vilimec (violin); Radio Symphony Orchestra Pilsen; Frantisek Preisler (conductor)

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Caribbean composer, violinist, swordsman, equestrian and military commander. Son of a manumitted African mother and French plantation owner (his last name was apparently taken from one of the plantations his father owned), he grew up in the vicinity of Basse-Terre. His family went to France in 1747 to escape difficulties with the law but returned to Guadeloupe a few years later. In 1753 they moved permanently, first to Bordeaux then to Paris, where he underwent his earliest musical education, probably under Antonio Lolli and a few years later François-Joseph Gossec. In 1769 he became a violinist in the Concerts des amateurs, later becoming its director. During this time, beginning with his debut as a soloist in 1772, he became famous for his technical proficiency on his instruments, earning the epithet as the finest violinist of the age. A proposal to make him musical director of the Opéra in 1776 was blocked by four singers who refused to work with a “mulatto.” In 1781 he founded the Loge Olympique orchestra sponsored by one of Paris’s largest masonic lodges; he conducted the premieres of Haydn’s so-called Paris symphonies, which he had helped commission. In 1787 he traveled to London, where his prowess as a violinist and swordsman were thought legendary. A supporter of the Revolution, he was given command of troops from France’s colonial domains in 1792, but a year later he was denounced and spent 18 months in prison. Disillusioned, he sailed to Hispanola to participate in the newly independent Haiti of Toussant l’Ouverture. There the corruption and poor living standards further eroded his health and state of mind. He returned to Paris to conduct the Cercle d’harmonie orchestra, but was unable to escape poverty. During his lifetime, Saint-Georges was a remarkable bon vivant who freely interacted in the upper circles of Parisian society. His music was known for its tunefulness and technical brilliance, using devices such as bariolage that were extremely uncommon. His 1778 opera 'Le partie du chasse' was well received. In all he wrote six operas, 13 violin concertos, 10 sinfonia concertantes, a bassoon concerto, two symphonies, nine violin sonatas, 18 string quartets, and several other smaller pieces. His multifaceted personality has been the subject of both literature (six novels) and a motion picture. He is reckoned as one of the greatest Afro-Caribbean musicians of the period.