divendres, 29 d’abril del 2022

FISCHER, Johann Carl Christian (c.1733-1800) - Symphonie mit acht obligaten Pauken (c.1780)

Johann Dallinger von Dalling (1741-1806) - Entrance of the Emperor Franz I. Stephan and his son Joseph (II.) into Frankfurt on March 29, 1764


Johann Carl Christian Fischer (c.1733-1800) - Symphonie (C-Dur) mit acht obligaten Pauken (c.1780)
Performers: Dresden Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra; Alеxandеr Pеtеr (conductor)

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German oboist and composer. According to Burney he was ‘brought up at one of the common reading schools … where all the children learn music, with reading and writing, as a thing of course’ and learnt to play the violin. He first turned to the oboe ‘in sport’ but found that ‘he could express his feelings better with the reed than the bow’ and went to study with Alessandro Besozzi. He performed Besozzi’s G major Oboe Concerto in Warsaw in 1757 and at around the same time he composed a flute concerto and two oboe concertos. From 1760 Fischer was a member of the Kapelle of Augustus III, King of Poland, in Dresden; following the dissolution of the Kapelle in 1764 he travelled to Berlin and joined the court of Frederick the Great, whose flute playing he accompanied, presumably on a keyboard instrument, for four hours a day for a month. Later that year he travelled to Mannheim and performed at the Concert Spirituel in Paris (with sensational reviews), and in 1765 he was in The Hague, where he was heard by the Mozart family. After visits to Germany and Italy he was for a short time a member of the Dresden opera orchestra (1766) and once more at the court of Frederick the Great in Berlin (1767). After further travels through France and the Netherlands, he arrived in London. His first concert there, on 2 June 1768, is notable for including the first solo public performance, by J.C. Bach, on the newly invented piano. Fischer was soon engaged to perform a concerto every night at Vauxhall Gardens and, according to Burney, such was his playing that the Drury Lane oboist John Parke ‘used to quit his post, and forfeit half his night’s salary in order to run to Vauxhall to hear him’. 

In 1774 he joined Queen Charlotte’s chamber group, alongside his compatriots J.C. Bach and Abel, although his formal appointment did not take place until 1780. He performed at the Bach-Abel concerts where, according to Burney, only Fischer ‘was allowed to compose for himself, and in a style so new and fanciful, that in point of invention, as well as tone, taste, expression, and neatness of execution, his piece was always regarded as one of the highest treats of the night, and heard with proportionate rapture’. Fischer remained in London for the rest of his life, with just a few trips abroad, including concert tours to Dublin in 1771 and 1776. In 1780 he married Thomas Gainsborough’s elder daughter Mary, to the painter’s chagrin and with only his grudging approval (seeillustration): the marriage was short-lived. His performance at the Handel Commemoration in 1784 was highly praised by George III, and in 1786 he left London for a tour of Europe, accompanied by the great Mannheim oboist Friedrich Ramm. Mozart heard him playing again in Vienna in 1787: his negative criticisms of Fischer’s performance are in stark contrast to the otherwise universal praise. Fischer remained active as a performer for the following 14 years. He died (according to Burney) after suffering an apoplectic fit while performing to the royal family. On his deathbed he bequeathed all his manuscripts to the king. These manuscripts preserve cadenzas and elaborations for several of the early concertos, as well as two unpublished concertos.

dimecres, 27 d’abril del 2022

FREISSLICH, Maximilian Dietrich (1673-1731) - Dixit Dominus à 4 (1726)

Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641) - Rest on the Flight into Egypt


Maximilian Dietrich Freisslich (1673-1731) - Dixit Dominus à 4 (1726)
Performers: Capella Gedanensis 

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German composer, half-brother of Johann Balthasar Christian Freisslich. He went as a boy, probably in about 1686-87, to Danzig, where he sang in the choir at the Marienkirche and studied composition as a pupil of the Kapellmeister, J.V. Meder. When in 1699 Meder had to flee from his creditors, Freisslich succeeded him as Kapellmeister and held the post to the end of his life, when he was succeeded by his half-brother. During his 32 years of activity he wrote much religious music and many secular works. The texts of his compositions, including a cycle of church cantatas (1708–9), were printed at Danzig, but the only surviving composition is a Dixit Dominus of 1726 (PL-GD), written in a sound contrapuntal style. Besides Johann Balthasar Christian, two more of his brothers (sons of a pastor, Johann Weigold Freisslich, 1619-89) were musicians: Johann Thobias (1675-?), an organist in Salzungen, and Johann Wigaläus (1679-?), a member of the Kapelle at the Marienkirche, Danzig, from 1701. 

dilluns, 25 d’abril del 2022

KIRNBERGER, Johann Philipp (1721-1783) - Concerto per il Cembalo Obligato (c.1770)

Christoph Friedrich Reinhold Lisiewski (1725-1794) - Portrait of Johann Philipp Kirnberger


Johann Philipp Kirnberger (1721-1783) - Concerto (c-moll) per il Cembalo Obligato (c.1770)
previously attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach
Performers: Luciano Sgrіzzі (1910-1994, cembalo); Orchestre Jean-François Pаllаrd

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German theorist and composer. All information relating to his career before 1754 is based on F.W. Marpurg’s biographical sketch (1754), an autograph album described by Max Seiffert (1889) and comments found in letters Kirnberger wrote to J.N. Forkel in the late 1770s. He received his earliest training on the violin and harpsichord at home, and attended grammar school in Coburg and possibly Gotha. He studied the organ with J.P. Kellner in Gräfenroda before 1738, and then the violin with a musician named Meil and the organ with Heinrich Nikolaus Gerber in Sondershausen in 1738. According to Marpurg, Kirnberger went in 1739 to Leipzig, where he studied composition and performance with Bach for two years (the autograph book shows that he was in Sondershausen in 1740 and Leipzig in 1741, which does not preclude his period of study with Bach). In June 1741 Kirnberger travelled to Poland, where he spent the next ten years in the service of various Polish noblemen. He also held a position as music director at the Benedictine convent at Reusch-Lemberg. In 1751 Kirnberger returned to Germany apparently stopping at Coburg and Gotha before going to Dresden, where he studied the violin for a short time. He was then engaged by the Prussian royal chapel in Berlin as a violinist. By 1754 he had resigned that post and obtained permission to join the chapel of Prince Heinrich of Prussia, and in 1758 was given leave to enter the service of Princess Anna Amalia of Prussia, a position he retained to the end of his life. Kirnberger was among the most significant of a remarkable group of theorists, centred in Berlin, which included J.J. Quantz, C.P.E. Bach and Marpurg. 

Almost without exception his contemporaries described him as emotional and ill-tempered, but dedicated to the highest musical standards. Criticized for being inflexible, conservative, tactless, and even pedantic, his detractors still acknowledged his devotion to his students and friends. These included his employer Princess Anna Amalia (whose famous library he helped to assemble), and such eminent musicians as C.P.E. Bach, J.F. Agricola, the Graun brothers, J.A.P. Schulz (his most important pupil) and the encyclopedist J.G. Sulzer, to whose Allgemeine Theorie der schönen Künste (1771-74) he contributed articles. Most accounts agree that he was a middling performer and that his compositions were correct if uninspired. Many are in a galant style similar to that of C.P.E. Bach; others are in the older ‘strict’ style in the manner of J.S. Bach, but in neither category does Kirnberger display the harmonic or melodic imagination of his models. Although his musical knowledge was wide and profound, it was, according to his contemporaries, disorganized. He found it so difficult to express his ideas in writing that he had to call on others to edit or even rewrite his theoretical works (Die wahren Grundsätze (1773), for example, was written by J.A.P. Schulz under Kirnberger’s supervision). Nonetheless, even his most severe critics, such as Marpurg, considered his theoretical and didactic works to be invaluable. Kirnberger regarded J.S. Bach as the supreme composer, performer and teacher. He regretted that Bach left no didactic or theoretical works and tried through his own teaching and writing to propagate ‘Bach’s method’. His devotion to this cause is reflected in 14 years’ intermittent effort to obtain the publication of all Bach’s four-part chorale settings.

diumenge, 24 d’abril del 2022

ARNOLD, Georg (1621-1676) - Missa Quarta à 4 voci (1672)

Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) - Simeon’s Song of Praise (1631)


Georg Arnold (1621-1676) - Missa Quarta à 4 voci (1672)
Performers: Johаnna Koslowsky (soprano); Monа Spägеle (aIto); Paul Gerhardt Adаm (tenor); Wilfriеd Jochеns (bass); Musica Cantеrеy Bambеrg; Gеrhаrd Wеinziеrl (Ieitung)

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Austrian composer and organist, active in Germany. As early as 1640 he was organist of St Mark, Wolfsberg, formerly in the possession of the Franconian bishopric of Bamberg. After the end of the Thirty Years War, on 14 September 1649, he was appointed court organist at Bamberg through the influence of Prince-Bishop Melchior Otto Voit of Salzburg, who also began the Baroque restyling of the interior of Bamberg Cathedral and called on Arnold to provide a new repertory of masses, vespers and motets. The inclusion of a mass by Tobias Richter in Arnold’s op.2 and a Laudate pueri by G.G. Porro in his Psalmi vespertini indicates that he had contacts with Mainz and Munich, while the presence of 22 of his motets in the Düben Collection and a canon in J.G. Fabricius’s Liber amicorum testifies to his reputation outside the Bamberg area. As an organ expert he was connected with Spiridion and Matthias Tretzscher and helped with the reconstruction of the organs in Bamberg that had been destroyed in the war. He became Hofkapellmeister at Bamberg in 1667. A painting of 1675 by his son Georg Adam, who was appointed court organist in 1685, shows the interior of the restored cathedral with the splendid Baroque organ on the left wall; Arnold is seen standing next to it in court dress and wig. There was a long tradition of polyphonic music in Bamberg, to which Arnold added the Venetian polychoral style, possibly to some extent inspired by the layout of the cathedral, with apses at either end of the nave. The use of the term ‘sacrarum cantionum’ in the titles of his 1651 volume and op.4 is indeed reminiscent of Giovanni Gabrieli and Schütz; intended as open-air music, their contents are well suited to the forces at his disposal. In his masses Arnold adopted the large-scale, south German concertante style: in the single choir works of 1665 the concertante principle is expressed in the alternation and different groupings of the obbligato instruments, while the parody masses of 1672 rely more on dynamic contrasts. In the double choir masses of 1656 Arnold introduced the spatial effects of polychoral writing into this style; his development is also marked by the integration of elements of contrapuntal settings. The marked antiphonal style of the psalms of 1662–3 owes something to Monteverdi and Viadana, in contrast to the more seamless polyphony of op.3, most of whose 47 pieces are canzonas. But it is in the more intimate concerted motets that Arnold is at his most inspired, particularly in the settings of non-liturgical mystical texts.

divendres, 22 d’abril del 2022

TORELLI, Giuseppe (1658-1709) - Sinfonia con Tromba (c.1695)

Philips Wouwerman (1619-1668) - Soldiers Carousing with a Serving Woman outside a Tent (ca. 1655)


Giuseppe Torelli (1658-1709) - Sinfonia con Tromba (c.1695)
Performers: Edwаrd Hаrr (trumpet); Wurttemberg Chamber Orchestra; Jorg Fаerber (conductor)

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Italian composer. Born in Verona in the parish of S Maria in Chiavica, he was the son of Stefano and Anna (Boninsegna) Torelli. He was the sixth of nine children, of whom the youngest, Felice, became famous as a painter. His father was a health inspector for the local customs office and supported his family comfortably. Giuseppe's early musical training, if any, may have come from the Veronese musician Giuliano Massaroti, who lived in the same part of the city. By 15 May 1676, he is recorded as having played violin for vespers at the church of Santo Stefano in Verona and, by August 1684, was engaged as violinist at the cathedral. The next month, he moved to Bologna, having been admitted to the Accademia Filarmonica on 27 June 1684. He was appointed to the regular chapel on 28 September 1686 and then to compositore, probably by 1692. Torelli composed a number of sinfonie for the city’s feast of San Petronio between 1692 and 1708, but he was in demand as a violinist in neighboring cities and was frequently absent from San Petronio. In January 1696, the chapel ensemble was disbanded temporarily for lack of funds, so Torelli moved north to Ansbach in Bavaria, Germany. By 1698, he had secured an appointment as maestro di concerto for the Margrave of Brandenburg at Ansbach. In 1699, he is recorded in Vienna, and the following year, he appears to have applied to the margrave for permission to return to Italy. He is next recorded in 1701 back in San Petronio in Bologna as a member of the newly reconstituted cappella musicale, directed by Giacomo Antonio Perti. Owing to Perti’s influence and his own international reputation, Torelli was granted a special appointment that allowed traveling. Torelli was buried by the Confraternity of the Guardian Angel in Bologna. Best known today as a composer of instrumental music for strings, Torelli was credited by Johann Joachim Quantz in 1752 for inventing the concerto with his publication of Sinfonie a 3 e Concerti a 4, Opus 5 (Bologna, 1692). Among his published works are 10 trio sonatas, 18 sinfonie, 12 concertos for two violins, 12 concertos for one violin and one violoncello, 12 concerti grossi, 12 other concertos for various instruments, over 30 works for solo trumpet, and over 30 other unpublished sonatas, sinfonie, and concertos. There are also a few arias and cantatas and one oratorio, Adam auss dem irrdischen Paradiess verstossen (“Adam Expelled from Earthly Paradise”).