diumenge, 16 de novembre del 2025

BALIUS I VILA, Jaume (1750-1822) - Adonde infiel dragon (c.1786)

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Map of Barcelona (c.1706)


Jaume Balius i Vila (1750-1822) - Adonde infiel dragon (c.1786)
Performers: Maria Hinojosa Montenegro (soprano); Orquesta Barroca De Sevilla; Vanni Moretto (conductor)
Further info: Adonde Infiel Dragon

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Spanish composer. Baptized in the Santa Maria del Mar parish in Barcelona, he began his musical studies as a choirboy at the Escolania de Montserrat. In 1778 he was appointed 'maestro de capilla' at Seu d'Urgell Cathedral. After his ordination as a priest in 1780, he secured the post of 'maestro de capilla' at Girona Cathedral in 1781, succeeding Francesc Juncà, and in a post he held until 1785. In that year he transferred to Córdoba to assume this magisterium, a position he retained until his death, with one brief interruption between 1787 to 1789 to assume the post of 'maestro de capilla' of the Royal Convent of La Encarnación in Madrid. As a composer, his legacy is exceptionally prolific, with a corpus that exceeds 900 cataloged compositions, mainly sacred. His style is rooted in the classicism of the Viennese school. 

divendres, 14 de novembre del 2025

MENDELSSOHN, Fanny (1805-1847) - Ouvertüre in C-Dur (1832)

Moritz Daniel Oppenheim (1800-1882) - Fanny Hensel (1842)


Fanny Mendelssohn (1805-1847) - Ouvertüre in C-Dur (1832)
Performers: The Women's Philharmonic; Joann Fаllеtta (conductor)

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German composer, pianist and conductor. Sister of Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847), she was the eldest of four children born into a post-Enlightenment, cultured Jewish family. She enjoyed an excellent general and musical education throughout her childhood, but while he was encouraged to pursue music professionally, she was prevented from doing so by her father. Nevertheless, music remained centrally important to her within private spaces such as the salon. She received her earliest musical instruction from her mother, Lea Salomon (1777-1842), who taught her the piano (she is reputed to have noted her daughter’s ‘Bach fingers’ at birth). She then studied the piano with Ludwig Berger, and in 1816 with Marie Bigot in Paris. A few years later she embarked on theory and composition with Carl Friedrich Zelter, a conservative musician and early champion of Johann Sebastian Bach. Her first composition dates from December 1819, a lied in honour of her father’s birthday. In 1820 she enrolled at the newly opened Berlin Sing-Akademie. During the next few years Mendelssohn produced many lieder and piano pieces; such works were to be the mainstay of her output of about 500 compositions. In 1825, the Mendelssohns moved to Leipziger Straße 3, a large property which allowed the family to establish one of the most impressive musical salons of the century. In 1829, she married the painter Wilhelm Hensel (1794-1861), whose active support of her gifts meant that, exceptionally, marriage and motherhood did not spell the end of her compositional life. She collaborated closely with her husband in a purpose-built studio, Hensel responding to her music with drawings, and she composing songs to his poetry. Beginning in the early 1830s, she became the central figure in a flourishing salon, for which she created most of her compositions and where she performed on the piano and conducted. Two trips to Italy, in 1839-40 and 1845, were among the highpoints of her life. In Rome she formed a close relationship with Charles Gounod, who later noted Fanny’s influence on his budding musical career. Her impressions of the first Italian trip are inscribed in 'Das Jahr', a set of 12 character-pieces that combine musical and autobiographical motifs. Her last composition, the lied 'Bergeslust', was written on 13 May 1847, a day before her sudden death from a stroke.

dimecres, 12 de novembre del 2025

ZANI, Andrea (1696-1757) - Concerto a quatro (c.1735)

Franz Christoph Janneck (1703-1761) - Musical company in the park


Andrea Zani (1696-1757) - Concerto (Re maggiore) a quatro con suoi ripieni, opera quarta (c.1735)
Performers: Compagnia de Musici

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Italian violinist and composer. Born in the center of the Italian violin makers at Cremona, he received his earliest training on the violin from his father and, subsequently, from Giacomo Civeri and Carlo Ricci. An invitation from Antonio Caldara, who had met him while passing through Casalmaggiore, took him to Vienna, where he became a well-known virtuoso and teacher without, however, obtaining an official position in the service of the imperial court. In 1736, however, he returned to Casalmaggiore on the death of his mentor, remaining there as a performer and teacher. He died in a carriage accident on the way to Mantua. His works are mostly in the style of Antonio Vivaldi, including the 12 violin concertos and the 18 trio sonatas (six of which were published in 1727). His set of six symphonies published in 1729, however, reflect the styles and structures of Milanese works by Antonio Brioschi and Giovanni Battista Sammartini.

dilluns, 10 de novembre del 2025

FÖRSTER, Christoph (1693-1745) - Concerto per l'Organo

Christian Stöcklin (1741-1795) - An imaginary church interior with figures


Christoph Förster (1693-1745) - Concerto (G-Dur) | per | l'Organo.
Performers: Hans-Eberhard Ross (organ)

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German composer. He began organ studies with local organist Johann Philipp Pitzler, with whom he traveled. In 1710 he met Johann David Heinichen in Weissenfels, who at the time was working as a lawyer. With Heinichen, he took lessons in general bass and also began studying composition. When Heinichen went to Italy, Förster moved to Merseburg where he continued his studies with the Kapellmeister and court organist Georg Friedrich Kaufmann. Later, in 1717 he was employed as a chamber musician in the Sachsen-Merseburg Hofkapelle where he played second violin to Johann Gottlieb Graun, whom he later superseded as Konzertmeister. In 1723, Förster traveled to Prague with his employer for the coronation of Charles VII of Bohemia. In Prague, he made the acquaintance of the Viennese court musicians Fux, Caldara, Conti and Piani and also took part in a performance of Fux's Constanza e Fortezza and performed in a concert as a harpsichord soloist and violinist for a Dutch ambassador. He continued to serve at his post in Merseburg until the Hofkapelle was dissolved in 1738 following the death of the Duke Moritz Wilhelm. At the birthday of Frederick Anton, Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt he played as a soloist under the leadership of Kapellmeister Johann Graf. Still without a fixed position, he applied for the position of vice-kapellmeister in Rudolstadt which he received on 3 May 1743 without a fixed salary. He died there two years later in 1745. Throughout his life, Förster maintained numerous contacts with other musicians. Most notably, he is known to have subscribed to two of Telemann's publications of the 1730s; Tafelmusik and the Paris quartets. It was Telemann who published Förster's Sei Duetti, Op. 1 in Paris in 1737. Förster was proficient in the Italian style of composition, which he learned from Heinichen and from his subsequent trips to Leipzig and Dresden (1719), and then Prague (1723). This is evident in his wealth of orchestral and chamber music, much of which was probably composed for performance at the Merseburg court. During his time in Merseburg he was also required to compose Italian cantatas, and purportedly also learned Italian for this purpose. Although there are several Italian cantatas listed in Breitkopf's thematic catalogue, few, if any, of these pieces have survived. 

diumenge, 9 de novembre del 2025

NEVES, Ignacio Parreiras (c.1730-c.1794) - Missa em Ré maior

Autor não identificado (19th Century) - Paisagem com igreja


Ignacio Parreiras Neves (c.1730-c.1794) - Missa em Ré maior
Performers: Camerata Barroca de Caracas; Collegium Musicum Fernando Silva; Isabel Palacios (conductor)

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Brazilian singer, composer, and conductor. In 1752, he joined the Brotherhood of São José dos Homens Pardos, where he served as a tenor until the end of his life, and also as a 'regente' (conductor/choirmaster) starting in 1792. He assumed the same post at the Church of Nossa Senhora das Mercês de Baixo from 1776 to 1782. He was also an organist and worked for the Senado da Câmara of Vila Rica, often performing as a tenor using the falsetto tradition of the time, following the Spanish and Portuguese style, rather than the Italian castrato tradition. As a composer, a significant portion of his musical output has been lost. Among the extant works, a Salve Regina, mass settings, a Ladainha (1789), the Ofício para os Funerais do Rei D. Pedro III, and the Oratório ao Menino Deus Para a Noite de Natal.