divendres, 17 de gener del 2025

KAUER, Ferdinand (1751-1831) - Sonate Militaire 'La conquete d'Oczakow'

January Suchodolski (1797-1875) - Victory of Ochakiv, 1788, December 17


Ferdinand Kauer (1751-1831) - Sonate Militaire pour le Clavecin ou Fortepiano ...
'La conquete d'Oczakow' (1788)
Performers: Erich Traxler (harpsichord)

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Austrian composer and conductor of Moravian birth. The son of a schoolmaster, he received his early education in Znaim from the Jesuits, later continuing his studies at Tyrnau in medicine, theology, and philosophy. Around 1777 he moved to Vienna as a teacher of keyboard while also working as a local church organist and with Artaria as a proofreader. He studied composition with Anton Zimmermann and soon obtained additional work as a violinist at the Leopoldstadt Theatre. There he became assistant to Wenzel Müller, writing his first Singspiels. During the 1790s he met with considerable success with the Singspiels 'Das Faustrecht in Thüringen' and 'Die Löwenritter', both of which were continued through several successful sequels. In 1810 he went to Graz as Kapellmeister, but returned to Vienna until 1818, when he was dismissed from his position. During the night of 28 February to 1 March 1830 he was among the victims of severe floods in the Leopoldstadt when a sudden thaw caused the Danube to overflow its banks. He lost almost all he possessed, including his musical scores, and died in utter poverty little more than a year later. As a composer, his output includes 19 Singspiels, 10 oratorios, 14 Masses, three Requiems, 30 symphonies (including one on Wellington’s Victory), seven concertos, several small chamber works with strings, and numerous keyboard works. He also brought out several theoretical works, including tutors for the flute, piano, violin and cello and on thoroughbass, and a singing manual, all published by Artaria between 1787 and 1794. Despite he has been all but forgotten, he was frequently performed in various countries (including Scandinavia) for many years, giving rise to numerous imitations and sequels.

dimecres, 15 de gener del 2025

SCHROTER, Corona (1751-1802) - Die Fischerin (1781)

Johann Peter Hasenclever (1810-1853)  - Young woman at the open window looking at the full moon


Corona Schröter (1751-1802) - Die Fischerin (1781)
Performers: Ulrike Stаude (soprano); Markus Schäfеr (tenor); Ekkehard Abеle (bass);
Michael Frеimuth (guitar); Gerald Hаmbitzеr (fortepiano)

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German singer, actress and composer. Daughter of the oboist Johann Friedrich Schröter (1724-1811), her earliest instruction was from her father and later from Johann Adam Hiller with whom she appeared in Hiller’s Grand Concerts in Leipzig. In 1776 a friendship with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe led to an appointment as a chamber musician at the Weimar court of Princess Anna Amalia. Although this was dissolved in 1783, she continued to live there supporting herself through lessons and through her musical salons. She and a companion moved to Ilmenau in 1801 in a vain attempt to recover from a lung disease. The bulk of her compositional efforts were dedicated toward Lieder (compiled in two collections from 1786 and 1794), of which 41 have survived, including an early setting of Goethe’s Der Erlkönig. In addition she composed 360 Italian airs and duets (lost), as well as music for two Singspiels. Her brothers Johann Samuel Schroeter (1753-1788) and Johann Heinrich Schröter (c.1760-after 1784) were musicians and composers, and her sister Marie Henriette Schröter (1766-after 1804) was a singer, active in Darmstadt court.

dilluns, 13 de gener del 2025

SORKOCEVIC, Luka (1734-1789) - Sinfonia in D-Dur

Gerard van der Gucht (1696-1776) - Concert ticket with a group of eleven musicians playing various instruments in an interior with a Venetian window


Luka Sorkočević (1734-1789) - Sinfonia (VI) in D-Dur
Performers: Zagreb orchestra

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Dalmatian-Croatian composer and nobleman. A member of a family of Dalmatian nobility, he was trained in music by Giovanni Valentini, maestro di cappella of the Dubrovnik cathedral. In 1752 he became a member of the Great Council. By 1757 he traveled to Rome to study under Rinaldo da Capua, but his position in society redirected his life toward a role as a politician. In 1776 he negotiated with France on behalf of the Republic and from 1781 to 1782 he was ambassador for the Republic of Dubrovnik to the Holy Roman court in Vienna, during which period he became friends with Christoph Willibald von Gluck, Joseph Haydn, and Pietro Metastasio. His health began to fail upon his return to Dubrovnik when he was afflicted with chronic arthritis, and in a fit of despondency he committed suicide by leaping from the upper story of his palace. He was occupied with musical composition for a small portion of his life, even as he maintained a career in politics. His output includes nine symphonies, two sonatas (one keyboard and one violin), several arias, and a motet in Croatian titled 'Bablionskiem na riekama' (Super flumina Babylonis, Psalm 136). His musical style is galant, although he shows some influences of the Italian opera. His son, Antun Sorkočević (1775-1841), was also a politician and composer, active in France.

diumenge, 12 de gener del 2025

WEIGEL, Philipp Jakob (1752-1826) - Missa solemnis

Unknown (18th Century) - Design for a ceiling painting


Philipp Jakob Weigel (1752-1826) - Missa solemnis
Performers: Kirchenchöre St.Peter und Eschbach; Kammerorchester Stohren; Lambert Bumiller (conductor)

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German Benedictine monk and composer. Few details are known about his life. In 1791 he professed his vows and entered as monk at St. Peter's Abbey, Schwarzwald. There he also served as choirmaster from 1806. In 1815, he became a parish priest in Bollschweil. He retired in 1821 and settled in Kirchhofen. As a composer, he mainly wrote sacred music, mostly lost, and he published the collection '46 Variationen zur steigenden Übung für Clavier-Schüler, und zur Erleichterung des Unterrichtes für die Lehrmeister als ein noch vorhandenes Bedürfnis verfertiget und herausgegeben'.

divendres, 10 de gener del 2025

ZUMSTEEG, Johann Rudolf (1760-1802) - Concert per il Violoncello

Paul Sandby (1731-1809) - The Asylum for the Deaf


Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg (1760-1802) - Concert (Es-Dur) per il Violoncello
Performers: Alfred Lessing (1930-2013, cello); Consortium Musicum; Gerd Berg (1927-2016, conductor)

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German cellist, composer and conductor. After the early death of his mother, he received general education at the Carlsschule in Stuttgart, the military academy founded by the duke, where he became friendly with Friedrich von Schiller and the sculptor Johann Heinrich Dannecker. He studied cello with Eberhard Malterre and cello and composition with Agostino Poli in Stuttgart, and in 1781 became solo cellist in the Court Orchestra there. In 1783, he married Luise Andreae with whom he had seven children. He served as music master at the Carlsschule (1785-94), and in 1791 was made director of German music at the Stuttgart Court Theater. In 1793 he succeeded Poli as court Konzertmeister, where he championed the works of W.A. Mozart. As a composer, he produced 12 operas at Stuttgart, of which the best was 'Die Geisierinsel', after Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' (1798). His other stage works included 'Zalaor' (1787), 'Tamira' (1788), 'Das Pfauenfest' (1801), and 'Ebondocani' (1803). His music also includes a monodrama, five sets of incidental music, two Masses, 14 sacred and 16 occasional cantatas, an ode, two symphonies, 12 concertos (10 for cello and two for flute, in addition to a concertante for two flutes), two cello sonatas, a trio for three cellos, and four duos. However, his name became widely known through the numerous ballads and lieder (c.300 works) published from 1791 onwards. His son Gustav Adolf Zumsteeg (1794-1859), after taking over his mother’s music shop (1821), helped to found the Stuttgart male choir Liederkranz (1824) and later established a music publishing house for choral works (1825), which remained active until it was purchased by Kazimierz Sikorski in 1940. His daughter Emilie Zumsteeg (1796-1857) was a singer, pianist and composer.