diumenge, 1 de febrer del 2026

DESMAREST, Henry (1661-1741) - Te Deum Laudamus

Louis Laguerre (1663-1721) - Sketch for an oval ceiling


Henry Desmarest (1661-1741) - Motet // Te Deum Laudamus // de mons.r Desmarest (c.1707)
Performers: Eugénie Lеfеbvre (soprano); Jehanne Amzаl (soprano); Clément Dеbiеuvre (haute-contre);
François Jοrοn (tenor); David Witczаk (baritone); Etienne Bаzola (baritone);
Ensemble Les Surprisеs; Louis-Noël Bеstion de Cаmboulаs (conductor)

---


French composer. Little is known of his early musical life other than that he was one of the boy pages of Louis XIV’s musical establishment. There, directly under the influence of Pierre Robert and Henry Du Mont at an important period in the development of the grand motet, he probably also encountered Lully, who used the chapel pages to augment his performances. In 1680 he was referred to as an ‘ordinaire de la musique du Roy’. Titon du Tillet mentioned an idylle written by him for the birth of the Duke of Burgundy in 1682; this was a form to which he would regularly return. He was unsuccessful in a contest in 1683 for a post as sous-maître at the royal chapel, but later got himself involved in writing motets for one of the successful competitors, Goupillet, to pass off as his own. The deception was not revealed until 1693 when Desmarest, complaining that he had not been paid sufficiently, exposed Goupillet. He gravitated increasingly towards secular forms of composition. It seems that he wanted to study in Italy but this plan was thwarted by Lully. Some measure of court favour can be inferred from the private performance of his first opera, Endymion, which took place over several days in the king’s apartments, one or two acts at a time, in February 1686, and pleased the dauphine so much that she commanded another performance a few days later. Writing for the stage of the Académie was barred to Desmarest at the time since Lully enjoyed a complete monopoly; the gap left by his untimely death in March 1687 began to be filled only tentatively by the next generation. Du Tralage cynically declared that 'Didon' (1693), one of Desmarest’ earliest surviving tragédies en musique, succeeded with the public because it was copied from Lully, that 'Circé' (1694), less closely modelled on Lully, was less successful, and that 'Théagène' (1695), in which the composer went his own way, was not successful at all. 

When he began work on another opera, 'Vénus et Adonis', in 1695, he was apparently in dispute with Collasse over who should set Duché de Vancy's 'Iphigénie en Tauride'; this was to be left unfinished by Desmarest and completed by André Campra in 1704. Within months of the death of his first wife in August 1696, he had fallen in love with his pupil, the 18-year-old daughter of Jacques de Saint-Gobert, director of taxation for Senlis. The upshot was a long legal battle, at the end of which in August 1699 the couple fled the country, Desmarest being condemned to death in his absence. The composer began his exile in Brussels. His friend and fellow chapel page, the composer Jean-Baptiste Matho, obtained a letter of recommendation for him from the Duke of Burgundy to the new King of Spain, Philip V, and he moved to the Spanish court in 1701 and married Mlle de Saint-Gobert. Six years later, again with support from connections in France, he secured an appointment as surintendant de la musique at the court of Lorraine, which was closely modelled on the court of Louis XIV, his duties encompassing both religious and secular music. Although he mounted a production of his own, Vénus et Adonis for the court at Lunéville in 1707, Desmarest’ operatic activities focussed chiefly on revivals of operas by Lully at both Lunéville and Nancy. During this time he continued to write occasional pieces and motets. However favourable the musical climate in Lorraine, he hoped to be allowed to return to France. A petition to Louis XIV on his behalf by Matho in 1712 was rejected, but he was finally pardoned by the regent in 1720. When Michel-Richard de Lalande died in 1726, he sought his post of sous-maître, but was unsuccessful. His wife died in the following year and he ended his days in Lorraine.

divendres, 30 de gener del 2026

WAGENSEIL, Georg Christoph (1715-1777) - Sinfonia à 5

Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Hof Palace, Seen from the North


Georg Christoph Wagenseil (1715-1777) - Sinfonia (D-Dur) | a | Corno Primo | Corno Secondo | Oboe Primo | Oboe Secondo | Violino Primo | Violino Secondo | Viola | et | Basso, MicWka 374
Performers: Camerata Bern; Thomas Fսri (conductor)

---


Austrian composer, keyboard player and teacher. Born into a prominent Viennese family, he studied under Johann Joseph Fux and Mattheo Palotta beginning around 1735. Fux was so impressed by his student that he recommended him in 1739 for the post of court composer, which was followed the next year by an appointment as organist for Dowager Empress Elisabeth. By 1749 he had become hofklaviermeister with the responsibility of instructing the royal family on the keyboard. Four years earlier, in 1745, his opera 'Ariodante' launched a career in the royal theatres, and by 1751 he had published a treatise 'Rudimenta panduristae oder Geig- Fundamenta', which was a forerunner of Leopold Mozart’s work. By 1765, however, he began to be afflicted with gout, resulting in a diminishing of his capacity and confinement to his home the final years of his life. Wagenseil was a much-appreciated teacher, whose students included Frantisek Xaver Dusek, Leopold Hofmann, and Johann Baptist Schenk. As a composer, he wrote 16 operas; three oratorios; 17 Masses and a Requiem; over 90 other sacred works (including canticles, Psalms, hymns, etc.); nine secular cantatas; 30 concert arias; 77 symphonies; 81 concertos for keyboard (most with string accompaniment); other concertos for flute, violin, cello, bassoon, and trombone; seven violin sonatas; seven divertimentos; four flute quartets; 60 trio sonatas; and a large number of smaller works for keyboard. Although his early Masses display a Baroque style, his symphonies and concertos, of which he was one of the most prolific composers of the period, were much more advanced, while his penchant for solid, colorful orchestration, interesting harmony, and attention to dramatic detail presage the opera reforms of Christoph Willibald von Gluck in his opera serias. Georg Christoph Wagenseil can be considered one of the pivotal figures in the development of the Classical style in Vienna with a compositional career that spanned a period from Fux, his teacher, to Haydn brothers and W.A. Mozart, for whom he served as a precursor.

dimecres, 28 de gener del 2026

DEPPISCH, Valentin (c.1746-1782) - Te Deum laudamus in C

Philippe Canot (c.1715-1783) - Ceiling Design


Valentin Deppisch (c.1746-1782) - Te Deum laudamus in C. / a / 4 Vocibus, / 2 Violinis,
2 Obois obi: / 2 Clarinis, / Tympanis / Violone el / Organo.
Performers: Angelika Czabán (soprano); Anita Huszár (mezzosoprano); Károly Komódi (tenor); Gábor Kari (baritone); Sol Oriens Kórus És Kamarazenekar; Deményi Sarolta (conductor)

---


Austrian (?) composer. The name Deppisch is of Bavarian origin, derived from the Middle High German terms 'täppisch' or 'tölpatschig', meaning unskilled or clumsy. While his arrival in Pécs may have been part of the broader 18th-century German emigration, it is more likely he originated from Austria, as the name remains extant in Vienna and the Styrian town of Fürstenfeld near the Hungarian border. Valentin Deppisch arrived in Pécs in 1769 at the age of 23 and began working as a second organist at the cathedral. In 1772, he purchased a house in Obere Franciscaner Gasse for 230 Rhine forints, though he moved to Caposvarer Gasse in 1774 due to the construction of a girls' institute. On 1 January 1778, he was promoted to first organist following the death of Joseph Fuckinger, which increased his salary by 25 forints. His professional duties included maintaining the parish church organ and providing accommodation and tuition for choirboys. He was married to Magdalena Dorn, a choir singer, with whom he had five children. Valentin Deppisch died on 14 March 1782, at the age of 36, after which his widow petitioned the Chapter for financial aid in exchange for her continued service in the church choir. As a composer, he received an annual payment of 75 forints from 1779 until his death, though archival dates on his Lauda Sion and Mass in C major indicate he was active as early as 1775. His extant output includes 4 Masses, a Requiem, two set of Vesperae, one Magnificat, and other sacred works as well as a symphony and one organ work.

dilluns, 26 de gener del 2026

HAYES, William (1708-1777) - Symphony 'The Fall of Jericho'

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Card and music township (c.1730)


William Hayes (1708-1777) - Symphony (d minor) 'The Fall of Jericho' (c.1740)
Performers: Capricio Basel

---


English composer, organist and singer. He showed an early talent for music. He trained at Gloucester Cathedral where the cathedral account books record his name amongst the choristers from 1717. He spent the early part of his working life as organist of St Mary's, Shrewsbury (1729) and Worcester Cathedral (1731). The majority of his career was spent at the University of Oxford where he was appointed organist of Magdalen College in 1734, and established his credentials with the degrees of B.Mus in 1735 and D.Mus in 1749. (He was painted by John Cornish in his doctoral robes around 1749.) In 1741 he was unanimously elected Heather Professor of Music and organist of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin. He presided over Oxford's concert life for the next 30 years, and was instrumental in the building of the Holywell Music Room in 1748, the oldest purpose-built music room in Europe. He was one of the earliest members of the Royal Society of Musicians, and in 1765 was elected a "privileged member" of the Noblemen and Gentlemen's Catch Club. He died in Oxford, aged 69. His sons Philip Hayes (1738-1797) and William Hayes (1741-1790) were also singers and composers.

diumenge, 25 de gener del 2026

HOFFMANN, Ernest Theodor Amadeus (1776-1822) - Miserere (1809)

Eduard Gaertner (1801-1877) - Der Gendarmenmarkt im Winter


Ernest Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann (1776-1822) - MISERERE (b-moll) | posto in Musica (1809), AllH 42
Performers: Krisztina Laki (soprano); Gwendolyn Killebrew (alto); Aldo Baldin (tenor); Nikolaus Hillebrand (bass); Kölner Rundfunkchor; Kölner Rundfunk-Sinfonie-Orchester; Roland Bader (conductor)
Further info: Miserere B-Moll

---


German writer, composer, and jurist. After studying law and serving as a legal assessor in Poznan, he pursued formal musical training under the organist Christian Podbielski. His professional career in music included tenures as music director at the Bamberg theater and opera conductor in Leipzig and Dresden (1813-14) before he permanently relocated to Berlin in 1814. Utilizing the pseudonym Kapellmeister Johannes Kreisler, he contributed a series of influential essays to the Allgemeine Musikalische Zeitung, which were subsequently compiled in the collection Phantasiestücke in Callot’s Manier (1814). Hoffmann's literary output, characterized by the use of the fantastic, exerted a profound influence on the Romantic school of literature and indirectly shaped the evolution of German musical composition. As a composer, his catalog includes several operas, the ballet Harlekin, a symphony, and various chamber works, including a piano trio and four piano sonatas; while historically neglected, these works are noted for their technical originality. Furthermore, he was an accomplished artist known for his sketches and caricatures, as well as a music critic whose analytical reviews provided a rigorous theoretical framework for Romantic aesthetics. His multidisciplinary contributions significantly impacted subsequent generations of European artists, writers, and musicians.