divendres, 10 de juliol del 2026

WESTENHOLZ, Sophia Maria (1759-1838) - Theme avec Variations pour le Piano-Forte (1806)

French school (18th century) - Portrait d'une femme noble


Sophia Maria Westenholz (1759-1838) - Thème | avec | X VARIATIONS | pour le Piano=Forte | composées | par | SOPHIE WESTENHOLZ. | Oeuvre II. | Chez Rodolphe Werckmeister | à Berlin ... (1806)
Performers: No available
Further info: Variations A major

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German singer, pianist and composer. Born into a musical family, she was the daughter of Ferdinand Fritscher (?-1764), the organist of Neubrandenburg. At a young age, she received private piano and voice lessons from Johann Wilhelm Hertel. In 1775, she secured a position in the Schwerin court orchestra. Her professional and personal life intertwined in 1777 when she married Carl August Friedrich Westenholz (1736-1789), the Kapellmeister of the Mecklenburg-Schwerin court in Ludwigslust. By 1779, she became an official member of that court, serving as both a singer and pianist. Her dedication to her musical career continued alongside her personal life, which included raising eight children. Following the premature death of her husband in 1789, she assumed a more central role in the court's musical life. She remained an active participant in court and church music for over three decades, until her retirement in 1821. During this period, she also held the esteemed position of piano instructor to the daughters of Duke Franz Friedrich I and Duchess Luise, further solidifying her influence within the Mecklenburg-Schwerin court. By the 1780s, she had established a regional reputation as a formidable pianist. Her virtuosic skill was praised by contemporaries, including the composer Ernst Wilhelm Wolf, who in 1782, enthusiastically described her as a "powerful female piano player" whose style was reminiscent of "the great Bach in Hamburg." This admiration was echoed by Carl Friedrich Cramer, who, in a review of six sonatinas dedicated to her by Wolf, celebrated her as "a true student of the only true, the Bachian style." Westenholz’s concert career flourished, and between 1792 and 1804, she performed as both a pianist and a glass harmonica player in major European cities such as Leipzig, Copenhagen, Hamburg, Hanover, and Berlin. From 1803 to 1837, Louis Massonneau, a violinist and later concertmaster in Ludwigslust, recorded the court concerts of the court orchestra in the so-called Ludwigsluster Diarium. This shows that Sophie Westenholz performed not only piano works by Mozart, Haydn, Pleyel, and other contemporary composers but also her own works. After her husband died in 1789 and his successor, Antonio Rosetti, died in 1792, she conducted the court music from the piano. The last performance by the musician in Ludwigslust is dated on 3 March 1813; she and her son, the pianist and composer Carl Ludwig Cornelius Westenholz (1788-1854), played a Mozart sonata for four hands. As a composer, in 1806 she published several works for piano and a collection of songs. The published Rondo (Op.1), Variations (Op.2), and Sonata for Four Hands (Op.3) were met with controversial reviews.

dimecres, 8 de juliol del 2026

PLATTI, Giovanni Benedetto (1697-1763) - Concerto per il Violino Principale

Claude Gillot (1673-1722) - Figures in an elegant interior watching an entertainment with Commedia dell'Arte characters


Giovanni Benedetto Platti (1697-1763) - Concerto (A-Dur). | co V.|n|o conc:
VV.|n|i V.|l|a e Basso | 5. St.[immen] (c.1730)
Performers: Sergei Filchenko (violin); Pratum Integrum

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Italian composer. Almost nothing is known about him before 1722, but in Venice his teachers might have included Francesco Gasparini, Albinoni, Vivaldi, Lotti, Alessandro Marcello or Benedetto Marcello. His father Carlo Platti (c.1661-after 1727), a violetta player in the orchestra of the basilica of S Marco, may also have taught him. While he was still in Italy (until 1722), he probably saw the recently invented fortepiano and a few of his keyboard solo sonatas and concertos might have been composed for it instead of the harpsichord but this point is debatable. In the chamber works (duets and trios) the harpsichord is clearly the instrument required. No "piano" or "forte" indications are on Platti's keyboard parts in his concertos for harpsichord and strings, though. Also, the extension of at least one of these concertos asks for a D that is beyond Cristofori's instrument's compass (4 octaves CC to c4). In 1722, he was called to Würzburg to work for the prince-bishop of Bamberg and Würzburg, Johann Philipp Franz von Schönborn. There he married Theresia Langprückner, a soprano singer with whom he had at least two children. Platti spent the rest of his life in Würzburg, working as a singer, instrument virtuoso, composer and conductor. His duties included finding musicians for the court , as one can read in one of his autograph letters that are available. His music consists of three Masses, a Requiem, a Stabat mater, three cantatas, an offertory, 48 concertos (many lost), 22 trio sonatas, and 20 keyboard sonatas.

dilluns, 6 de juliol del 2026

Unknown composer (18th Century) - Concerto a 5

Maximilian Blommaert (18th Century) - A cottage interior


Unknown composer (18th Century) - Concerto a 5 | Violino Principahlo | Violino Primo |
Violino Secundo | Viola | Basso Continuo
Performers: Trondheim Symphony Orchestra

diumenge, 5 de juliol del 2026

DE MONTE, Philippe (1521-1603) - Missa sine nomine

Niccoló Frangipane (c.1550-c.1600) (attributed) - Bacchanal


Philippe de Monte (1521-1603) - Missa a 6 'Missa sine nomine'
Performers: La Capella Ducale; Roland Wilson (conductor)

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Flemish composer. It is likely that he received his first musical training as a choirboy at St Rombouts Cathedral in Mechelen. He was employed early on as an instructor to the children of the Genovese banker Domenico Pinelli, in Naples. He then went to Rome, where he published his first book of madrigals (1554), and from Rome to Antwerp in 1554, and then to England, where he served as 'chorus praefectus' in the private chapel of Philip II of Spain, the husband of the Queen, Mary Tudor. In September 1555 he left England and went to Italy again; in 1567 he was in Rome. On 1 May 1568, he became Imperial Court Kapellmeister to the Emperor Maximilian II in Vienna; he held this position until his death, which occurred while the court was at Prague during the summer of 1603. In 1572 he was appointed treasurer of Cambrai Cathedral, and in 1577, also a canon (residence was not required for either position there). He was greatly esteemed as a composer, numbering among his works some 1,000 madrigals, about 40 masses (mostly in cantus firmus, paraphrase and parody masses), and many other works of sacred music. He was an important representative of the last generation of great Flemish composers of the Renaissance, and was one of the major composers of Italian madrigals. 

divendres, 3 de juliol del 2026

POKORNY, František Xaver (1729-1794) - Concerto per due Corni (c.1750)

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Le Régal sur l'herbe


František Xaver Pokorný (1729-1794) - Concerto (F-Dur). Corno Primo | Corno Secundo Principale | Violino Primo | Violino 2do: | Flauto Primo | Flauto 2do | Viola | Basso d: 30 Juli Di Pokorni (c.1750)
Performers: Hermann Bаumаnn (horn); Christoph Kοhlеr (horn); Concerto Amsterdam;
Jaap Schrödеr (1925-2020, conductor)

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Bohemian composer and violinist. Son of a bureaucrat, he was sent to Regensburg as a youth to study under Joseph Riepel. In 1750 he obtained a post as violinist at the court of Oettingen-Wallerstein, and in 1753 he was given leave to further his studies in Mannheim, where his teachers included Johann Stamitz, Franz Xaver Richter, and Ignaz Holzbauer. Returning to Wallerstein he was also employed at the Thurn und Taxis court in Regensburg, commuting back and forth for several years before being offered a permanent position in the latter city in 1769. He was appointed as court chamber composer, though his relationship with the Kapellmeister, Baron Theodor von Schacht was not smooth, resulting in much of his music being deliberately misattributed to others after (and possibly before) his death in 1794. As a composer, he was one of the most prolific symphonists of the period, noted for his particular use of the orchestra. His works in this genre are mostly four movement, and in his numerous concertos he was able to exploit the technical capabilities of the instrumental solos. His works include at least 145 symphonies (with as many as another 100 still of possible attribution), 65 concertos (including 45 for keyboard), numerous serenades/divertimentos, three quartets, a piano quintet, three string trios, and five trio sonatas. Much of his music remains to be explored, primarily due to von Schacht’s intervention.