dimecres, 25 de març del 2026

HASSE, Johann Adolf (1699-1783) - Concerto a 4 Stromenti

Giovanni Antonio Canal 'Canaletto' (1697-1768) - Venice, the Return of the Bucintoro on Ascension Day


Johann Adolf Hasse (1699-1783) - Concerto (D-Dur) a 4. Stromenti | Flauto Traversieri.
| Violino Primo | Violino Secondo | con | Cembalo o Violoncello
Performers: Ensemble Baroque Le Rondeau; Jean-Pierre Boullet (conductor)

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German composer. He was the second of five children of the organist Peter Hasse (c.1668-1737) and Christina Klessing, daughter of a mayor of Bergedorf. He studied in Hamburg before joining the opera company there. He quickly established himself as a tenor of reputation, but his career changed when his opera 'Antioco' opened at Brunswick on 1 August 1721. Soon, he left Germany for a long tour of Venice, Bologna, Florence, and Rome, finally settling in the major opera center of Naples for six years, until 1730. There he studied with Alessandro Scarlatti and possibly Nicolo Porpora, worked with the superstar castrato Carlo Broschi (Farinelli), and his rise in Neapolitan opera was spectacular. Hasse appeared in Venice for the 1730 Carnival season, a milestone of his career. In his opera 'Artaserse', he set a libretto of Metastasio, later to become his most important collaborator, for the first time. He also met in Venice another famous singer, the mezzo-soprano Faustina Bordoni (1697-1781), whom he married in June 1730 and who created many of the female protagonists in his later operas. Sometime after Carnival but before Ascension in 1730, he was granted the title of Kapellmeister to the court of the Elector August I of Saxony at Dresden, but he and Faustina Bordoni did not arrive there until 6 or 7 July 1731. Although this appointment lasted until 1763, the couple took frequent and substantial leaves of absence to various cities of Italy and Vienna to produce operas that had been commissioned by the nobility of Europe. In 1745, King Frederick the Great of Prussia visited and heard Hasse’s Te Deum and opera seria 'Arminio'. 

The king, a fine musician, thereafter often invited the composer and his wife to Potsdam. The Prussian bombardment of Hasse’s Dresden house in 1760, causing the loss of many manuscripts, may have soured this relationship. Porpora, possibly Hasse’s teacher in Naples, was brought to Dresden in 1748 to teach the Princess Maria Antonia of Saxony and was given the title Kapellmeister, but Hasse was promoted to Oberkapellmeister in 1750. In 1763, Hasse joined the imperial court in Vienna where he worked closely with Metastasio. In 1775, he and Faustina Bordoni retired to Venice. Although most of his work was quickly forgotten after he died, while active, he was the most renowned composer of Italian opera seria in Italy and German-speaking lands. He composed at least 58 operas, mostly seria, but also a few comedies, which were produced in many European opera centers. He was the favorite composer of the age’s most eminent opera librettist, Metastasio. Hasse composed fluently, with a particular gift for vocal melody, which he generally displayed to full advantage without distraction from contrapuntal textures. Besides the operas, he composed about 11 intermezzi, 11 Italian oratorios, 60 Italian chamber cantatas, and 33 more cantatas for voice and orchestra. His instrumental music includes 54 concertos, mostly for transverse flute and strings, and 24 trio sonatas. He also composed sacred music, most of it for four-voiced choir and orchestra: 15 masses, 2 requiems, 36 single mass ordinary settings, 10 mass offertories, 21 psalms, 18 antiphons, six hymns, and 38 motets for solo voice and orchestra.

dilluns, 23 de març del 2026

QUENTIN, Jean-Baptiste (c.1700-c.1750) - Sonata à quatre parties (c.1737)

North Italian School (17-18th Century) - Musical gathering (c.1700)


Jean-Baptiste Quentin (c.1700-c.1750) - Sonata à quatre parties des 'Sonates en trio et à quatre parties pour violons, flûtes traversières, viol et basse continue ... œuvre VIII' (c.1737)
Performers: Ensemble Quentin le Jeune

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French violinist and composer. Almosth nothing is known about him. He pursued his career in Paris, where he was a violinist at the Paris Opéra in 1718, and in 1738 he played the viola in the ‘grand choeur’. References to him indicate that he was a violinist of high reputation. As a composer, he was prolific with numerous collections of solo and trio sonatas, and few concertos (1724-1740). His brother, Bertin Quentin (?-1767), was a violinist, cellist and composer.

diumenge, 22 de març del 2026

ISTVANFFY, Benedek (1733-1778) - Messa dedicata al patriarcha Santo Benedetto

Francesco de Mura (1696-1782) - Latinus welcomes Aeneas and offers his daughter Lavinia in marriage


Benedek Istvánffy (1733-1778) - Messa (C-Dur) dedicata al patriarcha Santo Benedetto a 4tro vocal
2 vl., 2 ob., trombe, tympani, vlne. con organo conc[er]to.
Performers: Szilvia Hamvasi & Noémi Kiss (sopranos); Judit Németh (mezzo-soprano); Péter Drucker (tenor); István Kovács & Pál Benkõ (basses); Purcell Choir; Orfeo Orchestra; György Vashegyi (conductor)

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Hungarian composer. Son of József Istvánffy (1703-1771), organist and teacher of figural music at the Benedictine monastery of Szentmárton, he received the first instruction in music from his father. He soon obtaining the post of organist in the castle of Count Antal Széchényi, in a post he held at least until 1761. It was during that period when he got married to Katalin Kőmíves and later born his only daugther Franziska Istvánffy (1756-1816). In 1766 he became succentor at the cathedral in Győr and from 1773 to 1775 he was also responsible for leading the choir of the Jesuit church there, in a posts he held until his death. As a composer, he mainly wrote sacred works, among them, the 'Missa sanctificabis annum quinquagesimum vel Sanctae Dorotheae' (1774) and the 'Messa dedicata al patriarcha Santo Benedetto'. His music style was close to the composers which he was in touch during his lifespan, among them, Gregor Joseph Werner, Franz Josef Aumann, Joseph Krottendorfer and Christoph Sonnleithner.

divendres, 20 de març del 2026

DUSSEK, Jan Ladislav (1760-1812) - Concerto pour deux Pianofortes

François Dequevauviller (1745-1807) - The Concert (1784)


Jan Ladislav Dussek (1760-1812) - Concerto pour deux Pianofortes, Op.63 (c.1805)
Performers: Igor Ardаšev (piano); Renаtа Ardаševová (piano); Pаrdubice Orchestra; Leos Svárovský (conductor)

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Bohemian keyboardist and composer. He studied piano at age five and organ at age nine, and then became a chorister at the Iglau Minorite church and a pupil at the Jesuit Gymnasium. After further studies at the Kuttenberg Jesuit Gymnasium, he continued his studies at Prague's New City Gymnasium (1776-77) and at the University of Prague (1778). He found a patron in Count Manner, with whose assistance he was able to go to Malines in 1779, where he became active as a piano teacher. He made his public debut there as a pianist on 16 December 1779, and then set out on a highly successful tour, visiting Bergen op Zoom, Amsterdam, and The Hague. He then went to Hamburg, where he gave a concert on 12 July 1782, and also met C.P.E. Bach, with whom he may have studied. In 1783 he played at the St. Petersburg court. After spending about a year in the service of Prince Karl Radziwill as Kapellmeister in Lithuania, he made a major tour of Germany in 1784, winning notable acclaim in Berlin, Mainz, Kassel, and Frankfurt am Main as a piano and glass harmonica virtuoso. In 1786 he went to Paris, where he performed at the court for Marie Antoinette; except for a brief trip to Milan and Bohemia, he remained in Paris until the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 compelled him to flee to London. On 1 June 1789, he made his London debut at the Hanover Square Rooms. He soon became successful as a pianist and teacher in the British capital, appearing regularly at Salomon's concerts and being an active participant in these concerts during Joseph Haydn's two visits. In 1792 he married the singer, pianist, and harpist Sophia Corri (1775-1847). 

With his father-in-law, Domenico Corri, he became active as a music publisher. Both men were ill suited for such a venture, however, and Dussek's love for the good life further contributed to the failure of the business. Dussek fled to Hamburg in 1799, leaving his father-in-law to serve a jail sentence for debt. He apparently never saw his wife or daughter again. He seems to have spent about two years in Hamburg, where he was active as a performer and teacher. In 1802 he played in his birthplace, and then in Prague. From 1804 to 1806 he served as Kapellmeister to Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia. After the latter's death at the battle of Saalfeld (10 October 1806), he composed a piano sonata in his memory, the 'Elegie harmonique sur la mort du Prince Louis Ferdinand de Prusse', Op.61. He then was briefly in the service of Prince Isenburg. In 1807 he settled in Paris, where he served Prince Talleyrand, gave concerts, and taught. His health began to fail due to excessive drinking, and he was compelled to abandon his career. Jan Ladislav Dussek was a remarkable composer for the piano, proving himself a master craftsman capable of producing the most brilliant works for the instrument. In his later works he presaged the development of the Romantic school, anticipating such composers as Chopin, Mendelssohn, Schumann, and even Brahms. As a celebrated virtuoso of the keyboard, he shares with Muzio Clementi the honor of having introduced the 'singing touch'. As a composer, his works include, among others, 15 concertos, 34 sonatas for the fortepiano, 68 violin sonatas, six harp sonatas (possibly a legacy of an alleged affair with Anne-Marie Krumpholtz), six canzonetts, three string quartets, a Mass (1807), and three harp concertos.

dimecres, 18 de març del 2026

CLARKE, Jeremiah (c.1674-1707) - Suite in D Major

Unknown artist (17th Century) - Windsor Castle from the South (c.1681)


Jeremiah Clarke (c.1674-1707) - Suite in D Major
Performers: David Tasa (trumpet); Frankfurter Solisten; Vladislav Brunner (conductor)

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English composer and organist. Nothing is known of his origins. The earliest evidence was as a chorister at the Chapel Royal when James II was crowned in 1685. By 1692, he had been appointed organist at Winchester College, and on 6 June 1699, he was appointed vicar-choral at St. Paul’s Cathedral. He moved up to organist in January 1704. On 15 May 1704, Francis Pigott, organist at the Chapel Royal, died, and together with William Croft were sworn in as joint organists to replace him. It appears that he ended his own life, perhaps owing to an unhappy love affair, by shooting himself on 1 December 1707. As a composer, he wrote 22 anthems, 10 odes, 2 settings of the Te Deum, 2 suites for wind band, 2 suites for harpsichord, over 40 other short works for harpsichord, and the incidental music for 8 plays. He was a leading composer of the generation immediately junior to Purcell. He wrote the so-called Trumpet Voluntary, his best-known piece.