dimecres, 2 de juliol del 2025

PAER, Ferdinando (1771-1839) - Concerto per Organo

Unknown artist (19th Century) - Portrait of Ferdinando Paer


Ferdinando Paër (1771-1839) - Concerto (Re maggiore) per Organo con strumenti
Performers: Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini (1929-2017, organ); Orchestre de Chambre de Milan;
Tito Gotti (1927-2024, conductor)

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Italian composer. He studied with Francesco Fortunati and Gaspare Ghiretti in Parma, producing his first stage work, the prose opera 'Orphee et Euridice', there in 1791. On July 14, 1792, he was appointed honorary maestro di cappella to the court of Parma, bringing out his opera 'Le astuzie amorose' that same year at the Teatro Ducale there. His finest work of the period was 'Griselda, ossia La virtu at cimento' (Parma, 1798). In 1797 he was appointed music director ofthe Karnthnertortheater in Vienna. While there, he made the acquaintance of Beethoven, who expressed admiration for his work. It was in Vienna that he composed one of his finest operas, 'Camilla, ossia II sotteraneo' (1799). After a visit to Prague in 1801, he accepted the appointment of court Kapellmeister in Dresden. Three of his most important operas were premiered there: 'I Fuorusciti di Firenze' 1802), 'Sargino, ossia L'Allievo del Vamore' (1803), and 'Leonora, ossia L'amore conjugate' (1804), a work identical in subject with that of Beethoven's Fidelio (1805). In 1806 he resigned his Dresden post and accepted an invitation to visit Napoleon in Posen and Warsaw. In 1807 Napoleon appointed him his maitre de chapelle in Paris, where he also became director of the Opera-Comique. Following the dismissal of Spontini in 1812, he was appointed director of the Theatre-Italien. One of his most successful operas of the period, 'Le Maitre de chapelle' (Paris, 1821), remained in the repertoire in its Italian version until the early years of the 20th century. Paer's tenure at the Theatre-Italien continued through the vicissitudes of Catalani's management (1814-17) and the troubled joint directorship with Rossini (1824-27). After his dismissal in 1827, he was awarded the cross of the Legion d'honneur in 1828 and he was elected a member of the Institute of the Academie des Beaux Arts in 1831. He was appointed director of music of Louis Philippe's private chapel in 1832. As a composer, he was a prolific composer, producing at least 55 operas, most of them during the 25-year span from 1791 to 1816. His vocal writing was highly effective, as was his instrumentation. He was one of the central figures in the development of opera semiseria during the first decade of the 19th century. Nevertheless, his operas have disappeared from the active repertoire.

dilluns, 30 de juny del 2025

BENDA, Jiří Antonín (1722-1795) - Sinfonia in D-Dur

Johann Friedrich Fechhelm (1746-1794) - Berlin vom Tempelhofer Berg aus gesehen (1781)


Jiří Antonín Benda (1722-1795) - Sinfonia in D-Dur
Performers: Die Prager Virtuosen; Oldrich Vlcek (conductor)

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Bohemian composer and violinist. Son of Jan Jiří Benda (1686-1757) and brother of Franz Benda (1709-1786), Johann Georg Benda (1713-1752) and of the soprano Anna Franziska Benda (1728-1781), he trained initially by his father. He later was sent to a local school in Kosmonosy in 1735, and in 1739 he attended the Jesuit Gymnasium in Jičín in music. In 1742 he joined family members in Berlin, where he functioned for a few years as a violinist. In 1750 he was offered the position of Kapellmeister at the court of Saxe-Gotha by Duke Friedrich III, where he composed mainly church music. A journey to Italy in 1765 brought him into contact with leading opera composers of the day, who influenced his compositional style. In 1770 he was named kapelldirector, a largely symbolic post, but his regular duties for Friedrich’s successor, Duke Ernst II, included writing a new style of work that fused spoken drama with music, called the duodrama. The first work, Ariadne auf Naxos, was performed in 1774 and soon began to be imitated throughout Germany. At the same time, Benda gained a reputation as a composer of Singspiel, becoming the most popular composer of the genre of the time. A dispute with rival Anton Schweitzer led him to resign his post and leave Gotha for a year of travel to Hamburg and Vienna. Increasing fame brought about by his duodramas subsequently allowed him to tour various musical centers, such as Paris in 1781 and Mannheim in 1787, although he was formally retired. His last work, ironically, is a cantata titled Bendas Klagen from 1792. As a composer, Benda was one of the most celebrated people of the latter 18th century, known mainly for his sacred music and innovations in theatre music. In his duodramas in particular, one can note a carefully delineated harmonic and melodic sensitivity that underscores the text. His Singspiels are noted for their more complex musical settings and serious tone that is often far more progressive than in similar works by Johann Adam Hiller. His instrumental music, however, still maintains elements of the galant style, with sequenced themes and short rhythmic motives. His works include 13 operas (including incidental music and duodramas), 166 cantatas (mainly Lutheran), two Masses, an oratorio, six secular cantatas, about 25 Lieder, 30 symphonies, 23 concertos (mostly violin and harpsichord), 54 keyboard sonatas, and several other sonatas for violin and flute, as well as a large number of keyboard works. His son Friedrich Ludwig Benda (1752-1792) was also a composer and violinist.

diumenge, 29 de juny del 2025

NUSSBAUMER, Karl (1875-1916) - Vierte Messe (c.1900)

Nino Caffè (1909-1975) - Concertino


Karl Nussbaumer (1875-1916) - Vierte Messe (Pastoral) für gemischten Chor und Orgel oder Orchester (Streichquintett, Flöte, 2 Klarinetten [oder Oboen], Fagott, 2 Hörner, 2 Trompeten, Posaune und Pauken)
op. 38 (c.1900)
Performers: Choir & Instruments Schweitenkirchen; Manfred Kieferl (conductor)
Further info: Vierte Messe

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German composer. Almost nothing is known about his life. He was initially active as a composer in Salzburg from 1899 to 1909. Later he settled in Innsbruck where he served as a choirmaster for the Servite Order. Among his duties, he wrote several sacred works the most of which were performed during the religious services there. Although he was largely forgotten after his early death fighting as a soldier at Folgoridapaß in Trentino, his music achieved success and was published by Böhm Verlag in Augsburg.

divendres, 27 de juny del 2025

KOZELUH, Leopold (1747-1818) - Concerto pour le pianoforte a quatro mani

James Gillray (1757-1815) - The Pic-Nic Orchestra


Leopold Koželuh (1747-1818) - Concerto (B-Dur) | per | Clavicembalo ô Forte-Piano | a quatro mani | con l'accompagnamento di | 2 Violini | 2 Oboi | 2 Corni in B | Viola e Violoncello (c.1786)
Performers: Elena Sorokina (piano); Alexander Bakhchiev (1930-2007, piano); Symphony Orchestra Northern Crown; Yuri Nikolaevsky (1925-2003, conductor)

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Bohemian composer, pianist, music teacher and publisher. His earliest musical education was under Antonín Kubík and his cousin Jan Antonín Koželuh (1738-1814) in his hometown. By 1771 he had moved to Prague, where he studied briefly under František Xaver Dusek and wrote ballets for the National Theatre. By 1774 he had Germanized his name to prevent confusion with his cousin Jan Antonín Koželuh, arriving in Vienna in 1778 to study under Johann Georg Albrechtsberger. In 1781 he was given the post as teacher of Archduchess Elisabeth, Georg Christoph Wagenseil’s old position. By 1781 he was so well established there that he could refuse an offer to succeed Mozart as court organist to the Archbishop of Salzburg. He remained active in Viennese musical and social circles the remainder of his life. In 1792, he succeeded Mozart as Kammermusicus to the Imperial Court in Vienna. Although he is best known for his disparaging remarks on the music of Mozart, Joseph Haydn, and Ludwig van Beethoven, as a composer he had a reputation for works that demonstrated good orchestration and solid formal structures. His 400 or so compositions include six operas, 25 ballets, five Masses, numerous smaller church works, two oratorios, 30 symphonies, 22 piano concertos (plus others for clarinet and bassoon), two sinfonia concertantes, 24 violin sonatas, six string quartets, 63 keyboard trios, 10 parthies, two serenades, eight divertimentos, 61 dances, 87 keyboard sonatas, nine secular cantatas, and six vocal notturnos. His daughter Katharina Koželuh-Cibbini (1785-1858) was a well-known pianist and composer of piano music during the early 19th century in Vienna.

dimecres, 25 de juny del 2025

GAYTAN Y ARTEAGA, Manuel (1716-1804) - Eternamente Triste

Carl Marcus Tuscher (1705-1751) - Mercury Confiding the Child Bacchus to the Nymphs on Nysa


Manuel Gaytán y Arteaga (1716-1804) - Eternamente Triste
Performers: Julia Dοyle (soprano); Orquesta Barroca de Sеvilla; Enrico Onοfri (conductor)
Further info: Astro Nuevo

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Spanish composer. Son Bartolomé González Gaitán and Ana Luisa de Arteaga, both originally from Córdoba, he was the sixth of their seven children. On May 14th of 1725, he appears as an aspiring choir boy, at the age of 9. Before entering the choir, he complies with the 'estatuto de limpieza de sangre', which was an essential requirement to enter to serve at the Cathedral of Córdoba. Juan Manuel teachers’ of canto de organo were Pedro Millán, Francisco del Rayo, violinist of the Cathedral, and Pedro Corchado. On 1734, at the age of 18, he got economical support from 'ayuda de costa' to go to Italy, in order to better dedicate himself to music and composition. In Naples, he was exposed to opera buffa and the use of turquerías, elements that would later influence the style of his Spanish compositions. His earliest known work, 'Misa a 8 Pangelingua', was composed in 1740. It is not clear how many years he stayed in Italy, however, in 1748 he was already maestro de capilla at the Cathedral of Segovia where he would stay until 1752, when he moved to Córdoba being eligible as the same post. During his time in Córdoba he was responsible for about 45 musicians in the chapel. He remained in that post until 1779. It was then, when he requested and was granted his retirement in 1780 because of his poor health. Since his retirement, he did not loose contact with cathedral. In 1785 he was appointed to the opposition tribunal for Chapel Master. In June 1802 Franciscans welcomed him into their convent until his death. As a composer, his extant output is around 77 works, mainly preserved in the archive of the Cathedral of Córdoba. His compositions include antiphons, canticles, hymns, invitatories, lamentations, masses, motets, and other sacred pieces.