dimecres, 9 d’abril del 2025

MONN, Georg Matthias (1717-1750) - Sinfonia à Quattro

Bernardo Bellotto and Workshop - Nymphenburg Palace, Munich, (c.1761)


Georg Matthias Monn (1717-1750) - Sinfonia (B-Dur) à Quattro
Performers: Camerata Bern

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Austrian organist and composer. Although born into a musical family, little is known about the details of his early life, save that he was a chorister at Klosterneuburg, where he no doubt learned enough about music to become an organist there around 1731. His other positions were at the monastery in Melk and subsequently around 1736 at the Karlskirche in the Viennese suburb of Wieden. He was also active at the Holy Roman court, where his instrumental music was extremely popular. His life was cut short prematurely by a lung ailment, probably pneumonia, although he suffered from ill health his entire life. His most important student was Johann Georg Albrechtsberger, probably for whom Monn created a treatise titled 'Theorie des Generalbasses in Beispielen ohne Erklärung', which remained unpublished. As a composer, his works include 16 symphonies, eight concertos (six for keyboard, one for violin, one for cello, plus another arrangement of a harpsichord concerto for cello or contrabass), partitas, three fanfares, and three preludes and fugues for organ. His style represents the infusion of the homophonic texture, contrasting themes of the early sonata principle, and fundamental modulatory patterns that reflect the predominant style of the late 18th century. He was also one of the first to create the fourmovement symphony by adding a minuet in one of his works. His brother Johann Christoph Monn (1726-1782) was also a composer and teacher.

dilluns, 7 d’abril del 2025

LINIKE, Johann Georg (c.1680-1762) - Concerto a 2 Oboe e Violino obbligato

Alexis Peyrotte (1699-1769) - Le Conseil des singes ou Les politiques au jardin des Tuileries (c.1740)


Johann Georg Linike (c.1680-1762) - Concerto (F-Dur) a 2 Oboe e Violino obbligato
Performers: Concert Royal Köln
Further info: Mortorium

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German composer and violinist. He came from a family of musicians. From 1696 he was active in Berlin, where he was student of Johann Theile. Also there, he was second violinist in the court chapel at Berlin by 1710. He visited London in 1721 and remained at least until winter 1724-25. After 1725 he became the first violinist in the opera orchestra at Hamburg under the direction of Reinhard Keiser. During the season 1725-1726, he participated in performances of operas by George Frideric Handel under the direction of Georg Philipp Telemann. In August 1728, he became the ducal Kapellmeister in Mecklenburg-Strelitz. There, he led the orchestra, which comprised at least 14 musicians, and was also responsible for developing a music library. In 1742, Johann Christian Hertel assumed direction of the orchestra, and Linike became the court keyboardist. In 1752, the orchestra was disbanded, and it was not until 1761 that he received a pension. As a composer, he wrote the cantata 'Quando sperasti', four concertos and several chamber pieces. His works show relatively conservative Baroque traits in the prevalence of imitative entries at the beginning of movements, a pervasive two-part texture, and a tendency towards consistent motivic extension within individual movements. His brother Christian Bernhard Linike (1673-1751) was a cellist and composer, active in Berlin and Cöthen. 

diumenge, 6 d’abril del 2025

KUHNAU, Johann (1660-1722) - Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern

Joachim Ernst Scheffler - Urbis lipsiae (1749)


Johann Kuhnau (1660-1722) - Feria I. Nativitatis Christi. Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern
 à 2 Corni grandi, 2 Violini, 2 Viole, 2 Canti, A. T. B. e Cont.
Performers: Johannes Hoefflin (1932-2017, tenor); Boys’ Choir of the Gymnasium Eppendorf;
Instrumental-Ensemble; Gottfried Wolters (1910-1989, conductor)

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German composer, keyboard player and music theorist. His intelligence and musical talent were evident early on, so he was sent to study in Dresden in 1670. By 1671, he was a chorister at the Kreuzkirche, where he attracted the attention of the Kapellmeister Vincenzo Albrici. Another member of the Kreuzkirche staff, Erhard Titius, who had become cantor at Zittau, invited Kuhnau to continue his education at the prestigious Johanneum school there. After Titius died in 1682, Kuhnau filled in as cantor. He then moved to Leipzig, matriculated in law at the university, and after an unsuccessful application in 1682, won the post of organist at Thomaskirche in 1684. He published his law thesis in 1688 and began to practice. In 1689, he married and eventually had eight children. Before the turn of the century, he published all his keyboard music, built up his renown as an organist, and engaged in literary and linguistic scholarship. When the Thomaskantor Johann Schelle died on 10 March 1701, the authorities quickly elected Kuhnau as his successor, and he took up his new and prestigious post in April 1701. His career as cantor was not without difficulties. The growing Leipzig opera drew promising young singers away from enrolling at Thomasschule. Then, in 1701, Georg Philipp Telemann arrived in Leipzig to study law and immediately founded his Collegium Musicum, which also attracted some of Kuhnau’s students, and Telemann even inveigled the mayor, going over Kuhnau’s head, to allow himself to compose for Thomaskirche. Frequent illness troubled Kuhnau during this period, and in 1703, he learned that the city council had inquired of Telemann whether he might wish to succeed Kuhnau should he die. In the end, such intrigues counted as mere annoyances, and Kuhnau’s career at Thomaskirche was generally characterized by the esteem of Germany’s best musicians. Johann Kuhnau was a major figure in German music at the turn of the 18th century, and the immediate predecessor of Johann Sebastian Bach as cantor of Thomaskirche in Leipzig. Although Kuhnau composed at least 62 church cantatas, 14 Latin motets, a Magnificat, a passion according to St. Mark, and 2 masses, this considerable body of sacred music remained unpublished, and his single opera and a few other early stage pieces are lost, so he influenced his contemporaries principally through his published keyboard music: 14 suites, 2 preludes, 2 fugues, a toccata, and 14 sonatas, including the famous Biblical Sonatas for harpsichord (1700, Leipzig). Unlike Johann Sebastian Bach, he exhibited all the various talents and interests that the Leipzig city council evidently desired in the Thomaskantor: Kuhnau was not only an esteemed composer and organist but also had built a distinguished law career, translated scholarly works from French and Italian into German, learned mathematics, Greek, and Hebrew, and had written a satirical novel, 'Der musicalische Quack-Salber'. These self-motivated studies allowed him to carry out the multifarious teaching, administrative, and musical duties of his post with distinction. Much information about Kuhnau’s life comes from his autobiography published in Johann Mattheson’s collection, 'Grundlage einer Ehren-Pforte' (1740).

divendres, 4 d’abril del 2025

ZINGARELLI, Niccolò Antonio (1752-1837) - Sinfonia in Mi maggiore (c.1785)

Pietro Antoniani (c.1740-1805) - Naples a view of the Riviera di Chiaia from the Convento di Sant' Antonio with Vesuvius smoking in the distance


Niccolò Antonio Zingarelli (1752-1837) - Sinfonia in Mi maggiore (c.1785)
Performers: Atalanta Fugiens; Vanni Moretto (conductor)

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Italian teacher and composer. Following studies at the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto under Pasquale Anfossi and Antonio Sacchini, he was appointed as a violin teacher at Torre Annuziata in 1772. In 1781 his opera 'Montezuma' achieved success, allowing him to receive commissions throughout Italy, where he became one of the leading composers of opera. He attempted to achieve the same success in Paris in 1790, writing some works in collaboration with his pupil Isabelle de Charrière, though these all failed and the Revolution forced his return to Italy. In 1793 he was appointed maestro di cappella at the Cathedral of Milan and in 1795 he assumed the same post at Santa Casa in Loreto, Rome. By 1804 he was maestro di cappella at St. Peter’s in Rome, but a conflict with the French occupiers landed him in prison. He was released only at the special intervention of Napoleon. After Giovanni Paisiello’s death in 1816 he was also appointed musical director of Naples Cathedral. Zingarelli was an incredibly prolific composer throughout his entire life, writing in virtually all genres. His works include dozens of masses, eight oratorios, 57 operas, many Mass movements and insertion arias, 15 Requiems, 55 Magnificats, 23 Te Deums, 541 Psalm settings, 21 Stabat maters, and 50 motets, as well as numerous litanies, responsories, and sacred cantatas. He also wrote 20 secular cantatas, three large odes or hymns, 79 symphonies (mostly singlemovement sinfonia da chiesa), eight string quartets, three duos, eight sonatas, 11 pastorals, and 60 other works for organ. He was considered the last great composer of opera seria, and he spent much of his later years composing sacred music when his operas were overshadowed by other Italians such as Giaocchino Rossini and Vincenzo Bellini. His music conforms to the late Italian style of the Classical period and, thus, may have seemed anachronistic. He was renowned as a teacher, numbering Bellini, Mercadante, Carlo Conti, Lauro Rossi, Morlacchi, and Michael Costa among his students.

dimecres, 2 d’abril del 2025

FERRARI, Giacomo Gotifredo (1763-1842) - Duetto pour forte piano et clavecin (c.1795)

Thomas Rowlandson (1757-1827) - The Rivals (1812)


Giacomo Gotifredo Ferrari (1763-1842) - Duetto pour forte piano et clavecin ... œuvre XIII (c.1795)
Performers: Cary McMurran (1918-1992, pianoforte); J.S. Darling (harpsichord)

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Italian composer and theorist. After being orphaned as a child, he spent his early years as an apprentice silk merchant before going to Naples, where he studied under Giovanni Paisiello and Gaetano Latilla. In 1787 he became a court musician at the Tuileries in Paris, and was active as accompanist to the queen, voice teacher to the nobility, and maestro al cembalo at the Theatre de Monsieur. After the French Revolution, he settled in London in 1792 and pursued his career as a composer and voice teacher; among his students was the Prince of Wales. His 'Complainte de la reine de France' the following year is one of the most important pieces of antirevolutionary music written. In England he was a successful composer, theorist, and singing teacher with close ties to George IV. His music, little studied, includes seven operas, two piano concertos, 20 violin sonatas, six Italian ariettas, as well as a number of works for harp, violin, and keyboard. He also published several books, among them, 'Breve tratto di canto italiano' (London, 1818), 'Studio di musica teorica pratica' (London, 1830), and 'Anedotti piacevoli e interessanti occorsi nella vita Giacomo Gotifredo Ferrari da Rovereto' (London, 1830). His son Adolfo Angelico Gotifredo Ferrari (1807-1870), a pupil of Domenico Crivelli, taught singing at the Royal Academy. Adolfo’s wife, Johanna Thomson, and his daughter Sophia Ferrari were also singers.