dilluns, 10 d’octubre del 2022

NEUBAUER, František Kryštof (c.1760-1795) - Sinfonie 'La Bataille' (1794)

John Trumbull (1756-1843) - The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, 3 January 1777 (c.1787)


František Kryštof Neubauer (c.1760-1795) - Sinfonie 'La Bataille' à grand Orchestre (1794)
Performers: Angelicum Orchestra of Milan; Newel Jenkins (1915-1996, conductor)

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Bohemian violinist and composer. He was born of peasant parentage in the Czech-speaking part of central Bohemia. He received his early musical training from a local schoolmaster and was already a skilled violinist and composer when, still very young, he went to Prague to continue his studies. Like many of his bohemian contemporaries he left his native country, and his early travels took him to various monasteries in Bavaria, performing and composing in return for food and lodging. Documentary records indicate that in autumn 1780 he visited the Augustinian monasteries Au am Inn and Gars am Inn as well as the Benedictine monastery Attel am Inn. In 1781 he stayed in the Upper Bavarian cloisters of Diessen, Andechs, Schäftlarn and Fürstenfeld. Further journeys took him to Munich and Vienna, where, according to Schlichtegroll, he made the acquaintance of Haydn, Mozart, and his compatriots Kozeluch and Wranitzky. Important among other monasteries visited were Ottobeuren, where he taught music intermittently from 1783 to 1787, St Blasien (1786), and Schöntal, where Abbé Vogler expressed great admiration for his talents; records also confirm sojourns in Konstanz, Speyer, Heilbronn, Zürich and Koblenz. Neubauer obtained his first permanent position at Weilburg in 1790, but was forced to flee by the invasion of the French revolutionary armies. Following several appearances as a performer in Hannover, he briefly held a position at Minden before finally accepting an invitation from the Princess of Schaumburg-Lippe to join the court at Bückeburg.

The resident Konzertmeister there was J.C.F. Bach, and Neubauer’s arrival precipitated immediate rivalry between the two composers. After Bach’s death Neubauer succeeded him, but within a year he succumbed to an illness that was attributed to excessive drinking. Neubauer was a prolific and remarkably facile composer, as is shown by the number and variety of works he wrote during his short life. Predictably, as with most minor composers of the late 18th century, the influence of Haydn and Mozart can be detected in his works, which, although somewhat uneven, are considerably more than an eclectic fusion of traits from both composers, and reveal a skilled craftsman and imaginative composer with a marked individuality. His symphonies, quartets, concertos (particularly that for piano) and a piano trio are among his best instrumental works. For the most part they adhere to the three-movement plan, but in other respects are typical of his age. The forms are clear and well balanced, with the expected tonal organization of the Classical period, but in the development sections far-ranging modulations emphasize mediant relationships that are approached by shifts from major to minor. The quartets are not in the customary violin-dominated style, and go far towards achieving equal participation of all the instruments. Although he was known among earlier chroniclers principally as a ‘Sonatenkomponist’, recent research confirms that Neubauer’s considerable body of church music occupied a significant position at the time. His Missa Solemnis ex Dis is notable for containing a clarinet part and his Stabat mater (1781) is of remarkable quality. Other vocal music includes collections of solo songs, some of which achieve a surprising equality between voice and piano.

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