Anna Amalie von Preußen (1723-1787)
- Sonata (F-Dur) per il Flauto traverso e Basso (1771)
Performers: Elisabeth Wеinziеrl (flute); Eva Schiеfеrstеin (cembalo); Philipp von Morgеn (cello)
Further info: Flute Music of Female Composers
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German patron, amateur musician and composer. Son of Friedrich Wilhelm I
 (1688-1740) and Sophie Dorothea von Hannover (1687-1757), and sister of
 Frederick II (1712-1786), her earliest training in music came only 
after the death of her father and was under the tutelage of her brother.
 In 1743 she secretly married Baron Friedrich von der Trenck, but when 
this became known and her pregnancy discovered, she was packed off to 
the cloister at Quedlinburg. She preferred this location, though she 
spent most summers thereafter in Berlin at a palace given her by her 
brother. In 1755 she became abbess of the secularized convent of 
Quedlinburg, a position which afforded her a comfortable income and made
 almost no demands on her time. She continued to make her home in 
Berlin, where she held musical soirées attended by the artists and 
intelligentsia of Berlin and Europe. Adept as a performer on flute, 
violin, and keyboard, she formed her own musical circle alongside the 
Berlin School, taking composition from both Carl Heinrich Graun and 
Johann Kirnberger, beginning in 1758. Her number of compositions is 
relatively slight, given that she probably destroyed many in later 
years. Among them are several cantatas, marches, and smaller chamber 
works much in the style of the Berlin composers. Her greatest 
significance to music lies in her music library, a collection of 
incalculable value. It is particularly rich in 18th-century music – that
 of J.S. Bach above all. She has not to be confused with Anna Amalia, 
Duchess of Saxe-Weimar, also a composer.

 
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