divendres, 11 de juliol del 2025

DE NEBRA, José (1702-1768) - Sinfonía Octava

Circle of Nicolas Lancret (1690-1743) - A fête champetre


José de Nebra (1702-1768) - Sinfonía Octava en Do mayor
Performers: Los Elementos

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Spanish composer and organist. Born to a family of musicians, he began his musical training under his father José Antonio Nebra (1672-1748), who had settled in Cuenca as cathedral organist and teacher of the choirboys (1711-1729) and later became maestro de capilla (1729-1748). In 1719 José de Nebra became organist at the convent of Descalzas. In 1722 he served in the Osuna household as a musician, and in 1724 he was appointed as one of the organists of the royal chapel in Madrid. By 1751 he had become vice-maestro and a teacher at the Colegio de niños cantores, later serving at the Jeronimos convent as organist. His students include Antonio Soler. Nebra’s focus as a composer was on native Spanish stage works, including the autos sacramentales, zarzuelas, and comedias. His music includes 21 autos sacramentales, 51 theatre works, 40 villancicos, 10 versos, 16 keyboard sonatas, two Masses, 18 Lamentations, four vespers, 16 Salve Reginas, a Requiem, 23 Psalms, 22 hymns, 21 responsories, toccatas, and a number of smaller sacred works. His two brothers were also musicians: Francisco Javier Nebra (1705-1741) was organist at La Seo, Zaragoza (1727-1729) and then in Cuenca (1729-1741), and Joaquín Nebra (1709-1782) was organist at La Seo, Zaragoza, from 1730 until his death. His nephew Manuel de Nebra Blasco (1750-1784) was an organist and composer.

dimecres, 9 de juliol del 2025

LEDESMA, Nicolás (1791-1883) - Stabat Mater (1837)

Henri Lehmann (1814-1882) - Miraculous transport of the body of St.Catherine (1839)


Nicolás Ledesma (1791-1883) - Stabat Mater (1837)
Performers: Paloma Pérez Iñigo (soprano); J. Mecharri (tenor); R. Salaberria (bass);
Orquesta del Festival Internacional de LOIOLA; Javier Bello-Portu (1920-2004, conductor)

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Spanish composer. He was a choirboy at Tarazona Cathedral, where he was taught music by Francisco Javier Gibert and José Angel Martinchique. He later moved to Zaragoza, where he studied the organ with Ramón Ferreñac. From an early age he was organist and choirmaster in various collegiate churches: Borja (1807), Tafalla (1809), Calatayud (where he is known to have been about 1824) and finally Bilbao (1830), where he remained until his death. He was a prolific composer of masses, Lamentations, motets and villancicos. Although his music reflects the bombastic and theatrical tendencies of his age, he had a sound technique and a certain nobility of invention. He was also active with Hilarión Eslava in efforts to renew and purify religious music.

dilluns, 7 de juliol del 2025

RUST, Friedrich Wilhelm (1739-1796) - Sonate in Fis moll (1784)

Unknown artist (18th Century) - Kurfürst Maximilian Joseph von Pfalz-Bayern mit seiner Familie (1799)


Friedrich Wilhelm Rust (1739-1796) - Clavier=Sonate in | Fis moll | componirt | 1784
Performers: Seth Carlin (1945-2016, pianoforte)

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German composer. As a small child he learnt to play the violin, encouraged by his elder brother Johann Ludwig Anton, who was himself considered an excellent violinist. He also learnt the piano, and according to his own account in his autobiography (1775) could play the first part of J.S. Bach’s Das wohltemperirte Clavier from memory when he was 16. After his father’s death in 1751 he lived with his mother and eldest brother in Gröbzig until 1755. A copy that he made of the trio sonata from Bach’s Musical Offering dates from this period; it is now considered lost. He then attended the Lutheran Gymnasium in Cöthen, 1755-58. From 1758 he studied law at Halle-Wittenberg University; he also had lessons with W.F. Bach and in return deputized for him as a church organist. Soon after Rust had completed his studies there, Prince Leopold Friedrich Franz of Anhalt-Dessau sent him to Zerbst to study with Carl Höckh, and then to Berlin and Potsdam (July 1763-April 1764) to study the violin with Franz Benda and keyboard instruments with C.P.E. Bach. In 1765-66 he visited Italy in the prince’s retinue, and there completed his musical training. He then settled in Dessau, where a lively court and civic musical life soon developed under his influence, and he wrote most of his compositions for it. From 1769 he organized regular subscription concerts, with music performed by both court musicians and amateurs, and in 1775 a theatre was founded, a project for which Rust was largely responsible. His achievements were recognized in April 1775, when the prince made him court music director. He married his former singing pupil Henriette Niedhardt in May; the couple had eight children, two of whom became professional musicians. In his lifetime Rust was honoured and esteemed as an instrumentalist and composer; contemporary lexicons and his correspondence with colleagues bear eloquent witness to this. He was also active as a teacher, and trained a series of well-regarded instrumentalists and singers. The surviving instrumental music includes works for clavichord, viola d’amore, harp, lute, and nail violin, the sound of which appealed to his introverted nature. In addition to large-scale vocal works and six stage works he also wrote some 100 lieder, of which 70 have been made usable for modern performance.

diumenge, 6 de juliol del 2025

D'AMBLEVILLE, Charles (1587-1637) - Missa Psallite Domino (1636)

Christophe Nicolas Tassin (c.1600-1660) - Rouen (1636)


Charles d'Ambleville (1587-1637) - Missa Psallite Domino des 'Harmonia sacra, seu vesperae in dies tum dominicos, tum festos totius anni, una cum missa ac litaniis beatae virginis cum sex vocibus' (1636)
Performers: Ensemble Meihua Fleur de Prunus; Chœur du Centre Catholique Chinois de Paris;
François Picard (conductor)
Further info: Musique des Lumières

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French composer. All that is known of his life is that in 1626 he was procureur of the Compagnie de Jésus at Rouen. He left only musical works, from which we may infer that he was director of music of one of the colleges of his order. His Octonarium sacrum (1634) is a set of five-part verses for the Magnificat, using all eight tones; they are fugal and closely resemble similar pieces by Nicolas Formé. Two years later he published his Harmonia sacra in two complementary volumes for four and six voices respectively. It includes works for double choir in a distinctly modern style originating in Italy that had already been adopted in France by several composers. Each volume also contains several masses and motets for a single choir. The double-choir works are for liturgical use and comprise psalms, motets and hymns.

divendres, 4 de juliol del 2025

ROSETTI, Antonio (c.1750-1792) - Concertino Per il Fagotto (c.1780)

Frans Xaver Hendrik Verbeeck (1686-1755) - Concerto


Antonio Rosetti (c.1750-1792) - Concertino (Es-Dur) | Per il Fagotto Solo | Violini Primo, e 2do oblig:ti |
2: Corni, Flutta | Viola, e Basso (c.1780), MurR C68
Performers: Leo Cermak (bassoon); The Vienna Orchestral Society; Charles Adler (1889-1959, conductor)

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Bohemian composer and double bass player. The precise date and location of his birth remain uncertain. When he died in 1792, the death register in Ludwigslust recorded his age as 42, placing his birth in the year 1750. He is believed to have received early musical training from the Jesuits in Prague. In 1773 he left his native country and found employment in the Hofkapelle of Prince Kraft Ernst of Oettingen-Wallerstein whom he served for sixteen years, becoming Kapellmeister in 1785. While there, he orchestrated two piano concerti by Anna von Schaden. In July 1789 Rosetti left Wallerstein to accept the post of Kapellmeister to the Duke Friedrich Franz I of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in Ludwigslust where he died in service of the duke on 30 June 1792 at the age of 42 years. In 1777, he married Rosina Neher, with whom he had three daughters. In late 1781 he was granted leave to spend 5 months in Paris. Many of the finest ensembles in the city performed his works. Rosetti arranged for his music to be published, including a set of six symphonies published in 1782. He returned to his post, assured of recognition as an accomplished composer. As a composer, he wrote over 400 compositions, primarily instrumental music including many symphonies and concertos which were widely published. Rosetti also composed a significant number of vocal and choral works, particularly in the last few years of his life. Among these are German oratorios including Der sterbende Jesu and Jesus in Gethsemane (1790) and a German Hallelujah. The English music historian Charles Burney included Rosetti among the most popular composers of the period in his work A General History of Music. Rosetti is perhaps best known today for his horn concertos, which Mozart scholar H. C. Robbins Landon suggests (in The Mozart Companion) may have been a model for Mozart's four horn concertos. Rosetti is also known for writing a Requiem (1776) which was performed at a memorial for Mozart in December 1791. Attributing some music to Rosetti is difficult because several other composers with similar names worked at the same time, including Franciscus Xaverius Antonius Rössler.

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. 

dilluns, 23 de juny del 2025

ZOCARINI, Matteo (fl. 1740-1770) - Concertino a violoncello solo e cembalo

Antoine Watteau (1684-1721) - Les Charmes de la vie


Matteo Zocarini (fl. 1740-1770) - Concertino (g-moll) des
'VI Concertino [G, g, A, D, d, C] a violoncello solo e cembalo ... opera prima' (c.1740)
Performers: Hans Meier (violoncello); Inge Sauer (harpsichord)
Further info: Frühe Cellosonaten

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Italian cellist and composer. Almost nothing is known about his life. Only the work 'VI Concertino A Violoncello Solo E Cembalo', published around 1740, is extant. Although the sheet music incorrectly attributes its printing to Amsterdam publisher Michel-Charles Le Cène, the actual publisher remains unknown. The cover of this publication identifies Zocarini as an 'amatore della musica'. Given his focus on the cello in his compositions, it's believed Zocarini was a skilled cellist. He may also have performed in Paris in 1737 under the name Zuccharini.

diumenge, 22 de juny del 2025

EBERLIN, Johann Ernst (1702-1762) - Missa solemnis brevis

Mariano Rossi (1731-1807) - Matrimonio di Alessandro e Roxane (1787)


Johann Ernst Eberlin (1702-1762) - [M]issa (solemnis brevis) | à | Voci.
con | Violini. | Clarini. | Timpani. | Organo. | è | Bassi Soliti.
Performers: Soli, Domchor & Domorchester Salzburg; Andrea Fournier (conductor)

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German composer and organist. He received his earliest musical education at the Jesuit Gymnasium in Augsburg in 1712, where he was a pupil of Georg Egger and Balthasar Siberer. He moved to Salzburg in 1721 to attend university, and in 1727 he was named organist in the main cathedral. By 1749 he had attained the position of Kapellmeister for Archbishop Schrattenbach, which he held until his death. In 1752 Eberlin’s daughter Maria Josefa Katharina Eberlin (1730-1755) married Anton Cajetan Adlgasser, who two years later became cathedral organist. Eberlin received the honorary appointment of Titular-Truchsess, or princely steward, in 1754 and was widely honoured and respected at the time of his death. Leopold Mozart, in his description of the Salzburg musical establishment (published in F.W. Marpurg’s 'Historisch-kritische Beyträge zur Aufnahme der Musik', 1757), called Eberlin ‘a thorough and accomplished master of the art of composing … He is entirely in command of the notes, and he composes easily and rapidly … One can compare him to the two famous and industrious composers, [Alessandro] Scarlatti and Telemann’. As a composer, he was known mainly for his sacred music, which was written for both the main cathedral, the Benedictine-run university, and the St. Peter’s monastery church. These include over 95 plays and other didactic music such as the monodrama 'Sigismundus' (1763), 11 oratorios, three operas, 58 Masses, 160 settings of the Mass Proper, numerous hymns, litanies, Psalms, and responsories as well as 21 German sacred arias, nine Requiems, three symphonies, nine toccata and fugues, 65 preludes and versetti, and other smaller keyboard works. Eberlin influenced composers of the next generation chiefly through his sacred vocal music, among them Leopold and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Johann Michael Haydn. His daughter, Maria Caecilia Barbara Eberlin (1728-1806), also became a composer and was married to composer Joseph Meissner.

divendres, 20 de juny del 2025

MADLSEDER, Nonnosus (1730-1797) - Sinfonia in D-Dur

Francesco Zuccarelli (1702-1788) - Country Dance in an Italianate Landscape


Nonnosus Madlseder (1730-1797) - Sinfonia in D-Dur
Performers: Innsbrucker Kammerorchester; Othmar Costa (1928-2018, conductor)

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German composer, choir director and organist. He was a choirboy at the chapel of the royal convent in Hall, and sang in school comedies at the Jesuit Gymnasium there (1743-45); he continued his studies at the monastery of Polling, Bavaria, and at Freising. In 1749 he entered the Benedictine monastery at Andechs and in 1754 was ordained priest. According to his foreword to the Offertories, Op.1, he studied at Andechs with the music director Gregor Schreyer, was the monastery's assistant director of music (1755), organist and director of the Tafelmusik (1757), leader of the Figuralchor (1760) and singing master (1761-62). In 1763, to encourage his compositional activity, Abbot Meinrad Moosmüller sent him to visit the Italian Opera in Munich. In 1767 he became the music director and leader of the boys’ classes at the Andechs monastery. In 1772-74 and 1791-94 he was a priest at the convent of Lilienberg, Munich. Madlseder was considered an outstanding theoretician and contrapuntist and was highly regarded as a Kapellmeister and organist. His symphony shows Mannheim and Viennese Classical influences. The sacred vocal works, with their coloratura solo parts and fugal sections, are frequently demanding for the singer. His brother Josef Madlseder (1740-1806) was a bass singer and Kammervirtuos at Passau, and from 1803 a member of the choir at Salzburg Cathedral.

dimecres, 18 de juny del 2025

FRANCK, Johann Wolfgang (1644-c.1710) - Te Deum

Jan van den Hoecke (1611-1651) and Paul de Vos (1592-1678) - Amor as Winner


Johann Wolfgang Franck (1644-c.1710) - Te Deum in C-Dur
Performers: Ansbаcher Jugеndkantorei; Ansbаcher Kammerorchester; Rainer Goеdе (conductor)
Further info: Te Deum–C major

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German composer. Since his father, who died in 1645, had held an important administrative post at the court of the Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, and his mother’s family were natives of Ansbach, it is likely that he had a superior education at a Latin school there. He served there as court musician from 1665 until 1679. He composed three operas for the Ansbach court: 'Die unvergleichliche Andromeda' (1675), 'Der verliebte Föbus' (1678), and 'Die drei Tochier Cecrops' (1679). On January 17, 1679, in a fit of jealousy, he allegedly killed the court musician 'Ulbrecht', and was forced to flee. He found refuge in Hamburg with his wife, Anna Susanna Wilbel (whom he had married in 1666), and gained a prominent position at the Hamburg Opera. Between 1679 and 1686 he wrote and produced 17 operas, the most important of which was 'Diokletian' (1682). His private life continued to be stormy; he deserted his wife and their 10 children, and went to London, where he remained from 1690 to about 1702. In London he organized, with Robert King, a series of Concerts of Vocal and Instrumental Music. The exact date and place of his death are unknown, but a report in Johannes Moller’s 'Cimbria litterata' (Copenhagen, 1744) makes the intriguing suggestion that he may have been murdered in Spain. As a composer, he published 'Geistliche Lieder' (Hamburg, 1681, 1685, 1687, 1700), 'Remedium melancholiae' (London, 1690), arias, and sacred music.

dilluns, 16 de juny del 2025

MARCHITELLI, Pietro (c.1643-1729) - Concerto in La minore

Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (1609-1664) - Allegory of Vanity


Pietro Marchitelli (c.1643-1729) - Concerto in La minore
Performers: Ensemble Aurora

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Italian violinist, teacher and composer. He received a formal music education at the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto in 1657. When his teacher, the violinist Carlo de Vincentiis, died in 1677, he took over as principal violinist of the royal chapel in Naples, remaining in the post for more than 50 years. He also took the role of first violin in the orchestra of the Teatro San Bartolomeo. He was a close friend of Alessandro Scarlatti during his career, and held in high esteem by his contemporaries. Marchitelli died of old age and was buried at the Chiesa di San Nicola alla Carità in Naples, in 1729. As a teacher, his pupils included his nephews Michele Mascitti and Giovanni Sebastiano Sabatino. As a composer, almost his whole output is lost, but he wrote several sonatas and concertos which closely follow the model established by Arcangelo Corelli in both form and pattern of movements.

diumenge, 15 de juny del 2025

MAYR, Johann Simon (1763-1845) - Messa a 4 (1823)

Giuseppe Diotti (1779-1846) - Johann Simon Mayr


Johann Simon Mayr (1763-1845) - Messa (do minore) a 4 (1823)
Performers: Marina Ulewicz (soprano); Christa Mayer (mezzo-soprano); Thomas Cooley (tenor); Thomas Gropper (bass); Vokalensemble Ingolstadt; Georgisches Kammerorchester Ingolstadt; Franz Hauk (conductor)
Further info: Mayr - Missa in c-moll

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German composer, teacher and writer on music. The second child of Josef Mayr, a schoolteacher and organist, and Maria Anna Prantmayer, a brewer’s daughter from Augsburg, he received his early musical education from his father. In 1774 he entered the Jesuit college in Ingolstadt, and in 1781 he began to study law and theology at the University of Ingolstadt, where he taught himself various orchestral instruments and supported himself by playing the organ. In 1787 a Swiss Freiherr, Thomas von Bassus, took him to Italy to further his musical education; in 1789 he commenced studies with Carlo Lenzi in Bergamo; he then was sent to Ferdinando Bertoni in Venice. He began his career as a composer of sacred music; his oratorios were performed in Venice. After the death of his patron in 1793, he was encouraged by Niccolò Piccinni and Peter von Winter to compose operas. His first opera, 'Saffo o sia I riti d'Apollo Leucadio', was performed in Venice in 1794. He gained renown with his opera 'Ginevra di Scozia' (Trieste, 1801), and it remained a favorite with audiences; also successful were his operas 'La rosa bianca e la rosa rossa' (Genoa, 1813) and 'Medea in Corinto' (Naples, 1813). In 1802 he became maestro di cappella at Santa Maria Maggiore in Bergamo, and in 1805 he reorganized the choir school of the Cathedral as the Lezioni Caritatevoli di Musica and assumed its directorship. Intractable cataracts, which led to total blindness in 1826, forced him to limit his activities to organ playing. In 1822 he founded the Societa Filarmonica of Bergamo. As a composer, his operas, while reflecting the late Neapolitan school, are noteworthy for their harmonization and orchestration, which are derived from the German tradition. After 1815 he devoted most of his time to composing sacred music, which totals some 600 works in all. He was also an eminent pedagogue and Gaetano Donizetti was among his pupils. Johann Simon Mayr was a leading figure in the development of opera seria in the last decade of the 18th Century and the first two decades of the 19th Century.

divendres, 13 de juny del 2025

VRANICKY, Antonín (1761-1820) - Concerto pour deux Violes (1805)

Carl Schütz (1745-1800) - Ansicht des Kohlmarkts (1797)


Antonín Vranický (1761-1820) - Concerto pour deux Violes (1805)
Performers: Jan Pěruška (viola); Jaroslav Pondělíček (viola); Komorní orchestr členů České filharmonie;
Andreas Sebastian Weiser (conductor)

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Moravian composer, violinist and music teacher. He attended the grammar school at the Premonstratensian monastery in Nová Ríše and later studied philosophy and law at a Jesuit seminary in Brno. His earliest musical training included violin lessons from his brother Pavel Vranický (1756-1808); he was also known for his beautiful voice. Before December 1783 he became choirmaster to the chapel of the Theresianisch-Savoyische Akademie in Vienna (until the abolition of church music there with the reforms of Joseph II). In Vienna he studied composition with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn and Johann Georg Albrechtsberger, and became renowned as a violin teacher and virtuoso. By 1790 he had entered the services of Prince J.F. Maximilian Lobkowitz as a composer, music teacher, Konzertmeister and (from 1797) Kapellmeister of the prince’s private orchestra; in these duties he was active at Vienna, Prague and the prince’s country seats in Bohemia (at Roudnice, Jezerí and Bílina). After the prince took charge of the Vienna court theatres (1807) and later sole direction of the opera, he appointed him orchestra director of the court theatre, according to the obituary register, a post he held until his death. From 1 August 1814 he was also the orchestra director of the Theater an der Wien. He assisted the prince in leading the Hoftheater-Musik-Verlag from 1812 to 1816 (see Weinmann). After the prince’s death he remained in the service of his successor. As a composer, his output almost entirely consists of instrumental compositions. Chamber music prevails, which is connected with his position of the chief conductor of the chateau music, but his legacy also comprises at least 14 symphonies and the same number of violin concertos, concertos for other string instruments, a number of minuets, hunting marches and many other compositions.

dimecres, 11 de juny del 2025

GIAY, Giovanni Antonio (1690-1764) - Sinfonia a 5

Jean-François Daumont (fl.1740-1775) - Gezicht op het Palazzo Reale en de Via Po te Turijn


Giovanni Antonio Giay (1690-1764) - Sinfonia (Re maggiore) a 5
Performers: Orchestre des Pays de Savoie; Reinhard Goebel (conductor)

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Italian composer. Son of Stefano Giuseppe Giay, in 1700 he entered the Collegio degli Innocenti at the Turin Cathedral where he studied music with Francesco Fasoli. He probably then went to Rome to complete his studies. On his return to Turin he wrote 'Il trionfo d’Amore ossia La fillide', in collaboration with Andrea Stefano Fiorè, which was premiered at the Teatro Carignano in 1715. His own operas were performed over the next 35 years in Turin, Venice, Milan and Rome. After Fiorè died in 1732, he assumed the duties of maestro di cappella and was confirmed in the position by Carlo Emanuele III in a patent of 24 October 1738. In this capacity he directed the instrumental and vocal forces of the court and composed a large amount of church music. He held this position until his death and was succeeded by his son, Francesco Saverio Giay (1729-1801).

dilluns, 9 de juny del 2025

MANALT, Francisco (c.1710-1759) - Sonata de Camara (1757)

Domingo de Aguirre (1741-1805) - El Jardin del Cavallo en el Buen Retiro visto desde el balcon que cae al de los Reynos (1778)


Francisco Manalt (c.1710-1759) - Sonata (VI, Re menor) de la Obra harmonica en seis sonatas de camara de violin y bajo solo, parte primera / dedicadas al Excmo. Señor D. Pedro Téllez Girón, Duque de Osuna,
por D. Francisco Manalt, musico de la Rl. Capilla de S.M.C. (1757) 
Performers: Emilio Moreno (violin); José Manuel Hernández (cello); Eduard Martínez (harpsichord)

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Spanish composer. He began his career at the Palau barcelonés before moving to Madrid in 1755. Two years later, he was welcomed as a violinist into the Royal Chapel. His probable cousin, Gabriel Terrí Manalt, also a violinist, had been serving in the Palace since 1724. In 1757, he published his 'Obra harmónica en seis sonatas de cámara de violín y bajo solo', dedicated to the Duke of Osuna. This dedication sheds light on the connection between the musicians from the Palau barcelonés and Madrid. These sonatas were not simple pieces; they displayed imagination, fluidity, and a refined galant style with harmonious proportions. Furthermore, their slow movements hinted at an expressiveness aligned with Empfindsamkeit, a new sentimentalist movement popular in Europe at the time, which some of his Madrid colleagues also embraced. During the 1750s, he also collaborated with José Herrando in musical festivities at the court. Francisco Manalt life ended tragically. On January 14, 1759, the very day he was to be married, he suffered a sudden 'attack of epilepsy' hours before the ceremony, leading to his death two days later. Following the accident, the bride's uncle immediately summoned a notary and a priest. Manalt was married and made his will in 'articulo mortis' (at the point of death) in the presence of his cousin Terrí and other witnesses who confirmed he could still understand and speak, though not sign. This ensured that his sister in Barcelona and his fiancée in Madrid could inherit from him, and his fiancée was also able to claim a modest widow's pension from the Royal Chapel. 

diumenge, 8 de juny del 2025

VON WILDERER, Johann Hugo (c.1670-1724) - Te Deum laudamus

After Francesco Solimena (1657-1747) - De verheerlijking van de heilige Dominicus (kopie naar, 1710-1785)


Johann Hugo von Wilderer (c.1670-1724) - Te Deum laudamus (C-Dur) p. à 13. 4 Clarini, Tympani,
2 [probably "Violini" cutted] | 1 Violetta, Fagotto, Canto, Alto, Tenore, Basso.
Performers: Jugendkantorei der Diözese Spеyеr; Bach-Collegium Mannheim; Diеtmar Mеttlach (conductor)

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German composer. He studied with Giovanni Legrenzi in Venice and by 1692 was court organist at the St. Andreas church in Dusseldorf. By 1696 he was vice-Kapellmeister at the court there, being elevated to Kapellmeister in 1703. He married Maria Lambertina Dahmen on 11 March 1698, and she bore him nine children. In 1716 the Elector Johann Wilhelm died and was succeeded by his brother Karl Philipp, who had maintained a court at Innsbruck. Subsequently he joined together the Innsbruck and Düsseldorf musical establishments, first in Heidelberg and in 1720 in Mannheim, where he undertook the building of a new palace. These combined groups, under the joint directorship of Wilderer and Jakob Greber from Innsbruck, later became the basis for the famous orchestra of the ‘Mannheim School’, supported generously by the Elector Carl Theodor. Wilderer remained active in the dual capacity of Kapellmeister and composer until his death. His final major work was the sacred opera 'Esther', performed as an oratorio at Heidelberg in 1723 and as an opera at Mannheim, 17 March 1724. As a composer, he wrote 11 operas, mainly composed for the Düsseldorf court between 1695 and 1713, 2 oratorios, 4 cantatas, and some sacred works, among them, a Missa brevis extant in a remarkable copy in the hand of Johann Sebastian Bach. Wilderer importance rests upon his role in fostering the development of German opera and of what became known as the Mannheim school of composition.

divendres, 6 de juny del 2025

PERTI, Giacomo Antonio (1661-1756) - Gaude felix, parens Hispania (1712)


Giacomo Antonio Perti (1661-1756) - Gaude felix, parens Hispania (1712)
Performers: Arіon Choir; Collegio Ghіslіeri; Gіulio Prаndі (conductor)

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Italian teacher and composer. At the age of nine he began to study music in Bologna with his uncle Lorenzo Perti and with Rocco Laurenti, from whom he learnt the rudiments of organ playing. As early as 1678 he had a Mass performed at the church of San Tomaso al Mercato. In 1679 he collaborated on the opera 'Atide', to which he contributed the score for the third act. In 1681 he was elected a member of the Accademia Filarmonica, of which he was five times the principe (in 1719 was named censor). He then went to Parma, where he continued his studies with Giuseppe Corso. In 1689 he had his opera 'Dionisio Siracusano' performed in Parma, and another opera, 'La Rosaura', in Venice. In 1690 he succeeded his uncle as maestro di cappella at the Cathedral of San Pietro in Bologna. In 1696 he became maestro di cappella of San Petronio, a position he held until his death. He also held similar positions at San Domenico (1704-55; deputized for Giuseppe Matteo Alberti from 1734) and at Sancta Maria in Galliera (1706-50). Emperor Charles VI made him a royal councillor in 1740. His correspondence reveals a long-standing rapport with the Duchess Aurora Sanseverino of Piedimonte d’Alife, who was a member of a Bolognese family; he regularly sent compositions to her for use at her court. His correspondence also indicates that he was held in high regard by Johann Joseph Fux, Antonio Caldara, Bernardo Pasquini, Arcangelo Corelli and other influential musicians. Padre Martini held him in the highest esteem and included six examples of his contrapuntal music in his 'Esemplare ossia Saggio fondamentale pratico di contrappunto' (1774-75). As a composer, he wrote several operas and oratorios as well as 120 Psalms, 54 motets, 28 masses, and about 150 secular cantatas.

dimecres, 4 de juny del 2025

MOLINO, Francesco (1768-1847) - Grand Concerto pour la Guitare (c.1830)

Marie Louise Élisabeth Vigée Lebrun (1755-1842) - Portrait of the artist's daughter, Jeanne-Julie-Louise Le Brun, playing a guitar


Francesco Molino (1768-1847) - Grand Concerto (mi mineur) pour la Guitare avec accompagnement de deux Violons, deux Clarinettes, deux Cors & Alto et Basse, Op.56 (c.1830)
Performers: Pepe Romero (guitar); Academy of St. Martin in the Fields; Iona Brown (1941-2004, conductor)
Further info: Guitar concertos

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Italian guitarist and composer. His musical career, who was a descendant of a well-known family of musicians from Piedmont, began in the decade from 1783 to 1793, when he was a regular officer in the Piedmont Regiment of the Sardinian Army, as an oboist and occasionally also as a viola player in the orchestra of the Teatro Regio of Turin. After he was discharged, during the period of the Napoleonic unrest in most of Europe, he lived for several years in Genoa, where he met some important French cultural and artistic personalities such as the famous violinist Rodolphe Kreutzer. He returned to Turin after the fall of Napoleon and the restoration of the Savoy family, and was appointed as a violinist in the re-established Chapel of the King of Sardinia, from 1814 to 1818. Here his two cousins Luigi Molino (1762-1846) and Valentino Molino (1766-1824), who were slightly older than him and already fairly well-known, were already employed. Only after he moved to Paris, in 1818 or at the beginning of 1819, did he start being successful as a guitar composer, performer and teacher, although he never neglected the violin, and went on playing it for the rest of his life. The signers and dedicatees of many of his compositions suggest that he had relationships or contacts in Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, England and Germany. In Paris, where he had already published a Concerto per violino e orchestra for the publisher Pleyel in 1803, he benefitted from the support and patronage of the Duchess of Berry and of other members of the aristocracy, and was placed at the centre of the great popularity enjoyed at that time by the guitar. His success in Paris was due to the importance of his teaching, the originality of his solo pieces, the great number of simple pieces he composed for amateurs, and the quality of his chamber music. The fact that he was famous is testified also by some well-known contemporary reports about an extremely heated dispute between his supporters and Carulli’s; the exact substance of this dispute, however, is unknown. Although most of Molino’s works are for solo guitar his best-known are his Grand Concerto Op.56, the two Grand trio concertant Op.30 and Op.45, and the Notturni Opp.37, 38, 39.

dilluns, 2 de juny del 2025

SCHENCK, Johannes (1660-c.1712) - Sonata für Viola da gamba und Basso continuo (c.1704)

Gerard ter Borch II (1617-1681) - A Musical Company


Johannes Schenck (1660-c.1712) - Sonata (II, a-moll) für Viola da gamba und Basso continuo aus
'L'Echo de Danube' (c.1704)
Performers: Sarah Cunningham (viola da gamba); Mitzi Meyerson (harpsichord)

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Dutch composer and viol player of German descent. Although the details of his musical education are unknown, in 1680 he married his compatriot Geertuyd Hamen van Vianen and in 1687 published in Amsterdam his first work for the theatre, 'Bacchus, Ceres en Venus', which is considered the first example of singspiel in the history of his country. In those last years, he alternated between works on religious themes and profane works. His first publications, most of them printed at Estienne Roger’s workshop, were financially supported by influential businessmen and nobles who made possible the distribution of his work, thus becoming known to the public, and which consolidated his reputation as, perhaps, the greatest composer of his country in the second half of the 17th century. In about 1696 his fame secured him a post at the Düsseldorf court of the Elector Palatine Johann Wilhelm II, himself an amateur viol player. Schenck's career developed there as a court official too, culminating in 1710 in an appointment as 'chamber councillor'. He was thus present at the coronation in 1711 of Emperor Charles VI at Frankfurt. After 1712, his trace was lost. As a composer, his viol music constitutes one of the most important repertories composed for the instrument. It faithfully reflects the important stylistic changes taking place in northern Europe at the time, which may not always have worked to Schenck's advantage as a composer. Schenck's viol music culminated in 'Le nymphe di Rheno' and 'L'echo du Danube'. The former consists of duets for two equal viols, in which the relatively modest technical demands may reflect the level of the dedicatee, Schenck's employer Johann Wilhelm. In the six ambitious sonatas of 'L'echo du Danube' the influence of modern Italian string sonatas is prominent.

diumenge, 1 de juny del 2025

ELSNER, Józef (1769-1854) - Missa solemnis (1799)

Bernardo Bellotto (1721-1780) - Visitationist Church in Warsaw


Józef Elsner (1769-1854) - Missa (solemnis) in B-Dur, Op.3 (1799)
Performers: Agnieszka Grаlа (soprano); Justynа Ołów (alto); Jacek Szponаrski (tenor); Paweł Michаlczuk (bass); Choir of the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw; Capella Clаromontana; Michał Słаwecki (conductor)

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Polish composer and pedagogue of German origin. Born to a maker of musical instruments, he was initially intended for a career in medicine; however, he later became a choirboy, followed by a violinist and singer at the Breslau theatre. His instruction in harmony was received from Emanuel Aloys Förster in Breslau. Through the perusal of scores and association with musicians in Vienna, he subsequently held the position of first violin at the Brünn theatre in 1791 and musical director of the theatre in Lemberg in 1792. In 1799, he established himself in Warsaw, where he served as director of both German and Polish theatrical institutions. Subsequently, in 1813, in collaboration with Princess Zamoyska, he founded a musical society, which was later reconstituted as the "Warsaw Conservatory" in 1821. At this juncture, he relinquished his theatrical engagements to assume the roles of first director and professor of composition at the newly established institution. His retirement occurred in 1830, coinciding with the closure of the Conservatory due to prevailing political exigencies, though he continued his compositional pursuits. During a sojourn in Paris, select examples of his oeuvre were performed at the Tuileries and Saint-Cloud. As a composer, his output includes the opera 'Osoblievi Bracia' and approximately thirty other minor dramatic works in Polish. Additionally, he composed masses, motets, requiems, offertories, cantatas, and numerous sacred songs, alongside symphonies, quartets, concertos, and a substantial body of piano and instrumental music. He is regarded as a precursor of the Polish national musical style, his compositions synthesizing elements of the Viennese Classical tradition with aspects of Polish folk music. He frequently incorporated Polish songs and dances into his operas, secular vocal works, and instrumental compositions, as well as Polish religious melodies into his sacred works, transforming this source material in accordance with Romantic principles. Furthermore, he demonstrated an interest in the metrical and intonational characteristics of the Polish language. The influence of the Viennese school is most discernible in his early instrumental works, although his compositional focus shifted relatively early towards vocal and stage works, many of which drew upon Polish historical sources and illustrate the evolution of his musical idiom. His solo vocal works initially employed Rococo and galant styles but subsequently adopted Romantic characteristics, exhibiting heightened expressivity and replacing strophic forms with through-composed settings.

divendres, 30 de maig del 2025

NUDERA, Vojtěch (1748-1811) - Parthia in Dis (1806)

Anoniem (18th Century) - Signior Clarioneto (1818)


Vojtěch Nudera (1748-1811) - Parthia (Es-Dur) in Dis | a | Clarinetto Primo | Clarinetto Secundo | Cornu Primo | Cornu Secundo | con | Fagotto | pro me | Augustin Erasmus Hübner | beym Schulfach Anno 1806.
Performers: Prague Mozart Trio

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Bohemian composer. Very little is known about his life. He received violin and clarinet training before being appointed Kantor at a school in Vyšehrad. Shortly thereafter, it is believed he settled in Prague, where he worked as a chamber musician. Around 1796, he was documented as a violinist at Prague Cathedral. As a composer, only a few works are extant, among them divertimentos, orchestral variations, and partitas, mostly for wind instruments. His style was inherited from the classical Viennese tradition, though with incorporations more typical of Bohemia. 

dimecres, 28 de maig del 2025

FUX, Johann Joseph (1660-1741) - Ouverture à 6

Faustino Bocchi (1659-1742) - Grotesque scene with dwarves, cat and guineapigs.


Johann Joseph Fux (1660-1741) - Intrada aus 'Pulcheria' & Ouverture (C-Dur) à 6 oblig: C ♮, K 334
Performers: Neue Hofkapelle Grаz; Lucia Frοihοfer (conductor)

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Austrian composer and music theorist. His exact date of birth is unknown. According to his death certificate he was 81 when he died. His father, Andreas Fux (c.1618-1708), married twice, and Johann Fux may have been his eldest child. Although a peasant, Andreas Fux was a parish official attached to the church at St Marein and came into contact with a number of musicians, among them the Graz organist Johann Hartmann Peintinger and the Kantor Joseph Keller, who probably influenced his son's early musical development. In 1680 he enrolled as a ‘grammatista’ at Graz University, and in 1681 he entered the Jesuit Ferdinandeum as a student of grammar and music. By August 1685 he had taken a position as organist at St Moritz in Ingolstadt. Fux's movements between the beginning of 1689, when a new organist was appointed at St Moritz, and his marriage in 1696 remain uncertain. Although Fux's employment as court composer in Vienna dates officially from April 1698, he himself was ambiguous about his length of service in this capacity. In various documents, he implied that he began to work for the imperial household in 1695, or even 1693. Together with the recently appointed composers Carlo Badia, Giovanni Bononcini and Marc’Antonio Ziani, Fux effectively began to introduce elements of late Baroque style into the sacred and secular genres cultivated at court. After the death of Leopold I in 1705 and the accession of his son Joseph I, he retained the office of court composer. In the same year he was appointed deputy Kapellmeister at the Stephansdom, where in 1712 he succeeded Johann Michael Zacher as first Kapellmeister. He retained this office until the end of 1714, and during the same period he also directed services at the Salvatorkirche. His duties as deputy Kapellmeister at the Stephansdom centred on the music performed before the statue of Our Lady of Pötsch, which the emperor had had placed on the high altar of the cathedral in 1697. After the unexpected death of Joseph I on 17 April 1711, the empress-regent Eleonora dissolved the Hofmusikkapelle, and many of its personnel. 

By October 1711 he had been appointed deputy Kapellmeister to the court. In January 1715 Charles VI appointed him as Hofkapellmeister, a position he held for the rest of his life. As a composer who served three emperors, he undertook an especially taxing combination of duties. His coronation opera, 'Costanza e Fortezza', nominally in celebration of the Empress Elisabeth Christine's birthday but effectively written to mark the coronation of Charles VI as King of Bohemia, represents the peak of his public office. The publication of the 'Gradus ad Parnassum' in 1725 has been compared in importance with the publication of Fischer von Erlach's 'Entwurf einer Historischen Architektur' (1721). Both works embody the concept of Habsburg style selfconsciously, and persuasively relate their author's achievements to a coherent past. On 8 June 1731 Fux's wife died, and some seven months later the composer drew up his will (5 January 1732). His activities at court notably decreased, with many of his responsibilities being assigned to Antonio Caldara and others. He had complained of serious illness at the close of the Gradus, and by the late 1720s his rate of composition had sharply declined. His last testimonial is dated 10 March 1740. On 13 February 1741 he developed a ‘raging fever’ and died. He was much mourned at court. The most outstanding of his many students were Gottlieb Muffat, Georg Christoph Wagenseil and Jan Dismas Zelenka. According to Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Sebastian Bach placed him first among those contemporary composers whom he most admired. Fux represents the culmination of the Austro-Italian Baroque in music. His compositions reflect the imperial and Catholic preoccupations of the Habsburg monarchy no less than does the architecture of Fischer von Erlach or the scenic designs of the Galli-Bibiena family. His 'Gradus ad Parnassum' (1725) has been the most influential composition treatise in European music from the 18th century onwards.

dilluns, 26 de maig del 2025

CAMIDGE, Matthew (1764-1844) - Concerto for Organ (c.1815)

Anonymous (19th Century) - Charity school children's service at St Paul's Cathedral (c.1815)


Matthew Camidge (1764-1844) - Concerto (G minor) for Organ from
'Six Concertos for Organ or Grand Piano Forte', Op.13 (c.1815)
Performers: Simon Lindley (1948-2025, organ)

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English organist and composer. Son of John Camidge (1734-1803), at an early age he became a chorister of the Chapel Royal under his father’s old master, James Nares. On his return to York he became assistant to his father. He is said to have been the first to teach the cathedral choristers to sing from notes; previously all the services had been learnt by ear. The two Camidges also originated the York musical festivals, beginning with a performance, on a small scale, of Handel's ‘Messiah’ at the Belfry church, which led to oratorios being given with orchestral accompaniments in the minster. On the resignation of John Camidge, he was appointed his successor as organist (11 November 1799), a post he held until his retirement (8 October 1842). As a composer, he published a considerable quantity of music for the harpsichord, organ, and piano, besides a collection of psalm tunes, a ‘Method of Instruction in Musick by Questions and Answers,’ and some church music. In the preface to his Organ Concertos, op.13 (c.1815), he wrote that he had "endeavoured to imitate the particular style of music which has been so long admired, namely that of Handel and Corelli. This acknowledgement will, he hopes, secure him from the critics’ censure". Matthew Camidge was married to a niece of Sheriff Atkinson of York, by whom he had three sons; two took orders, and became respectively vicar of Wakefield and canon of York, and chaplain at Moscow and Cronstadt, and the third, John Camidge (1790-1859), succeeded his father as organist of York.