dimecres, 19 de febrer del 2025

FRITZ, Gaspard (1716-1783) - Sinfonia a piu strumenti (c.1770)

Carl Ludwig Hackert (1740-1796) - Genf mit Mont Blanc von Nordwesten


Gaspard Fritz (1716-1783) - Sinfonia (C-Dur) a piu strumenti des
'Sei Sinfonie a piu strumenti ... opera VI' (c.1770)
Performers: Kesselberg Ensemble; Petr Koudelka (conductor)

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Swiss composer and violinist. Son of the violinist Philippe Fritz (1689-1744) and Jeanne Guibourdance, he received his first violin lessons from his father. In the 1730s he studied in Turin with Giovanni Battista Somis, a former pupil of Arcangelo Corelli. After returning to Geneva, he married to Charlotte Foix (c.1714-1779) in 1737. In the same year several young English aristocrats settled in Geneva after having gone on their Grand Tour to Italy. They were used to meet at a salon called the Common Room of Geneva, and despite Geneva being strictly Calvinist at the time they were not prevented from organising extravagant cultural events, such as theatrical performances and pantomimes, between 1738 and 1743. These well-educated young Englishmen, who termed themselves “The Bloods”, also invited representatives of the local upper classes to their events. The young Gaspard Fritz directed a small orchestra that provided their musical entertainment, and he will presumably also have taken the opportunity to perform works of his own. In 1756 he went to Paris for the publication of several of his works and 12 March and 18 April he appeared at the Concert Spirituel, but his Italian style of playing acted against his success. In 1770, Charles Burney met Fritz in Geneva. Burney remarks that Fritz had taught the violin to several of his friends, which suggests that in his younger days he had given lessons to members of the “Bloods”. Burney’s record of their conversation reveals that Fritz was busy preparing the publication of his 'Sei sinfonie a piu stromenti'. These symphonies were published in Paris in the early 1770s. Burney was delighted at the news of their imminent publication and promptly ordered two copies from the composer. Gaspard Fritz only wrote instrumental music. His output include a few collections of works, among them, flute sonatas, violin sonatas, trio sonatas, six duets for two violins, the mentioned VI symphonies, a violin concerto as well as a missing harpsichord concerto. The printed opus collections were published between 1742 and 1772 in Geneva, Paris and London. There have been a number of copies preserved, especially as far as the sonata prints are concerned, in Danish and Swedish libraries, but also in Brussels, Berlin and Berkeley, which is evidence of how widespread and popular his music was during his lifetime. 

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