Johann Joseph Fux (1660-1741)
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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.

 
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