Giuseppe Antonio Brescianello (1690-1758)
- Sinfonia à 4 in g-moll, Opera I (1738)
Performers: Ensemble Barocco Sаns Sοuci
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Italian violinist and composer. He first appears in documents when in 
1715 the Elector of Bavaria brought him from Venice to Munich as a 
violinist. In October 1716, after the death of his predecessor Pez, he 
became musique directeur, maître des concerts de la chambre at the 
Württemberg court in Stuttgart, and in 1717 chief Kapellmeister. Between
 1717 and 1718 he wrote the pastoral opera La Tisbe, which he dedicated 
to his employer Archduke Eberhard Ludwig. Hoping this opera would be 
produced at the Stuttgart Opera, Brescianello wrote in his Präparationen
 that he had suited its melodies to the theatre taste: but that did not 
gain him a performance. From 1719 to 1721 he had to face heated battles 
with his rival Reinhard Keiser, who sought unsuccessfully for 
Brescianello’s position. In 1731 Brescianello became Rath und 
Oberkapellmeister. When the court’s finances collapsed in 1737, the 
Stuttgart opera troupe was dissolved and Brescianello lost his post, 
which spurred him on to increased activity as a composer. In 1738 
(according to EitnerQ) he wrote 12 concerti e sinphonie op.1 and other 
works, and somewhat later ‘18 Piecen fürs Gallichone’. When the regency 
of the generous artistic patron Duke Carl Eugen began in 1744, 
Brescianello was reinstated as Oberkapellmeister ‘on account of his 
particular knowledge of music and excellent competence’, and until his 
retirement he brought the opera and court music to renewed fame. He was 
pensioned off on 29 November 1751 according to Sittard, on St James’s 
Day 1755 according to other sources. His successor was Ignaz Holzbauer, 
then Jommelli. In his two decades as Kapellmeister, Brescianello helped 
to put his stamp on the musical life of Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg. His 
importance lies in his compositions, which mainly follow the conventions
 of his time (sequences and imitations, influences of the galant style, 
generally in loosened suite form). Apart from Tisbe, two cantatas and a 
mass (occasional and commissioned works), Brescianello wrote mainly 
chamber music using the violin, with which he was most acquainted 
through his training as a violinist: these works are thus among his most
 successful. 

 
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