Johann Adolph Hasse Vídeos
compositor alemán
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- ópera, música sacra, concierto, música de cámara
- Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico
- compositor, cantante, profesor de música, maestro de capilla
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2024-04-27
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Carl Friedrich Abel Johann Sebastian Bach Christian Ferdinand Abel Johann Adolf Hasse Johann Christian Bach Haydn 1723 1759 1785 1787
Kick back, relax, and unwind to Viola da Gamba Sonata in G Major, WK 155 by Friedrich Carl Abel, performed by Phillip Serna This music is from Creative Commons, is non-copyright and royalty-free via musopen.org Born on December 22, 1723 in Cöthen, Carl Friedrich Abel was a renowned viola da gamba player during his time. Johann Sebastian Bach is said to have composed his famous solo cello suites for Carl's father, Christian Ferdinand Abel. After his education under J.S. Bach at the Thomasschule, he joined the Dresden court orchestra under Johann Adolf Hasse, where he stayed for a decade before moving to London in 1759. There, he formed a close relationship with Johann Christian Bach, with whom he presented a series of subscription concerts featuring Haydn's symphonies, which were first performed in London. Even after J.C. Bach's death in 1785, Abel continued his association with the concerts in London until his own death on June 20, 1787. Abel's symphonies, overtures, string quartets, concertos and sonatas were highly regarded and widely published during his time. As a virtuoso gambist, his chamber works for the viola da gamba, although unpublished, are among his most developed and interesting compositions. #ClassicalTracks #ClassicalMusic #Violin #CarlAbel #ClassicalViolin #Classical
Carl Friedrich Abel Robert Rønnes Christian Ferdinand Abel Johann Sebastian Bach Johann Adolph Hasse Merlin Johann Christian Bach Haydn Theresa Cornelys Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1723 1725 1748 1758 1759 1762 1764 1765 1775 1782 1785 1787 2013
+••.••(...)) Carl Friedrich Abel: Sonata in e minor for Bassoon and Harp. (Original for Viola Da Gamba) Arranged and performed for Bassoon and Mac Playback Harp by Robert Rønnes, 1st June 2013. / About the composer: ( From Wikipedia) Carl Friedrich Abel (22 December 1723 / 20 June 1787)[1] was a German composer of the Classical era. (The Chambers Biographical Dictionary gives his year of birth erroneusly as 1725.)[2] He was a renown player of the viola da gamba, and composed important music for that instrument. Abel was born in Köthen, the son of Christian Ferdinand Abel, the principal viola da gamba and cello player in the court orchestra. In 1723 Abel senior became director of the orchestra, when the previous director, Johann Sebastian Bach moved to Leipzig. The young Abel later boarded at Leipzig's Thomaschule, where he was taught by Bach. On Bach's recommendation in 1748 he was able to join Johann Adolph Hasse's court orchestra at Dresden where he remained for ten years. In 1759 (or 1758 according to Chambers),he went to England and became chamber-musician to Queen Charlotte. He gave a concert of his own compositions in London, performing on various instruments, one of which was a five-string cello known as a pentachord, which had been recently invented by John Joseph Merlin. In 1762, Johann Christian Bach, the eleventh son of J.S. Bach, joined him in London, and the friendship between him and Abel led, in 1764 or 1765, to the establishment of the famous Bach-Abel concerts, England's first subscription concerts. In those concerts, many celebrated guest artists appeared, and many works of Haydn received their first English performance. For ten years the concerts were organized by Mrs. Theresa Cornelys, a retired Venetian opera singer who owned a concert hall at Carlisle House in Soho Square, then the height of fashionable events. In 1775 the concerts became independent of her, to be continued by Abel and Bach until Bach's death in 1782. Abel still remained in great demand as a player on various instruments new and old. He traveled to Germany and France between 1782 and 1785, and upon his return to London, became a leading member of the Grand Professional Concerts at the Hanover Square Rooms in Soho. Throughout his life he had enjoyed excessive living, and his drinking probably hastened his death, which occurred in London on 20 June 1787. One of Abel's works became famous due to a misattribution: in the 19th century, a manuscript symphony in the hand of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, was catalogued as his Symphony no. 3 in E flat, K. 18, and was published as such in the first complete edition of Mozart's works by Breitkopf & Härtel. Later, it was discovered that this symphony was actually the work of Abel, copied by the boy Mozart—evidently for study purposes—while he was visiting London in 1764. That symphony was originally published as the concluding work in Abel's Six Symphonies, Op. 7.
Johann Adolf Hasse Wiebke Lehmkuhl Hans Christoph Rademann Exaudi Meam 2011
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group Hasse: Requiem in C Major - III. Exaudi orationem meam · Wiebke Lehmkuhl · Dresdner Barockorchester · Hans-Christoph Rademann · Johann Adolf Hasse Hasse: Requiem in C Major; Miserere in C Minor ℗ 2011 Carus Released on: 2011-03-01 Composer: Johann Adolf Hasse Author: Traditional Auto-generated by YouTube.
Johann Adolf Hasse Wiebke Lehmkuhl Hans Christoph Rademann Sequentia 2011
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group Hasse: Requiem in C Major / Sequentia - Vd. Recordare · Wiebke Lehmkuhl · Dresdner Barockorchester · Hans-Christoph Rademann · Johann Adolf Hasse Hasse: Requiem in C Major; Miserere in C Minor ℗ 2011 Carus Released on: 2011-03-01 Composer: Johann Adolf Hasse Author: Traditional Auto-generated by YouTube.
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