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Wagenseil, G.C.: Symphonies, Vol. 2 - ...

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Georg Christoph Wagenseil: Cellokonzer...

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Wagenseil, G.C.: Concerto for Oboe and...

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Wagenseil: Cave Oblivione Delebitur

Wagenseil: Cello Concertos & Symphony

Six Sonatas for Violin, Cello and Viol...

Concerto for Alto Trombone and Orchest...

Wagenseil: Trio Sonatas

Georg Christoph Wagenseil: Concertos f...

Wagenseil: Quartets for Low Strings

Biography

Georg Christoph Wagenseil was an Austrian composer and organist of the late Baroque and early Classical eras. He was known as a virtuosic performer, and his innovative operas and symphonies had a strong influence on the composers of the Classical era. Wagenseil was born in Vienna in 1715 to a wealthy family and spent most of his childhood around the Imperial Court, where his father and maternal grandfather were employed. Piano lessons were included in his schooling, which was typical for someone of his high social status, and he sang in Empress Amelia Wilhelmine's private chapel until his teens. He then became more focused on his organ playing and pursued more advanced instruction from Adam Weger, the organist of St. Michael's church in Vienna. Wagenseil also began to compose for the piano and organ, which attracted the attention of the music director of the court, Johann Joseph Fux. In 1735, Wagenseil began studying with Fux and was appointed to the position of court scholar, with the recommendation of his teacher. After three years of intense study and practice, he received Fux's endorsement and became the court composer. He also served as the organist at Empress Elisabeth Christine's private chapel from 1741 to 1750. Beginning in the mid-1740s, he composed operas and theatrical works for special occasions such as royal birthdays and other celebrations. In 1745, Wagenseil traveled to Venice to oversee the production of his first opera, Ariodante. His operas were innovative in how he organized the structural elements of arias, choruses, and recitatives into longer arcs that avoided predictable formal patterns. Throughout the 1750s, he was granted with publication rights in France, and produced a prolific amount of chamber music and symphonies that made him very popular. Many of these works were chamber concertos of intermediate difficulty intended for amateur musicians to perform in their homes. By the 1760s, his works were widely distributed throughout several European countries, and they were known by Mozart, Haydn, and many others. Wagenseil stopped performing around 1765 after a gout attack that affected his left hand. He eventually became confined to his home but continued composing and teaching. Some of his more prominent students included Leopold Hofmann, Marie Antoinette, and Johann Baptist Schenk, who later became Beethoven's teacher. Wagenseil died in his home in Vienna in 1777. ~ RJ Lambert, Rovi