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Oratorien haydn biography


Gottfried Scholz describes the development of the musical genre of the oratory until Joseph Haydn, then explains the history of his oratorios and sketches..

Franz Joseph Haydn

(1732-1809)

Synopsis

Franz Joseph Haydn was among the creators of the fundamental genres of classical music, and his influence upon later composers is immense.

Joseph Haydn.

  • With his two great oratorios Die Schöpfung (The Creation) (1798) and Die Jahreszeiten (The Seasons) (1801) Haydn established the tradition of the German.
  • Gottfried Scholz describes the development of the musical genre of the oratory until Joseph Haydn, then explains the history of his oratorios and sketches.
  • Joseph Haydn is rightly regarded as a composer of epoch-making significance: Not only did he set standards in the fields of symphonic and chamber music.
  • Biography that already went as far as Haydn's stay in England.
  • Haydn’s most celebrated pupil was Ludwig van Beethoven, and his musical form casts a huge shadow over the music of subsequent composers such as Schubert, Mendelssohn and Brahms.

    Early Life

    Franz Joseph Haydn was recruited at age 8 to the sing in the choir at St.

    Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna, where he went on to learn to play violin and keyboard. After he left the choir, he supported himself by teaching and playing violin, while studying counterpoint and harmony.

    Haydn soon became an assistant to composer Nicola Porpora in exchange for lessons, and in 1761 he was named Kapellmeister, or "court musician," at the palace of the influential Esterházy family, a position that would financially support him for nearly 30 years.

    Isolated at the palace from other composers and musical trends, he