This neglected composer was once as famous as Beethoven in his day and compared to Mozart! He obviously has suffered from these over-inflated views and is correspondingly paying the unjust price of virtual obscurity today. He was on friendly terms with Beethoven for many years whilst in Vienna and we have some interesting recollections from him. He is the BBC's composer of the week - I was listening the other day without knowing who the composer of a certain clarinet concerto was (I suspected Weber) until I heard the theme from Haydn's 95th symphony which I knew Spohr had used (I thought it was from the octet or perhaps he used it there as well?). Apparently he was a giant of a man at 6'7!! A prolific composer and virtuoso violinist who also introduced the chin rest for violinists and was one of the first to use a baton.
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Composer of the week - Louis Spohr
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I sang in a production of Spohr’s opera Jessonda with the Oxford University Opera Club in about 1980. It struck me as pleasant rather than outstanding, but I was very young :-)
Apart from a couple of psalm settings on a BBC Music CD, I haven’t come across him since – except in the Mikado’s song, of course.
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Originally posted by PhilipHummel - also "neglected". And who also wrote a pretty good 'cello sonata. Did not Beethoven hold this composer in high regard?'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by PhilipWhich has often perplexed me.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostThe most perplexing of all is Schubert and I find it incredible that he was so anonymous - I suppose one reason was Italian opera which of course affected Beethoven's popularity but not his fame which is what I'm getting at in another thread!
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostAnother reason is that Schubert was not a performing artist himself, with as consequence that he wqasn't able to promote his music by performing it himself (as e.g. Beethoven did als piano virtuoso), and that he for many was "only" a dilettante, because of his job as teacher.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostNor was Haydn and yet his greatest successes were in London - perhaps Schubert (as a much younger man) should have travelled more!
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostHaydn was a "professional" composer/conductor at that time (in London he was well in his late fifties/early sixties), but his first decades in the service of the Eszterhazys (beginning 1761) he was hardly known at all. At the age Schubert died (31), Haydn just started to compose his first symphonies (early 1760s), and was virtually unknown outside Eszterhaza (summer-) or Eisenstadt (winter-residence of his masters).'Man know thyself'
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