- Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel
Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel (
January 31 ,1690 inGrünstädtel –November 27 ,1749 in Gotha) was a prolific Germancomposer .Biography
Stölzel grew up in
Schwarzenberg, Saxony in theErzgebirge . From 1707 he was a student of theology inLeipzig , and of Melchior Hofmann, the musical director of the Neukirche. He studied, worked and composed inBreslau and Halle. Then an eighteen-month sojourn in Italy from 1713 — where he metAntonio Vivaldi in Venice — rendered him "au courant" with the latest musical taste. After working for three years inPrague , he became briefly court "Kapellmeister" inBayreuth andGera . Then in 1719 he married, and the next year took up an appointment in Gotha, where he worked until his death for the dukes Frederick II and Frederick III of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, composing a cantata each week.From 1730 the "Kapellmeister" of the court at Gotha also wrote for
Sondershausen . Stölzel supplied numerous festive occasional pieces and arias for court performance; the archive at Schloss Sondershausen retains many of his manuscripts, found in a box behind the organ in 1870. Half of Stölzel's output, never engraved, is lost. Stölzel's immediate successor at the court in GothaGeorg Benda had most of Stölzel's manuscripts taken to the castle attic. Holes in the roof exposed the manuscripts to rain, and rats also chewed and ate the paper. Thirty years later when someone inquired about the music, and went to the attic, only a few shreds were left intact. This has to be one of the saddest losses in baroque music: e.g. Stölzel is reputed to have composed over 80 orchestral suites alone, and not a single one survives. In fact out of what had to have been hundreds of compositions, only 12(!) pieces survived at Gotha.He enjoyed an outstanding reputation in his lifetime:
Lorenz Christoph Mizler rated him as great asJohann Sebastian Bach .Johann Mattheson reckoned him among "the level-headed, learned, and great music masters" of his century. Stölzel was an accomplished German stylist who himself wrote a good many of the poetic texts for his vocal works. Students beginning the piano may remember some pieces by him, those that are included in theNotebook for Anna Magdalena Bach .His most important works are: four concerti grossi, many sinfonias, a concerto for oboe d'amore. His four operas: Narcissus, Valeria, Artemisia and Orion have not survived, and
oratorio s such as Brockes Passion (1725) and a Christmas Oratorio have been recorded. Twelve complete annualcantata cycles as well as cantatas to secular texts (five hundred) have come down in full.Maurice André performed Stölzel's concerto in D for trumpet, strings and continuo.His "Abhandlung vom Recitativ" ("The Art of
Recitative "), written about 1739, remained unpublished until 1962 (Werner Steger, "Gottfried Heinrich Stoelzels "Abhandlung vom Recitativ"). He was followed byGeorg Benda .ee also
*"
Bist du bei mir ": Stölzel's aria was copied out by Anna Magdalena Bach in her 1725Notebook for Anna Magdalena Bach References
* [http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/mielorth/stoelzel/ Gottfried Heinrich Stoelzel] Biography (in German), Ruhr-Universität Bochum
* [http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Lib/Stolzel-Gottfried-Heinrich.htm Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel] Biography from bach-cantatas.com
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