Christoph Demantius

Christoph Demantius

Christoph Demantius (15 December 1567 – 20 April 1643) was a German composer, music theorist, writer and poet. He was an exact contemporary of Monteverdi, and represented a transitional phase in German Lutheran music from the polyphonic Renaissance style to the early Baroque.

Contents

Life

He was born in Reichenberg (now Liberec, in the Czech Republic, north of Prague near the border with Germany), and probably received his early training there, though little information is available about his early life. By the early 1590s he was in Bautzen, where he wrote a school textbook, and in 1593 he received a degree from the University of Wittenberg. In 1594 he moved to Leipzig, and in 1597 he acquired the post of Kantor at Zittau, where he probably taught the young Melchior Franck.[1]

His next post, one he held for the rest of his life, was as Kantor to Freiberg Cathedral. While he was able to keep his position, the Thirty Years' War was disruptive to his life, and most of his children, of four different marriages, died due to the hardships imposed by the war.[1]

Works

Demantius was a hugely prolific composer, though many of his works have been lost. Stylistically he was a successor to Lassus, who was also working in Germany during the first part of Demantius's life. He wrote most of his music before the Thirty Years' War; it is probable that the hardships of the war, including lack of performing musicians, made it difficult to compose and publish.[2]

In the realm of sacred music Demantius wrote motets, masses, Magnificat settings, psalm settings, hymns, and a splendid setting of the St. John Passion, one of the most significant passion settings of the late Renaissance. This work, for six voices, is considered to be the last in the development of the German motet passion; those composed later were to be of the more dramatic kind, culminating in the St John Passion of J.S. Bach. Demantius's setting includes a setting of Isaiah chapter 53 in addition to the usual text from the Gospel of St. John.[2]

His motets are of a late Renaissance type, and all Lutheran; some are in German and others Latin. They are conservative in that they avoid some of the Italian Baroque innovations such as the concertato style and the basso continuo, both of which were becoming widely used in Germany by 1610; but he also created a highly individual musical language using traditional forms and means, quite distinct from the Palestrinian polyphony adopted by the other composers of the time commonly regarded as "conservative."

He also wrote secular music, both vocal and instrumental, including threnodies, dances, epithalamia, and numerous other occasional works. Most likely he wrote the poetry for his own music.

As a music theoretician he is famous for compiling the first dictionary of musical terms in the German language. He also published a textbook for teaching music in school, Forma musices, in 1592, at Bautzen.[2]

References and further reading

Notes

  1. ^ a b Blankenburg, Grove
  2. ^ a b c Blankenburg/Schröder, Grove online

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Christoph Demantius — Naissance 15 décembre 1567 Liberec …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Christoph Demantius — Johann Christoph Demantius (* 15. Dezember 1567 in Reichenberg, Böhmen; † 20. April 1643 in Freiberg/Sachsen) war ein deutscher Komponist. Demantius studierte 1593 an der Universität Wittenberg und war im folgenden unter anderem Kantor in Zittau …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Johann Christoph Demantius — (* 15. Dezember 1567 in Reichenberg, Böhmen; † 20. April 1643 in Freiberg/Sachsen) war ein deutscher Komponist. Demantius studierte 1593 an der Universität Wittenberg und war im folgenden unter anderem Kantor in Zittau in der Oberlausitz und (ab… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Demantius — Johann Christoph Demantius (* 15. Dezember 1567 in Reichenberg, Böhmen; † 20. April 1643 in Freiberg/Sachsen) war ein deutscher Komponist. Demantius studierte 1593 an der Universität Wittenberg und war im folgenden unter anderem Kantor in Zittau …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Demantĭus — Demantĭus, Christoph, Tonsetzer, geb. 1567 in Reichenberg, wirkte um 1596 in Zittau u. 1607 bis 1643 in Freiberg als Cantor u. st. 20. April 1643. Er gab heraus: Threnodiae, auserlesene Begräbnißlieder, 1611 …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • St. Christoph — Christoph ist ein männlicher Vorname und ein Familienname. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Herkunft und Bedeutung des Namens 2 Namenstag 3 Bekannte Träger des Namens 3.1 Vorname 3.2 Familienname …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Demantius — Demạntius,   Johannes Christoph, Komponist, * Reichenberg (Böhmen) 15. 12. 1567, ✝ Freiberg (Sachsen) 20. 4. 1643; Kantor in Zittau und Freiberg, komponierte geistliche (Messen, Motetten, Tedeum, sechsstimmige Johannespassion) und weltliche… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Christof — Christoph ist ein männlicher Vorname und ein Familienname. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Herkunft und Bedeutung des Namens 2 Namenstag 3 Bekannte Träger des Namens 3.1 Vorname 3.2 Familienname …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Persönlichkeiten Wittenberg — Hier sind alle Persönlichkeiten der Lutherstadt Wittenberg erfasst, deren Wirken eng mit der Lutherstadt und der Universität Wittenberg verbunden ist. Dies berührt ausschließlich Persönlichkeiten, bei denen der Bezug zu Wittenberg im Lebenslauf… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Deutsche Komponisten — Siehe auch: Liste österreichischer Komponisten klassischer Musik Liste sorbischer Komponisten klassischer Musik Liste der Komponisten des deutschsprachigen Films Liste klassischer Komponisten in der DDR Liste von Blasmusik Komponisten A Ludwig… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”