1800 in music

List of years in music (table)
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This is a list of music-related events in 1800.

Events

  • January 16 – Luigi Cherubini's opera, Les Deux Journées ("The Water Carrier"), is premièred in Paris at the Salle Feydeau.[1]
  • February 22 – Lorenzo da Ponte, best known as Mozart's former librettist, goes bankrupt in London; his partner in the publishing business, Jan Ladislav Dussek, has already gone into hiding.[1]
  • March 28 – Anton Weidinger gives the first public performance of Haydn's Trumpet Concerto in E flat major at the Vienna Burgtheater.[1]
  • April 2 – Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 debuts at the Burgtheater in Vienna.
  • April 21 – Haydn's Creation is performed in London. In the interval, Samuel Wesley plays one of his own organ concertos.[1]
  • June 2 – The premiere of Cesare in Farmacusa, with music by Antonio Salieri and words by Carlo Prospero Defranceschi, takes place at the Kärntnertortheater, Vienna.[1]
  • September 6 – During Lord Nelson's visit to Eisenstadt, his companion Emma, Lady Hamilton, performs Haydn's Arianna a Naxos and The Battle of the Nile, with Haydn himself on piano.
  • September 16 – François-Adrien Boïeldieu's opera, Le calife de Bagdad, opens at Paris's Salle Favart.
  • October 8 – Prince Joseph Franz von Lobkowitz pays Ludwig van Beethoven 200 florins for his String Quartets.[1]
  • October 14 – Nine-year-old prodigy Jakob Meyer Beer makes his début on the concert platform, playing a Mozart piano concerto; Jakob later reinvents himself as Giacomo Meyerbeer.[1]
  • December 1 – Franz Anton Hoffmeister and Ambrosius Kühnel establish the Bureau de Musique, a music publishing company, in Leipzig.[1]

Classical music

  • Ludwig van Beethoven
    • Symphony No. 1
    • Piano Concerto No. 3 (composed; first performance in 1803)
    • Piano Sonata in B-flat Major Op. 22
    • Piano Sonata in A-flat Major Op. 26
  • François Adrien Boieldieu – Harp concerto in C Major
  • Bartolomeo Campagnoli – 6 Fugues for Solo Violin, Op. 10
  • Adelaide Suzanne Camille Delaval – Prelude, Divertimento and Waltz, Op. 3
  • Jan Ladislav Dussek – Piano Sonata No.18, Op. 44
  • Giacomo Gotifredo Ferrari – 3 Trio Sonatas, Op. 25
  • Adalbert Gyrowetz – Divertissement, Op. 50
  • Louis-Emmanuel Jadin – 3 String Quartets, Livre 1
  • Leopold Kozeluch – Three Grand Sonatas for piano accompanied by violin and cello[1]
  • Franz Krommer – 3 String Quartets, Op. 18
  • Wenzel Thomas Matiegka – Fantaisie in C major, Op. 4
  • Johann Friedrich Reichardt – Der Jubel oder Juchhei (liederspiel)[1]
  • Carl Maria von Weber – 6 Variations sur un thème original, Op. 2 1832

Opera

  • François Adrien Boieldieu – Le Calife de Bagdad
  • Luigi Cherubini – Les deux journées
  • Ferdinando Paer – La testa riscaldata, La sonnambula, Ginevra degli Almieri and Poche ma buone
  • William Reeve – Paul and Virginia
  • Antonio Salieri – Cesare in Farmacusa and L'Angiolina
  • Carl Maria von Weber – Das stumme Waldmädchen

Methods and theory writings

  • Anton Bemetzrieder – A Complete Treatise on Music (London: Thomas Rickaby)
  • Johann Dalberg – Untersuchungen über den Ursprung der Harmonie (Erfurt: Beyer und Maring)
  • Gottlieb Graupner – A New Preceptor for the German Flute (Boston: G. Graupner)
  • P. Hoey – A Plain and Concise Method of Learning the Gregorian Note (Dublin: P. Wogan)
  • Samuel Holyoke – The Instrumental Assistant (Exeter, NH: H. Ranlet)
  • William Shield – An Introduction to Harmony (London: printed for the Author, sold by G. G. & J. Robinson)
  • Georg Joseph Vogler
    • Choral-System (Kopenhagen: Haly'schen Musikhandlung)
    • Musik-skole (Kiøbenhavn: Niels Christensen)

Births

  • January 1
    • Filipina Brzezinska-Szymanowska, Polish pianist and composer (died 1886)
    • Johann Kulik, luthier (died 1872)
  • January 11 – Giuseppina Ronzi de Begnis, Italian operatic soprano (died 1853)
  • January 14 – Ludwig Ritter von Köchel, music researcher and composer (died 1877)
  • March 5 – Georg Friedrich Daumer, librettist and philosopher (died 1875)
  • May 5 – Raymond Brucker, librettist and writer (died 1875)
  • June 24 – Antonio James Oury (Anna Caroline Oury), composer and pianist (died 1880)
  • July 30 – Alexander Veltman, lyricist and writer (died 1870)
  • July 31 – Michel Masson, lyricist and writer (died 1883)
  • August 26 – Joseph Christoph Kessler, German pianist and composer (died 1872)
  • October 12 – Francesco Florimo, composer and music historian (died 1888)
  • November 6 – Eduard Grell, composer and conductor (died 1886)
  • December 1 – Mihály Vörösmarty, lyricist and poet (died 1855)
  • December 4 – Emil Aarestrup, lyricist and poet (died 1856)
  • date unknown
    • Eduard Brendler, composer (died 1831)
    • Maria Caterina Rosalbina Caradori-Allan, French operatic soprano (died 1865)
    • Pavel Mochalov, lyricist and actor (died 1848)

Deaths

  • January 4 – Giovanni Battista Mancini, Italian castrato and singing teacher (born 1714)
  • January 6 – William Jones, music theorist and clergyman (born 1726)
  • March 9 – Dominique Della-Maria, composer and mandolin virtuoso (born 1768)
  • April 29 – Johann Christian Fischer, oboist and composer (born 1733)
  • May 7 – Niccolò Piccinni, composer (born 1728)
  • June 6 – Margareta Sofia Lagerqvist, opera singer (born 1771)
  • June 10 – Johann Abraham Peter Schulz, composer (born 1747)
  • June 11 – Margarethe Danzi, German composer and soprano (born 1768)
  • August 3 – Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch, harpsichordist and composer (born 1736)
  • August 4 – Julije Bajamonti, composer and historian (born 1744)
  • September 8 – Pierre Gaviniès, French violinist and composer (born 1728)
  • September 26 – William Billings, America's first major composer (born 1746)
  • September 27 – Hyacinthe Jadin, French composer (born 1776; tuberculosis)[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "1800". MusicandHistory.com. Archived from the original on 2012-08-28. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
  2. Anderle, Dr. Heinz (2005). "The Life and Times of Hyacinthe Jadin". Richard Fuller, trans. Archived from the original on March 11, 2015. Retrieved 2007-04-12. (arch.)
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