František Brixi
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image František Xaver Brixi (2 January 1732 – 14 October 1771) was a Czech classical composer of the 18th century. His first name is sometimes given by reference works in its Germanic form, Franz.
Biography
Brixi was born in Prague,[1] the son of composer Šimon Brixi.[2] He received his musical education at the Piarist Gymnasium in Kosmonosy.[1] His teachers included Template:Ill, a significant composer himself.[2]
In 1749 Brixi left Kosmonosy and returned to Prague, where he worked as an organist at several churches.[2] In 1759 he was appointed Script error: No such module "Lang". (choir director) and Script error: No such module "Lang". of St. Vitus Cathedral, thus attaining, at age 27, the highest musical position in the city;Template:Efn[1] this office he held till his early death. He wrote some 290 church works (of the most varied type), cantatas and oratorios, chamber compositions, and orchestral compositions. He was a prolific composer of music for the liturgy, and wrote more than 100 masses,[3] vespers and motets, among others. He also composed secular music such as oratorios and incidental music, concertos and symphonies.[4][5][6] His organ concertos, which have been recorded several times each, are his best-known pieces today.
Brixi died of tuberculosis in Prague in 1771, at the age of 39.[1]
Style
Brixi was an important composer at the junction between the Baroque and Classical periods.[6] Brixi's style is distinguished from that of his contemporaries by its fresh melodic writing, vivacious rhythm and lively bass lines, and from that of his predecessors by its simple yet effective instrumentation. During his lifetime his music was widely disseminated in Bohemia and Moravia.[5]
Influence
Brixi's music made Prague's people receptive for Mozart's music (where Mozart was in high esteem even during times where he was shunned elsewhere).[6]
Compositions
Brixi composed 500 works, in which sacred music dominated.[1] None of his compositions were published during Brixi's lifetime.[5]
Source:[7]
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- Missa di Gloria in D major (c.1758)
- Missa integra in D minor
- Missa brevis in C major for soloists, choir orchestra and organ
- Missa aulica in C major
- Missa pastoralis in C major
- Missa pastoralis in D major
- Missa solemnis in D major for soloists, choir, orchestra and organ
- Missa Dominicalis in C major
- 8 Organ Concertos
- Viola Concerto in C major
- Sinfonia in D major
- Oratorio Opus patheticum de septem doloribus Beatae Mariae Virginis
- Oratorio Crux morientis Jesu Christi
- Oratorio Filius Prodigus (Osek 1755)
- Oratorio Judas Iscariothes – Oratorium pro die sacro Parasceves (Osek c.1770)
- Litanie de seto Benedieto
- Confiteor tibi Domine
- Bitevní sinfonie
- Fuga in A minor
- Pastoral in C major
- Preludium In C major
- Regina coeli
Notes
References
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Further reading
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- Wikipedia articles incorporating the Cite Grove template
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- Composers with IMSLP links
- Articles with International Music Score Library Project links
- 1732 births
- 1771 deaths
- 18th-century musicians from Bohemia
- 18th-century classical composers
- 18th-century keyboardists
- 18th-century male musicians
- Catholic liturgical composers
- Classical-period composers from Bohemia
- Czech classical organists
- Czech male classical composers
- Czech male classical organists
- Composers from Prague