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François-Joseph Fétis

Index François-Joseph Fétis

François-Joseph Fétis (25 March 1784 – 26 March 1871) was a Belgian musicologist, composer, teacher, and one of the most influential music critics of the 19th century. [1]

249 relations: Adam de la Halle, Adelina Catalani, Adolphe Deloffre, Adolphe Samuel, Aimé Paris, Albert Grisar, Alexander Dargomyzhsky, Alexandre Artôt, Alexandre Montfort, Alexandre Pierre Joseph Doche, Amélie-Julie Candeille, Anna Mombelli, Antoine Bailleux, Antoine de Cousu, Antoine de Léris, Antoine Elwart, Antoine Ponchard, Antoine-Marie Coupart, Antoinette Saint-Huberty, Armand Limnander, Arthur Pougin, Artus Aux-Cousteaux, Auguste Andrade, Auguste Dupont, Auguste Mermet, Édouard Deldevez, Émile Bienaimé, Étienne Gosse, Étienne-François Gebauer, Études (Chopin), Bagatelle sans tonalité, Ballet Comique de la Reine, Baritenor, Bernard Jumentier, Berthold Tours, Brook Taylor, Carlo Negrini, Casimir Gide, Casimir von Blumenthal, Castil-Blaze, Cécile Mézeray, Charles Baudiot, Charles Borremans, Charles-Henri de Blainville, Charles-Marie Widor, Charles-Valentin Alkan, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, Chronological list of Belgian classical composers, Claude-Jean-François Despréaux, Clavier-Übung III, ..., Clément Loret, Conservatoire de Paris, Cornélie Falcon, Cultural depictions of Mary, Queen of Scots, Dominant (music), Edmond de Coussemaker, Egidius Aerts, Ermanno Picchi, Ernest Grosjean, Ester Mombelli, Eugène Godecharle, Eugène Ortolan, Félicien David, Federico Consolo, Ferdinand Hérold, Ferdinando Giorgetti, Fernando Sor, François Cupis de Renoussard, François Habeneck, François Lays, François Sudre (1787–1862), François Wartel, François-Joseph, Francesco Durante, Frantz Jehin-Prume, Frédéric Blasius, Frédéric Chopin, Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt, George Alexander Osborne, George Onslow (composer), Giacomo Meyerbeer, Gioacchino Conti, Giovanni Tadolini, Girard de Beaulieu, Girolamo Bartei, Giulio Fiesco, Giuseppe Cambini, Gottfried Keller (musician), Guillaume André Villoteau, Guillaume Du Fay, Guillaume-Lebrecht Petzold, Guillermo Morphy, Gustave Chouquet, Gustave Vogt, Haydn Quartets (Mozart), Hector Berlioz, Henri Bertini, Henri Desmarets, Henri Herz, Henri Larrivée, Henri Valentino, Henri-Étienne Dérivis, Henry Bredemers, Henry Verdhurdt, Honoré Langlé, Ignaz Pleyel, Isidore Bertheaume, Jacques-Michel Hurel de Lamare, Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens, Jean Ancot Jnr, Jean de Bournonville, Jean-Delphin Alard, Jean-Georges Sieber, Jean-Henri Levasseur, Jean-Jacques-Joseph Debillemont, Jean-Paul-Égide Martini, Jean-Toussaint Merle, Jean-Vital Jammes, Jeremiah Clarke, Jesús de Monasterio, Johann Gottfried Arnold, Johann Stadlmayr, Johannes Cotto, John Ella, John Spencer Smith, Joséphine Fodor, Josef Gusikov, Joseph Christoph Kessler, Joseph d'Ortigue, Joseph Hollman, Joseph von Blumenthal, Joseph-François Garnier, Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga, Jules Duprato, Jules Gallay, Jules Garcin, Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges, Julius Eichberg, L'Africaine, L'éclair, La muette de Portici, Late works of Franz Liszt, Léon Le Cieux, Le chalet, Le cheval de bronze, Le Ménestrel, Le postillon de Lonjumeau, Le pré aux clercs, Leading-tone, Life of Franz Liszt, List of 19th-century encyclopedias, List of Belgian classical composers, List of Belgians, List of composers by name, List of composers by nationality, List of encyclopedias by date, List of former teachers at the Conservatoire de Paris, List of music students by teacher: C to F, List of music theorists, List of musicologists, List of operas by Meyerbeer, List of people from Brussels, List of symphonies in E-flat major, List of symphony composers, Louis Picquot, Louis Théodore Gouvy, Louis-Armand Chardin, Louis-Charles-Joseph Rey, Louise Bertin, Louise Farrenc, Luigi Agnesi, Luigi Ferdinando Casamorata, Maistre Jhan, Manuel García (tenor), Maria Caterina Negri, Maria Stuarda, Marie Cabel, Marie Pleyel, Marie Stuart (opera), Marius Gueit, Mark Delpriora, Martin Pierre d'Alvimare, Maurice Schlesinger, Michel Paul Guy de Chabanon, Missa Gaudeamus, Mons, Music criticism, Musical historicism, Musical hoax, Musical Instrument Museum (Brussels), Nestor Roqueplan, Nicolas Gigault, Nicolas Roze, Nicolas Séjan, Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux, Olimpie, Opera in Scotland, Outline of forgery, Paolo Animuccia, Paul Lacombe, Paul Wranitzky, Pedro Carrera y Lanchares, Peter Benoit, Piano Concerto No. 1 (Chopin), Piano four hands, Pierre Gaveaux, Pierre Menault, Pierre Passereau, Pierre-François Levasseur, Pierre-François-Joseph Robert, Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Nougaret, Pierre-Louis Dietsch, Poldowski, Revue et gazette musicale de Paris, Robert le diable, Robert Wornum, Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium, Royal Conservatory of Brussels, Royal Library of Belgium, Saint Nicholas' Church, Ghent, Saint Waltrude Collegiate Church, Sémiramis (Catel), Selika Lazevski, Sigismond Thalberg, Simon Molitor, Six Sonatas for Violin and Harpsichord, BWV 1014–1019, Sophie Gail, Stephen Heller, Stradella (Niedermeyer), Teodulo Mabellini, Théâtre des Folies-Marigny, Théâtre Lyrique, Thomas Campion, Thomas Helmore, Tonality, Trois nouvelles études, Victor Frédéric Verrimst, Victorin de Joncières, Vincenzo Righini, Wellington Guernsey, Wilhelm von Lenz, William Cusins, William Tell (opera), Xavier Boisselot, Zampa, 1784 in music, 1837 in music, 1871 in music, 7-limit tuning. Expand index (199 more) »

Adam de la Halle

Adam de la Halle, also known as Adam le Bossu (Adam the Hunchback) (1245–50 – 1285–88?, or after 1306) was a French-born trouvère, poet and musician.

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Adelina Catalani

Adelina, sometimes Adelaide or Adele, Catalani (fl. 1818–1832) was a Franco-Italian soprano.

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Adolphe Deloffre

Louis Michel Adolphe Deloffre (28 July 1817 – 8 January 1876) was a French violinist and conductor active in London and Paris, who conducted several important operatic premieres in the latter city, particularly by Charles Gounod and Georges Bizet.

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Adolphe Samuel

Adolphe-Abraham Samuel (11 July 1824 – 11 September 1898) was a Belgian music critic, conductor and composer.

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Aimé Paris

Aimé Paris (1798–1866) was a French scholar.

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Albert Grisar

Albert Grisar (born in Antwerp on December 25, 1808 – died in Asnières on June 15, 1869) was a Belgian composer.

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Alexander Dargomyzhsky

Alexander Sergeyevich Dargomyzhsky (Алекса́ндр Серге́евич Даргомы́жский) was a 19th-century Russian composer.

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Alexandre Artôt

Alexandre Joseph Artôt (25 January 1815 – 20 July 1845) was a Belgian violinist.

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Alexandre Montfort

Alexandre Montfort (12 May 1803 – 13 February 1856) was a French classical composer.

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Alexandre Pierre Joseph Doche

Alexandre Pierre Joseph Doche (Paris, 1799 – Saint Petersburg, 31 July 1849 was a French violinist and composer, conductor at the Théâtre du Vaudeville from 1828 to 1848. The son of Joseph-Denis Doche, he studied at the Conservatoire de Paris and succeeded his father as composer and conductor at the Théâtre du Vaudeville. In January 1839, he married th Belgian actress Marie-Charlotte-Eugénie de Plunkett. In 1848 he appeared at the theatre of Saint-Petersburg but suddenly died of cholera in 1849.

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Amélie-Julie Candeille

Amélie-Julie Candeille (night of July 31, 1767, parish of Saint-Sulpice, Paris – February 4, 1834, Paris) was a French composer, librettist, writer, singer, actress, comedian, and instrumentalist.

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Anna Mombelli

Anna Mombelli, born Marianna Mombelli, (1795 – after 1817) was an Italian opera singer who sang both mezzo-soprano and contralto roles. She is primarily known for having created the role of Siveno in Rossini's first opera Demetrio e Polibio in 1812. Mombelli was born in Naples, the second of Domenico Mombelli and Vincenza Viganò-Mombelli's twelve children. She was trained in singing by her father who had been a prominent tenor in the 1780s and 90s. She often appeared in the Mombelli family's opera troupe along with her elder sister Ester in further productions of Demetrio e Polibio as well as in the premiere of Carlo Coccia's Evellina. She also appeared with her sister in the world premiere of Vincenzo Migliorucci's cantata Paolo e Virginia. According to Fétis, she sang with success in Milan during the 1814, 1815, and 1816 seasons and also appeared as Tisbe to Ester's Angelina in La Cenerentola at the Teatro Carignano in 1817. Mombelli retired from the stage shortly after her marriage in 1817 to the journalist Angelo Lambertini whom Henry Prunières described as "a savant and a fool, an excellent violin player and an intimate friend of Rossini's.".

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Antoine Bailleux

Antoine Bailleux was an 18th-century Parisian violinist and music publisher, active from 1761 to 1800 or 1801.

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Antoine de Cousu

Antoine de Cousu was a French cleric, Kapellmeister, composer and theorist, active in Picardy in the first half of the 17th century.

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Antoine de Léris

Antoine de Léris (Mont-Louis, Roussillon, 28 February 1723 — 1795) was a French journalist and drama critic of the 18th century and a historian of the French theatre, author of the Dictionnaire portatif historique et littéraire des théâtres, contenant l'origine des differens théâtres de Paris, ("Portable historical and literary dictionary of theatres, containing the origins of the various theatres of Paris"), published without the author's name on the title page by Jombert in Paris in 1754.The corrected and augmented second edition, 1763, is a standard work of theatre history, a "library" of information.

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Antoine Elwart

Antoine Elwart (19 September 1808 – 14 October 1877) was a French composer, musicologist and musicographer.

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Antoine Ponchard

Louis Antoine Ponchard (31 August 1787 – 6 June 1866) was a 19th-century French operatic tenor and teacher.

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Antoine-Marie Coupart

Antoine-Marie Coupart (13 June 1780 – 19 October 1864) was an early 19th-century French playwright and chansonnier, as well as a dramaturge at the Théâtre du Palais Royal (1831–1864).

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Antoinette Saint-Huberty

Anne-Antoinette-Cécile Clavel, better known by her stage name Madame Saint-Huberty or Saint-Huberti (Strasbourg, 15 December 1756 - 22 July 1812, Barnes, London) was a celebrated French operatic soprano whose career extended from c.1774 until 1790.

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Armand Limnander

Baron Armand-Marie Ghislain Limnander van Nieuwenhove (born 22 May 1814 in Ghent, Belgium – d. 15 August 1892 at the Château de Moignanville, a village in the department of Seine-et-Oise, France) was a Belgian composer of choral and orchestral works and church music.

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Arthur Pougin

Arthur Pougin (6 August 1834 – 8 August 1921) was a French musical and dramatic critic and writer.

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Artus Aux-Cousteaux

Artus Aux-Cousteaux (Hautcousteaux, Haultcousteau, Arthur d'Auxcousteaux; c. 1590-1656) was a French singer and composer, active in Picardy and Paris.

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Auguste Andrade

Jean (or Jacob) Auguste Andrade (12 August 1793 – 11 January 1843) was a 19th-century French singer and composer.

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Auguste Dupont

Auguste Dupont, full name Pierre-Auguste Dupont, (9 February 1827 - 17 December 1890) was a Belgian pianist and composer.

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Auguste Mermet

Auguste Mermet (5 January 1810 in Brussels4 July 1889 in Paris) was a French opera composer.

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Édouard Deldevez

Édouard-Marie-Ernest Deldevez (31 May 1817 – 6 November 1897) was a French violinist, conductor at important Parisian musical institutions, composer, and music teacher.

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Émile Bienaimé

Paul Émile Bienaimé (6 July 1802 – 17 January 1869) was a 19th-century French composer.

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Étienne Gosse

Étienne Gosse (Bordeaux, 1773 – Toulon, 21 February 1834) was an 18th–19th-century French playwright, chansonnier, and journalist.

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Étienne-François Gebauer

Étienne-François Gebauer (7 March 1776 – 1823) was a French composer and flautist.

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Études (Chopin)

The Études by Frédéric Chopin are three sets of études (solo studies) for the piano published during the 1830s.

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Bagatelle sans tonalité

Bagatelle sans tonalité ("Bagatelle without tonality", S.216a) is a piece for solo piano written by Franz Liszt in 1885.

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Ballet Comique de la Reine

The Ballet Comique de la Reine (at the time spelled Balet comique de la Royne) was an elaborate court spectacle performed on October 15, 1581, during the reign of Henry III of France, in the large hall of the Hôtel de Bourbon, adjacent to the Louvre Palace in Paris.

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Baritenor

Baritenor (also rendered in English language sources as bari-tenor or baritenore) is a portmanteau (blend) of the words "baritone" and "tenor".

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Bernard Jumentier

Bernard Jumentier, (24 March 1749 – 7 December 1829) was a French composer of classical and sacred music as well as maître de chapelle.

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Berthold Tours

Berthold Tours (Rotterdam, Dec 17, 1838 – London, Mar 11, 1897) was a Dutch-born English violinist, composer and music editor.

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Brook Taylor

Brook Taylor (18 August 1685 – 29 December 1731) was an English mathematician who is best known for Taylor's theorem and the Taylor series.

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Carlo Negrini

Carlo Negrini (24 June 1826 in Piacenza – 14 March 1865 in Naples) was an Italian spinto tenor and creator of Gabriele Adorno in Verdi’s opera Simon Boccanegra.

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Casimir Gide

Casimir Gide (4 July 1804 – 18 February 1868) was a 19th-century French composer, bookseller as well as prints and maps editor.

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Casimir von Blumenthal

Casimir von Blumenthal (August 1787 in Brussels – 22 July 1849 in Lausanne), was an Austrian violinist, composer and conductor who worked in Switzerland.

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Castil-Blaze

François-Henri-Joseph Blaze, known as Castil-Blaze (1 December 1784 – 11 December 1857), was a French musicologist, music critic, composer, and music editor.

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Cécile Mézeray

Cécile Mézéray was a French soprano active in France and Belgium in the mid nineteenth century.

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Charles Baudiot

Charles-Nicolas Baudiot (29 March 1773 – 26 September 1849) was a French classical cellist and composer.

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Charles Borremans

Charles Borremans (25 April 1769 – 17 July 1827), was a violinist and conductor at the Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie in Belgium from 1804 to 1825.

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Charles-Henri de Blainville

Charles-Henri de Blainville (1711–1769) was a French composer, cellist, pedagogue and theorician.

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Charles-Marie Widor

Charles-Marie Jean Albert Widor (21 February 1844 – 12 March 1937) was a French organist, composer and teacher, most notable for his ten organ symphonies.

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Charles-Valentin Alkan

Charles-Valentin Alkan (30 November 1813 – 29 March 1888) was a French-Jewish composer and virtuoso pianist.

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Chevalier de Saint-Georges

Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges (December 25, 1745 – June 10, 1799) was a champion fencer, classical composer, virtuoso violinist, and conductor of the leading symphony orchestra in Paris.

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Chronological list of Belgian classical composers

No description.

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Claude-Jean-François Despréaux

Claude-Jean-François Despréaux was a French musician and revolutionary, born in the 1740s and died in Paris on 11 August 1794.

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Clavier-Übung III

The Clavier-Übung III, sometimes referred to as the German Organ Mass, is a collection of compositions for organ by Johann Sebastian Bach, started in 1735–36 and published in 1739.

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Clément Loret

Clément Loret (10 October 1833 – 14 February 1909) was an organist, music educator, and composer of Belgian origin, French naturalized.

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Conservatoire de Paris

The Conservatoire de Paris (English: Paris Conservatory) is a college of music and dance founded in 1795 associated with PSL Research University.

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Cornélie Falcon

Cornélie Falcon (28 January 1814 – 25 February 1897) was a French soprano who sang at the Opéra in Paris.

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Cultural depictions of Mary, Queen of Scots

Mary, Queen of Scots, has inspired artistic and cultural works for more than four centuries.

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Dominant (music)

In music, the dominant is the fifth scale degree of the diatonic scale, called "dominant" because it is next in importance to the tonic, and a dominant chord is any chord built upon that pitch, using the notes of the same diatonic scale.

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Edmond de Coussemaker

Charles Edmond Henri de Coussemaker, known as Edmond de Coussemaker, born on 19 April 1805 in Belle, died on 10 January 1876 in Bourbourg, was a schooled jurist.

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Egidius Aerts

Egidius Aerts (1822–1853) was a Belgian flautist and composer.

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Ermanno Picchi

Ermanno Picchi (7 June 1811 – 18 April 1856) was an Italian composer, pedagogue and music critic who played an active role in the musical life of Florence from 1836 until his early death in 1856.

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Ernest Grosjean

Ernest Grosjean (18 December 1844 – 28 December 1936) was a French organist and composer.

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Ester Mombelli

Maria Ester Mombelli (1792 – after 1827) was an Italian opera singer particularly known for her performances in operas by Rossini and Donizetti.

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Eugène Godecharle

Eugène-Charles-Jean Godecharle (bapt. 15 January 1742 – 26 June 1798) was a Belgian violinist and composer.

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Eugène Ortolan

Eugène Ortolan (1 April 1824, Paris – 11 May 1891, Paris) was a 19th-century French jurist, diplomat and composer.

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Félicien David

Félicien-César David (13 April 1810 – 29 August 1876) was a French composer.

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Federico Consolo

Federico Consolo (April 4, 1841 – December 14, 1906) was an Italian violinist and composer.

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Ferdinand Hérold

Louis Joseph Ferdinand Hérold (28 January 1791 – 19 January 1833), better known as Ferdinand Hérold, was a French operatic composer of Alsatian descent who also wrote many pieces for the piano, orchestra, and the ballet.

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Ferdinando Giorgetti

Ferdinando Giorgetti (23 June 1796 in Florence, Italy – 23 March 1867 in Florence, ItalyGiorgetti, Ferdinando, in Dizionario enciclopedico universale della musica e dei musicisti, edited Alberto Basso, serie II: Le biografie, vol. 3: FRA-JA, Torino, UTET, 1986, p. 210.) was a composer, violinist, educator and Italian publicist.

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Fernando Sor

Fernando Sor or Josep Ferran Sorts i Muntades (baptized 14 February 1778 – died 10 July 1839) was a Spanish classical guitarist and composer.

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François Cupis de Renoussard

François Cupis de Renoussard Seigneur de Renoussard, called le cadet (10 November 1732 – 13 October 1808) was an 18th-century classical French composer, cellist and music educator.

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François Habeneck

François Antoine Habeneck (22 January 1781 – 8 February 1849) was a French classical violinist and conductor.

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François Lays

François Lay, better known under the stage name Lays (14 February 1758 – 30 March 1831), was a French baritone and tenor opera singer.

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François Sudre (1787–1862)

Jean-François Sudre (15 August 1787 – 3 October 1862) was a violinist, composer and music teacher who invented a musical language called la Langue musicale universelle or Solrésol.

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François Wartel

Pierre-François Wartel, (born Versailles, 3 April 1806; died Paris 3 August 1882) was a French tenor and music educator.

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François-Joseph

François-Joseph is a given name, and may refer to.

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Francesco Durante

Francesco Durante (31 March 1684 – 30 September 1755) was a Neapolitan composer.

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Frantz Jehin-Prume

Frantz Jehin-Prume (18 April 1839 – 29 May 1899) was a Canadian violinist, composer, and music educator of Belgian birth.

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Frédéric Blasius

Frédéric Blasius (24 April 1758, in Lauterbourg – 1829, in Versailles) was a French violinist, clarinetist, conductor, and composer.

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Frédéric Chopin

Frédéric François Chopin (1 March 181017 October 1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist of the Romantic era who wrote primarily for solo piano.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt

Friedrich Wilhelm Opelt (9 June 1794 – 22 September 1863) was a musicologist, a mathematician, and an astronomer.

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George Alexander Osborne

George Alexander Osborne (24 September 1806 – 16 November 1893) was an Irish composer and pianist.

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George Onslow (composer)

André George(s) Louis Onslow (27 July 1784 – 3 October 1853) was a French composer of English descent.

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Giacomo Meyerbeer

Giacomo Meyerbeer (born Jacob Liebmann Beer; 5 September 1791 – 2 May 1864) was a German opera composer of Jewish birth who has been described as perhaps the most successful stage composer of the nineteenth century.

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Gioacchino Conti

Gioacchino Conti (28 February 1714 – 25 October 1761), best known as Gizziello, was an Italian soprano castrato opera singer.

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Giovanni Tadolini

Giovanni Tadolini (18 October 1789 – 29 November 1872) was an Italian composer, conductor and singing instructor, who enjoyed a career that alternated between Bologna and Paris.

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Girard de Beaulieu

Girard de Beaulieu, better known by the incorrectly recorded name Lambert de Beaulieu (? – after 1587) was a French bass singer, instrumentalist, and composer.

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Girolamo Bartei

Girolamo Bartei (c. 1570 - c. 1618) was an Italian composer of sacred music in the early Baroque.

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Giulio Fiesco

Giulio Fiesco (possibly born ?1519, fl. 1550–1570) was an Italian composer of the Renaissance, active in Ferrara, known for his madrigals.

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Giuseppe Cambini

Giuseppe Maria Gioacchino Cambini (Livorno, 13 February? 1746Netherlands? 1810s? or Paris? 1825?) was an Italian composer and violinist.

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Gottfried Keller (musician)

Gottfried Keller (died 1704) was a German keyboard player and composer in England, at least for the last decade of his life, where he was known as Godfrey Keller.

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Guillaume André Villoteau

Guillaume André Villoteau (19 Septembrer 1759 in Bellême – 27 April 1839 in Tours) was a French musicologist.

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Guillaume Du Fay

Guillaume Du Fay (also Dufay, Du Fayt; 5 August, c. 1397; accessed June 23, 2015. – 27 November 1474) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the early Renaissance.

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Guillaume-Lebrecht Petzold

Guillaume-Lebrecht Petzold was a piano maker in Paris in the early 19th century.

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Guillermo Morphy

Guillermo Morphy y Ferríz de Guzmán, best known as Conde Morphy or Count Morphy (February 29, 1836 – August 27, 1899 in Madrid) was a Spanish aristocrat, music critic, musicologist, historian, educator, composer and politician.

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Gustave Chouquet

Gustave Chouquet (16 April 1819 – 30 January 1886)Grove & Charlton 2001.

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Gustave Vogt

Gustave Vogt (18 March 1781 – 20 May 1870) was a French oboist and composer.

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Haydn Quartets (Mozart)

The "Haydn" Quartets by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are a set of six string quartets published in 1785 in Vienna as his Op.

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Hector Berlioz

Louis-Hector Berlioz; 11 December 1803 – 8 March 1869) was a French Romantic composer, best known for his compositions Symphonie fantastique, Harold en Italie, Roméo et Juliette, Grande messe des morts (Requiem), L'Enfance du Christ, Benvenuto Cellini, La Damnation de Faust, and Les Troyens. Berlioz made significant contributions to the modern orchestra with his Treatise on Instrumentation. He specified huge orchestral forces for some of his works, and conducted several concerts with more than 1,000 musicians. He also composed around 50 compositions for voice, accompanied by piano or orchestra. His influence was critical for the further development of Romanticism, especially in composers like Richard Wagner, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Franz Liszt, Richard Strauss, and Gustav Mahler.

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Henri Bertini

Henri Jérôme Bertini (28 October 1798 – 30 September 1876) was a French classical composer and pianist.

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Henri Desmarets

Henri Desmarets (February 1661 – 7 September 1741) was a French composer of the Baroque period primarily known for his stage works, although he also composed sacred music as well as secular cantatas, songs and instrumental works.

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Henri Herz

Henri Herz (6 January 1803 – 5 January 1888) was a pianist and composer, Austrian by birth and French by domicile.

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Henri Larrivée

Henri Larrivée (9 January 1737 – 7 August 1802) was a French opera singer.

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Henri Valentino

Henri Valentino (14 October 1785 – 28 January 1865) was a French conductor and violinist.

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Henri-Étienne Dérivis

Henri-Étienne Dérivis (2 August 1780 – 1 February 1856) was a French operatic bass.

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Henry Bredemers

Henry (Henri, Hendrik) Bredemers (Bredeniers) (c. 1472 – May 20, 1522) was a South Netherlandish organist and music teacher.

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Henry Verdhurdt

Camille Henry Joseph Verdhurdt was a 19th-century Belgian baritone, singing teacher and theatre director.

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Honoré Langlé

Honoré François Marie Langlé (1741–1807) was a French theorist of music of Monegasque origin, author of a Traité d'harmonie et de modulation (Paris: Boyer, 1795).

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Ignaz Pleyel

Ignace Joseph Pleyel (18 June 1757 – 14 November 1831) was an Austrian-born French composer and piano builder of the Classical period.

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Isidore Bertheaume

Isidore (or Julien) Bertheaume (ca. 1752 – 20 March 1802) was a French classical composer and violinist.

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Jacques-Michel Hurel de Lamare

Jacques-Michel Hurel de Lamare (1 May 1772 – 27 March 1823) was a noted French cellist.

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Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens

Jacques-Nicolas (Jaak-Nicolaas) Lemmens (3 January 1823 – 30 January 1881), was an organist, music teacher, and composer for his instrument.

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Jean Ancot Jnr

Jean Ancot (6 July 1799 – 5 June 1829) was a Belgian violinist, pianist and composer.

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Jean de Bournonville

Jean de Bournonville was a French composer active in the first third of the 17th century, born in Noyon around 1585 and died in Paris on 27 May 1632.

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Jean-Delphin Alard

Jean-Delphin Alard (8 March 181522 February 1888) was a French violinist, composer, and teacher.

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Jean-Georges Sieber

Jean-Georges Sieber (2 February 1738 in Reiterswiesen, Bad Kissingen – 13 January 1822 in Paris) was a German born French musician and music publisher.

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Jean-Henri Levasseur

Jean-Henri Levasseur, called "the younger" (29 May 1764 in Beaumont-sur-Oise – 1823 in Paris) was a French cellist, composer and music educator.

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Jean-Jacques-Joseph Debillemont

Jean-Jacques-Joseph Debillemont (12 December 1824, Dijon – 14 February 1879, Paris), was a 19th-century French musician, both a composer, music critic, and conductor who devoted himself mainly to incidental music (operettas and ballets).

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Jean-Paul-Égide Martini

Jean-Paul-Égide Martini, (31 August 1741 – 14 February 1816) was a composer of classical music.

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Jean-Toussaint Merle

Jean-Toussaint Merle (10 June 1789 – 27 February 1852) was a French playwright and journalist.

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Jean-Vital Jammes

Jean-Vital Jammes (known by the stage name Ismaël) (28 April 1825 – 13 June 1893)Birth name and life dates are from Pierre (1900).

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Jeremiah Clarke

Jeremiah Clarke (c. 1674 – 1 December 1707) was an English baroque composer and organist, best known for his ''Trumpet Voluntary,'' a popular piece often played at wedding ceremonies.

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Jesús de Monasterio

Jesús de Monasterio y Agüeros (b Potes, Cantabria, 21 March 1836; d Casar de Periedo, 28 Sept 1903) was a Spanish violinist, composer, conductor and teacher.

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Johann Gottfried Arnold

Johann Gottfried Arnold (1773-1806) was a German cellist and composer.

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Johann Stadlmayr

Johann Stadlmayr (or Stadelmayer) (born perhaps around 1580 probably in Freising; died 1648 in Innsbruck) was a composer and long serving Hofkapellmeister to the Princes of Tirol.

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Johannes Cotto

Johannes Cotto (John Cotton, Johannes Afflighemensis) (c. 1100) was a music theorist, possibly of English origin, most likely working in southern Germany or Switzerland.

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John Ella

John Ella (1802–1888) was an English violinist and director of concerts.

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John Spencer Smith

John Spencer Smith FRS (11 September 1769 – 5 June 1845) was a British diplomat, politician and writer.

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Joséphine Fodor

Joséphine Fodor (13 October 1789 or in 1793 – 10 August 1870), also known under the name Joséphine Fodor-Mainvielle, was a French 19th-century lyrical artist (soprano).

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Josef Gusikov

Michal Josef Gusikov (born Yehiel-Michiel, also spelt Guzikow or Gusikow) (2 September 1806 – 21 October 1837) was a klezmer who gave the first performances of klezmer music to West European concert audiences on his 'wood and straw instrument'.

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Joseph Christoph Kessler

Joseph Christoph Kessler (26 August 180014 January 1872), also seen as Kötzler, was a German pianist and composer who was active mostly in the Austrian Empire.

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Joseph d'Ortigue

Joseph Louis d'Ortigue (22 May 1802 – 20 November 1866) was a French musicologist and critic.

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Joseph Hollman

Joseph Hollman (26 October 1852 – 31 December 1927), was a Dutch cellist.

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Joseph von Blumenthal

Joseph von Blumenthal, also known as Joseph de Blumenthal (1 November 1782 – 9 May 1850), was an Austrian violinist and violist, influential pedagogue and composer.

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Joseph-François Garnier

Joseph-François Garnier (18 June 1755 - 31 March 1825) was a French oboist and composer.

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Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga

Juan Crisóstomo Jacobo Antonio de Arriaga y Balzola (January 27, 1806January 17, 1826) was a Spanish Basque composer.

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Jules Duprato

Jules Laurent Anacharsis Duprato (20 August 1827 – 20 May 1892) was a 19th-century French composer.

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Jules Gallay

Jules Gallay (4 September 1822 – 3 September 1897) was a French lawyer and music historian.

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Jules Garcin

Jules Auguste Garcin (11 July 1830 – 10 October 1896) was a French violinist, conductor and composer of the 19th century.

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Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges

Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges (7 November 1799 – 23 December 1875), French playwright, was born and died in Paris.

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Julius Eichberg

Julius Eichberg (June 13, 1824 – January 19, 1893) was a German-born composer, musical director and educator who worked mostly in Boston, Massachusetts.

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L'Africaine

L'Africaine (The African Woman) is a grand opera in five acts, the last work of the composer Giacomo Meyerbeer.

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L'éclair

L'éclair (The Lightning Flash) is an opéra comique in 3 acts by Fromental Halévy to a libretto by Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges.

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La muette de Portici

La muette de Portici (The Dumb Girl of Portici, or The Mute Girl of Portici), also called Masaniello in some versions, is an opera in five acts by Daniel Auber, with a libretto by Germain Delavigne, revised by Eugène Scribe.

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Late works of Franz Liszt

The radical change Franz Liszt's compositional style underwent in the last 20 years of his life was unprecedented in Western classical music.

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Léon Le Cieux

Léon Le Cieux (12 May 1821 – 15 February 1873) was a French classical violinist.

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Le chalet

is an opéra comique in one act by Adolphe Adam to a French libretto by Eugène Scribe and Mélesville after the singspiel by Goethe.

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Le cheval de bronze

Le cheval de bronze (The Bronze Horse) is an opéra comique by the French composer Daniel Auber, first performed on 23 March 1835 by the Opéra-Comique at the Salle de la Bourse in Paris.

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Le Ménestrel

Le Ménestrel (The Minstrel) was an influential French music journal published weekly from 1833 until 1940.

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Le postillon de Lonjumeau

Le postillon de Lonjumeau (The Postillion of Lonjumeau) is an opéra-comique in three acts by Adolphe Adam to a French libretto by 'Adolphe de Leuven' and 'Brunswick' (pen names of Adolphe von Ribbing and Léon Lévy).

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Le pré aux clercs

Le pré aux clercs (The Clerks' Meadow) is an opéra comique in three acts by Ferdinand Hérold with a libretto by François-Antoine-Eugène de Planard based on Prosper Mérimée's Chronique du temps de Charles IX of 1829.

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Leading-tone

In music theory, a leading-note (also subsemitone, and called the leading-tone in the US) is a note or pitch which resolves or "leads" to a note one semitone higher or lower, being a lower and upper leading-tone, respectively.

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Life of Franz Liszt

Franz Liszt (October 22, 1811July 31, 1886) was a prolific 19th-century Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor, music teacher, arranger, organist, philanthropist, author, nationalist and a Franciscan tertiary.

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List of 19th-century encyclopedias

No description.

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List of Belgian classical composers

This is a list of Belgian classical composers, alphabetically sorted by surname, then by other names.

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List of Belgians

This is a list of notable Belgian people who either.

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List of composers by name

This is a list of composers by name, alphabetically sorted by surname, then by other names.

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List of composers by nationality

The following is a list of composers by nationality.

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List of encyclopedias by date

This is a list of encyclopedias, arranged by time period.

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List of former teachers at the Conservatoire de Paris

This is a partial list of former teachers at the Conservatoire de Paris.

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List of music students by teacher: C to F

This is part of a list of students of music, organized by teacher.

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List of music theorists

This is a list of music theorists arranged in chronological order.

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List of musicologists

A musicologist is someone who studies music (see musicology).

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List of operas by Meyerbeer

The following is a list of operas by Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864).

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List of people from Brussels

This is a list of notable people from Brussels.

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List of symphonies in E-flat major

This is a list of symphonies in E-flat major written by notable composers.

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List of symphony composers

This is a list of composers who have written symphonies, listed in chronological order by year of birth, alphabetical within year.

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Louis Picquot

Louis Picquot (1804 – 1870) was a 19th-century French musicographer, author of the first biography of Luigi Boccherini and a catag of his works.

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Louis Théodore Gouvy

Louis Théodore Gouvy (July 3, 1819April 21, 1898) was a French/German composer.

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Louis-Armand Chardin

Louis-Armand Chardin (1755 – 1 October 1793) was an 18th-century French composer.

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Louis-Charles-Joseph Rey

Louis-Charles-Joseph Rey (26 October 1738 in Lauzerte – 12 May 1811 in Paris) was a French classical cellist, the brother of Jean-Baptiste Rey.

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Louise Bertin

Louise-Angélique Bertin (Les Roches, Essonne, 15 January 1805Paris, 26 April 1877) was a French composer and poet.

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Louise Farrenc

Louise Farrenc (31 May 1804 – 15 September 1875) was a French composer, virtuoso pianist and teacher.

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Luigi Agnesi

Luigi Agnesi (17 July 1833 – 2 February 1875) was a Belgian operatic bass-baritone, conductor and composer.

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Luigi Ferdinando Casamorata

Luigi Ferdinando Casamorata (Würzburg, 15 May 1807 – Florence, 24 September 1881) was a composer and Italian music critic.

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Maistre Jhan

Maistre Jhan (also Jehan, Jan, Ihan) (c. 1485 – October 1538) was a French composer of the Renaissance, active for most of his career in Ferrara, Italy.

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Manuel García (tenor)

Manuel del Pópulo Vicente Rodriguez García (also known as Manuel García the Senior; 21 January 1775 – 10 June 1832) was a Spanish opera singer, composer, impresario, and singing teacher.

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Maria Caterina Negri

Maria Caterina Negri (28 September 1704 – after 1744) was an Italian contralto who created numerous roles in 18th-century operas, including many by George Frideric Handel.

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Maria Stuarda

Maria Stuarda (Mary Stuart) is a tragic opera (tragedia lirica), in two acts, by Gaetano Donizetti, to a libretto by Giuseppe Bardari, based on Andrea Maffei's translation of Friedrich Schiller's 1800 play Maria Stuart.

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Marie Cabel

Marie Cabel (31 January 1827 – 23 May 1885) was a Belgian coloratura soprano.

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Marie Pleyel

Marie Pleyel (born Marie-Félicité-Denise Moke; 4 July or 4 September 1811 in Paris – 30 March 1875 in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, near Brussels) was a Belgian concert pianist.

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Marie Stuart (opera)

Marie Stuart is a grand opera in five acts composed by Louis Niedermeyer to a libretto by Théodor Anne loosely based on events in the life of Mary, Queen of Scots.

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Marius Gueit

Marius André Gueit (2 September 1808 in Hyères – 1865 in Paris) was a 19th-century French organist, cellist and composer.

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Mark Delpriora

Mark Delpriora (born 1959) is an American classical guitarist and composer.

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Martin Pierre d'Alvimare

Martin Pierre d'Alvimare du Briou (18 September 1772 – 3 June 1839), sometimes spelled Dalvimare, was a French musician, harpist and composer.

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Maurice Schlesinger

Moritz Adolf Schlesinger (30 October 1798 in Berlin - 25 February 1871 in Baden-Baden), generally known during his French career as Maurice Schlesinger, was a German music editor.

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Michel Paul Guy de Chabanon

Michel-Paul Guy de Chabanon (1730, Saint-Domingue – 1792, Paris) was a violinist, composer and writer on music theory and French literature.

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Missa Gaudeamus

The Missa Gaudeamus is a musical setting of the Ordinary of the Mass by Franco-Flemish composer Josquin des Prez, probably composed in the early or middle 1480s, and published in 1502.

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Mons

Mons (Bergen; Mont; Mont) is a Walloon city and municipality, and the capital of the Belgian province of Hainaut.

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Music criticism

The Oxford Companion to Music defines music criticism as 'the intellectual activity of formulating judgements on the value and degree of excellence of individual works of music, or whole groups or genres'.

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Musical historicism

Musical historicism signifies the use of historical materials, structures, styles, techniques, media, conceptual content, etc., whether by a single composer or those associated with a particular school, movement, or period.

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Musical hoax

A musical hoax (also musical forgery and musical mystification) is a piece of music composed by an individual or group who intentionally misattribute it to someone else.

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Musical Instrument Museum (Brussels)

The Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) (Musée des instruments de musique, Muziekinstrumentenmuseum) is a music museum in central Brussels, Belgium.

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Nestor Roqueplan

Louis-Victor-Nestor Roqueplan (16 September 1805 – 24 April 1870) was a French writer, journalist, and theatre director.

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Nicolas Gigault

Nicolas Gigault (ca. 1627 – 20 August 1707) was a French Baroque organist and composer.

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Nicolas Roze

Nicolas Roze (17 January 1745, Mercurey - 30 September 1819, Saint-Mandé) was a French composer and musicologist.

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Nicolas Séjan

Nicolas Séjan (17 March 1745 – 16 March 1819) was a French composer and organist, from a family allied to the Forqueray.

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Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux

Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux (1745–1797) was a French composer, born in Paris.

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Olimpie

Olimpie (also spelled Olympie) is an opera in three acts by Gaspare Spontini.

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Opera in Scotland

Scottish opera is a subgenre of Scottish music.

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Outline of forgery

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to forgery: Forgery – process of making, adapting, or imitating objects, statistics, or documents with the intent to deceive.

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Paolo Animuccia

Paolo Animuccia (died 1563) was a Renaissance Italian composer.

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Paul Lacombe

Paul Lacombe (11 July 1837 – 4 June 1927) was a Languedocien (French) composer and pianist.

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Paul Wranitzky

Pavel Vranický, later Germanized as Paul Wranitzky (30 December 1756 – 29 September 1808), was a Moravian classical composer.

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Pedro Carrera y Lanchares

Fray Pedro Carrera y Lanchares (1760s - c.1815) was a Spanish Carmelite friar, organist and composer.

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Peter Benoit

Peter Benoit (17 August 18348 March 1901), was a Flemish composer of Belgian nationality.

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Piano Concerto No. 1 (Chopin)

The Piano Concerto No.

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Piano four hands

Piano four hands (À quatre mains, Zu vier Händen, Vierhändig, a quattro mani) is a type of piano duet in which the two players play on a single piano.

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Pierre Gaveaux

Pierre Gaveaux (9 October 1761 – 5 February 1825) was a French operatic tenor and composer, notable for creating the role of Jason in Cherubini's Médée and for composing Leonore ou l'amour conjugal, the first operatic version of the story that later found fame as Fidelio.

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Pierre Menault

Pierre-Richard Menault (1642–1694) was a French Baroque composer.

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Pierre Passereau

Pierre Passereau (fl. 1509 – 1547) was a French composer of the Renaissance.

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Pierre-François Levasseur

Pierre-François Levasseur, called "the older" (born 11 March 1753) in Abbeville, was a French classical cellist.

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Pierre-François-Joseph Robert

Pierre-François-Joseph Robert (21 January 1763 – 13 April 1826) was a French lawyer, politician and professor of public law at the société philosophique, journalist.

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Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Nougaret

Pierre-Jean-Baptiste Nougaret (16 December 1742, La Rochelle – 27 June 1823, Paris) was an 18th–19th-century French man of letters.

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Pierre-Louis Dietsch

Pierre-Louis-Philippe Dietsch (also Dietch, Dietzch, Dietz; 17 March 1808 – 20 February 1865) was a French composer and conductor,Cooper & Millington 1992.

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Poldowski

Poldowski was the professional pseudonym of a Belgian-born British composer and pianist born Régine Wieniawski (16 May 187928 January 1932), daughter of the Polish violinist and composer Henryk Wieniawski.

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Revue et gazette musicale de Paris

The was a weekly musical review founded in 1827 by the Belgian musicologist, teacher and composer François-Joseph Fétis, then working as professor of counterpoint and fugue at the Conservatoire de Paris.

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Robert le diable

Robert le diable (Robert the Devil) is an opera in five acts composed by Giacomo Meyerbeer from a libretto written by Eugène Scribe and Germain Delavigne.

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Robert Wornum

Robert Wornum (1780–1852) was a piano maker working in London during the first half of the 19th century.

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Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium

The Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium (in Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts de Belgique) is the independent learned society of science and arts of the French Community of Belgium.

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Royal Conservatory of Brussels

Starting its activities in 1813, the Royal Conservatory of Brussels (French: Conservatoire royal de Bruxelles, Dutch: Koninklijk Muziekconservatorium) received its official name in 1832.

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Royal Library of Belgium

The Royal Library of Belgium (Koninklijke Bibliotheek van België in Dutch, Bibliothèque royale de Belgique in French, abbreviated KBR and sometimes nicknamed Albertina in Dutch and Albertine in French) is one of the most important cultural institutions in Belgium.

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Saint Nicholas' Church, Ghent

St.

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Saint Waltrude Collegiate Church

Saint Waltrude Collegiate Church is a Catholic church, named in honour of Saint Waltrude of Mons.

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Sémiramis (Catel)

Sémiramis is an opera by the composer Charles-Simon Catel.

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Selika Lazevski

Selika Lazevski was a black amazone in ''Belle Époque'' Paris.

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Sigismond Thalberg

Sigismond Thalberg (8 January 1812 – 27 April 1871) was a composer and one of the most famous virtuoso pianists of the 19th century.

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Simon Molitor

(Alois Franz) Simon (Joseph) Molitor (3 November 1766 – 21 February 1848) was a German-born Austrian composer, guitarist, violinist and music historian – an influential figure both in early 19th-century guitar music and in the development of music history as a subdiscipline of musicology.

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Six Sonatas for Violin and Harpsichord, BWV 1014–1019

The six sonatas for violin and obbligato harpsichord BWV 1014–1019 by Johann Sebastian Bach are works in trio sonata form, with the two upper parts in the harpsichord and violin over a bass line supplied by the harpsichord and an optional viola da gamba.

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Sophie Gail

Edmee Sophie Gail née Garre (28 August 1775 – 24 July 1819) was a French singer and composer.

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Stephen Heller

---- Stephen Heller (Heller István (15 May 1813 (first edition) gives his date of birth as May 15, 181514 January 1888) was a Hungarian pianist, teacher and composer whose career spanned the period from Schumann to Bizet, and was an influence for later Romantic composers.

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Stradella (Niedermeyer)

Stradella is a Grand Opera in five acts by Louis Niedermeyer to a libretto by Emile Deschamps and Émilien Pacini.

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Teodulo Mabellini

Teodulo Mabellini (2 April 1817 – 10 March 1897) was an Italian composer.

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Théâtre des Folies-Marigny

The Théâtre des Folies-Marigny, a former Parisian theatre with a capacity of only 300 spectators, was built in 1848 by the City of Paris for a magician named Lacaze and was originally known as the Salle Lacaze.

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Théâtre Lyrique

The Théâtre Lyrique was one of four opera companies performing in Paris during the middle of the 19th century (the other three being the Opéra, the Opéra-Comique, and the Théâtre-Italien).

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Thomas Campion

Thomas Campion (sometimes Campian; 12 February 1567 – 1 March 1620) was an English composer, poet, and physician.

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Thomas Helmore

Thomas Helmore (7 May 1811 in Kidderminster – 6 July 1890 in Westminster) was a choirmaster, writer about singing and author and editor of hymns and carols.

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Tonality

Tonality is the arrangement of pitches and/or chords of a musical work in a hierarchy of perceived relations, stabilities, attractions and directionality.

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Trois nouvelles études

Frédéric Chopin wrote his Trois nouvelles études ("three new studies") for piano in 1839, as a contribution to "Méthode des méthodes de piano", a piano instruction book by Ignaz Moscheles and François-Joseph Fétis.

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Victor Frédéric Verrimst

Victor Frédéric Verrimst (29 November 1825 in Paris – 16 January 1893 in Houilles) was a French double-bassist and composer.

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Victorin de Joncières

Félix-Ludger Rossignol, known as Victorin de Joncières (12 April 1839 – 26 October 1903), was a French composer and music critic.

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Vincenzo Righini

Vincenzo Maria Righini (22 January 1756 – 19 August 1812) was an Italian composer, singer and kapellmeister.

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Wellington Guernsey

Wellington Guernsey (correct name: William Greville Hudson Guernsey) (8 June 1817 – 13 November 1885) was an Irish composer, poet, and military man.

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Wilhelm von Lenz

Wilhelm von Lenz (born 20 May 1809 in Riga - died 7 January 1883 in Saint Petersburg) was a Baltic German Russian official and writer.

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William Cusins

Sir William George Cusins (14 October 183331 August 1893) was an English pianist, violinist, organist, conductor and composer.

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William Tell (opera)

Guillaume Tell (William Tell, Guglielmo Tell) is a French-language opera in four acts by Italian composer Gioachino Rossini to a libretto by Victor-Joseph Étienne de Jouy and L. F. Bis, based on Friedrich Schiller's play William Tell which drew on the William Tell legend.

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Xavier Boisselot

Dominique-François-Xavier Boisselot (Montpellier, 3 December 1811 — Paris, 8 April 1893) was a French composer and musical-instrument manufacturer.

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Zampa

Zampa, ou La fiancée de marbre (Zampa, or the Marble Bride) is an opéra comique in three acts by French composer Louis Joseph Ferdinand Hérold.

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1784 in music

No description.

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1837 in music

This article is about music-related events in 1837.

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1871 in music

This article is about music-related events in 1871.

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7-limit tuning

7-limit or septimal tunings and intervals are musical instrument tunings that have a limit of seven: the largest prime factor contained in the interval ratios between pitches is seven.

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Redirects here:

Biographie universelle des musiciens, F.-J. Fétis, Fetis, Francois Fetis, Francois Joseph Fetis, Francois Joseph Fétis, Francois-Joseph Fetis, Francois-Joseph Fétis, François Joseph Fetis, François Joseph Fétis, François-Joseph Fetis, Fétis, Fétis, F.-J., Fétis, François-Joseph.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/François-Joseph_Fétis

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