Johann Joseph Vilsmayr

Johann Joseph Vilsmayr (1663 11 July 1722) was an Austrian violinist and composer. From 1 September 1689 he worked at Salzburg's Hofkapelle, where he almost certainly became a pupil of Heinrich Ignaz Biber, one of the best contemporary European violinists. Judging from the regular increases of his salary, Vilsmayr must have quickly attained a good reputation at the court. He kept the Salzburg position until his death on 11 July 1722.

Vilsmayr's only surviving music is a collection published in Salzburg in 1715, titled Artificiosus Concentus pro Camera. It contains six partitas à Violino Solo Con Basso bellè imitatea description that, until recently, was taken as "for solo violin and basso continuo". The bass part was presumed to be lost, however, scholar Pauline H. Nobes has recently demonstrated that the partitas were probably meant for violin solo, and Con Basso bellè imitate may refer to the polyphonic texture of the works.[1]

Notes

  1. Letzbor, Gunar. Liner notes to "Johann Joseph Vilsmayr - Artificiosus Concentus pro Camera. Gunar Letzbor (violin). Arcana/Westdeutscher Rundfunk Kõln, 2003. Catalogue number: Arcana A 328.


gollark: In time, all drives will experience death.
gollark: They are VERY GOOD on a server because they are MUCH FASTER FOR RANDOM ACCESS.
gollark: Not really. They are fairly reliable in practice. It is stupid to just hope your drive won't fail - KEEP BACKUPS.
gollark: SSDs are just really fast anyway, so just use those if you need ßpeed.
gollark: We get such intellegent and well-considered comments.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.