Johann Klemm

Johann Klemm or Klemme (c. 1593–1660) was a German Baroque organist and composer.[1]

Klemm was a pupil of Heinrich Schütz and organist at the Dresden court.[2] As was normal for students to publish the works of their teachers, in 1647, together with Alexander Hering, he published Schütz's Symphoniae sacrae II.

Works, editions, recordings

  • German madrigals for four, five, and six voices (Freiburg, 1629)
  • Partitura seu tabulatura italica, a collection of 36 fugues in open score (Dresden, 1631).
gollark: overmoderating online communities bad too!
gollark: I mean, "free speech" in the general sense roughly just means "less censorship".
gollark: And yet that's something like half our traffic?
gollark: > anyway, free speech as i understand is just your right to speak out against the government, not to just spout random bullshitNo, not really. I mean, as a legal principle yes.
gollark: > free speech is saying "proof ?" to "hitler did nothing wrong" and not "no u", free speech has pros and consNo, free speech is just not silencing people who disagree with you, or who you disagree with.

References

  1. "Johann Klemm". Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  2. Daniel R. Melamed Bach Studies 2006 "Second, the Dresden composer and music publisher Johann Klemm remarked in the preface to his Partitura seu tabulatura italica, a collection of fugues notated in open score and published in 1631, that Heinrich Schütz taught ..."


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