Nicolas Hotman

Nicolas Hotman (also Autheman, Haultemant, Hautman, Otteman;[1] ca. 16101663) was a Baroque composer, who spent most of his career in France. He is believed to have been from Germany, but was probably born in Brussels. He came with his family to Paris around 1626, where he died in April of the year 1663.

Nicolas Hotmann, 1650

He was known to be an expert player of the lute, theorbo, and the viola da gamba, as well as the composer of a few surviving musical compositions. Hotman is sometimes referred to as the teacher of violist Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe.

Works

  • Suite de Monsieur Otteman
  • Airs à boire à 3 parties (Paris, 1664)
gollark: He breaks various cryptosystems using that and Shor's algorithm for naughtiness-niceness determination also.
gollark: Santa uses Grover's algorithm across a distributed elf system to optimize various computations.
gollark: * N = 1
gollark: Yes, according to Santa-based Santa evaluation.
gollark: He just gives himself very fast computers.

References

  1. Stuart Cheney (2001). "Hotman, Nicolas". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved June 4, 2016.


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