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First name: Johann B.
Last name: Vanhal
Dates: 1739-1813
Category: Quartet
Nationality: Czech
Opus name: Opus 40,3 in Bes
Publisher: Doblinger
Peculiarities: to buy: http://www.doblinger-musikverlag.at/dyn/kataloge/Doblinger_A-Z_2010.pdf; Doblinger www.broekmans.nl 176201
Information: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Johann Baptist Vanhal (May 12, 1739-August 20, 1813) was an important classical music composer born in Nechanice, Bohemia to a Czech peasant family. Vanhal received his early training from a local musician. From these humble beginnings he was able to earn a living as a village organist and choirmaster. The Countess Schaffgotsch, who heard him playing the violin, took him to Vienna in 1760, where she arranged lessons in composition with Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf. Further patronage helped him to travel and gain further knowledge of music and by the age of 35, he was moving in exalted musical company: it is reported he played quartets with Haydn, Mozart, and Dittersdorf.. Vanhal tailored his output to economic realities of the day and ceased writing symphonies in the late-1770s. He wrote three operas: Il Demofoonte (1770), Il trionfo di Clelia (1770), and The Princess of Tarento. In the 1770s, Vanhal met the contrabassist Johannes Matthias Sperger and wrote a double bass concerto for him.[citation. The English music historian Charles Burney visited Vanhal in 1772. Mozart performed Vanhal's Violin Concerto in B flat in Augsburg in 1777. Vanhal was reported to have suffered from an unspecified nervous disorder, which eventually went away, but which gave rise to the opinion held by Burney and others that the quality of Vanhal's compositions deteriorated with the disappearance of his condition. Scholars such as Paul Bryan find that "the quality and quantity of the serious works he [Vanhal] composed after 1770, ... belie that assertion."