Marianne Martines (1744-1812) - Missa solemnis (1765)

Alles Gute zum Geburtstag Marianne Martines! 🎺🙏🏼 Composer: Marianne Martines (1744-1812) Work: Missa solemnis in D-Dur (1765) Performers: Katharina Spiеlmann (soprano); Nina Amοn (mezzosoprano); Felix Riеnth (tenor); Michael Krеis (bass); Chorgemeinschaft Kirchdοrf; Peter Lοοsli (conductor) Missa solemnis (1765) 1. Kyrie 0:00 2. Gloria 9:01 3. Credo 26:49 4. Sanctus 37:40 5. Benedictus 41:04 6. Agnus Dei 44:23 Painting: Anoniem (18th Century) - Allegory of music HD image: Further info: Listen free: No available --- Marianne (Maria Anna Katharina) von Martines [Martinez] (Vienna, 4 May 1744 - Vienna, 13 December 1812) Austrian composer, singer and keyboardist. She was the daughter of a Neapolitan who had come to Vienna as ‘gentiluomo’ to the papal nuncio. She spent her childhood under the educational guidance of Pietro Metastasio, a friend of the family who lived in the same house; she was taught singing, the piano and composition by Nicola Porpora and Jospeh Haydn, who were also living there, by Giuseppe Bonno and possibly by J.A. Hasse. As a child she had attracted attention at court with her beautiful voice and her keyboard playing, and in 1761 a mass by her was performed in the court church. She acknowledged in 1773, when she became an honorary member of the Bologna Accademia Filarmonica, that as a composer she took as her principal models Hasse, Jommelli and Galuppi. Not only did she possess a thorough understanding of imitation and fugue, but she also knew how to set words in the Baroque manner. Her predilection for coloratura passages, leaps over wide intervals and trills indicate that she herself must have been an excellent singer. In 1772 Burney praised her singing for all the typical virtues of the Italian school as well as for ‘touching expression’. Burney’s remark that her vocal works were ‘neither common, nor unnaturally new’ applies to her instrumental works as well. A typical composer of the early Classical period in Vienna, she wrote in the Italian style. Her works include four Masses, six motets, three litanies, numerous Psalms and other sacred works, two oratorios, three keyboard sonatas, a keyboard concerto, and a symphony, as well as songs.