Johann Baptist Schenk
Johann Baptist Schenk (30 November 1753 – 29 December 1836) was an Austrian composer and teacher.
Schenk was born in Wiener Neustadt. While still a boy he composed songs, dances and symphonies, and became a proficient violinist and keyboard and wind instrument player. In 1773 he went to Vienna to study with Georg Christoph Wagenseil. Beginning in 1777 he was composing religious works for Saint Stephen's Cathedral. In the 1780s he became a prolific composer of incidental music for plays and singspiele. Mozart was a good friend of Schenk and Beethoven studied under him in 1793. He died in Vienna.
His best-known singspiel is Der Dorfbarbier, which premiered in 1796. His other compositions include numerous cantatas, ten symphonies, several concertos (including a well-known one for harp), and five string quartets. In around 1823, he composed a variation on a waltz by Anton Diabelli (D 718), being one of the 51 composers who contributed to Vaterländischer Künstlerverein.
Sources
[edit]- John Kucaba/Bertil H. van Boer. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, edited by Stanley Sadie (1992), ISBN 0-333-73432-7 and ISBN 1-56159-228-5
External links
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- 1753 births
- 1836 deaths
- 18th-century classical composers
- 18th-century Austrian male musicians
- 19th-century classical composers
- 18th-century Austrian people
- 19th-century Austrian people
- Austrian classical composers
- Austrian opera composers
- Austrian male opera composers
- Composers for harp
- People from Wiener Neustadt
- Musicians from Lower Austria
- Pupils of Georg Christoph Wagenseil
- 19th-century male musicians
- Austrian composer stubs