1790 in music
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Events
- January 21 – Mozart holds a rehearsal of his new opera Cosi fan Tutte in the presence of his friends Joseph Haydn and Michael Puchberg; it is premiered on January 26 at the Burgtheater in Vienna with libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte.
- September – The 'Four Great Anhui Troupes' bring Anhui opera, or what becomes called Huiju, to Beijing for the birthday of the Qianlong Emperor. This is effectively the birth of the Beijing Opera.
- September 28 – Death of music patron Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, following which his son disbands his orchestra and the players disperse.
- December 26 – Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven meet for the first time, in Bonn.[1]
- Georg Joseph Vogler brings his invention, the orchestrion, to London.
- August Duranowski becomes leader of the Brussels opera orchestra.
Opera
- Francesco Bianchi – La vendetta di Nino
- Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf – Der Teufel als Hydraulikus
- Étienne Méhul – Euphrosine et Corradin ou le Tyran corrigé
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Così fan tutte
- Giovanni Paisiello
- Nina (libretto by Giambattista Lorenzi)
- Zenobia in Palmira, R.1.81
- William Shield – Hartford Bridge
Classical music
- Ludwig van Beethoven – Cantata on the Death of Joseph II
- Bartolomeo Campagnoli – Flute Concertos Op. 3
- Muzio Clementi – Keyboard Sonata in F, WoO 3
- Johann Ladislaus Dussek – Piano Trio
- Felice Giardini – 6 Quartets, Op. 25
- Joseph Haydn – String Quartets, Op. 64, "Tost", Sonata Hob. XVI No. 49 in E-flat major
- Johann Nepomuk Hummel – Piano Quartet in D major
- Leopold Kozeluch – Clarinet Concerto in E-flat major
- Claus Schall – Concerto No. 4 for violin and orchestra in D major
- Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse – Piano Sonata No.5 in E major
- Paul Wranitzky – Symphony in C major, 'Hungarian'
Published popular music
- James Hook – "Rosy Hannah"
- Franz Xaver Partsch – 12 Lieder für das schöne Geschlecht, mit Melodien (Prague)
- The Apollonian Harmony, Vol.2 (London: Button Whitaker's Music Warehouse), including "Epitaph" by William Boyce
Methods and theory writings
- Johann Georg Albrechtsberger – Gründliche Anweisung zur Composition
Births
- February 11 – Ignaz Assmayer, composer (d. 1862)
- February 16 – Chretien Urhan, composer
- March 15 – Nicola Vaccai, composer
- July 23 – Anna Sofia Sevelin, alto
- October 10 – Georg Gerson, composer (d. 1825)
- October 17 – August Ferdinand Anacker, composer (d. 1854)
- October 30 – Karol Lipiński, violinist and composer (d. 1861)
- November 7 – Luigi Legnani, guitarist and composer (d. 1877)
- November 11 – Joseph Kreutzer, violinist, conductor and composer (d. 1840)
- date unknown
- Ghanam Krishna Iyer, Carnatic music composer (d. 1854)
- Anna Maria Sessi, opera singer (d. 1864)
Deaths
- January 25 – Giusto Ferdinando Tenducci, composer and castrato singer (unknown birth year)
- February 14 – Capel Bond, composer, 59[2]
- February 19 – Jean-Baptiste Krumphultz, composer, 47 (suicide by drowning)[3]
- February 20 – Emperor Joseph II
- February 21 – Johann Friedrich Kloffler, conductor and composer, 64
- May 24 – François-Henri Clicquot, organ builder, 57/58[4]
- June 25 – Lovisa Augusti, opera singer, 33
- September 3 – Thomas Norris, composer
- September 28 – Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, patron of Joseph Haydn
- December 16 – Ludwig August Lebrun, composer, 38
- date unknown
- Simoni Dall Croubelis, composer
- Lucile Grétry, composer, 18
References
- "Beethoven and Haydn: their relationship". Classic FM (UK). Retrieved 2020-11-03.
- Maggie Humphreys; Robert Evans (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-7201-2330-2.
- The American Harp Journal. American Harp Society. 1973. p. 17.
- The Organ. Musical Opinion, Limited. 1988. p. 76.
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