1741 in music
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Events
- August 22âSeptember 14 â George Frideric Handel composes his oratorio Messiah in London to a libretto compiled by Charles Jennens,[1] completing the "Hallelujah Chorus" on September 6.[2]
- October 2 â The Bull's Head Musical Society opens a Music Hall in Fishamble Street, Dublin, Ireland.[3]
- November 18 â George Frideric Handel arrives in Dublin to give a series of concerts[4] having tried out the Messiah privately en route in Chester.
- November 25 â Marguerite-Antoinette Couperin, the first female court musician at the French court, sells her official post to Bernard de Bury.
- Johann Friedrich Agricola arrives in Berlin to study musical composition under Johann Joachim Quantz.
- Antonio Vivaldi leaves Venice for Vienna, but dies shortly after his arrival.
- 19-year-old JiÅÃ AntonÃn Benda is given the post of second violinist at the Berlin court of King Frederick II of Prussia.
- William Hogarth produces an engraving entitled The Enraged Musician.
Classical music
- Girolamo Abos â Magnificat à quarto concertato con strum.
- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
- Harpsichord Concerto in A major, H.411
- Symphony in G major, H.648
- Johann Sebastian Bach â Goldberg Variations, BWV 988
- Joseph Bodin de Boismortier â 6 Flute Sonatas, Op. 91
- Michel Corrette â Nouveau Livre de noëls
- Jean-Baptiste Dupuits â 6 Sonatas for Vielle and Harpsichord, Op. 3
- Willem de Fesch â 8 Concertos in 7 Parts, Op. 10
- Baldassare Galuppi â Confitebor tibi Domine in C major, B.II.2
- Christoph Graupner
- Trio Sonata in E major, GWV 208
- Flute Sonata in G major, GWV 708
- George Frideric Handel
- Messiah composed.
- Quel fior che all'alba ride, HWV 192 (duet)
- Overture in D major, HWV 424
- Johann Adolph Hasse â 12 Flute Concertos, Op. 3
- Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg â Pièces de Clavecin
- Jean-Philippe Rameau â Pieces de Clavecin en Concerts
- Georg Philipp Telemann â 24 Odes, TWV 25:86-109
Opera
- Tomaso Albinoni â Artamene
- Andrea Bernasconi â Demofoonte
- Baldassare Galuppi â Penelope
- Christoph Willibald Gluck â Artaserse
- Karl Heinrich Graun â Rodelinda regina de' Longobardi, GraunWV B:I:6
- George Frideric Handel â Deidamia, HWV 42 (composed 1740)
- Johann Adolph Hasse â Numa Pompilio
- Niccolò Jommelli â Semiramide riconosciuta
- Giovanni Battista Lampugnani â Arsace
Publications
- Johann Sebastian Bach â Clavier-Ãbung IV (Nuremberg: Balthasar Schmid), now known as the Goldberg Variations.
- The Cocquiel Manuscript, B-Br Ms II 3326 Mus, containing sacred music by various composers (including Jacob La Fosse and Abraham van den Kerckhoven)
Methods and theory writings
- Michel Corrette â Méthode pour apprendre le violoncelle, Op. 24
- Antoine Terrasson â Historique sur la vielle
- Carlo Tessarini â Gramatica di musica
Births
- February 8 â André Grétry, composer (died 1813)
- February 9
- Joseph Corfe (died 1820)
- Henri-Joseph Rigel, composer (died 1799)
- April 17 â Johann Gottlieb Naumann (died 1801)
- May 23 â Andrea Luchesi, composer (died 1801)
- July 17 â Suzette Defoye, opera singer and ballerina
- July 27 â François-Hippolyte Barthélémon, violinist and composer (died 1808)
- August 31 â Jean-Paul-Ãgide Martini, composer (died 1816)
- September 11 â Johann Jakob Engel (died 1802)
- September 25 â Václav Pichl, singer, violinist and composer (died 1805)
- November 27 â Jean-Pierre Duport (died 1818)
- date unknown
- Franz Xaver Hammer, gambist, cellist and composer (died 1817)
- Giacomo Rust (died 1786)
- Anna Brita Wendelius, singer and member of the Swedish Royal Academy of Music (died 1804).
Deaths
- January 5 â Ann Turner Robinson, English soprano
- February 13 â Johann Fux, composer and theorist (born 1660)
- March 17 â Jean-Baptiste Rousseau (born 1671)
- June 21 â Joseph-Hector Fiocco, Flemish violinist and composer (born 1703)
- July 28 â Antonio Vivaldi, composer (born 1678)
- August â David Owen, Welsh harpist (born 1712)
- August 24 â Gabriel-Vincent Thévenard, French operatic baritone (born 1669)
- September 3 (or after) â Carlo Francesco Cesarini (born 1666)
- September 7 â Henri Desmarets, French composer of sacred music (born 1661)
- probable â Francesco Scarlatti, composer (born 1666)
