Gottlieb Muffat (1690-1770) has been heralded as one of the first composers of keyboard music to display ‘distinctly Austrian traits’. In light of both the extent and quality of his œuvre, he was undoubtedly the single most important composer of keyboard music in Vienna in the first half of the eighteenth century. A prodigious child, he performed for the Emperor when he was around ten years old and his formative years were shaped by two of the most renowned composers of the period: his father Georg and Johann Joseph Fux. Muffat served as organist at the Viennese imperial court for over half a century and was responsible for teaching several members of the imperial family. This book explores both his career and quotidian existence and presents much hitherto unknown information about other members of this musical family. A thematic catalogue, which includes descriptions of all known manuscript sources of his music, comprises the second part of this study and serves to highlight the significance of his output and the reception and transmission of his work.
Table of Content
Contents
Part I: A Documentary Biography
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Biography
Muffat family genealogy
Biographical sources
The father: Georg Muffat
Gottlieb Muffat
Gottlieb Muffat’s children
Gottlieb Muffat’s siblings
Posterity
Works
Cultivation of keyboard music in Vienna
Compositional output
Reception and transmission of works
Sources
Discussion of individual sources
Conclusion
Part II: Catalogue of Works and Sources
Thematic Catalogue
Abbreviations
Notes on usage
Works printed during Gottlieb Muffat’s lifetime (A)
Keyboard partitas (B)
Anonymous partitas of uncertain authorship (App B)
Other keyboard works (C)
Chamber works (D)
Works in the archive of the Berlin Sing-Akademie by Georg Muffat
Index of works arranged by genre and key
Musical Sources
Notes on usage
Index of sources and works
Source descriptions
Index of copyists
Index of provenance
Appendix
Bibliography
Index of musical sources
Index of names
About the author
ALISON J. DUNLOP Ph D MA BA (1985-2013) studied Music and Modern Greek at Queen’s University Belfast. She began working at the Don Juan Archiv Wien in 2011 and was also a freelance musicologist and translator. She published articles on various aspects of early keyboard music and source studies. Her latest research project focused on musical life at the Viennese imperial court in the eighteenth century.