Comments (13)
Comment on this music
Login/Register to post a comment.
|
Allein Gott in der Hoh sei Ehr
Uploaded by: EdoL
Composer: Bach, J. S. Organ: 1766 Riepp Heilig-Geist Organ (Surround), Ottobeuren, Germany Software: Hauptwerk VII Views: 68
Sonata G Dur
Uploaded by: DominiqueD
Composer: Johann-Melchior DREYER (1746-1824) Organ: 1766 Riepp Heilig-Geist Organ (Surround), Ottobeuren, Germany Software: Hauptwerk VIII Views: 56
Doppelfuge fur Orgel
Uploaded by: EdoL
Composer: Albrechtsberger, Johann Georg Organ: 1766 Riepp Heilig-Geist Organ (Surround), Ottobeuren, Germany Software: Hauptwerk VII Views: 70
Was Gott tut, das ist Wohlgetan
Uploaded by: EdoL
Composer: Pachelbel, Johann Organ: 1766 Riepp Heilig-Geist Organ (Surround), Ottobeuren, Germany Software: Hauptwerk VII Views: 108
Uploaded by:
|
EdoL (11/09/23)
|
Composer:
|
Adlung, Jacob
|
Sample Producer:
|
OrganArt Media
|
Sample Set:
|
1766 Riepp Heilig-Geist Organ (Surround), Ottobeuren, Germany
|
Software: | Hauptwerk VII |
Genre: | Baroque |
Description: | Jakob Adlung, or Adelung, (14 January 1699 – 5 July 1762) was a German organist, teacher, instrument maker, music historian, composer and music theorist.
He was born in Bindersleben, near Erfurt, to David Adlung, an organist and his first teacher, and the former Dorothea Elisabetha Meuerin, from Tondorf. He attended the St. Andreas lower school in Erfurt from 1711, moving on to the Erfurt Gymnasium in 1713, during which time he lived in the household of Christian Reichardt, who also taught him organ.
He studied philosophy, philology, and theology at the University of Jena from 1723 to 1726, where he studied the organ further with Johann Nikolaus Bach. At this time, he became friends with Johann Gottfried Walther in Weimar, and borrowed his works on music theory; he later wrote some books on the subject, most of which were destroyed, along with his house, in a fire in 1736.
He returned to Erfurt in 1737 where he succeeded Johann Heinrich Buttstedt as organist of the Prediger church after the former's death, a post he retained for the rest of his life. He was also professor of languages at the Erfurt Gymnasium and taught, by his own estimate, 218 organ students and 284 language students between 1728 and 1762.
He is one of a group of excellent scholar-musicians of the mid-18th century, along with Johann Mattheson, Lorenz Christoph Mizler, and Johann Gottfried Walther, who all wrote important and comprehensive studies of the theory, aesthetics, and practice of music; their works are rich and still partly untapped sources of information today, particularly about baroque music and performance practice.
Riepp HeiligGeist Surround version
Front: 40 Rear: 80 |
Performance: | Live |
Recorded in: | Stereo |
Playlists: |
|
Options:
|
Sign up today to download piece.
Login or Register to Subscribe
See what EdoL used to make this recording
|
|
|