Compositores
Era Clássica Média

Nascidos entre 1730 e 1749


The Anger of Achilles, by Jacques-Louis David
Foto copiada de:
Wikimedia Commons - Wikipedia
Autor da foto: desconhecido - Caso você seja o autor e/ou proprietário, clique aqui.

                         Período clássico é o período da música erudita ocidental entre a segunda metade do século XVIII e o início do século XIX,  caracterizada  pela  claridade,  simetria  e  equilíbrio.  Os compositores mais conhecidos   do período  são  Franz  Joseph  Haydn (1732-1809), Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) e Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), embora este último, mostrava características do Romantismo desde sua Terceira Sinfonia. Leia mais.

 

Perfis Relacionados ao Tema

 
 
Capel Bond  (1730–1790)
Pasquale Errichelli  (1730–1785)
Tommaso Giordani  (c. 1730–1806)
William Jackson (of Exeter) (1730–1803)
Antonín Kammel  (1730–1784)
Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti  (1730–1795)
Giovanni Meneghetti (c. 1730–1794)
Georg von Pasterwitz  (1730–1803)
Antonio Sacchini  (1730–1786)
Christian Cannabich  (1731–1798)
František Xaver Dušek  (1731–1799)
Elisabetta de Gambarini  (1731–1765)
Gaetano Pugnani  (1731–1798)
Théodore-Jean Tarade  (1731–1788)
Carlo Giuseppe Toeschi (1731–1788)
Pierre Vachon  (1731–1803)
Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach  (1732–1795)
František Xaver Brixi  (1732–1771)
Giuseppe Demachi  (1732 – c. 1791)
Thomas Erskine, Earl of Kellie  (1732–1781)
Johann Christian Kittel  (1732–1809)
Joseph Haydn  (1732–1809)
Gian Francesco de Majo, or "Ciccio" (1732–1770)
Josina van Aerssen, or Josina van Boetzelaer  (1733–1787)
Thomas Sanders Dupuis  (1733–1796)
Anton Fils, or Filtz  (1733–1760)
Johann Christian Fischer  (1733–1800)
Istvánffy Benedek (1733–1778)
Thomas Linley the elder  (1733–1795)
Giacomo Tritto  (1733–1824)
Franz Ignaz Beck  (1734–1809)
Jean-Jacques Beauvarlet Charpentier  (1734–1794)
Benjamin Cooke  (1734–1793)
François-Joseph Gossec  (1734–1829)
Karl von Ordóñez  (1734–1786)
Jean-Baptiste Rey  (1734–1810)
Luka Sorkočević  (1734–1789)
Ignazio Spergher (1734–1808)
Johann Christian Bach  (1735–1782)
John Bennett  (c. 1735–1784)
Giovanni Battista Cervellini (1735–1801)
John Collett  (c. 1735?–1775)
Johann Gottfried Eckard  (1735–1809)
Mme Papavoine  (born c. 1735; fl. 1755–61)
Anton Schweitzer  (1735–1787)
Johann Schobert  (c. 1735–1767)
Ernst Wilhelm Wolf  (1735–1792)
Johann Georg Albrechtsberger  (1736–1809)
Hélène-Louise Demars  (born c. 1736)
Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch  (1736–1800)
Ignaz Fränzl  (1736–1811)
Johann Christoph Kellner  (1736–1803)
Antonio Tozzi  (1736–1812)
Élisabeth de Haulteterre  (fl. 1737–1768)
Josef Mysliveček  (1737–1781)
Michael Haydn  (1737–1806)
Philippe-Jacques Meyer  (1737–1819)
Friedrich Schwindl (1737–1786)
Philip Hayes  (1738–1797)
William Herschel  (1738–1822)
Leopold Hofmann  (1738–1793)
Jean-François Tapray (1738–1819)
Anna Bon di Venezia  (c. 1739 – after 1767)
Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf  (1739–1799)
Friedrich Wilhelm Rust  (1739–1796)
Johann Baptist Wanhal  (1739–1813)
Anna Amalia, Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach  (1739–1807)
Mlle Guerin  (born c. 1739, fl. 1755)
Agata della Pietà  (fl. c. 1740 – c. 1800)
Michael Arne  (1740–1786)
Samuel Arnold  (1740–1802)
Joseph Corfe  (1740–1820)
Ernst Eichner  (1740–1777)
Luigi Gatti  (1740–1817)
Guillaume Lasceux  (1740–1831)
Elisabeth Olin  (1740–1828)
Giovanni Paisiello  (1740–1816)
Samuel Webbe the elder  (1740–1816)
Johann André  (1741–1799)
François Hippolyte Barthélemon  (1741–1808)
Alexandro Marie Antoin Fridzeri  (1741–1819)
André Ernest Modeste Grétry  (1741–1813)
Franz Xaver Hammer  (1741–1817)
Honoré Langlé  (1741–1807)
Andrea Luchesi  (1741–1801)
Jean Paul Egide Martini  (1741–1816)
Johann Gottlieb Naumann  (1741–1801)
Václav Pichl  (1741–1804)
Henri-Joseph Rigel  (1741–1799)
Giacomo Rust  (1741–1786)
Luigi Tomasini  (1741–1808)
Anton Zimmermann  (1741–1781)
Jean-Baptiste Davaux  (1742–1822)
Romanus Hoffstetter  (1742–1815)
Jean-Baptiste Krumpholz  (1742–1790)
Simon Le Duc (Leduc) (1742–1777)
Vasily Pashkevich  (1742–1797)
Anton Ferdinand Tietz  (1742–1811)
Maria Carolina Wolf  (1742–1820)
Luigi Boccherini  (1743–1805)
Carlo Franchi  (c. 1743 – after 1779)
Giuseppe Gazzaniga  (1743–1818)
Franz Nikolaus Novotny  (1743–1773)
Yekaterina Vorontsova-Dashkova  (1743–1810)
João Pedro de Almeida Mota  (1744–1817)
Josef Bárta  (c. 1744–1787)
Joseph Beer  (1744–1811)
Anne Louise Brillon de Jouy  (1744–1824)
Gaetano Brunetti  (1744–1798)
Marianna von Martines  (1744–1812)
Yekaterina Sinyavina  (died 1784)
Johann Michael Bach III  (1745–1820)
Joseph Bengraf, or József Bengráf  (1745–1791)
Maxim Berezovsky  (c. 1745–1777)
Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges  (1745–1799)
João de Sousa Carvalho  (1745 – c. 1799)
Georg Druschetzky  (1745–1819)
Nicolas-Jean Lefroid de Méreaux  (1745–1797)
Johann Peter Salomon  (1745–1815)
Maddalena Laura Sirmen  (1745–1818)
Carl Stamitz  (1745–1801)
Ferdinando Gasparo Turrini (1745 – c. 1820)
Jan Nepomuk Vent, or Johann Wendt  (1745–1801)
Jan Stefani  (1746–1829)
Marie Emmanuelle Bayon Louis  (1746–1825)
William Billings  (1746–1800)
Giuseppe Cambini  (1746 – c. 1825)
James Hook  (1746–1827)
Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith  (1746–1820)
Johann Friedrich Peter  (1746–1813)
Giovanni Punto, or Jan Václav Stich  (1746–1803)
Joseph Quesnel  (1746–1809)
Johann Wilhelm Hässler  (1747–1822)
Ivan Mane Jarnović, or Giovanni Mane Giornovichi  (1747–1804)
Ivan Khandoshkin  (1747–1804)
Leopold Kozeluch  (1747–1818)
Justin Morgan  (1747–1798)
Carl Marianus Paradeiser  (1747–1775)
Johann Abraham Peter Schulz  (1747–1800)
Joachim Albertini, or Gioacchino Albertini  (1748–1812)
Francesco Azopardi  (1748–1809)
Josef Fiala  (1748–1816)
Étienne-Joseph Floquet  (1748–1785)
Emanuel Aloys Förster  (1748–1823)
John Mahon  (c. 1748–1834)
Christian Gottlob Neefe  (1748–1798)
Theodor von Schacht  (1748–1823)
William Shield  (1748–1829)
Joseph Schuster  (1748–1812)
Henriette Adélaïde Villard Beaumesnil  (1748–1813)
Domenico Cimarosa  (1749–1801)
Jean-Louis Duport  (1749–1819)
Jean-Frédéric Edelmann  (1749–1794)
Johann Nikolaus Forkel  (1749–1818)
Antonín Kraft  (c. 1749–1820)
Georg Joseph Vogler  (1749–1814)
Polly Young, also known as Maria Barthélemon  (1749–1799)
Marija Zubova  (1749–1799)

 

&&&&&&&&&