Gottfried Finger Explained

Gottfried Finger (c. 1655-56 – buried 31 August 1730), also Godfrey Finger, was a Moravian Baroque composer. He was also a virtuoso on the viol,[1] and many of his compositions were for the instrument. He also wrote operas. Finger was born in Olomouc, modern-day Czech Republic, and worked for the court of James II of England before becoming a freelance composer. The fact that Finger owned a copy of the musical score of the work Chelys by the Flemish composer Carolus Hacquart suggests that the two composers may have worked together in England.[2] After a contest in London to set William Congreve's The Judgement of Paris as an opera, in which Finger came in fourth place, he left England and moved to Germany. He died in Mannheim.

Works (selection)

Frontispiece to Fingers Sonatae XII pro diversis instrumentis, Simon Gribelin, ca. 1688

Sonatae XII. for various instruments, three parts for violin & viola di gamba, three more for II violins & viola di basso, three consecutives for III violins, a reliquary for II violins & viola, all in continuo for organ and harp…, Opus 1, (Amsterdam, Estienne Roger around 1690)

Six Sonatas of two parts for two flutes…, Opus 2, (London, John Walsh & Joseph Hare around 1688)

Six sonatas à 2 flutes & 1 basse continue…, Opus 4, (Amsterdam, Estienne Roger around 1690)

10 Sonatas for three, two violins and cello or basso continuo, Opus 5, (Amsterdam, Estienne Roger around 1690)

7 sonatas for trumpet, oboe, bass and B.c.

7 suites for Baryton and B.c.

Overture to the serenade The Fifth Element (Heidelberg, 1718)

Opera; The Victory of Beauty over the Heroes (with Jean-Baptiste Volumier and Augustin Reinhard Stricker) (Berlin, 1706, lost)

Opera; Roxane and Alexander's Wedding (Berlin, 1708, lost)

Literature

Weblinks

Commons: Gottfried Finger – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20130624171446/http://em.oxfordjournals.org/content/33/4/591.short Oxford Journals Volume 33, Issue 4Pp. 591-608, Gottfried Finger's Christmas pastorella
  2. Peter Holman, Life After Death: The Viola Da Gamba in Britain from Purcell to Dolmetsch, Boydell & Brewer, 2010, p. 17