Joseph Mayseder Explained

Joseph Mayseder (27 October 1789 – 21 November 1863) was an Austrian violin virtuoso and composer.[1]

Biography

Mayseder showed musical promise from an early age, and was a student of Joseph Suche (1797), Paul Wranitzky (1798) and Ignaz Schuppanzigh. By the age of eleven, he was performing in public concerts at the Augarten in Vienna. He received lessons in composition from Emanuel Aloys Förster.

In 1810, he was appointed concertmaster of the Vienna Court Opera. In 1816, he was the violin soloist of the Hofburg Palace chapel orchestra, which he conducted from 1836. He was a major quartet player, as well as a teacher and composer for his instrument. Among his students were the highly esteemed Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst.[2]

Mayseder was the recipient of multiple awards and honorary memberships. He was appointed to the Italian: [[Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia]] in Rome, along with Franz Liszt and others.[3] He was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Order of Franz Joseph in 1862, and was an honorary member of the German: [[Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde]]. He was one of 51 composers who contributed to the German: [[Vaterländischer Künstlerverein]]. He was made an honorary citizen of Vienna in 1817.

He was buried in a grave of honour in the Central Cemetery in Vienna. The German: Maysedergasse in the Viennese German: [[Innere Stadt]] was named after him in 1876.

Selected works

Concert Music

String quartets

String quintets

Violin and piano

Piano trios

Piano quartets

Church music

Notes and References

  1. The first name is often spelled as Josef.
  2. Book: Greene, David Mason. Greene's Biographical Encyclopedia of Composers. 1985. 626. Reproducing Piano Roll Fnd. . 9780385142786.
  3. The Musical World, A Weekly Record of Musical Science, Literature and Intelligence. XII. May–December 1839. 219. The Musical World.