Composers

Christoph Nichelmann

Christoph Nichelmann
13.08.1717 - 20.07.1762
Country:Germany
Period:Baroque

Biography

Christoph Nichelmann (13 August 1717 – 20 July 1762) was a German composer and harpsichordist. He was second keyboard player in the Royal Ensemble of Frederick the Great.

Born in Treuenbrietzen, from 1730 on the advice of a relative Nichelmann attended the Thomasschule in Leipzig, where he was accepted by Johann Sebastian Bach.[1] He studied composition with Wilhelm Friedemann Bach and learned to play the piano.[2] In 1733, because of his interest in opera, he went to Hamburg to explore theatrical music in the French and Italian style. There he was a student of Reinhard Keiser, Georg Philipp Telemann and Johann Mattheson.[1] At times he worked as a private secretary for musicians and noble families.[2]

In 1739 Nichelmann moved to Berlin, where he continued his studies with Johann Joachim Quantz and Carl Heinrich Graun.[1] In 1742, he decided to travel to England and France, returning to Hamburg two years later. An offer of King Frederick the Great of Prussia brought him again to Berlin, where in 1744 he became the second harpsichordist of the royal operatic ensemble,[3] ("zweiter Cembalist der königl. Operncapelle") to accompany the king who played the flute.[2] He retained this position until 1756. From then on he had to support himself by giving private lessons. Nichelmann's last years were made difficult by the Seven Years' War. He died in Berlin.[2]

Nichelmann's traditional compositions fall within the period of 1737-1759, which was a time of changing musical styles, from Baroque to the early classical period.[3] Best known are his piano concertos in three-movements (fast-slow-fast). He also wrote eighteen concertos, one overture, and three symphonies, as well as choral works and other piano pieces. His twenty-two songs are early examples of the Berliner Liederschule, or Berlin school of songs.[2] His serenata Il sogno di Scipione[4] was known in the 18th century.

Nichelmann's treatise Die Melodie, nach ihrem Wesen sowohl, als nach ihren Eigenschaften (Melody, after its Nature and its Properties) (1755) was acclaimed, although it was criticized by a theorist under the pen name Caspar Caspar Dünkelfeind,[2] who was possibly Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach.

Show more...