Anton Joseph (A. J.) Hampel (1710 – 30 March 1771) was a horn player who is generally credited with having developed, somewhere between 1750 and 1760, the technique of hand-stopping which allows natural horns to play fully chromatically. This was one of the most important innovations in the history of the horn, comparable with Heinrich Stölzel's development of the first valve horn in 1817.
It was this development that enabled the horn repertoire ...
more
Read article at Wikipedia
Anton Joseph Hampel
top ↑
Similar topics in Freebase
-
Hans Sitt
Hans Sitt (21 September 1850, Prague – 10 March 1922, Leipzig), was a German violinist, teacher, and composer. During his lifetime, he was regarded as one of the foremost teachers of violin. Most of the orchestras and conservatories of Europe and North America then sported personnel who numbered... -
Josef Mysliveček
Josef Mysliveček (March 9, 1737 – February 4, 1781) was a Czech composer who contributed to the formation of late eighteenth-century classicism in music. Outside of the Czech Republic, his reputation is substantially sustained from his close relationship with the Mozart family between 1770 and 1778... -
Ignaz Moscheles
(Isaac) Ignaz Moscheles (May 23, 1794 – March 10, 1870) was a Bohemian composer and piano virtuoso, whose career after his early years was based initially in London, and later at Leipzig, where he succeeded his friend and sometime pupil Felix Mendelssohn as head of the Conservatoire. Much of what... -
Joseph Schuster
Joseph Schuster (11 August 1748 Dresden – 24 July 1812 Dresden) was a German composer. He received his first musical training from his father, a court musician in Dresden, and Johann Georg Schürer. Thanks to a scholarship from the Saxon Prince-electors, Schuster was able to study with Giovanni... -
Heinrich Grünfeld
Heinrich Grünfeld (April 21, 1855, Prague – August 26, 1931, Berlin) was a Bohemian-Austrian violoncellist; a brother of Alfred Grünfeld. He educated at the Prague Conservatory, he went to Berlin in 1876, and for eight years taught at the Neue Akademie der Tonkunst in that city. In conjunction with... -
Hans Krása
Hans Krása (November 30, 1899 – October 17, 1944) was a Czech composer who perished in the Holocaust. He helped to organize cultural life in Theresienstadt concentration camp. Hans Krása was born in Prague to a Czech father who was a lawyer, and a German-Jewish mother. He studied both the piano and...