Jakob Haibel
Jakob Haibel (20 July 1762 Graz – 24 March 1826 Đakovo) was an Austrian composer, operatic tenor and choirmaster.
Biography
Around 1789, Haibel joined Emanuel Schikaneder's company of performers at the Freihaus-Theater auf der Wieden. While there, he acted in plays and sang in operas and other musical productions. In the mid-1790s he started composing incidental music for company's plays and writing singspiele. His first score for the company was the ballet Le nozze disturbate, which premiered in 1795 to great success. The company performed the work 39 times that year alone. Beethoven based his 12 variations on a Menuett à la Vìganò WoO 68 (1795) on an air from the ballet. In 1796, his opera Der Tiroler Wastel premiered at the theater to rave reviews. The work was Haibel's greatest success and was given 66 times that year and 118 times in all at the Freihaus-Theater. The work was staged in a multitude of other theatres throughout the Austro-German part of Europe and no other original score by Haibel ever equalled its success.
Haibel continued to compose music for the theater until the death of his first wife Katharina (ca. 1768 – Vienna, 14 February 1806). At the time, he was not to be found in Vienna, for in 1804 he had already left for Diakowar (Đakovo), Slavonia,[1] where he spent the rest of his life as the cathedral choirmaster. Recent research has brought to light 16 Masses by Haibel written during this time, preserved in the Kuhač collection at the Nacionalna i Sveučilišna Knjižnica in Zagreb.
Haibel became Mozart's posthumous brother-in-law when he married Sophie Weber, Constanze's sister, on 7 January 1807. After Haibel's death in 1826, Sophie moved to Salzburg to live with her sister.
References
- ^ Lorenz, Michael (2008) Neue Forschungsergegnisse zum Theater auf der Wieden und Emanuel Schikaneder ("New research results concerning the Theater auf der Wieden and Emanuel Schikaneder"), p. 13. Wiener Geschichtsblätter. 4, 2008. Available on line.
Sources
- Peter Branscombe. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, edited by Stanley Sadie (1992), ISBN 0-333-73432-7 and ISBN 1-56159-228-5
- Zdravko Blažeković and Ennio Stipčević. "Johann Petrus Jakob Haibel (1762-1826) and His Sixteen Newly Discovered Masses from Djakvo (Croatia)", in: Off-Mozart: Glazbena kultura i "mali majstori" srednje Europe, 1750–1820 / Musical Culture and the "Kleinmeister" of Central Europe, 1850–1826. Muzikološki zbornici 3 (Zagreb: Hrvatsko muzikološko društvo, 1995), 67–75. ISBN 953-6090-02-3
- Zdravko Blažeković, "Due musicisti nella Pannonia del primo Ottocento: Ðuro Arnod e Petrus Jakob Haibel", Danubio: Una civiltà musicale. IV: Croazia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania, ed. by Carlo de Incontrera and Alba Zanini (Monfalcone: Teatro Comunale di Monfalcone, 1994), 47–64.
External links
- Composers with IMSLP links
- Articles with International Music Score Library Project links
- Articles with FAST identifiers
- Articles with ISNI identifiers
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
- Articles with BNF identifiers
- Articles with BNFdata identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with LCCN identifiers
- Articles with NTA identifiers
- Articles with PLWABN identifiers
- Articles with MusicBrainz identifiers
- Articles with DTBIO identifiers
- Articles with RISM identifiers
- Articles with SUDOC identifiers
- Austrian opera composers
- Austrian male opera composers
- 1762 births
- 1826 deaths
- Austrian classical composers
- Composers from the Austrian Empire
- Composers from the Holy Roman Empire