Johann Philipp Krieger
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Johann Philipp Krieger (February 25, 1649 – February 7, 1725), was a German Baroque composer, who although not prominent, contributed quality music (such as keyboard music, trio sonatas, and operas) to the seventeenth and eighteenth century musical world.
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[edit] Early years
As a young boy he studied with Johann Drechsel and Gabriel Schütz in Nuremberg. In his teens studied for nearly five years as a pupil of Johann Schröder and Förster in Copenhagen.
[edit] Adulthood
After returning to his home in Bayreuth he served as organist, while the Nuremberg Council promised him the first available position.
He traveled to Italy in 1673 and studied in Venice with Johann Rosenmüller and Volpe. In Rome he studied with Abbatim and Bernardo Pasquini. In 1675 he performed for Leopold I at Vienna, and was ennobled by him. He later returned to Bayreuth, and shortly thereafter visited Frankfurt and Kassel, refusing job opportunities in both places. At Halle, in 1677, he was named chamber musician and organist, became Vice-Kapellmeister in 1678 and Kapellmeister when the court moved to Weissenfels in 1680. The court’s musical establishment soon became one of Germany’s greatest. A catalog of vocal works performed there lists over 2,000 of Krieger’s compositions along with hundreds of works by his brother Johann and other German and Italian composers. A selection of his works can be found in vols. 53 and 54 of Denkmäler Deutscher Tonkunst.