Joseph Schuster (composer)

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Joseph Schuster (1748-1812) 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 Battista Martini and counterpoint in Venice with G. Pera from 1765 to 1768. In 1776 he completed his first opera seria Didone abbandonata after a libretto by Metastasio at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples by all accounts a great success. In the same year, the opera seria Demofoonte premiered in Forlì. In the following years, his position was solidified with operatic successes in Naples and Venice. He was also recognized in Germany as an accomplished composer. Most of his works are assigned to the opera buffa, but he also composed religious works, chamber music and orchestral music. Schuster's work is also found in the string quartets appendix of the Köchel catalogue (No. 210 et seq), and for a long time the "Milan Quartets" (1772-73) were viewed as Mozart works. Schuster composed these works around 1780, which were long considered to be copies of Mozart originals. The musicologist Ludwig Finscher was able to uncover the true origin (in The Music Research, 1966).[1]

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