Nicolaus Adam Strungk
Nicolaus Adam Strungk (christened 15 November 1640 in Braunschweig – 23 September 1700 in Dresden) was a German composer and violinist.
Life
Nicolaus Adam was the son of the organist Delphin Strungk. He studied organ under his father, then at the University of Helmstedt. From 1660 he studied violin with Nathanael Schnittelbach, performing for the Duke of Wolfenbüttel, and Kaiser Leopold I in Vienna. From 1665 he was chamber musician in the service of Prince Johann Friedrich in Hanover.
In 1679 Strungk became director of the Hamburger Ratsmusik. In 1688 he succeeded Christian Ritter as deputy Kapellmeister and organist in Dresden, where in 1693 he succeeded Christoph Bernhard as Hofkapellmeister. He left after three years, in 1696, to take up directorship of the Leipzig Opera. He died of fever a few years later.[1][2]
His fourth daughter, Dorothea Christine Lachs, was a noted poetess and author of the libretto to Telemann's Germanicus.
Works
Strunck's surviving keyboard compositions, two ricercars and seven capriccios, were composed in Rome and Vienna between 1683 and 1686. They were written in a strictly contrapuntal style with two or three sections, each having a different subject.[3]
Strungk composed several operas for Hamburg und Leipzig:
- Der glückselig steigende Sejanus (1678)
- Der unglückselig fallende Sejanus (1678)
- Die liebreiche, durch Tugend und Schönheit erhöhte Esther (1680)
- David oder Der königliche Sclave (1680)
- Die drei Töchter Cekrops (1680)
- Alceste (Hamburg, 1680) (possibly by Johann Wolfgang Franck)
- Theseus (1683)
- Semiramis (1683)
- Florette (1683)
Cantatas.
Recordings
- Nicolaus Adam Strungk: Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ Maria Zedelius, soprano (11:09) on De Profundis - German Baroque cantatas with Heinrich Schütz: Erbarm dich mein. Franz Tunder: An Wasserflüssen Babylon; Ach Herr, lass deine lieben Engelein. Nicolaus Bruhns: De profundis clamavi. Matthias Weckmann: Wie liegt die Stadt so wüste. Michael Schopper, Musica Antiqua Köln dir. Reinhard Goebel.1985[4]
Notes
- ↑ W. Wolffheim, Nicolaus Adam Strungk. Sein Leben u. seine Werke. Dissertation, München 1913, Freiburg im Breisgau 1915.
- ↑ Max Seiffert: Strunck, Nicolaus Adam. In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 36. Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1893, S. 667–669.
- ↑ Apel 1997
- ↑ Archiv Produktion 415 526-1 (415 526-2)
References
- Apel, Willi (1997), The History of Keyboard Music to 1700 (transl. Hans Tischler), Indiana University Press, pp. 575–577, ISBN 0253211417, "Nicolaus Adam Strunck and others"
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