The Strauss brothers—Eduard, Johann II, and Josef—central figures in Vienna’s nineteenth-century musical life. Johann Strauss II stands among the most recognizable and influential figures of nineteenth-century musical life. His path was neither simple nor linear: it unfolded through family conflict, artistic ambition, public acclaim, and personal loss. His life reveals that artistic triumph often emerges from tension—between inheritance and independence, public success and private compromise—leaving a legacy shaped as much by personal choice as by musical brilliance. The milestones below trace the decisive moments that shaped his journey—from the shadow of his father to international recognition. 1825 Born on October 25 in Vienna into a family already deeply involved with music. His father, Johann Strauss I, was a celebrated composer and conductor—a circumstance that would profoundly, and often contentiously, influence his life. 1831 Composes his first waltz, revealing a...
Telemann played a key role in shaping musical professionalism, encouraging public performance and cultivated listening. The Double Concerto for two horns and orchestra in E-flat major belongs to the third collection of Telemann’s Tafelmusik ( Musique de Table ), published in 1733—one of the most ambitious and representative instrumental publications of the Baroque era. Far from being conceived as mere background music, Tafelmusik was intended for attentive listening within cultivated social circles, a purpose reflected in the compositional care, formal clarity, and stylistic variety of its contents. This concerto is of particular interest from an organological perspective. Telemann designates the two solo instruments as tromba selvatica , a term that has long puzzled musicologists. It likely does not refer to the trumpet in the strict sense, but rather to a high-pitched natural brass instrument related to the early horn, lacking valves and possessing limited chromatic flexibi...