Jacob Hintze: Difference between revisions

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'''Aliases:''' Jakob Hintze
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==Life==
==Life==
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German composer, became 1666 court musician to the Elector of Brandenburg at Berlin; but he retired to his birthplace in 1695, and died at Berlin with the reputation of being an excellent contrapuntist. Edited the 12th and subsequent editions of Johann Crüger's 'Praxis pietatis,' Berlin, 1666, 1690, 1695, adding to it 65 hymns.
German composer, became 1666 court musician to the Elector of Brandenburg at Berlin; but he retired to his birthplace in 1695, and died at Berlin with the reputation of being an excellent contrapuntist. Edited the 12th and subsequent editions of Johann Crüger's 'Praxis pietatis,' Berlin, 1666, 1690, 1695, adding to it 65 hymns.


*{{W|lang=de|Jacob Hintze
Wikipedia (in German): {{W|lang=de|Jacob Hintze}}


==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
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Latest revision as of 03:06, 23 October 2022

Alias: Jakob Hintze

Life

Born: 4 September 1622, Bernau, Germany

Died: 5 May 1702, Berlin

Biography

German composer, became 1666 court musician to the Elector of Brandenburg at Berlin; but he retired to his birthplace in 1695, and died at Berlin with the reputation of being an excellent contrapuntist. Edited the 12th and subsequent editions of Johann Crüger's 'Praxis pietatis,' Berlin, 1666, 1690, 1695, adding to it 65 hymns.

Wikipedia (in German): Jacob HintzeLink to the German Wikipedia article

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

External links