João Domingos Bomtempo

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João Domingos Bomtempo

ComC
1814 portrait by Henrique José da Silva
(National Museum of Music, Lisbon)
Born(1775-12-28)28 December 1775
Lisbon, Portugal
Died18 August 1842(1842-08-18) (aged 66)
Lisbon, Portugal
OccupationComposer
Notable work
  • Messe de Requiem, Op.23 ("In Memory of Camões") (1819)
StyleRomantic
Spouse
Maria das Dores de Almeida
(after 1836)

João Domingos Bomtempo (Portuguese pronunciation:

composer
and pedagogue.

Biography

Bomtempo was the son of an Italian musician in the Portuguese court orchestra, and studied at the Music Seminary of the Patriarchal See in Lisbon. Unlike most of his contemporaries, he was not interested in opera and, in 1801, instead of going to Italy, he traveled to Paris, where he started a career as a virtuoso pianist. He moved to London in 1810 and became acquainted with liberal circles in that city.

During 1822 he returned to Lisbon, and founded there a Philharmonic Society to promote public concerts of contemporary music. After the Portuguese civil war between liberals and absolutists had resulted in a liberal victory, Bomtempo became a music teacher to the young Queen Maria II of Portugal and first Director of the National Conservatory, created in 1835 to replace the old Patriarchal Seminary, which had been abolished by the new liberal regime.

Bomtempo composed a vast number of concertos, sonatas, variations and fantasies for the piano. His two known symphonies are the first to be produced by a Portuguese composer. But his largest work, and probably his masterpiece, is his Requiem in memory of Luís de Camões, which has been released on CD.

List of compositions

  • Op. 1 - Piano Sonata No. 1 in F major
  • Op. 2 - Piano Concerto No.1 in E flat major (ca. 1804)
  • Op. 3 - Piano Concerto No.2 in F minor (ca. 1800-1810)
  • Op. 4 - Fandango & Variations for piano
  • Op. 5 - Piano Sonata No. 2 in C minor
  • Op. 6 - Introduction, 5 variations & fantasy on Paisiello's favorite air for piano
  • Op. 7 - Piano Concerto No.3 in G minor
  • Op. 8 - Capriccio & Variations on God save the King for piano in E flat major
  • Op. 9 No.1 - Piano Sonata No. 3 in E flat major
  • Op. 9 No.2 - Piano Sonata No. 4 in C major
  • Op. 9 No.3 - Sonata for violin and harpsichord in E major
  • Op. 10a - Hymno lusitano (cantata); Arrangement by the composer for piano 4-hands titled: March of Lord Wellington
  • Op. 10b - La Virtù Trionfante (cantata)
  • Op. 11 - Symphony No.1 in E flat major
  • Op. 12 - Piano Concerto No.4 in D major (1811-1812)
  • Op. 13 - Piano Sonata No. 5 in C major
  • Op. 14 - Fantasia for piano in C minor
  • Op. 15 No.1 - Piano Sonata No. 6 in A flat major
  • Op. 15 No.2 - Piano Sonata No. 7 in G minor
  • Op. 15 No.3 - Variations for piano on a popular French song
  • Op. 16 - Piano Quintet in E flat major
  • Op. 17 - A paz da Europa (cantata)
  • Op. 18 No.1 - Piano Sonata No. 8 in G major
  • Op. 18 No.2 - Piano Sonata No. 9 in F minor
  • Op. 18 No.3 - Piano Sonata No.10 in E flat major
  • Op. 19 - 12 Studies for piano (1816)
  • Op. 20 - Piano Sonata No.11 in E flat major
  • Op. 21 - Variations for piano on a theme from
    Die Zauberflöte
    in G minor
  • Op. 22 - Variations for piano on a theme from Alessandro in Efeso in B flat major
  • Op. 23 - Requiem in C minor (1819-1820)
  • Op. 24 - Piano Concerto No.5 in C minor/major[1]
  • 4 Absolutions, B5
  • Libera me Domine in C minor
  • Piano Concerto No.6 in E minor, B26 (1810-1840)
  • Piano Quintet in D minor, B74
  • Serenata for piano and winds in F major, B75 (1821-1830)
  • Symphony No.2 in D major, B16
  • Te Deum in F major, B10
  • Variations for piano on a theme from
    La donna del Lago
    in E minor (1822)
  • Fantasy for piano and orchestra (on a theme from La donna del Lago)
  • Waltz for piano
  • Alessandro in Efeso, opera seria
  • Tantum Ergo, Kyrie, Gloria e Credo (1842)

References

External links