Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Josef Antonín Plánický

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
17 September 1732, Freising, Germany

Josef Antonín Plánický (November 27, 1691, Manětín – September 17 1732, Freising) was a Czech composer, musician and singer of the Baroque era.

Contents

Life

Plánický gained his basic musical education from his father, who was the teacher and organist in the church of his hometown, and thereafter probably studied at some Jesuit schools. In 1715, he became a musical teacher in the family of Count Lažanský and later, until his death, he held service in aristocratic families at several locations in Bohemia, Moravia and Austria.

Works

His most famous work, and the only one to be fully preserved, is Opella ecclesiastica seu Ariae duodecim nova idea excornatae, a collection of 12 spiritual cantatas from 1723. The collection contains 7 soprano, 3 alto and 2 bass vocal arias, which are accompanied by organ or harpsichord, two violins, violon, and solo oboe or solo violin. In 1724, he wrote an opera Zelus divi Corbinian Ecclesiae Frisigensis Fundamentum. It is also known that he composed numerous litanies, motets, Te Deums and requiems, as well as some special compositions called musica navalis (Naval Music) for rides on Prague's Vltava River. However, none of these survived, because the archive was dismantled.

References

Josef Antonín Plánický Wikipedia