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Wenzel Müller (26 September 1767 – 3 August 1835) was an Austrian composer and conductor.
Müller was born in Markt Türnau, in the Moravia.[1] He studied with Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf and performed as a theatre musician in his youth. In 1786 he became Kapellmeister at the Theater in der Leopoldstadt in Leopoldstadt, Vienna. After a short spell at the German theatre in Prague from 1807 until 1813 he returned to Leopoldstadt where he worked until 1830. Under his leadership, the theatre became one of the most important venues in Viennese musical life. He died in Baden bei Wien.
He was a popular and prolific composer producing more than 250 works. Although he wrote several popular stage works (mostly Singspiele), his art songs are his enduring legacy. Often possessing witty music and lyrics or expressing a great deal of tenderness, Müller's songs were immensely popular and some of the works he wrote with Ferdinand Raimund remain in the Viennese repertory.
His opera Die Schwestern von Prag provided the theme for Beethoven's "Kakadu Variations" for piano trio, Opus 121a. He is said to have composed what has been falsely known as Mozart's Twelfth Mass, K. Anh. 232, the Missa in G major K. Anh. 232 (C1.04).[2]
Müller was married twice and his second wife was Magdalena Valley Reining. He had children Therese (1791–1876), Caroline (1814–1868), Ottilia (1816–1817), Carl (born 1815) and Joseph (born 1816), all of whom became opera singers.[3]
Library of Congress, Diana, Princess of Wales, Latin, Oclc, Integrated Authority File
Brno, Olomouc, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bohemia
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Opera, Opéra comique, Opera buffa, Aria
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Romantic music, Joseph Haydn, Franz Liszt, Friedrich Schiller
Berlin, London, Austria, Amsterdam, Rome
Opéra comique, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Opera buffa, Richard Wagner, New Grove Dictionary of Opera
Berlin, Vienna, Hamburg, Singspiel, Opera
Neue Mozart-Ausgabe, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Great Mass in C minor, K. 427, Requiem (Mozart), Franz Xaver Süssmayr
Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt, Johann Sebastian Bach, Vincenzo Bellini, Carnatic music
United Nations, 1984, Indonesia, 2014, Athens