{"id":18517,"date":"2023-05-09T10:51:13","date_gmt":"2023-05-09T10:51:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uraniarecords.com\/?post_type=product&p=18517"},"modified":"2024-04-30T15:51:09","modified_gmt":"2024-04-30T15:51:09","slug":"kellner-certamen-musicum-vol-iii","status":"publish","type":"product","link":"https:\/\/uraniarecords.com\/de\/prodotto\/kellner-certamen-musicum-vol-iii\/","title":{"rendered":"KELLNER: CERTAMEN MUSICUM – Vol. III"},"content":{"rendered":"
JOHANN PETER KELLNER (1705-1772)<\/p>\n
CERTAMEN MUSICUM – Vol. III<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n SUITES FOR HARPSICHORD<\/p>\n Suite Nos. 5 & 6\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n FRANZ SILVESTRI<\/p>\n Johann Peter Kellner was born in Gr\u00e4fenroda, Thuringia, on the 28 or 29 September 1705, and died in the same German town on 19 April 1772.\u00a0 The scarce information we have about his life is found in the abridged autobiography published in F.W. Marpurg\u2019s\u201cHistorische-kritische Beytr\u00e4ge zur Aufnahme der Musik\u201d<\/em> (Berlin, 1754-78\/R, i, 439-45). It appears that his parents wanted him to be a coal merchant like his father, but he was determined to study music. His teachers were not important names, and he did not attend any university.<\/p>\n His received his initial musical tuition in his hometown, where he studied singing under kantor Johann Peter Nagel and organ and harpsichord with the latter\u2019s son Johann Heinrich. Later he studied organ with J.C. Schmidt, organist at St. Blasii in Zella, probably in 1720-1. During that period he also got tuition in composition by Hieronimus Florentius Quelh (or Kelh) in Suhl.<\/p>\n After 1722 Kellner went back to Gr\u00e4fenroda, where he worked as assistant tutor of minister Jeremias Schneider until 1725, when he was selected for the post of kantor in nearby Frankenhain. In 1727 he went back again to his hometown, where he would remain for the rest of his life. Initially he was assistant kantor of his first teacher Nagel, succeeding him after his death in 1732. Kellner is likely to have sponsored the fine church organ with two manuals and 24 stops built by Johann Anton Weise in 1736 at St. Laurentius, also in Gr\u00e4fenroda.<\/p>\n Kellner\u2019s fame did not extend beyond Thuringia, but he is most likely to have met both J.S: Bach and Handel. Possible contacts with Bach occurred in Leipzig in 1729, and in the same year\u2014during a trip to Halle\u2014with Handel. The link with Bach has never been demonstrated and it is not known how he was able to copy 90 Bachian manuscripts, notably including BWV 535, 538, 540, 549, 550, 578 and 579. Kellner\u2019s copy of Bach\u2019s Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin has generated many controversies, because of the omission of several movements and the complete Partita in b minor, as well as other divergences from the well known original MS, extant in the Staatsbibliothek Preussischer Kulturbesitz<\/em>. Kellner\u2019s son Johann Christoph Kellner (1736-1803), who had a more significant musical career than his father and also a remarkable output as a composer, once said\u2014most likely exaggerating\u2014that his father was \u201ca close friend of Bach\u2019s<\/em>\u201d.<\/p>\n