
Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632–1687) was the dominant musical force at the court of Louis XIV and the chief architect of the French Baroque style. An Italian-born[…]

Few nineteenth-century composers shaped popular musical theater as decisively as Jacques Offenbach (1819–1880). A German-born French composer, virtuoso cellist, conductor, and theater manager, Offenbach helped[…]

Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971) reshaped 20th-century music with an imagination that moved from the raw, rhythm-driven energy of his early Russian ballets to lucid neoclassicism and,[…]

Henry Purcell (c. 1659–1695) is widely regarded as the most important English composer of the later 17th century. Working in London across church, court, and[…]

Henri Duparc (1848–1933) was a French late-Romantic composer whose reputation rests on a remarkably small but exquisite catalogue—especially 17 mélodies that helped expand French art[…]

Hendrik Franciscus Andriessen (1892–1981) was a Dutch composer, organist, and influential educator whose elegant, French-tinged musical language helped refresh Catholic liturgical music in the Netherlands[…]

Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672) stands as a monumental figure in the landscape of early Baroque music, widely acknowledged as the most significant German composer prior to[…]

Hector Berlioz (1803–1869) stands as one of the boldest innovators of the Romantic era—an architect of modern orchestral color, a restless dramatist in sound, and[…]

Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) was an Austro-Bohemian composer and one of the most renowned conductors of his generation. His work forms a bridge between the 19th-century[…]

Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) reshaped 19th-century opera with a blend of theatrical instinct, melodic invention, and human drama that still defines the repertory. Over a career[…]
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