John Field (Composer)

John Field (July 26, 1782January 23, 1837) was an Irish composer and pianist. He is best known for being the first composer to write nocturnes. Born in Dublin, Field first studied the piano under his father, who was a violinist, and later under Tommaso Giordani. He later went to London where he studied under Muzio Clementi. He toured Europe both to demonstrate the pianos that Clementi made and as a concert pianist before settling in Saint Petersburg in Russia where he was a popular performer and teacher. He died in Moscow. Field is best remembered as the first composer to write nocturnes, single movement pieces for piano which were not in a fixed form (as the minuet or fugue are) and which maintained a single mood throughout. These pieces greatly influenced Frederic Chopin, who went on to write 21 nocturnes himself. Inasmuch as Field's nocturnes were the first single-movement piano character pieces, they can be seen as important forerunners of many other Romantic composers' works, among them Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt and Edvard Grieg. Field also wrote seven piano concertos of which the best known is probably the second (1811).

External links

Field, John Field, John Field, John Field, John Field, John Field, John Field, John Field

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
quakeworld
franois sverin marceau desgraviers
vocal house
hot dip galvanizing
barry gray
minor
groom
hearsay
spot welding
de broglie hypothesis
robert vaughn
velvet acid christ
david trimble
edgar schein
john julius angerstein
career development
bishop of london
veterinarian
osdev
vet
omnibus
perching duck
golden raspberry awards
george stubbs
netherlands carillon
solecism
prescription and description
william thomas beckford
usmc war memorial
h dropping
bandersnatch
jessie matthews
british coin two pounds (pre decimal)
english coin rose ryal
abraham hayward
andrew davies (writer)
john arthur roebuck
scots greys
q factor
charles cavendish fulke greville
bucephalus
hebrew university of jerusalem
sailing at the 1900 summer olympics
plecoptera