Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | More... Weekend Specials
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home > Composers >

WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
Johann Kaspar Kerll
Born: April 9, 1627; Adorf, Saxony   Died: February 13, 1693; Munich, Germany  
One of many German organist/composers celebrated in his day but little known to modern listeners, Johann Kaspar Kerll carried on the keyboard traditions of Frescobaldi and Froberger, and was a composer central to the early years of the Munich opera house. His church music was also highly regarded.

Scholars have exerted some energy attempting to disprove a few claims made for Kerll; he did not, apparently, study with Frescobaldi, although
...
Read more
See all recordings available (40)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
Johann Kaspar Kerll titles in:
Recommended   SuperAudio CD   ArkivCD   MP3 Downloads  
Works
Age, plaude, mens devota (1)
Alma redemptoris mater (1)
Ama con meum (1)
Angelorum esca (1)
Ave regina coelorum a 2 (1)
Ave regina coelorum a 5 (1)
Battaglia (5)
Cantate laudes Mariae (1)
Canzona 1, for keyboard (1)
Canzona for keyboard in D minor (2)
Canzona for keyboard in G minor (1)
Canzona for Keyboard no 2 (1)
Canzona for Organ in E minor (1)
Canzona for Organ no 1 (2)
Canzona for Organ no 3 in D minor (2)
Canzona for Organ no 4 (3)
Canzona for Organ no 5 (2)
Canzona for Organ no 6 (1)
Capriccio sopra il cucu (7)
Ciaccona in C major (1)
Ciaccona Variata (2)
Dic mihi, imprudens anima (1)
Donimus regnavit (2)
Estote fortes in bello (1)
Laetabundus et jocundus (1)
Missa "ino fletu solatium obsidionis Viennensis" (1)
Missa "Non sine quare" (1)
Missa "Renovationis" (1)
Missa nigra (1)
Missa superba (1)
Modulatio organica super Magnificat (2)
Modulatio Organica: Magnificat Quarti Toni (1)
O panis mellifluus (1)
Passacaglia (4)
Passacaglia for Keyboard in D minor (5)
Passacaglia variata (2)
Plaudentes virgini (1)
Plorate, ululate (1)
Ricarcata, for keyboard (1)
Salve regina a 2 (1)
Salve regina a 5 (1)
Sonata á 3 in G minor (1)
Sonata à 5 in G minor (1)
Sonata for 2 Violins, Viola da Gamba and Basso Continuo in G minor (1)
Suite for Keyboard in A minor (2)
Suite for Keyboard in D major (3)
Suite for Keyboard in F major (3)
Suite for Keyboard in G major (2)
Toccata con durezza e ligature (1)
Toccata cromatica con durezze e ligature for organ in E major (2)
Toccata for Keyboard no 1 (5)
Toccata for Keyboard no 2 (1)
Toccata for Keyboard no 3 in A minor (3)
Toccata for Keyboard no 4 in E major "Cromatica Durezze e Ligature" (2)
Toccata for Keyboard no 5 in C major "Tutta de Salta" (2)
Toccata for Keyboard no 6 (2)
Toccata for Keyboard no 7 (1)
Toccata for Keyboard no 8 in G major (3)
Toccata per li pedali (1)
Toccata sive ricercata in Cylindrum phonotacticum transferen (1)
Tote pulchra es Maria (1)
Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo in F major (2)
Triumphante sidera (1)
Biography by James Reel
One of many German organist/composers celebrated in his day but little known to modern listeners, Johann Kaspar Kerll carried on the keyboard traditions of Frescobaldi and Froberger, and was a composer central to the early years of the Munich opera house. His church music was also highly regarded.

Scholars have exerted some energy attempting to disprove a few claims made for Kerll; he did not, apparently, study with Frescobaldi, although he may have had contact with Froberger. Furthermore, there's no evidence to support the assertion that Kerll served as organist at the Stephansdom, a leading church in Vienna. What is certain is that Kerll got his first lessons from his organist father, and was writing music by the time he was 14. More formal studies came in Vienna in the 1640s under Giovanni Valentini, and in Rome in the late 1640s and early 1650s with Carissimi. By age 20, Kerll was proficient enough to land a job as organist at the Brussels court of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm, who subsidized his lessons with Carissimi.

Now thoroughly trained and not merely talented, Kerll obtained the vice-Kapellmeister post at the court of Elector Ferdinand Maria in Munich in 1656; he rose to full Kapellmeister in six months, upon the death of his predecessor. The following year it was Kerll who wrote the very first work, Oronte, performed at the new Munich opera house. This and Kerll's 10 other operas have all been lost. The year 1658 brought another prestigious assignment: the mass for the coronation of Emperor Leopold I at Frankfurt. The emperor elevated the peasant-born Kerll to the nobility in 1664.

Kerll's career, however, was not one long, easy ascent. He fought with the Italian singers at the Munich court, and in 1673 he quit his job and moved to Vienna. How he initially supported himself there is unclear, but Leopold did grant him a pension in 1675 and made him one of his court organists two years later. Kerll survived both the plague of 1679 and the siege of Vienna in 1683, commemorating them both in music, and then returned to Munich for about the last decade of his life, publishing there some of his organ and sacred music. Kerll is praised perhaps less for his own qualities than for his capability as a successor to Froberger and forerunner of Bach, particularly in the area of organ counterpoint. Most of his masses employ the then-fashionable concertante technique.
 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2012.
Data supplied by Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. Copyright 1948-2012. For personal use only. All rights reserved.