Joseph Martin Kraus (1756-1792), demonstrated talents as a
composer at a young age and went on to lead an illustrious, if
brief, career as an acclaimed classical composer. At the age of 26,
Kraus embarked on a four-year grand tour, receiving accolades from
some of the most important musical luminaries of the period as well
as achieving a reputation as one of the top six most important
composers of his age (the others being Haydn, Mozart, Rosetti,
Pleyel, and Reichardt). Like Mozart, he was a prolific
correspondent, whose many observations include musings on the music
and musicians of his time. Kraus s intimate letters to family give
an unusual picture of the private man, showing a slice of domestic
life in the 18th century among the emerging middle class. These
letters include one of the few descriptions of the great Handel
Centenary Festival from an outsider, critiques of the operas
performed in Paris by Piccinni, the first mention in history of
Mozart s Le Nozze di Figaro, and descriptions of the art and
archeology of Pompeii. These documents are crucial to the
understanding of not only Kraus s life and works, but also of the
18th century life of an important composer and his milieu."
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