Composers

Antonio Brioschi

String ensemble
Violin
Viola
Sinfonia
Sonata
by popularity
6 Sonatas, Op.2Sinfonia in B-flat majorSinfonia in C major, ULB Mus Ms 121-1Sinfonia in D major, ULB Mus Ms 121-2Sinfonia in D major, ULB Mus Ms 121-3Sinfonia in D major, ULB Mus Ms 121-4Sinfonia in D major, ULB Mus Ms 121-5Sinfonia in D major, ULB Mus Ms 121-6Sinfonia in E-flat major, ULB Mus Ms 121-10Sinfonia in E-flat major, ULB Mus Ms 121-7Sinfonia in E-flat major, ULB Mus Ms 121-8Sinfonia in E-flat major, ULB Mus Ms 121-9Sinfonia in G major
Wikipedia
Antonio Brioschi (fl. c. 1725 – 1750) was an Italian symphony composer who wrote at least twenty six symphonies; most of which were preserved in the collection of Pierre Philibert de Blancheton.
Brioschi was a pioneer in symphonic music in the early Classical period which traditionally starts around 1730. He appears to have been a more prolific symphonic composer during this period than even the better-known Giovanni Battista Sammartini and seems to have been active in or near Milan. The symphonic school in Milan gathered around the authoritative figure of Sammartini and included Brioschi, Ferdinando Galimberti and Giovanni Battista Lampugnani. Brioschi himself seems to have been associated with the musical life of the Jewish community in Casale Monferrato.