Composers

Georg Muffat

Organ
String ensemble
Harpsichord
Violin
Toccata
Sonata
Concerti grossi
Concerto
Chaconne
Passacaglia
Variation
Partita
Canzona
Suite
by popularity

#

6 Partitas

A

Apparatus Musico-OrganisticusArmonico tributo

C

Canzona VIICiacona in G majorCor vigilans

D

Delirium amorisDulce somnium

F

Florilegium PrimumFlorilegium Secundum

N

Nova cyclopedeias harmonica

P

Passacaglia in G minorPerseverantiaPräludium in B-flat majorPropitia sydera

R

Regulae Concentuum Partiturae

S

SaeculumString Sonata in A majorString Sonata in D majorString Sonata in E minorString Sonata in G majorString Sonata in G minor

T

Toccata decimaToccata duodecima et ultimaToccata nonaToccata octavaToccata primaToccata quartaToccata quintaToccata secundaToccata septimaToccata sextaToccata tertiaToccata undecima

V

Violin Sonata in D major
Wikipedia
Georg Muffat (1 June 1653 – 23 February 1704) was a Baroque composer and organist. He is best known for the remarkably articulate and informative performance directions printed along with his collections of string pieces Florilegium Primum and Florilegium Secundum (First and Second Bouquets) in 1695 and 1698.
Georg Muffat was born in Megève, Duchy of Savoy (now in France), of André Muffat (of Scottish descent) and Marguerite Orsyand. He studied in Paris between 1663 and 1669, where his teacher is often assumed to have been Jean Baptiste Lully. This assumption is largely based on the statement "For six years ... I avidly pursued this style which was flowering in Paris at the time under the most famous Jean Baptiste Lully." This is ambiguous (in all of the languages in which it was printed) as to whether the style was flourishing under Lully, or that Muffat studied under Lully. In any case, the style which the young Muffat learned was unequivocally Lullian and it remains likely, though unevidenced, that he had at least some contact with the man himself.
After leaving Paris, he became an organist in Molsheim and Sélestat. Later, he studied law in Ingolstadt, afterwards settling in Vienna. He could not get an official appointment, so he travelled to Prague in 1677, then to Salzburg, where he worked for the archbishop for some ten years. In about 1680, he traveled to Italy, there studying the organ with Bernardo Pasquini, a follower of the tradition of Girolamo Frescobaldi; he also met Arcangelo Corelli, whose works he admired very much. From 1690 to his death, he was Kapellmeister to the bishop of Passau.
Georg Muffat should not be confused with his son Gottlieb Muffat, also a successful composer.
His works are strongly influenced by both French and Italian composers:
Muffat was, as Johann Jakob Froberger before him, and Handel after him, a cosmopolitan composer who played an important role in the exchanges between European musical traditions. The information contained within the Florilegium Primum and Secundum is nearly unique. These performance directions were intended to assist German string players with the idiom of the French dance style, and include detailed rules for the tempo and order of bow strokes in various types of movement, as well as more general strategies for good ensemble playing and musicianship. These texts remain extremely valuable for modern historically-interested musicians.