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This article is about music-related events in 1823.
Events
- April 13 – According to his official biographer, Gustav Schilling, eleven-year-old Franz Liszt gives a concert after which he is personally congratulated by Ludwig van Beethoven;[1] however, there is no record of Beethoven having attended the concert.
 - May 8 - The most famous song of the nineteenth century Home, Sweet Home was sung for the first time in London. (melody by Englishman Sir Henry Bishop, lyrics by John Howard Payne.
 - August 12 – Hector Berlioz writes to the journal Le Corsaire defending Gaspare Spontini's opera La vestale.[2]
 - Gioachino Rossini arrives in London and is presented to King George IV.
 - The arpeggione is invented by Viennese guitar maker Johann Georg Staufer.
 - Soprano Henriette Méric-Lalande catches the attention of the critic Castil-Blaze, who introduces her to the famous tenor Manuel García, thereby advancing her career.[3]
 - Franz Liszt is denied entry into the Paris Conservatory by the Director, Luigi Cherubini, who states that he cannot admit foreigners.
 
Classical music
- Christian Frederik Barth – Oboe Concerto, Op.12
 - Ludwig van Beethoven  
- Diabelli Variations, Op. 120
 - Missa Solemnis, Op. 123
 
 - Vincenzo Bellini – Oboe Concerto in E-flat major
 - Hector Berlioz – Amitié, reprends ton empire, H 10b
 - Ferdinando Carulli – Duos Nocturnes, Op. 189
 - Carl Czerny – Toccata, Op. 92
 - Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia – Rondo, Op. 13
 - Mauro Giuliani – 6 Variations, Op. 112
 - Mikhail Glinka – Andante Cantabile and Rondo
 - Johann Nepomuk Hummel 
- Nocturne, theme et variations, Op. 99
 - Introduction, theme et variations, Op. 102
 
 - Friedrich Wilhelm Kalkbrenner – Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 61
 - August Alexander Klengel – Piano Trio, Op. 36
 - Ernst Krähmer – Variations brillantes, Op. 18
 - Franz Krommer 
- Flute Quintet, Op. 101
 - Symphony No. 6 in D
 
 - Friedrich Kuhlau 
- 3 Flute Quintets, Op. 51
 - 6 Sonatinas, Op. 55
 
 - Giovanni Morandi – Raccolta di sonate per gli organi moderni No.4
 - George Onslow 
- Piano Trio No. 7, Op. 20
 - Grand Sonata No. 2, Op. 22
 - String Quintets Nos.7-9, Opp. 23–25
 
 - Ferdinand Ries 
- Symphony Nos. 4 and 5, Opp. 110 and 112
 - Introduction et rondeau sur une danse russe, Op. 113, No. 1
 - Piano Sonata, Op. 114
 - Cello Sonata No. 4 in G minor, Op. 125
 
 - Christian Heinrich Rinck – 12 Adagios for Organ, Op. 57
 - Bernhard Romberg – Cello Concerto No. 5, Op. 30
 - Franz Schubert –
- Die Schöne Müllerin
 - Drang in die Ferne, D. 770
 - Der Zwerg, D.771
 - Wehmut, D.772
 - Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D. 774
 
 - Louis Spohr 
- Potpourri on Irish Themes, Op. 59
 - String Quartet No.18, Op. 61
 
 
Stage works
- Gaetano Donizetti – Alfredo il grande
 - Mary Fauche – The Shepherd King, Op.1[4]
 - Saverio Mercadante – Didone abbandonata
 - Gioachino Rossini – Semiramide
 - Franz Schubert
 - Carl Maria von Weber – Euryanthe
 
Popular Music
Publications
- Alling Brown – The Gamut, or Scale of Music (New Haven: A. H. Maltby and Co.)
 - Thomas Busby – A Musical Manual (London: Goulding & D'Almaine)
 - Emanuel Aloys Förster – Anleitung zum General-Baß
 - Philippe Marc Antoine Geslin – Exposition de la gamme (Paris)
 
Births
- January 1 – Sándor Petőfi, lyricist (died 1849)
 - January 3 – Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens, organist and composer (died 1881)
 - January 5 – William Smith Rockstro, musicologist and musician (died 1895)
 - January 21 – Alexandre Édouard Goria, pianist and composer (died 1860)
 - January 27 – Édouard Lalo, composer (died 1892)
 - June 2 – Carl Christian Møller, composer (died 1893)
 - June 30 – Selmar Bagge, composer (died 1896)
 - July 22 – Paulina Rivoli, operatic soprano (died 1881)
 - August 3 – Francisco Ansenjo Barbieri, composer (died 1894)
 - August 14 – Karel Miry, Belgian composer (died 1889)
 - August 15 – Léon Gastinel, French composer (died 1906)
 - August 16 – Adolphe Herman, composer (died 1903)
 - August 17 – Theodor Julius Jaffé, opera singer and actor (died 1898)
 - October 21 – Emilio Arrieta, composer (died 1894)
 - October 28 – William Spark, musician (died 1897)
 - November 4 – Karel Komzák I, composer and conductor (died 1893)
 - November 26 – Thomas Tellefsen, pianist and composer (died 1874)
 - December 1 – Ernest Reyer, opera composer and music critic (died 1909)
 - December 10 – Theodor Kirchner, composer and musician (died 1903)
 - December 11 – David Bennett, Canadian soldier and musician (died 1902)
 - date unknown – John Diamond, dancer and minstrel (died 1857)
 
Deaths
- February 16 – Johann Gottfried Schicht, conductor and composer (born 1753)
 - March 1 – Pierre-Jean Garat, singer (born 1764)
 - March 18 – Jean-Baptiste Breval, French cellist and composer (born 1753)
 - April – Jacques Widerkehr, Alsatian composer (born 1759)
 - April 15 – Louis Deland, actor, singer and dancer (born 1772)
 - June 20 – Theodor von Schacht, German composer (born 1748)
 - October 2 – Daniel Steibelt, German pianist and composer (born 1765)
 - November 12 – Emanuel Aloys Förster, composer and music teacher (born 1748)
 - date unknown – Federigo Fiorillo, composer and musician (born 1755)
 
References
- ↑ Schilling: Franz Liszt, p.51.
 - ↑ Hector Berlioz website. Accessed 2 October 2013
 - ↑ Le guide de l'opéra, Roland Mancini & Jean-Jacques Rouveroux, (Fayard, 1986) ISBN 2-213-01563-5
 - ↑ "The Shepherd King, Op.1 (Fauche, Mary) - IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download". imslp.org. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
 
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