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The portrait of organist and composer August Alexander Klengel, by Carl Christian Vogel von Vogelstein. Date unknown.

August Stephan Alexander Klengel (29 June 1783, Dresden – 22 November 1852, Dresden) was a German pianist, organist and composer.

Biography

Klengel was the son of landscape painter Johann Christian Klengel [de]. He showed an early talent for music, and studied piano under (among others) Johann Peter Milchmeyer (1750–1813).

In 1803, Muzio Clementi, a renowned teacher, visited Dresden. He accepted Klengel as pupil, and took him with him on his travels. In 1805, they went together with Ludwig Berger to St Petersburg. Clementi next travelled to London, but Klengel remained in St Petersburg until 1811, giving piano lessons. He next moved to Paris in 1812; in 1814, he returned to Dresden; in 1815, he visited London, where the Philharmonic Society commissioned him to write a piece, and he wrote for them his Piano Quintet (for piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass).[1] In 1816, he was appointed court composer to the King of Saxony (at the time, Frederick Augustus I), in Dresden. Except for brief visits to Paris and Brussels, he remained in that city for the rest of his life.

His Canons and Fugues for Piano, in All the Major and Minor Keys were first published in 1854, after his death. In them, Klengel attempted to synthesise the lessons he had drawn both from Bach and from Clementi. (In his text-book Applied Counterpoint, page 287, Percy Goetschius recommends analysis of Klengel's Canons and Fugues.)

Compositions

These include:

References

  1. ^ The French Emperor Napoleon fell from power in April 1814, and was exiled. After the campaign of the Hundred Days (March – July 1815), Napoleon was exiled a second and final time.
  2. ^ Catalog description of the manuscript of the 2nd concerto, dedicated to Johann Baptist Cramer, at the Austrian National Library, Vienna. The first concerto, in B, can be found in instrumental parts at IMSLP. The concerto was published as Op.15 by Peters (and as Op.29 as well, ca.1823 - see the comments to Op.4's IMSLP.)

Further reading

Discography