Winfried Michel

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Winfried Michel (born 1948 in Fulda) is a German recorder player, composer, and editor of music.

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Michel studied with Ingetraud Drescher, Nikolaus Delius, and Frans Brüggen. He is lecturer for the recorder at the Staatliche Hochschule Münster and at the Musikakademie Kassel. In addition to compositions published under his own name, he has written numerous pieces in the style of the early 18th century under the pseudonym Giovanni Paolo Simonetti. In 1993 he succeeded in convincing noted Haydn scholar H. C. Robbins Landon and the pianist/scholars Paul and Eva Badura-Skoda that six piano sonatas he had composed were long-lost works by Joseph Haydn. [1]

Based on the opening few bars of six lost Haydn works, found in an old thematic index, these sonatas were published in 1995 as works by Haydn, "supplemented and edited by Winfried Michel." He has similarly completed the Viola Sonata left as a two-movement fragment by Mikhail Glinka with a menuet as third movement, even though Glinka would have—according to his autobiography—put a rondo. [2]

Compositions

As Winfried Michel

As Giovanni Paolo Simonetti

Sources

  1. Beckerman, Michael. 1994. "CLASSICAL VIEW; All Right, So Maybe Haydn Didn't Write Them. So What?" New York Times (May 15).
    Lindskoog, Kathryn. 1996. "In the Footsteps of Michelman." The Lewis Legacy 69 (Summer).
  2. "Glinka Sonata | Paula Brusky, PhD". www.paulabrusky.com. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  3. Pirates of the Baroque Red Priest www.allmusic.com, accessed 20 January 2023

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