Composers

František Jiránek

String ensemble
Bassoon
Oboe
Violin
Orchestra
Concerto
Sinfonia
Sonata
by popularity
8 ConcertosBassoon Concerto in C major, KapM Jiranek 19Bassoon Concerto in F major, KapM Jiranek 18Bassoon Concerto in G major, KapM Jiranek 20Bassoon Concerto in G minor, KapM Jiranek 21Oboe Concerto in B-flat major, KapM Jiranek 16Oboe Concerto in B-flat major, KapM Jiranek 17Oboe Concerto in F major, KapM Jiranek 15Sinfonia in C major, KapM Jiranek 1Trio Sonata in A major, KapM Jiranek 25Violin Concerto in A major, KapM Jiranek 10Violin Concerto in D minor, KapM Jiranek 7
Wikipedia
František Jiránek (24 July 1698 – 1778) was a Czech (Bohemian) Baroque composer, musician and very likely a student of Antonio Vivaldi.
Jiránek was born on 24 July 1698 in Lomnice nad Popelkou (Northern Bohemia, present-day Czech Republic). His parents were servants of the Counts of Morzin; František also started to work for them as a musician. Count Václav Morzin sent him to Venice in 1724 to improve his musical abilities. His teacher was probably Antonio Vivaldi himself. Count Václav Morzin was a very important supporter of Vivaldi (Vivaldi dedicated to him his famous Four Seasons).
In 1726 Jiránek came back to Prague and worked as a violinist in the Prague ensemble of Václav Morzin. In this ensemble worked also Antonín Reichenauer and Johann Friedrich Fasch. After the death of Václav Morzin in 1737 Jiránek left Prague and was employed by the Prime Minister of Saxony, Heinrich von Brühl in Dresden. In Dresden his work was informed by the coming Classical music. After the death of Heinrich Brühl in 1763 he retired and died in 1778 in Dresden.
Only Jiránek's instrumental works have been preserved (e.g. violin concertos, symphonies or concertos). His work was strongly influenced by Vivaldi's musical style, although it has also many original distinctive elements. In fact their styles are so similar that Jiránek's works have occasionally been misattributed to Vivaldi. See, for example, the Violin Concerto in D major RV Anh. 8, which is now known to have been a Jiránek composition, catalogued as Jk Ap. 1.