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Georg Christoph Wagenseil (29 January 1715 – 1 March 1777) was an Austrian composer. He was a well-known musical figure in his day — both Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are known to have been familiar with his works. His early works are Baroque, while his later pieces are in the Classical style. He composed a number of operas, choral works, symphonies, concertos, chamber music and keyboard pieces. Please support my channel: https://ko-fi.com/bartjebartmans Symphony in C major, Op. 5, No. 5. VW 361 (1774) Arranged by Paul-César Gibert (1717–1787) as an "Ouvertura Famosa" per il Cembalo o Piano-Forte (c. 1774) I. Allegro molto (0:00) II. Andante (4:30) III. Tempo di Menuetto (8:00) Stuttgarter Kammerorchester conducted by Johannes Goritzki Apart from occasional stylistic glances back to the past (what is meant is, e.g., the operatic, somewhat conservative, but highly animated Allegro molto from the Sinfonia in C [WV 361], a work forming part of another collection published by Venier). Wagenseil’s style increasingly follows a clear line of development toward the concert symphony – this against the background of his Paris successes. Repetitions of introductory segments become part of the standard inventory of these compositions and together with the extension of the middle and final movements in these same works result in an increase of overall length of about fifty percent. In addition, modulations of key of experimental character, excursions to minor keys occupying whole segments, if not whole movements too, and instances of tone-color interplay (e.g., when Wagenseil uses the transverse flutes to reinforce the violins [WV 374] or in unison with the violins and oboes [WV 432]).