Anneke Uittenbosch

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Anneke Uittenbosch (* in Haarlem , Netherlands ) is a Dutch harpsichordist .

Life

Uittenbosch received her first piano lessons from her father. After graduating from school, she studied piano with Roel Riphagen at the music school in Haarlem. Because of her interest in the music of the 18th century, she switched to Gustav Leonhardt's class at the Amsterdam Conservatory , where she passed her soloist examination. From the end of the 1960s and in the 1970s she taught harpsichord at the Maastricht Conservatory, later also as a main subject professor at the Amsterdam Conservatory.

As a harpsichordist, both as a soloist and as a continuo accompanist , she made numerous recordings with Gustav Leonhardt and the Leonhardt Consort, works for two harpsichords with Ton Koopman . With Nikolaus Harnoncourt and his Concentus Musicus Wien , she recorded harpsichord concerts by Johann Sebastian Bach . She worked with Frans Brüggen and the “Concerto Amsterdam” founded by the violinist Jaap Schröder . She made regular concert appearances and recordings in the trio formation "L'Estro Armonico Amsterdam", together with the flautist Frans Vester and the viol player Veronika Hampe ; they have taken the ensemble to many Western European countries. She worked with the singers Elly Ameling and Max van Egmond on a recording of the collection Pathodia sacra et profana by the diplomat, poet and composer Constantijn Huygens . In 1988 she recorded all of the works for harpsichord and violin by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach for the Glossa label with the Dutch violinist Alda Stuurop . Johann Sebastian Bach published part two of The Well-Tempered Clavier in 1992 on the Globe label .

She regularly accompanied her husband, the opera singer Lieuwe Visser , in works from the 17th and 18th centuries, both on a concert tour through the United States of America and when recording sound carriers. She dealt in depth with the complete works of Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck .

Web links

source

Summary of biographical information on a long-playing record sleeve with works by Sweelinck, His Master's Voice 5C 065-24586 from 1971