thumb|200px|Johann Peter Salomon by [[Thomas Hardy (English painter)|Thomas Hardy (1790–92)]]

Johann Peter Salomon (20 February 1745 [baptized] – 25 November 1815) was a German violinist, composer, conductor and musical impresario. Although an accomplished violinist, he is best known for bringing Joseph Haydn to London and for conducting the symphonies that Haydn wrote during his stay in England. He also knew and worked with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven.

Life

Johann Peter Salomon was born in January 1745 into a Jewish family in Bonn (but was baptized as an infant) and was the second son of Philipp Salomon, an oboist at the court in Bonn. His birth home was at Bonngasse 515, coincidentally the later birth home of Beethoven. In 1758, at the age of thirteen, he became a violinist in the orchestra of the Elector Clemens August at Bonn.

Seven years later, Salomon went on tour and traveled to Berlin and Frankfort. Following this he arrived in Rheinsberg where he soon became the concert master and composer for the orchestra of Prince Heinrich of Prussia. several art songs, a number of concertos, and chamber music pieces. He is perhaps best known today, however, as a concert organizer and conductor. Haydn wrote his symphonies numbers 93 to 104 for these trips, sometimes known as the Salomon symphonies (more widely known as the London symphonies). Salomon is also said to have provided Haydn with the original model for the text of The Creation. He was one of the founder-members of the Philharmonic Society and led the orchestra at its first concert on 8 March 1813.

Salomon died aged 70 at his house in Newman Street, Westminster, on 25 November 1815, after a long illness, following an incident in the summer of 1815 when he was thrown from his horse. He is buried in the cloisters of Westminster Abbey.

Assessment

right|thumb|Memorial in south cloister of Westminster Abbey

Salomon's violin playing was highly regarded in his day; for a collection of reviews, see Robbins Landon (1976, 24–27). H.C. Robbins Landon also praises his personal qualities: "Salomon was not only a clever and sensitive impresario, he was also generous, scrupulously honest, and very efficient in business matters." Beethoven, who knew Salomon from his days in Bonn, wrote to Ries on hearing of his death, "Salomon's death grieves me much, for he was a noble man, and I remember him since I was a child."

Notes

References

  • Hubert Unverricht. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, edited by Stanley Sadie (1992), and
  • The Oxford Dictionary of Opera, by John Warrack and Ewan West (1992),
  • Robbins Landon, H. C. (1976) Haydn: Chronicle and Works. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.