Jindřich Krištof Hataš
Jindřich Krištof Hataš (German: Heinrich Christoph Hatasch/Hattasch; 1756–1808) was a German composer and violinist of Czech origin.
The son of Dismas Hataš and Anna Franziska Benda, Jindřich Krištof was born in Gotha. He was taught to play the violin by his father. It has been suggested that a reference to Hattasch junior as the music director of Johann Joseph von Brunian's theatre group in Brno refers to Jindřich Krištof Hataš, but this has not been verified.[1] In 1778 he was appointed as first violinist in the theatre orchestra of Friedrich Ludwig Schröder in Hamburg. He remained in Hamburg for the rest of his life. Among his known works are three singspiele Der Barbier von Bagdad (lost), Der ehrliche Schweizer (lost) and Helva und Zelinde, from which several numbers were published in Hamburg in 1796.
Further reading
- Alfred Baumgartner: Propyläen Welt der Musik. Band 2: Cools – Hauer. Propyläen-Verlag, Berlin 1989, ISBN 3-549-07832-3, S. 481.
References
- ^ The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2001
External links
- 1739 births
- Czech classical composers
- 1808 deaths
- Czech male classical composers
- German male classical composers
- Czech classical violinists
- German classical violinists
- Male classical violinists
- 18th-century German composers
- 18th-century male musicians
- 18th-century violinists
- People from Gotha (town)
- German opera composers
- Male opera composers
- Czech opera composers
- German classical composers