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Maria Anna Barbara or Babette Ployer (2 September 1765 – before April 1811) was an Austrian piano and composition pupil of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, for whom he wrote two piano concertos in 1784, No. 14 KV. 449 and No. 17, KV. 453, which were both premiered at her residence by her in 1784.
The history of the work suggests that, if the theory above is correct that the work commemorates the death of Maria Anna von Genzinger, it originated before that event. First, the manuscript form of the work has an entirely different dedicatee, namely Antonia Ployer, whose niece Barbara Ployer was a distinguished pianist of the time. [5]
Ployer may refer to: Barbara Ployer (1765–1811), an Austrian piano and composition pupil of Mozart for whom he composed two piano concertos Ployer Peter Hill (1894-1935), US Army Air Corps test pilot
For the sake of Kevin Von Erich, and for Kerry’s daughters. And for their children for years to come. February 22, 1993: Wrestler Kerry Von Erich’s funeral held at First Baptist Church in Dallas.
In the wake of her death, Leone's stepfather, Mike Romero, organized a GoFundMe campaign to help cover the memorial and other expenses associated with the sudden loss. As of writing, more than ...
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
After the death of her father, Mozart conveyed a housing at Countess Waldstätten's to Auernhammer which was located in the Leopoldstadt district of Vienna. In 1786, she married Johann Bessenig (c. 1752 – 1837), with whom she had four children. She regularly participated in concerts in private venues and at the Burgtheater.
2006 "New and Old Documents Concerning Mozart's Students Barbara Ployer and Josepha Auernhammer", Eighteenth-Century Music, vol. 3, no. 2, September 2006 (Cambridge University Press), 311–322. 2005 "The Jenamy Concerto", Newsletter of the Mozart Society of America, vol. IX, no. 1 (January), 1–3. Archived 2020-02-24 at the Wayback Machine