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Whether you're looking for composer biographies, historical music articles or public domain sheet music, Music of Yesterday has what you are looking for. We update content daily and link the best articles on this page weekly to keep you up to date on what's new.

Our content consists of article extracts from newspapers, magazines and books written and published prior to 1923 bringing to you the flavor of early music history as it was presented by prominent people in the music industry at that time including articles written by famous composers about other famous composers as well as articles written by opera stars and the top music educators of the time.

Also included in our archive are articles concerning the teaching of various musical instruments as well as music theory and what the best methods were for teaching students of all ages.

Most of our biographies include not only birth dates and places but more personal information on the lives and times of the person being studied and in some cases the interaction between composers of their time. Learn about their struggles, successes and more.

Are you interested in information about a particular opera? Read a short description of some of the most famous operas; feel the drama.

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Jacob Adlung

He was born at Bindersleben, Erfurt, Jan. 14, 1699; a theologian, scholar, and musician. His taste for music came late; the clavier, organ, and theory, he learned from Christian Reichardt the organist, who though not a musician of the first rank was truly devoted to his art. After the death of Buttstedt in 1727 Adlung received his post as organist of the Lutheran Church, where he was soon known for his masterly playing, and in 1741 became professor at Rathsgymnasium of Erfurt. In 1736 his house and all his possessions were burnt, but the undaunted man was not discouraged. He taught both music and language, wrote largely and well on music, and even constructed instruments with his own hands; and thus made a successful resistance to adverse fortune till his death, July 5, 1762. Three of this works are of lasting value in musical literature:

(1) Anleitung zur musik. Gelahrtheit, with a preface by Joh. Ernst Bach (Erfurt, 1758); a 2nd edition, issued after his death, by J A Hiller (Leipzig, 1783).

(2) Musica mechanica Organoedi, etc. (Berlin, 1768), a treatise in two volumes on the structure, use, and maintenance of the organ and clavicymbalum. This contains additions by J F Agricola and J L Albrecht, a translation by the former of a treatise on the organ by Bedos De Celles, and an autobiography of Adlung.

(3) Musikalisches Siebengestirn (Berlin, 1768).

 
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