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John Frederick Lampe
www.en.wikipedia.org
Short Name: John Frederick Lampe
Full Name: Lampe, John Frederick, 1703-1751
Birth Year: 1703
Death Year: 1751

John Frederick Lampe (born Johann Friedrich Lampe; probably 1703 – 25 July 1751) was a musician.

He was born in Saxony, but came to England in 1724 and played the bassoon in opera houses. His wife, Isabella Lampe, was sister-in-law to the composer Thomas Arne with whom Lampe collaborated on a number of concert seasons. John and Isabella's son, Charles John Frederick Lampe, was a successful organist and composer as well.

Like Arne, Lampe wrote operatic works in English in defiance of the vogue for Italian opera popularised by George Frideric Handel and Nicola Porpora. Lampe, along with Henry Carey and J. S. Smith, founded the short-lived English Opera Project. He became a friend of Charles Wesley, and wrote several tunes to accompany Wesley's hymns. His works for the stage include the mock operas Pyramus and Thisbe (1745) and The Dragon of Wantley (1734), which ran for 69 nights, a record for the time, surpassing The Beggar's Opera. He was based for a time in Dublin and later in Edinburgh, where he died.

--en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

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Tunes by John Frederick Lampe (7)sort descendingAsInstancesIncipit
CRUCIFIXION (Lampe)John Frederick Lampe (Composer)155311 65456 5432
DYING STEPHENJohn Frederick Lampe (Composer)513454 32166 56543
FAIRFIELD (Lampe)John Frederick Lampe (Composer)153157 12345 43223
IRISHJohn Frederick Lampe (Composer)411512 34323 53451
KENT (Lampe)J. F. Lampe (Composer)2453716 54332 54576
RESURRECTION (Harmonia Sacra)Johann Freidrich Lampe (Composer)134555 67112 34
ST. LUKE (Lampe)John Frederick Lampe (Composer)217653 21475 54343
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