Composers

Giovanni Henrico Albicastro

String ensemble
Violin
Cello
Viola
Violone
Concerto
Sonata
by popularity
12 Concertos, Op.712 Trio Sonatas, Op.312 Trio Sonatas, Op.46 Violin Sonatas, Op.5Concerto in A major, Op.7 No.11Concerto in B minor, Op.7 No.7Concerto in B-flat major, Op.7 No.6Concerto in C major, Op.7 No.3Concerto in C minor, Op.7 No.4Concerto in D major, Op.7 No.8Concerto in D minor, Op.7 No.2Concerto in E minor, Op.7 No.10Concerto in F major, Op.7 No.1Concerto in F minor, Op.7 No.12Concerto in G major, Op.7 No.9Concerto in G minor, Op.7 No.5Violin Sonata in F minor
Wikipedia
Giovanni Henrico Albicastro (c. 1660 – 26 January 1730) was a talented amateur musician who published his compositions pseudonymously.
His name is the italianized version of Johann Heinrich von Weissenburg. Albicastro came from the village of Bieswangen, near Pappenheim in central Bavaria, not far from the village of Weissenburg ("White Castle", thus "Albicastro" in Latin or Italian). Johann Gottfried Walther included Albicastro in his Musicalisches Lexicon (1732) under the mistaken supposition that Albicastro came from Switzerland; consequently he has often been included in lists of Swiss musicians. He might be classified as a Bavarian-born composer of Italian music that was published in both the Protestant and Catholic Low Countries.
In 1686, Albicastro arrived in Leiden, in the Netherlands, where he registered at the University of Leiden as a Musicus Academiae, but his name does not appear in the university's archives.
In 1696, a collection of twelve of his trio sonatas appeared, entitled Il giardino armonico sacro-profano ("The sacred-profane harmonic garden"), Op. 3. Edited by François Barbry, it was published in Bruges by François van Heurck; no copies of the last six, or of Albicastro's opus 1 or opus 2 from Bruges seem to have survived. In Amsterdam a separate set of opus numbers were published by Estienne Roger: collections of violin sonatas (Opp. 2, 3, 5, 6 and 9), trio sonatas (Opp. 1, 4 and 8), and string concertos (Op. 7) in a Corellian idiom.
During the last phases of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1713), he served as a captain of cavalry. He remained active in this position until 1730, when he died in Maastricht on 26 January. One source mentions that he may have died in 1738, but this is erroneous.