Composers

Carel Anton Fodor

Piano
Violin
Orchestra
Cello
Viola
Harpsichord
Flute
Piano four hands
Sonata
Concerto
Quartet
Symphony
Variation
by popularity
3 Sonatas, Op.114 Piano Quartets, Op.74 Sonatas for Keyboard with Violin, Op.25 Piano Quartets, Op.14Keyboard Concerto in C major, Op.8Keyboard Concerto in D major, Op.1Keyboard Concerto in D major, Op.5Keyboard Concerto in G minor, Op.12Piano Sonata in F-sharp minor, Op.2 No.2Sonata for Piano 4-Hands in C major, Op.9Symphony No.10 in D majorTheme and 7 Variations for Viola and Violin
Wikipedia
Carel Anton Fodor or Carolus Antonius Fodor (12 April 1768 – 22 February 1846) was a Dutch pianist, conductor, and the most prominent composer of his generation in the Netherlands, writing in the manner of Joseph Haydn.
He was born in Venlo He accompanied his older brother, Carolus Emanuel, to Paris at the age of thirteen, to complete his musical studies, perhaps visiting Russia, but returning to Amsterdam in 1790. Concertising in Amsterdam and The Hague, he built a solid reputation in Dutch musical circles as a pianistic virtuoso.
In 1798 he married Geertruida Tersteeg. At the death of Bartholomeus Ruloffs in 1801 he was named conductor of the orchestra of Felix Meritis, which he was to lead for twenty-five years. In the following year he was nominated to the position of the orchestra Eruditio Musica. In 1808 Louis Bonaparte appointed him to head the Instituut voor Wetenschappen, Literatuur en Schone Kunsten, precursor of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen, the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1811 he established, with Johann Wilhelm Wilms and some others the series of Tuesday concerts. He died, aged 77, in Amsterdam.
Anton Fodor published three symphonies (Opp. 5, 12 and 19), eight piano concertos, and a considerable output of chamber music in which the piano plays the leading role, as well as songs on Dutch texts. His opera, Numa Pompilius, has been lost.