Skip to content
Category

Oratorio composers

page 1
Ludwig van Beethoven
German composer (1770-1827)
Johann Sebastian Bach
German composer (1685–1750)
Antonio Vivaldi
Italian composer and violinist (1678-1741)
Joseph Haydn
Austrian composer (1732–1809)
George Frideric Handel
German-British Baroque composer (1685–1759)
Paul McCartney
Sir James Paul McCartney is an English musician and songwriter. He gained global fame with the Beatles, for whom he was the bassist and keyboardist, and shared primary songwriting and lead vocal duties with John Lennon. McCartney is known for his melodic approach to bass-playing, versatile tenor vocal range and musical eclecticism, exploring genres ranging from pre-rock and roll pop to classical, ballads and electronica. His songwriting partnership with Lennon is the most successful in music history.
Robert Schumann
German composer, pianist and critic (1810–1856)
Felix Mendelssohn
German composer, pianist, organist and conductor of Jewish descent (1809-1847)
Camille Saint-Saëns
French composer, organist, conductor and pianist (1835–1921)
Charles Gounod
French composer (1818–1893)
Edward Elgar
English composer (1857-1934)
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
German composer (1714–1788)
Georg Philipp Telemann
German composer
Johann Christian Bach
German composer (1735–1782)
Andrew Lloyd Webber
British theatre composer (born 1948)
Jules Massenet
French composer (1842–1912)
César Franck
Belgian-French composer and organist (1822–1890)
Arthur Honegger
Swiss composer (1892-1955)
Luigi Boccherini
Italian composer and cellist (1743–1805)
Ralph Vaughan Williams
English composer (1872-1958)
Marc-Antoine Charpentier
17th-century French composer
Arthur Sullivan
English composer of the Gilbert & Sullivan duo (1842-1900)
John Adams
American composer (born 1947)
Michael Haydn
Austrian composer, brother of Joseph Haydn, (1737-1806)
Louis Spohr
German composer, violinist and conductor
Thomas Arne
18th-century British composer
Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf
Austrian composer, violinist and silvologist
Charles Villiers Stanford
Irish composer, music teacher, and conductor (1852–1924)
Giacomo Carissimi
Italian composer (1605–1674)
Jan Dismas Zelenka
Czech baroque composer
Hubert Parry
British composer, teacher and historian (1848–1918)
Josef Mysliveček
Czech composer
Michael Tippett
English composer (1905-1996)
Frank Martin
Swiss composer (1890–1974)
Joachim Raff
Swiss composer (1822-1882)
Ferdinando Paer
Italian composer (1771–1839)
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
English composer and conductor (1875–1912)
William Sterndale Bennett
British musician (1816-75)
Granville Bantock
British composer and conductor (1868-1946)
Leopold Koželuch
Czech music educator, composer and pianist
Peter Benoit
Flemish composer (1834-1901)
Lorenzo Perosi
Italian composer (1872–1956)
John Stainer
English composer (1840–1901)
Felix Draeseke
German composer (1835-1913)
Julius Benedict
German-born composer and conductor (1804–1885)
George Alexander Macfarren
British composer and musicologist (1813–1887)
Giuseppe Martucci
Italian musician (1856-1909)
Horatio Parker
American composer and teacher (1863–1919)
Antonio Rosetti
Czech classical era composer and double bass player (1746-1792)
Lennox Berkeley
British composer (1903–1989)
Frederic Hymen Cowen
British pianist, conductor and composer (1852–1935)
Alexander Mackenzie
Scottish conductor and composer (1847-1935)
Friedrich Schneider
German composer and conductor
Howard Blake
composer
Bernhard Klein
German composer (1793-1832)
William Crotch
English composer, organist and artist (1775-1847)
Walford Davies
British composer (1869–1941)
Giuseppe Corsi
Italian composer and priest
Michael Costa
Italian conductor and composer (1808–1884)
Edgar Tinel
Belgian composer and pianist (1854-1912)