John Field (July 26, 1782 – January 23, 1837) was an Irish composer and pianist. He is best known for being the first composer to write nocturnes.
In 1801 Field accompanied Clementi on a tour of Paris and Vienna (where he studied briefly with Johann Georg Albrechtsberger). When Clementi moved to Russia, Field followed him there, continuing his employment demonstrating his pianos. Field established his own concert career in Russia, and by 1806 was dividing his time between Moscow and Saint Petersburg, settling in the latter city after his marriage in 1810. His teaching proved lucrative, and his lifestyle became somewhat extravagant; he was something of a bon viveur, and fathered an illegitimate son.
By 1831 his health deteriorated, with a painful cancer of the rectum, and he travelled back to London for medical attention. He returned to Russia by way of France (where, after first hearing one of Liszt's assaults on the keybord, he asked his neighbour, "Does he bite?") and Italy, spending nine months in a hospital in Naples. Helped by a Russian aristocratic family, he returns to Moscow in 1835. There he composed his last few nocturnes in the sixteen months remaining to him. He died in Moscow.
Among his solo piano compositions, Field composed 16 nocturnes, four piano sonatas (the first three published together as his Op. 1), as well as fantasias, etudes, rondos, and sets of variations.
Classical era composers | Romantic composers | Irish composers | Irish classical pianists | 1782 births | 1837 deaths | Natives of County Dublin
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