Johann Adolph Hasse (baptised 25 March 1699 – 16 December 1783) was an 18th-century German composer, singer and teacher of music. Immensely popular in his time, Hasse was best known for his prolific operatic output, though he also composed a considerable quantity of sacred music. Married to
soprano
A soprano () is a type of classical singing voice and has the highest vocal range of all voice types. The soprano's vocal range (using scientific pitch notation) is from approximately middle C (C4) = 261 Hertz, Hz to A5 in Choir, choral ...
Faustina Bordoni and a friend of
librettist Pietro Metastasio, whose libretti he frequently set, Hasse was a pivotal figure in the development of ''
opera seria'' and 18th-century music.
Early career
Hasse was baptised in
Bergedorf near Hamburg where his family had been church organists for three generations. His career began in singing when he joined the Hamburg
Oper am Gänsemarkt in 1718 as a tenor. In 1719 he obtained a singing post at the court of
Brunswick, where in 1721 his first opera, ''Antioco'', was performed; Hasse himself sang in the production.

He is thought to have left Germany during 1722. During the 1720s he lived mostly in
Naples
Naples ( ; ; ) is the Regions of Italy, regional capital of Campania and the third-largest city of Italy, after Rome and Milan, with a population of 908,082 within the city's administrative limits as of 2025, while its Metropolitan City of N ...
, dwelling there for six or seven years. In 1725 his
serenata ''Antonio e Cleopatra'', was performed at Naples; the principal roles were sung by Carlo Broschi, better known as
Farinelli, and
Vittoria Tesi. The success of this work not only earned Hasse many commissions from Naples's opera houses, but also, according to
Johann Joachim Quantz, brought him into contact with
Alessandro Scarlatti, who became his teacher and friend; Hasse also altered his style in several respects to reflect that of Scarlatti.
Hasse's popularity in Naples increased dramatically and for several years his workload kept him extremely busy. In this period he composed his only full ''
opera buffa
Opera buffa (, "comic opera"; : ''opere buffe'') is a genre of opera. It was first used as an informal description of Italian comic operas variously classified by their authors as ''commedia in musica'', ''commedia per musica'', ''dramma bernesc ...
'', ''La sorella amante'', in addition to several ''
intermezzi'' and serenatas. He visited the
Venetian Carnival of 1730, where his opera ''
Artaserse'' was performed at
S Giovanni Grisostomo. Metastasio's libretto was heavily reworked for the occasion, and Farinelli took a leading role. Two of his arias from this opera he later performed every night for a decade for
Philip V of Spain.
Dresden and Venice
In 1730 Hasse married Faustina Bordoni, and was also appointed ''
Kapellmeister'' at the
Dresden
Dresden (; ; Upper Saxon German, Upper Saxon: ''Dräsdn''; , ) is the capital city of the States of Germany, German state of Saxony and its second most populous city after Leipzig. It is the List of cities in Germany by population, 12th most p ...
court, though he did not arrive at Dresden until July 1731; earlier in the year he had been active at
Vienna
Vienna ( ; ; ) is the capital city, capital, List of largest cities in Austria, most populous city, and one of Federal states of Austria, nine federal states of Austria. It is Austria's primate city, with just over two million inhabitants. ...
, supervising a performance of his
oratorio
An oratorio () is a musical composition with dramatic or narrative text for choir, soloists and orchestra or other ensemble.
Similar to opera, an oratorio includes the use of a choir, soloists, an instrumental ensemble, various distinguisha ...
''Daniello'' at the court of the
Habsburgs. Soon after the couple's arrival in Dresden, Faustina performed before the court. In September Hasse's ''
Cleofide'' (set to a highly adapted
Metastasio text) was given its premiere; it seems possible that
J. S. Bach attended the performance; certainly
C. P. E. Bach claimed that Hasse and his father had become good friends around this time. King
Augustus II the Strong of Poland and Saxony granted him the title of the Royal-Polish and Electoral-Saxon Kapellmeister.
In October Hasse left Dresden to direct premieres of his next operas at
Turin
Turin ( , ; ; , then ) is a city and an important business and cultural centre in northern Italy. It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin, and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. The city is main ...
and
Rome
Rome (Italian language, Italian and , ) is the capital city and most populated (municipality) of Italy. It is also the administrative centre of the Lazio Regions of Italy, region and of the Metropolitan City of Rome. A special named with 2, ...
, and he also wrote music for the Venetian theatres at this time. By late 1732, Hasse was in Naples again, though he spent the winter at Venice where his ''Siroe'' was first performed in particularly lavish style. In February 1733
Augustus II the Strong, Hasse's early royal patron at Dresden, died. As the court went into a year of mourning, Hasse was permitted to remain abroad. Many of his sacred works, composed for Venice's churches, date to this time.
For much of 1734 Hasse was at Dresden, but from 1735 until 1737 he was in Italy, largely at Naples. Faustina performed in the September 1735 premiere of ''Tito Vespasiano'' (another adapted Metastasio libretto) at
Pesaro. Returning to the royal court in Dresden during 1737 Hasse composed five new operas, but when the court moved to Poland in the autumn of 1738 he and Faustina came back to Venice, where both of them were extremely popular. His next stay in Dresden was also his longest, between the first months of 1740 and January 1744. In this time he revised ''
Artaserse'', composing new arias for Faustina, and also wrote a couple of original ''intermezzi''. His general avoidance of comic opera seems to have been due to Faustina, who feared that the style of singing demanded by ''opera buffa'' would damage her voice.
Dresden: 1744–1763

Between the winter of 1744 and late summer 1745, Hasse was in Italy, but then returned to Dresden for a year.
Frederick the Great, a keen flute player, visited the court in December 1745, and it is likely that many of Hasse's flute sonatas and concertos that date to this time were written for Frederick. The King of Prussia was also present at a performance of one of Hasse's ''Te Deum''s, and himself ordered a performance of the composer's opera ''Arminio''. Soon after Hasse visited Venice and Munich, returning to Dresden in June 1747 to stage his opera ''La spartana generosa'', performed to celebrate multiple royal weddings at this time. Also at this time the hierarchy at Dresden was restructured;
Nicola Porpora was named ''Kapellmeister,'' while Hasse himself was promoted to ''Oberkapellmeister.''
In 1748 Hasse performed two of his operas, ''Ezio'' and ''
Artaserse,'' in
Bayreuth in the half finished
Markgräfliches Opernhaus, because of the marriage of
Elisabeth Fredericka Sophie of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, the daughter of
Wilhelmine of Bayreuth. The marriage of princess Maria Josepha of Saxony to the
French Dauphin gave Hasse the opportunity to journey to Paris in the summer of 1750, where his ''Didone abbandonata'' was performed.
On 28 March 1750 Hasse presented his last oratorio ''La conversione di Sant' Agostino'' in the chapel of the royal palace in Dresden. The libretto, penned by the
Dresden Electress Maria Antonia Walpurgis (1724–1780), concerns the conversion of a sinner to sainthood and was modeled after and edited by
Metastasio. The Dresden premiere was followed by numerous performances of the work in
Leipzig, Hamburg, Mannheim,
Padua
Padua ( ) is a city and ''comune'' (municipality) in Veneto, northern Italy, and the capital of the province of Padua. The city lies on the banks of the river Bacchiglione, west of Venice and southeast of Vicenza, and has a population of 20 ...
, Rome,
Riga
Riga ( ) is the capital, Primate city, primate, and List of cities and towns in Latvia, largest city of Latvia. Home to 591,882 inhabitants (as of 2025), the city accounts for a third of Latvia's total population. The population of Riga Planni ...
,
Prague
Prague ( ; ) is the capital and List of cities and towns in the Czech Republic, largest city of the Czech Republic and the historical capital of Bohemia. Prague, located on the Vltava River, has a population of about 1.4 million, while its P ...
, Potsdam and Berlin which is a testament to the work's popularity in the latter half of the 18th century.
The 1751 Carnival in Dresden saw the retirement of Faustina from operatic performance. Hasse continued to produce new operas throughout the decade, including a setting of Metastasio's ''Il re pastore'', a text
later used by
Mozart. In 1756 the
Seven Years' War
The Seven Years' War, 1756 to 1763, was a Great Power conflict fought primarily in Europe, with significant subsidiary campaigns in North America and South Asia. The protagonists were Kingdom of Great Britain, Great Britain and Kingdom of Prus ...
compelled the court at Dresden to move to
Warsaw
Warsaw, officially the Capital City of Warsaw, is the capital and List of cities and towns in Poland, largest city of Poland. The metropolis stands on the Vistula, River Vistula in east-central Poland. Its population is officially estimated at ...
, though Hasse himself lived mostly in Italy, travelling to Poland solely to supervise productions of his operas, if at all. In the autumn of 1760 he moved to Vienna, where he stayed for the next two years, returning to Dresden in 1763 to find much of his home destroyed and the musical apparatus of the court opera wrecked. Hasse's main patron at Dresden, king
Augustus III of Poland and Saxony died soon after and his successor, who also died quickly, deemed elaborate musical events at the court superfluous. Hasse and Faustina were paid two years' salary but given no pension.
Vienna and Venice: last years

In 1764 Hasse travelled to Vienna, where the coronation of
Joseph II was marked by a performance of his ''
festa teatrale'' ''Egeria'', again set to a libretto by Metastasio. For the most part, he remained at Vienna until 1773. Mozart was present at a performance of his ''Partenope'' in September 1767. Most of his operas composed during this period were also successfully produced at Naples. He was the favourite of
Maria Theresa, and it can be argued that he took up the job of ''de facto'' court ''Kapellmeister.'' With the premiere of ''
Piramo e Tisbe'' (September 1768) Hasse had intended to retire from opera but was compelled by Maria Theresa to compose a further work, ''Ruggiero'' (1771), again set to a Metastasian libretto. In 1771, when hearing 15-year-old Mozart's opera ''
Ascanio in Alba'', Hasse is reported to have made the prophetic remark: "This boy will cause us all to be forgotten."
At this time operatic style was undergoing significant change, and the model of ''opera seria'' that Hasse and Metastasio had settled found itself assailed by the threat of the reforms of
Christoph Willibald Gluck
Christoph Willibald (Ritter von) Gluck (; ; 2 July 1714 – 15 November 1787) was a composer of Italian and French opera in the early classical period (music), classical period. Born in the Upper Palatinate and raised in Bohemia, both part of th ...
and
Ranieri de' Calzabigi, as laid down in the music and libretto for Gluck's opera ''
Orfeo ed Euridice''.
Charles Burney, visiting Vienna in 1773, reported on the debate.
Finding his music under siege from an ''avant-garde'' surge in a new direction, Hasse left Vienna in 1773 and spent the final ten years of his life in Venice, teaching and composing sacred works. Faustina died in November 1781, and Hasse himself, after a long period of suffering from arthritis, just over two years later. He was almost completely ignored after his death, until F. S. Kandler paid for his gravestone in Venice, where he is buried in
San Marcuola, and authored a biography of Hasse in 1820.
Relationship with Metastasio
Hasse's friendship with Metastasio, and his appreciation of the art form the librettist had created, increased over the years. The early Metastasio texts he set were all greatly altered for the purpose, but
Frederick the Great and
Francesco Algarotti both exerted influence in order to make Hasse pay greater respect to Metastasio's works. In the early 1740s he began setting new Metastasian libretti unadapted, and his personal relations with the librettist also improved significantly at around this time. In one of his letters, dated to March 1744, Metastasio made the following comments:
In the following years Hasse reset his earlier works based on Metastasio's texts, this time paying great attention to the poet's original intention, and during the 1760s, as Metastasio wrote new texts, Hasse was, as a general rule, the first composer to set them. Burney left the following note:
Style and reputation
Despite
Giovanni Battista Mancini's claim that Hasse was the ''padre della musica'', and despite the composer's massive popularity as a figure at the very forefront of 18th-century serious Italian opera, after his death Hasse's reputation vastly declined and his music lay mostly unperformed (with the exception of some of his sacred works, which were revived now and again in Germany). In particular, his operas sank without trace and revival only began as the 20th century approached its end: Gluck's reforms took opera away from Hasse's style and Metastasio's Arcadian ideals to a new direction from which it would not return.
In his day, Hasse's style was noted primarily for his lyricism and sense of melody. Burney put it this way:
Careful choice of key was also a crucial factor in Hasse's style, with certain emotions usually marked out by certain key choices. Amorous feelings were expressed by A, for instance, while for expressions of aristocratic nobility Hasse used C and B flat; on the other hand, his supernatural and fear-inducing music usually went into the keys of C and F minor. Most of his arias begin in the major, switching only to minor for the B section before returning to major for the ''da capo''. As his career developed his arias grew much longer but a lyrical sense was still his overriding target.
In Hamburg, the
Johann Adolph Hasse Museum is dedicated to his life and work.
[Lange Nacht der Museen Hamburg]
Johann Adolf Hasse Museum
Works
Notes and references
Notes
References
Sources
*
Further reading
*Francesco Degrada: "Aspetti gluckiani nell'ultimo Hasse", Chigiana, xxix–xxx (1975), 309–329
*
S. Hansell: "Sacred Music at the Incurabili in Venice at the Time of J. A. Hasse", ''
Journal of the American Musicological Society'', xxiii (1970), 282–301, 505–521
*
D. Heartz: "Hasse, Galuppi and Metastasio", ''Venezia e il melodramma nel settecento'': Venice 1973–5, i, 309–339
*F. L. Millner: "Hasse and London's
Opera of the Nobility", ''Music Records'', xxxv (1974), 240–246
*Frederick L. Millner: ''The Operas of Johann Adolf Hasse''. Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press, 1979 (Studies in Musicology, 2).
*Smither, Howard E.: ''A History of the Oratorio.'' University of North Carolina Press, 1977
*
Reinhard Strohm: ''Essays on Handel and Italian Opera'' (Cambridge, 1985)
*Imme Tempke: "Mozart und der 'Musick-Vatter' Hasse". In: ' Nr. 71. Verlag HB-Werbung, Hamburg-Bergedorf, (2006). .
*Imme Tempke: "Hasses Musikausbildung in Hamburg". In: ''Lichtwark-Heft'' Nr. 67. Verlag HB-Werbung, Hamburg-Bergedorf, (2002). .
*Robert Torre: "Operatic Twins & Musical Rivals: Two Settings of Artaserse (1730)", ''Discourses in Music'', vol. 6, no. 1, (Summer 2006).
*Alan Yorke-Long: ''Music at Court: Four Eighteenth-century Studies'', (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1954)
External links
Article: "Dresden in the time of Zelenka and Hasse"by
Brian RobinsArticle: Torre, Robert. "Operatic Twins and Musical Rivals: Two Settings of Artaserse (1730)" Discourses in Music: Volume 6 Number 1 (Summer 2006) David Charlton, classical.net
The Hasse Project*
*
Free scoresat the
Mutopia Project
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hasse, Johann Adolph
1699 births
1783 deaths
Composers from Hamburg
Singers from Hamburg
18th-century Italian composers
German classical composers of church music
Italian Baroque composers
German Classical-period composers
German opera composers
German male opera composers
Pupils of Nicola Porpora
Pupils of Alessandro Scarlatti
18th-century German composers
18th-century German male musicians
People from Bergedorf
Chief conductors of the Staatskapelle Dresden