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== First Viennese School == {{More citations needed|section|date=November 2021}} [[File:Canaletto (I) 058.jpg|thumb|300px|View of Vienna in 1758, by [[Bernardo Bellotto]]]] The [[First Viennese School]] is a name mostly used to refer to three composers of the Classical period in late-18th-century [[Vienna]]: Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven. [[Franz Schubert]] is occasionally added to the list. In German-speaking countries, the term ''Wiener Klassik'' (lit. ''Viennese classical era/art'') is used. That term is often more broadly applied to the Classical era in music as a whole, as a means to distinguish it from other periods that are colloquially referred to as ''classical'', namely [[Baroque music|Baroque]] and [[Romantic music]]. The term "Viennese School" was first used by Austrian musicologist Raphael Georg Kiesewetter in 1834, although he only counted Haydn and Mozart as members of the school. Other writers followed suit, and eventually Beethoven was added to the list.<ref>{{Cite Grove |last1=Heartz |first1=Daniel |author-link=Daniel Heartz |last2=Brown |first2=Bruce Alan |author2-link=Bruce Alan Brown |title=Classical|name-list-style=amp}}</ref> The designation "first" is added today to avoid confusion with the [[Second Viennese School]]. Whilst, Schubert apart, these composers certainly knew each other (with Haydn and Mozart even being occasional chamber-music partners), there is no sense in which they were engaged in a collaborative effort in the sense that one would associate with 20th-century schools such as the Second Viennese School, or [[Les Six]]. Nor is there any significant sense in which one composer was "schooled" by another (in the way that Berg and Webern were taught by Schoenberg), though it is true that Beethoven for a time received lessons from Haydn. Attempts to extend the First Viennese School to include such later figures as [[Anton Bruckner]], [[Johannes Brahms]], and [[Gustav Mahler]] are merely journalistic, and never encountered in academic musicology. According to scholar James F. Daugherty, the Classical period itself from approximately 1775 to 1825 is sometimes referred to as "the Viennese Classic period".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cmed.faculty.ku.edu/private/classical.html |title=The Classical Period (1775-1825) |first=James F. |last=Daugherty |publisher=[[University of Kansas]] |date= |access-date=20 March 2024}}</ref>
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