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Events
- March 23 – Johann Sebastian Bach revives his St Matthew Passion BWV 244 (BC D 3b) with some further revisions of instrumentation and voicing at St. Thomas Church, Leipzig: the work is now scored with a ripieno soprano choir and viola da gamba and harpsichord in the second orchestra (the organ for this orchestra is under repair).
 - April 13 – First performance of Handel's oratorio Messiah staged at the Music Hall in Fishamble Street, Dublin[1] in aid of local charities. Matthew Dubourg leads the orchestra. Handel leaves Ireland on 13 August.
 - December 7 – The Berlin Court Opera is inaugurated with a performance of Carl Heinrich Graun's Cleopatra e Cesare.
 - Joseph Benda joins the Prussian royal orchestra.
 
Publications
- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach – 6 Harpsichord Sonatas, Wq.48 (Nuremberg: Balthasar Schmid) (composed 1740–1742)
 - Francesco Barsanti – A Collection of Old Scots Tunes(Edinburgh: Alexander Baillie)
 - Jean-Joseph Mouret – Motets à une et deux voix avec symphonie (Paris: la Veuve Mouret, Mme Boivin, Le Sr Le Clerc)
 - Jacques-Christophe Naudot – 6 Concertos en quatre parties, for hurdy-gurdy, musette, flute, recorder, or oboe, with two violins and continuo, Op. 17 (Paris)
 - John Parry – Antient British music, or A collection of tunes, never before published, which are retained by the Cambro-Britons... part 1, containing 24 airs... (London: Mickleborough), compiled with Evan Williams, contains the first appearance of the melody now used for "Deck the Halls"
 
Classical music
- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach 
- Harpsichord Concerto in G major, H.412, Wq. 9
 - 6 Harpsichord Sonatas, Wq.49 (published 1744)
 
 - Johann Sebastian Bach
- Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet, BWV 212 ("Peasant Cantata")
 - The Art of Fugue (Die Kunst der Fuge), BWV 1080, earliest known manuscript (P200)
 
 - Louis-Nicolas Clérambault – Motets, Book I (Books I–V were all composed and published between 1742–1760 but no exact dates survive)
 - Michel Corrette – Concerto Turc (No. 19 from Concertos Comiques)
 - Christoph Graupner 
- Trio Sonata in G minor, GWV 215
 - Concerto for 2 Chalumeaux in C major, GWV 303
 
 - George Frideric Handel – Messiah (first performed, composed 1741)
 - Johann Adolph Hasse – I pellegrini al sepolcro di Nostro Signore (oratorio)
 - Giovanni Battista Martini – 12 Sonate d’intavolatura per l’organo e ’l cembalo (published 1747 in Bologna)
 - Johann Melchio Molter 
- Clarinet Concerto in D major, MWV 6.36
 - Clarinet Concerto in D major, MWV 6.38
 
 - Jacques-Christophe Naudot – Suite en trio, Op. 18
 - Giovanni Benedetto Platti – 6 Harpsichord Sonatas 'sur le goût italien' (published in Nuremberg, 1742)
 - Franz Xaver Richter – Kemptener Te Deum
 - Giovanni Battista Sammartini – 12 Sonatas, Op. 2
 - Domenico Scarlatti – Keyboard sonatas K. 31–93 presented to the queen.
 
Opera
- Giuseppe Carcani – Demetrio
 - Baldassare Galuppi – Scipione in Cartagine
 - Carl Heinrich Graun – Cesare e Cleopatra
 - Johann Adolph Hasse 
- La Didone abbandonata
 - Lucio Papirio
 
 - Niccolò Jommelli – Don Chichibio
 - Leonardo Leo – Andromaca
 - Gennaro Manna – Tito Manlio
 
Methods and theory writings
Francesco Valls – Mapa Armónico Práctico
Births
- January 15 – Simon Leduc (died 1777)
 - May 8 – Jean-Baptiste Krumpholz, Czech composer (died 1790)
 - July 19 – Jean-Baptiste Davaux (died 1822)
 - August 19 – Jean Dauberval, French dancer (died 1806)
 - Probable date – Martha Ray, English singer (murdered 1779)
 
Deaths
- January 24 (buried) – Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter, Austrian composer (born 1665)
 - April 16 – Stefano Benedetto Pallavicino, Paduan-born librettist (born 1672)
 - June 28 – Jan Josef Ignác Brentner, Czech composer (born 1689)
 - July 22 – Andrea Adami da Bolsena, Italian castrato, master of the papal choir (born 1663)
 - July 12 – Evaristo Felice Dall'Abaco, Veronese-born violinist and composer (born 1675)
 - August 25 – Carlos Seixas, Portuguese composer (born 1704)
 - date unknown 
- Matteo Goffriller, Italian cello-maker (born 1659)
 - Giovanni Mossi (born c. 1680)
 
 
References
- ↑ "BBC History British History Timeline". Archived from the original on 9 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
 
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