1851 in music
| List of years in music | 
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| (table) | 
 
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This article is about music-related events in 1851.
Events
- February – Operatic tenor Sims Reeves returns to perform in Dublin with his new wife, soprano Charlotte Emma Lucombe.
 - February 6 – Schumann's Symphony No. 3 receives its première in Düsseldorf, the composer conducting.[1]
 - March 11 – Giuseppe Verdi's opera Rigoletto is first performed at La Fenice in Venice.[2]
 - April 5 – Jenny Lind visits the Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, USA.
 - July 23 – Richard Wagner writes down the leitmotif for the "Ride of the Valkyries".
 - Operatic baritone Hans von Milde marries soprano Rosa Agthe.
 - Eight-year-old Adelina Patti sings in public for the first time.
 
Published popular music
- "Cora, the Indian Maiden's Song" – w. Shirley Brooks m. Alexander Lee
 - "Old Folks at Home" (Way Down Upon the Swanee River) by Stephen Foster
 - "Ring, Ring, de Banjo" by Stephen Foster
 - "I Would Not Die in Summer Time" by Stephen Foster
 - "Laura Lee" by Stephen Foster
 
Classical music
- Woldemar Bargiel 
- Piano Trio No. 1 in F major, Op. 6
 - String Quartet No.3, Op.15b
 
 - Johannes Brahms 
- Scherzo in E-flat minor for solo piano, Op. 4
 - Heimkehr (Homecoming) for voice and piano, Op. 7 No. 6
 
 - Stephen Heller – Pensées fugitives, Op.30
 - Franz Liszt 
- Transcendental Études for Piano, S 139
 - Grandes études de Paganini
 
 - Johann Kaspar Mertz – Fantaisie über 'Don Juan', Op.28
 - Jacques Offenbach – Concerto Rondo for cello and orchestra.
 - George Onslow – Wind Quintet Op. 81
 - Anton Rubinstein – Symphony No. 2 (Ocean) (first version)
 - Robert Schumann 
- Symphony No. 4 from 1841, revised
 - Violin Sonata No. 1
 - Violin Sonata No. 2
 - Der Rose Pilgerfahrt, oratorio
 - Mädchenlieder, Op. 103
 - 7 Lieder, Op. 104
 - 6 Gesänge, Op. 107
 - Piano Trio No. 3, Op. 110
 - 3 Gedichte, Op. 119
 - Julius Cäsar Ouverture, Op. 128
 - 3 Fantasiestücke, for piano
 - Märchenbilder, for piano and viola
 
 - Adrien-François Servais 
- Souvenir de la Suisse, Op.10
 - 6 Caprices for Cello, Op.11
 
 - Hugo Staehle – 6 Lieder, Op.2
 
Opera
- Félicien-César David – La Perle du Bresil
 - Charles Gounod – Sapho
 - Albert Lortzing – Die Oprnprobe
 - Joachim Raff – König Alfred
 - Giuseppe Verdi – Rigoletto
 
Births
- January 25 – Jan Blockx, pianist, composer and music teacher (d. 1912)
 - January 27 – Gaspar Villate, composer (d. 1891)
 - February 12 – Anna Yesipova, pianist (d. 1914)
 - March 27 
- Ruperto Chapí, composer (d. 1909)
 - Vincent d'Indy, composer (d. 1931)
 
 - May 1 – Ludvig Hegner, composer (d. 1923)
 - May 6 
- Aristide Bruant, French singer (d. 1925)
 - Jean-Alexandre Talazac, operatic tenor (d. 1896)
 
 - May 7 – Julius Buths, pianist, conductor and composer (d. 1920)
 - May 17 – Victor Bendix, pianist, conductor and composer (d. 1926)
 - June 3 – Theodore Baker, musicologist (died 1934)
 - June 11 – Oscar Borg, composer (d. 1930)
 - June 12 – Pol Plançon, operatic bass (d. 1914)
 - August 8 – Walborg Lagerwall, Swedish violinist (d. 1940)
 - October 11 – Josif Marinković, composer (d. 1931)
 - October 16 – Viggo Bielefeldt, composer (d. 1909)
 - November 5 – Émile Pierre Ratez, composer (d. 1934)
 - November 16 – Minnie Hauk, operatic soprano (d. 1929)
 - probable – Marie Heilbron, operatic soprano (d. 1886)
 
Deaths
- January 21 – Albert Lortzing, composer (b. 1801)
 - January 24 – Gaspare Spontini, composer (b. 1774)
 - February 20 – Josef Alois Ladurner, Austrian composer and pedagogue (b. 1769)
 - March 6 
- Alexander Alyabyev, composer (b. 1787)
 - Emma Hartmann, composer (b. 1807)
 
 - April 8 – John Parry (Bardd Alaw), harpist and composer (b. 1776)
 - July 4 – Martin-Joseph Mengal, composer (b. 1784)
 - July 17 – Béni Egressy, composer and librettist (b. 1814)
 - August 8 – James Shudi Broadwood, piano-maker (b. 1772)
 - October 8 – George Alexander Lee, singer, songwriter and opera producer (b. 1802)
 - December 1 – Carl Dahlén, ballet dancer and choreographer (b. 1770)
 
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Music in 1851.
References
- ^ Kuenning, Geoff (1994). "Schumann: Symphony No. 3, Rhenish". Archived from the original on 18 December 2005.
 - ^ Rosselli, John (2000). The Life of Verdi. Musical Lives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-52166-957-3.