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Josef Linke


Josef Linke (8 June 1783 – 26 March 1837) was a cellist and composer who had a distinguished career in Vienna, as a soloist and as a member of the Schuppanzigh Quartet. He took part in the first performances of string quartets and other chamber works of Ludwig van Beethoven.

Linke was born in Trachenberg in Silesia (now Żmigród in Poland). He later lived nearby in Breslau; he studied cello with Lose, the first cellist of the Breslau Opera House, where Carl Maria von Weber was the conductor, and he played in the opera orchestra.

He moved to Vienna, and in 1808 he became the cellist in a string quartet which Count Andrey Razumovsky had commissioned the violinist Ignaz Schuppanzigh to set up; Schuppanzigh's quartet gave concerts in the Count's palace. In December 1808, Schuppanzigh, Linke and Beethoven gave the first performances of Beethoven's two piano trios Op. 70, and in 1814 they gave the first performance of Beethoven's Piano Trio Op. 97 (the "Archduke Trio"). In 1815 Beethoven wrote for Linke the two Cello Sonatas Op. 102.

Linke remained with Schuppanzigh's quartet until it was disbanded, after the Count's palace burnt down on New Year's Eve 1815. Schuppanzigh left Vienna for several years. Linke was attached to the Erdődys, a Hungarian noble family, and went with them to Croatia.

Linke returned to Vienna in 1818, where he was a soloist in the orchestra of the Theater an der Wien. He was in a quartet assembled in 1819 by the violinist Joseph Böhm, in which the other players were Karl Holz and Franz Weiss, both formerly with Schuppanzigh's quartet.


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