François Schubert

François Schubert (né Franz Anton Schubert (the Younger); 22 July 1808, Dresden – 12 April 1878, Dresden) was a violinist and composer. After training with concertmaster Antonio Rolla in Dresden, Schubert studied violin with Charles Philippe Lafont in Paris and began working under the name François Schubert. He played in the Staatskapelle in Dresden from 1823 to 1873. The son of church composer Franz Anton Schubert (the Elder, 1768–1824), Schubert was married to the singer and actress Maschinka Schubert (1815–1882) who was the daughter of horn player and composer Georg Abraham Schneider. Their daughter was the opera singer and composer Georgina Schubert (1840–1878). François Schubert composed concert pieces, études, and chamber music, but is largely known for the bagatelle The Bee, a perpetuum mobile for violin and piano – a piece that is often misattributed to Franz Schubert due to the similarity of the two men's names.

Similar Artists

Francesco Barsanti

Charles-Auguste de Bériot

Pierre de Maere

Henri Vieuxtemps

Pablo de Sarasate

Eugène Ysaÿe

Maria Theresia von Paradis

Henryk Wieniawski

Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Franz Drdla

Peter Wiltschinsky

Barockorchester Stuttgart

Peter Wiltschinsky

Guillermo Perrin

David Monrad Johansen

George Alexander Osborne