1860 in music
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Events
    
- January 1 – Julius Friedländer buys the Leipzig music publishing house, CF Peters.[1]
 - February 9 – The second "Querelle des Bouffons" is sparked when Hector Berlioz criticizes Richard Wagner's music in the Journal des débats.[1] Wagner responds on February 15.
 - February 10 – The Serenade No. 2 in A, Op. 16 by Johannes Brahms is given its first public performance in Hamburg.
 - March 3 – The Serenade No. 1 in D, Op. 11 by Johannes Brahms is given its first public performance in Hanover.
 - April 9 – Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville records himself singing "Au Clair de la Lune" – the earliest known intelligible recording of the human voice.
 - May 4 – Charles Bacon's bronze statue of the late Felix Mendelssohn is unveiled at Crystal Palace in London.[1]
 - September 14 – Franz Liszt makes a will.[1]
 - October 22 – The city of Weimar pays tribute to Franz Liszt with a torchlight procession and honorary citizenship.[1]
 - The first Viennese operetta, Das Pensionat by Franz von Suppé, is premièred at the Theater an der Wien.
 - Richard Wagner essay on "Music of the Future" is first published, in French translation.
 - First official National Eisteddfod of Wales is held at Denbigh.
 
Published popular music
    
- "Dixie" by Dan Emmett
 - "Down Among the Cane-Brakes" by Stephen Foster
 - "Kalinka" by Ivan Larionov
 - "Lincoln and Liberty" words by Jesse Hutchinson, Jr.
 - "Mary Of Argyle" words by Charles Jefferys, music by Sidney Nelson
 - "Old Black Joe" by Stephen Foster
 - "Virginia Belle" by Stephen Foster
 - "When the Corn Is Waving, Annie Dear" by Charles Blamphin
 - "I'll Twine 'Mid the Ringlets" words by Maud Irving, music by Joseph Philbrick Webster
 
Classical music
    
- Johannes Brahms
- Vier Gesänge, for women's chorus, two horns and harp, Op. 17
 - String Sextet No. 1 in B-flat major, Op. 18
 
 - Karl Davydov – Fantasie über russische Lieder, Op.7
 - Eduard Franck 
- Piano Trio No.2 in E♭ major, Op.22
 - Violin Sonata No.2, Op.23
 
 - Joseph Mikel – Les lanciers aux bains de mer
 - Louis Moreau Gottschalk – Jeunesse, Op.70
 - Franz Liszt – First of the Mephisto Waltzes
 - John Knowles Paine – Concert Variations on the Austrian Hymn in F for Organ (Op.3, No.1)
 - Anton Rubinstein – Soirées à Saint-Pétersbourg
 - Camille Saint-Saëns 
- Symphony No.2, Op.55
 - Ave Maria
 
 
Opera
    
- Gaetano Donizetti – Rita, ou Le mari battu (Posthumously discovered, premiered, and published)
 - Flor van Duyse – Teniers te Grimbergen (libretto by Prudens van Duyse, premiered at Ghent)
 - Charles Gounod – La colombe, premiered August 3 in Baden-Baden
 - Stanislaw Moniuszko – Hrabina
 - Jacques Offenbach 
- Barkouf
 - Le carnaval des revues
 
 
Musical theater
    
- Orphée Aux Enfers, Vienna production
 
Births
    
- January 7 – Emanuil Manolov, Bulgarian composer (d. 1902)
 - January 24 – Philippe Bellenot, composer (died 1928)
 - March 13 – Hugo Wolf, composer (d. 1903)
 - May 5 – Pietro Floridia, composer (d. 1932)
 - May 17 – August Stradal, pianist (died 1930)
 - May 29 – Isaac Albéniz, pianist and composer (d. 1909)
 - June 25 – Gustave Charpentier, composer (d. 1956)
 - July 7
- Florence Farr, actress and composer (d. 1917)
 - Gustav Mahler, conductor and composer (d. 1911)
 
 - September 1 – Cleofonte Campanini, conductor (d. 1919)
 - September 18 – Alberto Franchetti, opera composer (d. 1942)
 - November 18 – Ignacy Jan Paderewski, pianist (d. 1941)[2]
 - November 27 – Victor Ewald, composer (d. 1935)
 - December 4 – Lillian Russell, US singer and actress (d. 1922)
 - December 18 – Edward MacDowell, pianist and composer (d. 1908)
 - December 20 – Dan Leno, English music hall comedian, dancer and singer (d. 1904)
 - December 24 – Julius Korngold, music critic (died 1945)
 - December 28 – Harry B. Smith, US songwriter (d. 1936)
 - December 30 – Thomas Bulch, brass-band composer (d. 1930)
 
Deaths
    
- January 26 – Wilhelmine Schröder-Devrient, opera singer (b. 1804)[3]
 - February 24 – James Barr, composer (born 1779)
 - March 6 – Justus Johann Friedrich Dotzauer, French cellist and composer (b. 1783)
 - March 14 – Louis Antoine Jullien, conductor and composer (b. 1812)[4]
 - May 21 – Johannes Frederik Fröhlich, violinist, conductor and composer (b. 1806)
 - June 21 – Mykola Markevych, musician, composer and poet (b. 1804)
 - 10 August – Sara Augusta Malmborg, singer, pianist and painter (b. 1810)
 - August 26 – Friedrich Silcher, composer (b. 1789)
 - September 25 – Carl Friedrich Zöllner, composer and choirmaster (b. 1800)
 - November 27 – Ludwig Rellstab, critic (b. 1799)
 - date unknown
- James Barr, composer (b. 1779)
 - Veena Kuppayyar, composer of Carnatic music (b. 1798)
 
 
References
    
- MusicAndHistory.com: 1860 Archived 2013-04-11 at archive.today. Accessed 8 March 2013
 - Marian Marek Drozdowski (1981). Ignacy Jan Paderewski: A Political Biography. Interpress. p. 15. ISBN 978-83-223-1771-6.
 - Richard Wagner; Wagner, Edward (17 November 1983). Richard Wagner: My Life. CUP Archive. p. 774. ISBN 978-0-521-22929-6.
 - John Denison Champlin; William Foster Apthorp (1899). Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians: Easter-Mystères. C. Scribner's Sons. p. 60.
 
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