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Events
- January 14 – Hans von Bülow interrupts a performance of Franz Liszt's Die Ideale at the Berlin Singakademie to ask for hostile elements in the audience to be silent.[1]
 - January 22 – The First Piano Concerto of Johannes Brahms is given its first public performance in Hanover.
 - February 8 – Count Michael Wielhorsky invites musical associates to his home in an attempt to revive the Symphonic Society; this indirectly results in the formation of the Russian Musical Society, under the patronage of Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna and her protégé, Anton Rubinstein.[1]
 - March 4 – Charter of the French Opera House, New Orleans, which opens on December 1 of the same year with a gala performance of Rossini's William Tell.
 - March 11 – Giuseppe Verdi announces his retirement to friends at a dinner party.[1]
 - March 12 – The Prelude to Act 1 of Tristan und Isolde receives its first public performance at the Sophieninselsaal in Prague, in a charity concert in aid of poor medical students, conducted by Hans von Bülow, who provided his own concert ending for the occasion.
 - April 3 – Richard Wagner takes up residence in Lucerne, Switzerland.[1]
 - April 4 – Bryants Minstrels give the first performance of "Dixie" at Mechanics' Hall, New York City.
 - April 4 – Tannhäuser is performed at the Stadt Theater in New York City under the musical direction of Carl Bergmann. It is the first performance of a Wagner opera in the United States.
 - May 6 – At the first concert of the Victoria Philharmonic Society, its future conductor John Bayley is a soloist on both clarinet and violin.[2]
 - July 1 – A monument to George Frideric Handel (by Hermann Heidel) is unveiled in his birthplace, Halle; Franz Liszt is among those present.
 - October 23 – Richard Wagner and an ailing Hector Berlioz meet in Paris and make up their differences.[1]
 - December 19 – César Franck inaugurates the new organ at the basilia of Sainte-Clotilde, Paris, an instrument built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll.[1]
 - Alexander Borodin begins a period of chemical research at Heidelberg, working on benzene derivatives.
 - Alberto Mazzucato becomes musical director of La Scala opera house.
 - Richard Wagner finishes his opera Tristan und Isolde. The Prelude to Act 1 receives its first public performance on March 2.
 
Published popular music
- "Darling little blue eyed Nell" w. B. E. Woolf m. Frederick Buckley
 - "I’m on My Journey Home" Sarah Lancaster
 - "Thou Art the Queen of My Song" Stephen Foster
 - In 1859, John Freeman Young published the English translation of Silent Night that is most frequently sung today.
 - "Upidee", arranged by H. G. Spaulding
 
Classical music
- Charles-Valentin Alkan – Concerto for Solo Piano
 - Mily Balakirev – Overture to King Lear[3]
 - Hector Berlioz 
- arrangement of Plaisir d’amour, H.134
 - Hymne pour la consécration du nouveau tabernacle, H 135
 
 - Johannes Brahms
- Piano Concerto No. 1
 - Serenade No. 2 in A
 - Psalm 13, Op.27
 
 - Max Bruch 
- Piano Trio, Op.5
 - String Quartet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 9
 
 - Felix Draeseke – Helges Treue
 - Jules Egghard – Méditation d'une jeune fille, Op.41
 - Edvard Grieg
- 23 Little Piano Pieces, EG 104
 - Siehst du das Meer, for voice and piano
 
 - Fromental Halévy – Italie (cantata)
 - Friedrich Hegar – Violin Sonata in C minor
 - Stephen Heller – 2 Valses, Op.93
 - Theodor Kirchner – 16 Preludes, Op.9
 - Franz Liszt
- Totentanz
 - first version of Psalm 23
 - Prelude after a theme from Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen for piano
 - Deux Épisodes d'apres le Faust de Lenau (orchestral arrangement)
 - Festgesang, S.26
 - Te Deum II for chorus, organ, brass and percussion, S. 27
 - Künstlerfestzug zur Schillerfeier 1859, S.114
 
 - Giacomo Meyerbeer – Le revenant du vieux château de Bade, ballade
 - Stanisław Moniuszko – Śpiewnik domowy No.5
 - Michał Kleofas Ogiński – 6 Polonaises
 - Joachim Raff – 6 Morceaux, Op.85
 - Stanislas Verroust 
- Solo de concert No.4, Op.77
 - Solo de concert No.5, Op.78
 - Solo de concert No.6, Op.79
 
 
Opera
- César Cui – The Mandarin's Son
 - Félicien David – Herculanum, premiered March 4 in Paris
 - Léo Delibes – L'Omelette à la Follembuche
 - Charles Gounod – Faust first performed March 19 in Paris. Libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré, based on a work by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
 - Giacomo Meyerbeer – Le pardon de Ploërmel
 - Giuseppe Verdi – Un ballo in maschera, premiered February 17 in Rome.
 
Musical theater
- Jacques Offenbach 
- Geneviève de Brabant, original version. Premiered November 19 in Paris.
 - Les vivandières de la grande armée
 
 
Births
- January 26 – W. O. Forsyth, pianist and composer (died 1937)
 - February 1 – Victor Herbert, cellist, conductor and composer (died 1924)
 - March 8 
- Karl Eduard Goepfart, composer (died 1942)
 - Otto Taubmann, composer (died 1929)
 
 - April 3 – Reginald de Koven, US composer (died 1920)
 - April 5 – Wilhelm Harteveld, composer (died 1927)
 - April 11 – Basil Harwood, organist and composer (died 1949)
 - May 13 – August Enna, composer (died 1939)
 - June 22 – Frank Heino Damrosch, founder of Institute of Music (died 1937)
 - June 27 – Mildred J. Hill, composer of "Happy Birthday to You" (died 1916)
 - July 11 – Alfred Maria Willner, composer (died 1929)
 - July 15 – Carlo Munier, musician (died 1911)
 - July 21 – Charles H. Taylor, lyricist (died 1907)
 - September 21 – Otto Lohse, conductor and composer (died 1925)
 - September 24 – Julius Klengel, cellist, composer (died 1933)
 - October 14 – Camille Chevillard, conductor and composer (died 1923)
 - October 20 – Guglielmo Zuelli, opera composer (died 1941)
 - October 26 – Arthur Friedheim, Russian-born pianist
 - November 15 – Joseph Vidal, composer (died 1924)
 - November 17 – Gerhard Rosenkrone Schjelderup, composer (died 1933)
 - November 19 – Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov, conductor and composer (died 1935)
 - November 22 – Cecil Sharp, folk music revivalist (died 1924)
 - November 30 – Sergei Lyapunov, pianist and composer (died 1924)
 - December 21 – Max Fiedler, conductor and composer (died 1939)
 - December 23 – Adrian Ross, English lyricist (died 1933)
 - December 24 – Roman Statkowski, composer (died 1925)
 - December 27 – William Henry Hadow, musicologist (died 1937)
 - December 30 – Josef Bohuslav Foerster, composer (died 1951)
 
Deaths
- January 7 – Peter Ferdinand Funck, violinist and composer (born 1788)
 - January 13 – Francisco José Debali, composer (born 1791)
 - January 20 – Bettina von Arnim, composer (born 1785)[4]
 - February 6 – Jane Stirling, pianist and friend of Frédéric Chopin (born 1804; ovarian cyst)
 - February 26 – Ferdinand Lukas Schubert, composer (born 1794)
 - March 14 – Nicola Tacchinardi, cellist and operatic tenor (born 1772)
 - March 30 – Philippe Musard, composer (born 1792)
 - April 14 – Ignaz Bösendorfer, piano manufacturer (born 1796)
 - July 23 – Marceline Desbordes-Valmore, actress, singer and poet (born 1786)
 - July 29 
- Léon-Lévy Brunswick, librettist (born 1805)
 - Auguste Mathieu Panseron, composer and singing teacher (born 1796)
 
 - August 18 – Antonio D'Antoni, opera composer and conductor (born 1801)
 - August 28 – Edward Holmes, musicologist, music critic, pianist and music educator (born 1797)
 - October 16 – John Fane, 11th Earl of Westmorland, soldier, politician, diplomat and musician (born 1784)
 - October 22 – Louis Spohr, violinist, conductor and composer (born 1784)
 - November 7 – Carl Gottlieb Reißiger, Kapellmeister and composer (born 1798)
 - December 13 – Daniel Liszt, son of Franz Liszt and Countess Marie d'Agoult (born 1839; tuberculosis)
 - December 31 – Luigi Ricci, composer (born 1805)
 - Date unknown – Lewis Henry Lavenu, conductor, composer and impresario (born 1818)
 
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 MusicAndHistory.com : 1859 Accessed 10 March 2013
 - ↑ Review, Victoria Gazette, 10 May 1859
 - ↑ "Review of Recording of King Lear Overture". Archived from the original on 1 October 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-21.
 - ↑ Frederiksen, Elke; Goodman, Katherine (1995). Bettina Brentano-von Arnim: Gender and Politics. Detroit: Wayne State University. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-81432-516-2.
 
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