Johann_Georg_Röllig
Johann Georg Röllig (or Johann George Roellig as his autograph signature indicates)(1710–1790),[1] brother of composer Johann Christian Roellig (b.1716), was a German composer, organist and Kapellmeister at the Court of Anhalt-Zerbst.[2] From the age of 17, Roellig was a student at the Dresden Kreuzschule.[3] According to his autobiography, J.G. Roellig studied composition, with court composer Jan Dismas Zelenka (1679-1745), lessons paid for by Count von Brühl, the Saxon Prime Minister, indicating that the young composer had come to attention of one of the most important figures at the Dresden court. In 1736, he matriculated at the University of Leipzig to study theology.[4] In 1737, Prince Johann August of Anhalt-Zerbst heard Roellig perform and appointed him Court Organist and Court Musician.[5] On the death of court Kapellmeister, Johann Friedrich Fasch, in 1758, Roellig (along with the court Konzertmeister, Carl Hoeckh) assumed some of his duties, particularly in continuing to supply the court with cantatas.[6] Following Hoeckh's death in 1773, Röllig was finally appointed Kapellmeister in 1774.[7]