Giovanni Battista Venier, Frenchified as Jean-Baptiste, of Venetian origin, moved to Paris in the 1750s.
From 1757 or 1758,[4] these symphonies were released by way of periodic, as did his colleagues Huberty and La Chevardière and sometimes in combination, but briefly.
Among the composers, the Italians were Giovanni Battista Sammartini, Gaetano Pugnani, Luigi Boccherini, of whom he gave the Opp.
2, and 4 to 9;[5] between 1767 and 1772,[6] the Germans, Viennese and the Bohemians were Johann Christian Bach, Haydn (including his Symphony No.
22, Der Philosoph with its adagio published en 1773), and others such as Filtz, Christian Joseph Lidarti, Franz Ignaz Beck, Florian Leopold Gassmann, Wagenseil, Ignaz Fränzl, Dittersdorf and Karl Joseph Toeschi [de; fr], Valentin Roeser, Josef Mysliveček and Antonín Kammel... Pieter van Maldere; Gossec (Symphonies Op.