Winter was born in
Mannheim. He was a child prodigy on the violin, who occasionally played in the
Mannheim court orchestra, from age ten, both violin and double bass. He studied violin in Mannheim with
Wilhelm Cramer and Thaddäus Hampel, and later composition with
Georg Joseph Vogler. Winter was engaged as a violinist in the orchestra from 1776. He also conducted from 1777. When the court moved to
Munich in 1778, he became conductor of the orchestra, and met
Mozart for the first time. He married Marianne Grosser that year, the daughter of a tailor. In 1781/82, Winter was sent to Vienna to study on a scholarship with
Antonio Salieri, meeting Mozart again. He became director of the court theatre in Munich at which point he started to write stage works, at first ballets and melodramas. He was promoted to vice
kapellmeister in 1787 and to kapellmeister in 1798, holding the position for most of his life. Winter composed more than thirty operas between 1778 and 1820, and only few were unsuccessful. His most popular work,
Das unterbrochene Opferfest (The interrupted sacrificial feast), was produced in 1796 in Vienna leading to his recognition as an opera composer. He composed two operas to librettos by
Emanuel Schikaneder,
Die Pyramiden von Babylon and
Das Labyrinth, oder Der Kampf mit den Elementen, a sequel to Mozart's
Die Zauberflöte which was premiered at the
Theater auf der Wieden on 12 June 1798. for the 1826 production at
La Scala Winter returned to Munich in 1798. Five years later he visited London, where he produced
La grotta di Calipso in 1803,
Il ratto di Proserpina in 1804 (both to librettos by
Lorenzo Da Ponte), and
Zaira in 1805, with great success. His
Maometto, composed in 1817 and premiered at
La Scala in Milan, is occasionally revived, and was recorded. His last opera,
Der Sänger und der Schneider, was premiered in Munich in 1820. His operas were produced also in Berlin, Amsterdam, Paris and Moscow. In 1811, he founded the Musikalische Akademie in Munich, an association which is remembered in the Akademiekonzerte of the
Bavarian State Orchestra. Besides his works for the stage, he composed
concertos for
wind instruments and orchestra and, beginning in 1820, sacred music. He gave voice lessons and published a
Vollständige Singschule (Complete school of singing) in 1825. Winter was knighted on 23 March 1814. He died in Munich at age 71. ==Operas==