fantasticus baroque chamber works buxtehude stradella schmelzer jenkins pandolfi mealli kertzinger muffat RES10112

Similar documents
15. Corelli Trio Sonata in D, Op. 3 No. 2: Movement IV (for Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

Georg Philipp TELEMANN. Robert Smith. Fantasias for Viola da Gamba RES10195

Vivaldi: Concerto in D minor, Op. 3 No. 11 (for component 3: Appraising)

Chamber Music Traced through history.

Conversed Monologue. Concerti by JG Graun, J-M Leclair, & WF Bach RES Fantasticus XL

DDD Absolutely Digital CDR

David Schrader, harpsichord TT: (77:15)

BAROQUE MUSIC. the richest and most diverse periods in music history.

3 against 2. Acciaccatura. Added 6th. Augmentation. Basso continuo

Stylistic features Antonio Vivaldi: Concerto in D minor, Op. 3 No. 11

Introduction to Classical Music Joe Gusmano

Chapter 10. Instrumental Music Sunday, October 21, 12

sonnerie fantasticus & other portraits french baroque chamber works marais leclair francoeur du phly rameau dornel RES10122

Bach. Duo Belder Kimura. Carl Philipp Emanuel. Rie Kimura violin Pieter-Jan Belder harpsichord & fortepiano. Complete works for Keyboard & Violin

7. Stravinsky. Pulcinella Suite: Sinfonia, Gavotta and Vivo

HOMEWORK CHAPTER Which of the following letter schemes best represents the formal play of a da-capo aria a. AAAAA b. ABCA c. AAB d. ABA e.

Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 Mvmt 3

The Development of Modern Sonata Form through the Classical Era: A Survey of the Masterworks of Haydn and Beethoven B.

The Baroque Period. Better known today as the scales of.. A Minor(now with a #7 th note) From this time onwards the Major and Minor Key System ruled.

BACH & BEFORE. Stylus Fantasticus Sonatas of Bach, Buxtehude, Biber, Schmelzer & Bertali

33. Dowland Flow my tears (for Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

Sgoil Lionacleit. Advanced Higher Music Revision

Course Outcome Summary

News Digital release: Oct. 2, 2012 CD release: Oct. 30, 2012

Music in the Baroque Period ( )

Improvisation in Current Concert Practice

The Baroque 1/4 ( ) Based on the writings of Anna Butterworth: Stylistic Harmony (OUP 1992)

25 Name. Grout, Chapter 12 Music in the Early Eighteenth Century. 11. TQ: What does "RV" stand for?

The Excellency of Hand English Viola da Gamba Duos

rhinegold education: subject to endorsement by ocr Mozart: Clarinet Concerto in A, K. 622, first movement Context Scores AS PRESCRIBED WORK 2017

13. Holborne Pavane The image of melancholy and Galliard Ecce quam bonum (For Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding)

Pavane and Galliard Anthony Holborne

2016 HSC Music 1 Aural Skills Marking Guidelines Written Examination

Level performance examination descriptions

H Purcell: Music for a While (For component 3: Appraising)

Chapter 16 Sacred and Secular Baroque Music

Chapter 11. The Art of the Natural. Thursday, February 7, 13

2015 SCHOOLS NOTES EGARR & THE GOLDEN AGE

Percussion in the Baroque Period

Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor - 3 rd Movement (For Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

17. Beethoven. Septet in E flat, Op. 20: movement I

TEXAS MUSIC TEACHERS ASSOCIATION Student Affiliate World of Music

How Figured Bass Works

L van Beethoven: 1st Movement from Piano Sonata no. 8 in C minor Pathétique (for component 3: Appraising)

CONCERT MUSIC ( ) GERALD ABRAHAM EDITED BY

University of West Florida Department of Music Levels of Attainment piano

COURSE TITLE: Advanced Chorus (Grades 9-12) PREREQUISITE:

Cantata no. 48: Ich Elender Mensch (Movements I - IV) J S Bach

Program Notes: Suite in E Minor and the Aranjuez Concerto

The Baroque Period: A.D

PULCINELLA SUITE: SINFONIA, GAVOTTA, VIVO. Stravinsky

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliate(s). All rights reserved. NES, the NES logo, Pearson, the Pearson logo, and National

Tempo this means the speed of the music, how fast (Presto) or slow (Lento) it is.

Edexcel A Level Syllabus Analysis

3. Phyllis Campbell ( )

34. Weelkes Sing we at pleasure. Background information and performance circumstances

BRAHMSFEST. commemorating the 1 OOth anniversary of the death of Johannes Brahms ( ) DESMOND HOEBIG, cello. RODNEY WATERS, piano

Music Department Page!1

Tonality Tonality is how the piece sounds. The most common types of tonality are major & minor these are tonal and have a the sense of a fixed key.

1 Name. 3. What are the enlightenment preferences in social behavior? 14. List important steps toward public concerts.

GCSE Music CPD Resource Booklet

Lecture Notes - Music Owen J. Lee - day 9-1. Descent from the Cross (Raphael, 1507) - Renaissance

Introduction to Music Chapter 4 - Music of the Baroque Period ( )

School of Church Music Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Strathaven Academy Music Department. Advanced Higher Listening Glossary

Music Grade 6 Term 1 GM 2018

Any valid description of word painting as heard in the excerpt. Must link text with musical feature. e.g

44. Jerry Goldsmith Planet of the Apes: The Hunt (opening) (for Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding)

AN ANALYSIS OF PIANO VARIATIONS

GRADE 11 NOVEMBER 2015 MUSIC P2

Johann Sebastian Bach ( ) The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I (24 Preludes and Fugues, BWV )

An Interpretive Analysis Of Mozart's Sonata #6

YSTCM Modules Available to NUS students in Semester 1, Academic Year 2017/2018

OCR GCSE (9-1) MUSIC TOPIC EXPLORATION PACK - THE CONCERTO THROUGH TIME

MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2008 question paper 0410 MUSIC

ANDREW WILSON-DICKSON - BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

The Classical Period (1825)

King Edward VI College, Stourbridge Starting Points in Composition and Analysis

Grade Level 5-12 Subject Area: Vocal and Instrumental Music

California Subject Examinations for Teachers

20. Sweelinck Pavana Lachrimae

Stephen Schwartz Defying Gravity (from Wicked) Name: PLC. score

Part IV. The Classical Period ( ) McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

27. G. Gabrieli In Ecclesiis (For Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding) Background Information and Performance Circumstances

Friday, May 5, :00 p.m. Aleksa Kuzma. Graduate Recital. DePaul Recital Hall 804 West Belden Avenue Chicago

0410 MUSIC. Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the question paper and the Principal Examiner Report for Teachers.

Connecticut State Department of Education Music Standards Middle School Grades 6-8

Bach s influence in keyboard music. Motin Yeung. Research paper In Music seminar 89s. Fall 2012 Teacher: Harry Davidson

MUSIC THEORY CURRICULUM STANDARDS GRADES Students will sing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music.

The Classical Period

MUSIC HISTORY Please do not write on this exam.

Music Appreciation - Chapter 4 The Late Baroque Period

Elements of Music - 2

Music Curriculum Glossary

Authentic Bach Chorales? Part I

MUSIC OF THE BAROQUE PERIOD

LEVEL DESCRIPTIONS, CLASSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND VOCAL

GCE. Music. Mark Scheme for January Advanced Subsidiary GCE Unit G353: Introduction to Historical Study in Music

MUAR 211 Midterm I Prep. Dido and Aeneas Purcell Texture: imitative polyphony + homophony + word painting (homophonic) Genre: opera Language: English

Transcription:

RES10112 jenkins pandolfi mealli kertzinger muffat baroque chamber works fantasticus buxtehude stradella schmelzer

Fantasticus Baroque chamber works Alessandro Stradella (1639-1682) 1. Sinfonia No. 22 in D minor Fantasticus 7. Passacaglia in G minor (from Apparatus musico-organisticus (1690)) [7:45] Dieterich Buxtehude (c. 1637-1707) 2. Sonata a 2 in A minor, BuxWV 272 Rie Kimura baroque violin Robert Smith viola da gamba & baroque cello Guillermo Brachetta harpsichord Georg Muffat (1653-1704) [7:51] [7:42] Dietrich Buxtehude Sonata and Suite in B flat, BuxWV 273 Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi Mealli (c. 1629-c. 1679) 8. Sonata [8:07] 3. Sonata La Castella 9. Allemanda [2:18] 10. Courant 11. Sarraband [1:23] [0:49] [6:00] 12. Gigue [1:23] [4:50] 13. Fantasia in D minor [6:45] Total playing time [6:47] Johann Heinrich Schmelzer (c. 1620/23-1680) 4. Sonata a 2 in A minor attr. Augustinus Kertzinger (d. 1678) 5. Sonatina in D minor John Jenkins (1592-1678) [4:50] Antonio Bertali (1605-1669) 6. Sonata a 2 in D minor [66:38]

Stylus fantasticus The seventeenth century saw a dramatic rise in the status of instrumental music. In earlier centuries, instruments were mainly used to double voices or play improvised dances. But from 1600 onwards, an instrumental repertory emerged independent of vocal and dance music. This new repertory increasingly featured idiomatic instrumental techniques, such as multiple-stopping for stringed instruments or rolled chords for keyboardists. For the first time in history, composers could gain a European reputation principally by writing instrumental music, as with Heinrich Biber (1644-1704), Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713), Johann Jakob Froberger (1616-1667) and many others. The emerging repertory of idiomatic instrumental music posed a compositional challenge. How should such instrumental works be structured when they had no words? Should a composer follow dance rhythms or the logic of counterpoint? Or should the piece be a showcase for the virtuosity of an individual performer? Fantasticus In 1650 an answer to this dilemma was provided by the Jesuit polymath Athanasius Kircher (1601-1680). In his Musurgia universale he formulated the notion of the stylus fantasticus (also known as stylus phantasticus): The fantastic style is suitable for instruments. It is the most free and unrestrained method of composing; it is bound to nothing, neither to words nor to a melodic subject; it was instituted to display genius and to teach the hidden design of harmony... Kircher conceived the stylus fantasticus as primarily contrapuntal, but using freely invented themes rather than the cantus firmus (pre-existing melodies) often used in vocal counterpoint. As examples of the fantastic style, Kircher quoted excerpts from several pieces, including Froberger s Fantasia on the theme Ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la and a sinfonia for four lutes attributed to Lelio Colista (1629-1680). By the eighteenth century, concepts of the stylus fantasticus had broadened. Writing in 1739, the Hamburg theorist Johann Mattheson (1681-1764) defined it as an improvised or improvisatory style: a singing or playing that comes of free genius or, as is said, ex tempore. [...] This style is the most free and unrestrained manner of composing, singing and playing that one can imagine, for one hits first upon this idea and then upon that one, since one is bound neither to words nor to melody, only to harmony, so that the singer or player can display his skill. As examples, Mattheson quoted the rhapsodic openings of keyboard toccatas by Froberger and

Dieterich Buxtehude (c. 1637-1707); these unrestrained outpourings contrasted with the contrapuntal pieces cited by Kircher. Mattheson also extended the notion of the stylus fantasticus to include improvisatory music for instrumental ensemble. He described how in 1666 in Hamburg, a sonata for two violins and viola da gamba by the young [Kaspar] Förster [c. 1616-1673] was played. Each player was given eight bars to let his free ideas be heard, in accordance with the stylus fantasticus. Mattheson s description implies that each performer improvised over a repeated bass theme. An ostinato bass, reiterated hypnotically by the continuo, was the ideal foundation for virtuosic outpourings by players of melody instruments. Taking Kircher s and Mattheson s ideas together, it is evident that the stylus fantasticus was multifaceted, encompassing contrapuntal textures, unrestrained improvisation, and ostinato bass-lines. A combination of strict counterpoint and improvisatory freedom is heard in the Sinfonia a 2 by Antonio Stradella (1639-1682). Stradella worked in Rome until 1677, and later was active in Venice, Turin and Genoa. Although his output is dominated by operatic music, he also wrote sonatas and concerti grossi for strings. His sinfonia begins with a free dialogue between the violin and violoncello, using rhapsodic improvisatory lines; a more imitative canzona follows, its distinctive theme full of repeated notes. Later a short contrapuntal duo is heard twice, interspersed by a brief gigue. In the second statement the parts are swapped around, demonstrating Stradella s command of invertible counterpoint. A leading exponent of the stylus fantasticus was Dieterich Buxtehude, organist at the Marienkirche in Lübeck from 1668 until his death. Buxtehude s output includes many organ praeludia in improvisatory style, with virtuosic flourishes for the hands and feet. He also used improvisatory devices in his chamber music. Buxtehude s Sonata a 2 in A minor, BuxWV 272 consists of two sections based on ostinatos, linked by a short chordal Adagio. The first ostinato is a sixteen-beat theme that is repeated twenty-six times, while the violin and gamba wrap roulades, figuration and even a gigue around it. The second ostinato is built on a jagged theme in the bass; this allows dissonant upper parts, especially audible in the triple-stopped passages for the violin. Buxtehude s Sonata and Suite in B flat major, BuxWV 273 combines the mesmerising effect of the ostinato with the rhythms of the dance suite. The piece opens with a 113-bar section

based on a fourteen-beat striding ostinato in the bass; the violin and then the gamba have lengthy solos over this ostinato, reminiscent of Mattheson s description of individual players within an ensemble taking their turn to improvise. Later, an Allegro section starts with contrapuntal exchange between the melody instruments, but even here Buxtehude includes short solos for the violin and a gamba over a repeated bass line. The piece concludes with four dance movements an Allemanda, Courant, Sarraband and Gigue, all linked by thematic likenesses. Buxtehude later revised this piece as his Sonata, op. 1 no. 4 (BuxWV 255), for which he removed the dance movements, possibly so the piece could be used in church. The stylus fantasticus in ensemble music was cultivated with particular intensity at the imperial court of Vienna, as well as in the surrounding Austrian lands. The rich musical life of the Viennese court benefited from Italian expatriates such as Antonio Bertali (1605-1669), who worked there from 1624 until his death. His Sonata a 2 begins with a cantabile violin melody, against which the viola da gamba interjects rapid flourishes. In later sections, both melody instruments cascade downward in falling figures; there are solos for the violin and then the gamba; and both instruments unite for a triple-time passage. Another Italian expatriate in Austria was the violinist Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi Mealli (c. 1629-c. 1679). Little is known about his biography, apart from that he worked for Archduke Ferdinand of Austria in 1660. His Sonata La Castella for violin and continuo is dominated by a central ostinato section. Over a theme of four descending notes, the violinist uses an array of arpeggiated and scalic figures, with lines that push upwards to the instrument s highest register. This ostinato section is framed by free sections for the violin that combine cantabile writing with frenzied figuration. Inspired by these Italians in Austria were indigenous composers such as Johann Heinrich Schmelzer (c. 1620/23-1680). Possibly a pupil of Bertali, Schmelzer spent his entire career at the Viennese court, where he was ennobled in 1673 for his musical achievements. His Sonata a 2 in A minor is more contrapuntal and tightly organised than many of the other works on this recording; the violin and gamba either imitate a single theme closely, or one instrument plays a plain counter-subject against the running semiquavers in the other instrument. Another feature of Austrian string music was a tendency for extreme virtuosity, as heard in the Sonatina for viola da gamba attributed to Augustinus Kertzinger (d. 1678).

Kertzinger was a Benedictine monk who was Kapellmeister at the cathedral in Prague and the church of St Stephen s in Vienna. The Sonatina is a quicksilver composition built out of many short sections, including scalic flourishes, virtuosic displays of multiple stopping, and snatches of two gigues. Often a small rhythmic or melodic figure ricochets across the instrument s register from the highest to the lowest notes. Pre-eminent among the next generation of Austrian instrumentalists was Georg Muffat (1653-1704), who worked at Salzburg, Prague and Passau, and also studied with Jean Baptiste Lully (1632-1687) in Paris and Bernardo Pasquini (1637-1710) in Rome. In his music, Muffat mingled Italian and French styles in a cosmopolitan fashion, as can be heard in his keyboard Passacaglia from Apparatus musico-organisticus (1690). The genre of the passacaglia arose in Mediterranean lands as a guitar improvisation over a repeated bass-line. Muffat transformed the passacaglia with the French technique of rondeau, bringing the opening theme back every sixth variation. In between these statements of the opening theme, Muffat offers variations on its basic harmonies. Across the whole piece, Muffat steadily increases the rhythmic intensity, moving through quavers, then semiquavers, arpeggiated figures, and finally demisemiquaver tirades. Although the stylus fantasticus was cultivated with particular intensity in German-speaking lands, a version of the style was also found in England. During the late-sixteenth century, English composers such as William Byrd wrote contrapuntal keyboard fantasias; these pieces arguably inspired the contrapuntal notion of fantasia subsequently found on the Continent. John Jenkins (1592-1678) applied the English fantastic style to the viol consort that was favoured among amateur musicians of the early to mid-seventeenth century. His Fantasia in D minor for treble, bass viol and keyboard contains imitative sections with the longbreathed, irregular phrases typical of English viol music; there is also rapid figuration in dialogue between the violin and gamba, plus a pleasing turn to the major mode in the middle of the piece. 2012 Stephen Rose Stephen Rose is a senior lecturer in music at Royal Holloway, University of London. His research focuses on German music 1500 1750 in its social, material and performing contexts. He directs Early Music Online, and is a regular contributor to the Oxford University Press journal Early Music. Among his many publications is The Musician in Literature in the Age of Bach (Cambridge University Press, 2011).

Fantasticus Inspired by the gloriously virtuosic music from the end of the 17th century, from which the name Stylus fantasticus came, the aim of the ensemble is to recreate repertoire from the early seicento until the late-baroque searching and exploring the extravagance that flourished when composers and instrumentalists dared to traverse the established limits of the normal. From the florid excesses of Biber, through the unrestrained harmonic richness of Rameau and the ravishing melodic imagination of Pandolfi Mealli, to the vividness and passion of the forerunners of romanticism as depicted by the generation after Bach, Fantasticus makes no compromises with regard to authentic performance, fearlessly trespassing on the borders of correctness. Fantasticus is an ensemble based in the Netherlands. Made from three individuals with a wealth of experience on stage, its members are prize winners of important early music competitions (Bruges, Van Wassenaer, Premio Bonporti) and play with the most established Baroque orchestras, including the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra, De Nederlandse Bachvereniging and Bach Collegium Japan. The combination of violin, viola da gamba and harpsichord was very popular during the whole baroque period and this allows the group to bring consistently varied programmes to our audiences. The three members, Rie Kimura, Robert Smith and Guillermo Brachetta (Japan, UK and Argentina) all came to the Netherlands to profit from the fertile early music scene. They spent time learning from the pioneers of the early music movement at the conservatoires of The Hague and Amsterdam before themselves becoming a part of the thriving Baroque music life in Holland. As individuals and as an ensemble, their music takes them all over the Netherlands and indeed all over the world. www.fantasticus.nl More titles from Resonus Classics Mendelssohn: Octet Op. 20 World premiere recording of original 1825 version Performed on gut strings Eroica Quartet and Friends RES10101 Altogether it s a splendid performance a must for all who treasure this masterpiece. BBC Music Magazine Chamber Disc of the Month Ravel & Debussy: String Quartets Performed on gut strings Eroica Quartet RES10107 Refreshingly rethought interpretations of a classic quartet coupling [...] thought-provoking deeply satisfying performances The Strad The Strad Recommends 2012 Resonus Limited è 2012 Resonus Limited Recorded in the Oude Dorpskerk, Bunnik, Holland on 19-20 April 2012 Producer, Engineer and Editor: Adam Binks Photography 2012 Fantasticus Recorded at 24-bit / 96kHz resolution Cover image: Spring (1573) by Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1527-1593) DDD MCPS RESONUS LIMITED LONDON UK info@resonusclassics.com www.resonusclassics.com

RES10112