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1 LP -
198 362 - (p) 1966
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1 CD -
437 081-2 - (c) 1986 |
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Höfische
Konzertmusik des österreichischen Barock |
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Georg Muffat (1653-1704) |
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Fasciculus (Suite) VIII:
Indissolubilis Amicitia - Florilegium
II, 1698 |
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16' 27" |
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- Ouverture |
4' 29" |
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A1
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- Les Courtisans
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1' 22" |
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A2 |
- Rondeau |
2' 28" |
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A3
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- Les Gendarmes
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0' 51" |
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A4
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- Les Bossus
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1' 03"
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A5
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- Gavotte |
1' 05" |
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A6
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- Sarabande pour le Génie de
l'Amitié
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1' 57" |
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A7
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- Gigue |
1' 35" |
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A8
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- Menuet |
1' 50" |
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A9
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Violine,
Violetta (Tenor-Viola), Viola
(Tenor-Viola da Gamba), Bass-Viola da
gamba
Continuo: Violone, Bass-Viola da gamba,
Cembalo
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Concerto I: Bona Nova
- Exquisitioris harmoniae instrumentalis
gravi-jucundae, 1689 |
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10' 10" |
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- Sonata. Grave -
Allegro |
4' 08"
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A10
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- Ballo.
Allegro |
1' 40"
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A11
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- Grave
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1' 02" |
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A12
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- Aria
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1' 32" |
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A13
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- Giga
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1' 55" |
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A14
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Concertino:
Violine I/II; Ripieno: Oboe I/II,
Violine I (3), Violine II (3), Viola
I/II (Tenor- & Bass-Viola da gamba)
Continuo: Bass-Viola da gamba, Violone,
Fagott, Cembalo
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Henrich Ignaz Franz Biber
(1644-1704) |
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Sonata à 6 "die Pauern
Kirchfahrt genandt" - Manuscript,
Kremsier/Ôsterreich, St.
Mauritz Archiv
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6' 15" |
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- Sonata. Adagio - Presto
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1' 33" |
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B1
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- Die Pauern Kirchfahrt - Adagio
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2' 19" |
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B2 |
- Aria |
2' 30" |
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B3
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Violine I/II,
Viola I/II (Tenor- & Bass.Viola da
gamba)
Continuo: Violone, Bass-Viola da gamba,
Cembalo
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Sonata à 2 violini, trombone,
violone - Manuscript,
Kremsier/Ôsterreich, St.
Mauritz Archiv |
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6' 46" |
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- (Allegro non troppo)
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0' 34" |
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B4
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- (Poco allegro)
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0' 46" |
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B5
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- (Adagio) |
1' 04" |
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B6
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- (Allegro) |
0' 21" |
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B7
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- (Adagio) |
1' 16" |
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B8
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- (Poco allegro)
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0' 17" |
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B9
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- (Adagio) |
0' 55" |
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B10
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- (Allegro) |
0' 19" |
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B11
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- (Allegro) |
1' 21" |
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B12
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Violine I/II,
Posaune, Bass-Viola da gamba, Cembalo
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Sonata VIII - Fidicinium
sacro-profanum |
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5' 14" |
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- Allegro |
1' 33" |
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B13
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- (Presto) |
2' 39" |
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B14
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- Presto - Adagio |
1' 06" |
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B15
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Violine, Viola
I/II (Tenor-Viola, Tenor-Viola da gamba
Continuo: Violone, Bass-Viola da gamba,
Cembalo
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Battalia à 10 - Manuscript,
Kremsier/Ôsterreich, St.
Mauritz Archiv |
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3' 57" |
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- Sonata. Allegro
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0' 58" |
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B16
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- Allegro: Die liederliche
Gesellschaft von allerley Humor |
0' 41" |
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B17
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- Presto |
0' 37" |
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B18
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- Der Mars
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1' 04" |
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B19
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- Presto |
0' 34" |
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B20
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- Aria |
1' 48" |
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B21
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- Die Schlacht |
0' 44" |
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B22
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- Lamento der verwundten
Musquetierer (Adagio)
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1' 18" |
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B23
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Violine I-III,
Viola I-IV (Viola, Tenor Viola, Tenor
viola da gamba),
Violone I/II (Violone, Bass-Viola da
gamba); Cembalo
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Concentus
Musicus, Wien
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Nikolaus
Harnoncourt, conductor |
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Luogo e data
di registrazione
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Palais Schönburg, Vienna
(Austria) - 22-26 marzo 1965
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Registrazione
live / studio
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studio |
Producer / Engineer
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Rainer Brock / Klaus Scheibe
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Prima Edizione
CD
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Archiv Produktion "Collectio
argentea" - 437 081-2 - (1 cd) - 53' 33"
- (c) 2012 - ADD
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Prima
Edizione LP
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Archiv Produktion - 198 362 -
(1 lp) - 53' 33" - (p) 1966
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Notes on the program
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The reign of the Emperor
Leopold I (1658-1705) was a golden age
for all the arts, and for music in
particular. The misery of the Thirty
Years' War was over, and as though to
cumpensate for its orrors, artists
created an illusory world of beauty and
splendour. The monarchs of Europe
competed with one another in the
magnificence of their palaces, at their
head the great rivals Louis XIV of
France and Leopold I of Austria.
The Hapsburgs had always loved music,
and in Leopold I this love grew until it
became an almost unbridled passion. The
Emperor, who was himself a composer of
considerable attainments, placed great
importance on choosing personally
between applicants for musical positions
at his court; even when the treasury was
empty, and he could not pay his
soldiers, he always found the means to
provide for his musical requirements. A
contemporary wrote about him: "...for if
there was anything in the world to
delight the Emperor, it was certain to
be good music. It increased his joy and
lessened his cares, and it may assuredly
be said of him that no other pleasure
gave him such enjoyment as a
well-ordered concert... his musical
establishment may probably he described
as the finest in the world... When a
particular passage occurred which
pleased him, he closed his eyes in order
to listen more attentively..." Owing to
the fact that thorough musical training
was regarded as part of a general
education at that time, a similar
passion for music also spread to many
smaller courts; the Arcbishop of Olmütz,
Prince Liechtenstein, maintained at his
residence Kremsier a large orchestra of
carefully picked virtuosi which was in
no way inferior to time Imperial
orchestra, and in some respects even
outshone it, while the Archbishop of
Salzburg, like many another spiritual
and temporal rulers, kept a brilliant
court “Capelle'. These princes also
built themselves magnificent palaces,
within whose marble-covered walls music
had not only an architectonic
equivalent, but also an ideal sounding
board.
The love of music among the nobility
naturally spread throughout the whole of
society. There was music making in most
middle-class homes, in many churches
Mass was celebrated daily with
instrumental accompaniment, and music
was widely cultivated in the Jesuit
schools. Thus gifed musicians had ample
opportunity and encouragement to
exercise their art.
Georg Muffat, who was born in Savoy,
studied with Lully, the most illustrious
musician of the age, in Paris, then he
went to Wenna, where he enjoyed the
patronage of Leopold I. He later became
organist to the Archbishop of Salzburg,
who sent him to Rome to master the
Italian style of music. Thus he was
probably the first musician who
consciously drew for his compositions on
a combination of the Frenth and Italian
styles, both of which he had studied
under the guidance of their principal
exponents. In the foreword to his
“Florilegium" he gave precise directions
for "...easier understanding of how such
a ballet is to be performed in the true
and most elegant manner,,,", placing the
greatest emphasis on the numbers of
instruments to be employed, the
decorations, and in particular the
correct methods of bowing. Ihe suites
making up the Florilegium were written
as “ballets in accordance with the ideas
of the late M. Joann
Baptist de Lully...", that is to say in
the French style. The “Eighth Part in E
minor, or major with the major third,
named Indissolubilis Amicitia or
Indissoluble Friendship, was produced in
1695 as a, ballet founded on a play
concerning the friendship between Damon
and Pythias". In the 4th part, "Les
Gendarmes", "four mounted dancers fired
off pistols à tempo” at a moment
indicated by asterisks. - "The first
Concerto in D, entitled Bona Nova (Good
News), composed at Salzburg in l689", is
one of Muffat's "Twelve Concertos
devised with great diligence in a
hitherto unfamiliar manner for the rare
delectation of the ears..." He was
inspired to the composition of these
works while studying in Rome, where he
"...heard with the greatest delight and
wonder some concertos of this kind most
carefully produced by the artistically
fruitful Arcangelo Corelli." In these
works Muffat deliberately blended the
French and Italian styles: "... I strove
so to balance profound Italian feeling
with French gaiety and charm that
neither the one should colour the music
too darkly, nor the other make it too
frivolous." The spirit of the Italian
concerto is here skilfully brought
together with the form of the French
suite. In the succession of movements
the two normally conflicting styles
alternate amicably: "In the opening
sonatas and the affettuoso slow
movements the Italian manner may be
observed, while the intervening dances
are founded on the French style."
Heinrich Biber, one of the most gifted
composers of the 18th century, was born
at Wartenberg in Bohemia. We know nothin
about his musical training, but he
probably studied the violin and
composition under Schmelzer, who later
became Court Capellmeister in Vienna.
Both his style and the fact that
Schmelzer was closely associated with
Biber's first employer Prince
Liechtenstein, Archbishop of Olmütz,
suggest that Schmelzer was his teacher.
Although Biber left this first position
against his employer's wishes, the
Archbishop had such a high opinion of
his artistic genius that he asked for
copies of all Biber’s works to be sent
to him. From Olmütz Biber went to
Salzburg, where he became
Vice-Capellmeister. Numerous concert
tours won him a worldwide reputation as
a virtuoso violinist, and he was raised
to the nobility by Leopold I. He was on
friendly terms with the most famous
violin maker of the period, Jakobus
Stainer. In his instrumental works he
brought out the tonal and technical
possibilities of each instrument to
splendid effect.
The four sonatas selected for inclusion
in this recording demonstrate the
diversity of forms in which a sonata
could be written at that time. The
Sonata VIII from the "Fidicinium"' and
the Sonata for 2 violins, trombone and
continuo are wholly in the traditional
Italian style: each is in one movement,
whose fast and slow sections are joined
without a break. The first of these
works is monolithic ensemble music,
while the second is a concert piece for
three virtuosi, to each of whom is
assigned a free, cadenza-like solo. The
most unusual of these works are probably
the two programmatic pieces. In the
"Pauernkirchfahrt" (Country Churchgoing)
we can visualise the assembling of the
countryfolk, and a rocession arriving
from the distance and entering a church
ringing with the sound of organ music,
after which there follow a vigorous
peasant dance and an attractive Aria,
probably proceeding from the tavern. -
The "Battalia" (Battle) is perhaps the
most "modern" work in the whole range of
Baroque music. After the warlike
introductory Sonata (with its "col
legno" effect of striking the strings
with the wood of the how) we hear the
"Musketeers" singing a hotch-potch of
their coarse songs, including "Kraut und
Rüben" which Bach used in his Goldberg
Variations. Biber wrote of this passage:
"Hic dissonant ubique, nam enum sic
diversis cantilenis clamore solent"
(Here all voices are at variance, as
different songs are being roared out
simultaneously). After a short Interlude
there follows the "March", in which the
violin has to imitate a fife, and the
double-bass a drum. (Biber wrote: "Where
the drum is heard in the bass, a piece
of paper must be used on the
string..."). Then come a song of
horsemen and the farewell before the
battle, in which the cannons are
represented by "Bartók pizzicati": ("The
battle must not be played with the bow,
but the string must be plucked strongly
with the right hand in imitation of the
pieces of cannon!"). The concluding
"Lament of the wounded" may seem macabre
to us, especially when we reflect that
the entire work is dedicated to Bacchus,
as Biher stated on the title page. At
that time, however, when puerperal
fever, smallpox and the plague were a
constant threat to mankind, people had
an entirely different attitude to
suffering and death. The musical
representation of the "programme" is
extremely concise; in accordance with
the custom of the period, Biber
expressed himself in the briefest
possible way. The instruments used in
this recording are very similar to those
which Muffat and Biber had at their
disposal. The instruments of Jakobus
Stainer, the most renowned violin maker
of that period, corresponded perfectly
with the tonal concepts of his day.
Biber was on friendly terms with him,
and had the use of various Stainer
instruments both at Kremsier and at
Salzburg. The adjustment of all the
string instruments used in the recording
(fitting of fingerboard, neck, bass bar
and strings) is either as it was
originally, or has een carefully
restored accordingly. The woodwind
instruments were practically keyless,
semitones being obtained by half closing
holes or forked fingering, and notes of
the second and third octaves by
overblowing. The contrast between "open"
and "covered" notes produced a variety
of tonal effects which was greatly
appreciated at the time. Fortunately it
was possible to obtain a very weil
preserved oboe dating from the first
quarter of the 18th century for this
recording, and a second oboe was made as
a replica of it, both as regards
construction and tone quality. The
trombone used in Biber's Sonata, a copy
exactly modelled on instruments of the
period, is considerably narrower in bore
than modern trombones, and therefore
softer. Thus it did not prove difficult
to obtain a faultless balance between
the gentle tone of the Baroque violins
and that of the trombone. The
harpsichord is not fitted with plastic
or leather plectra as is customary
nowadays, but with quills; so as to
produce the brilliant sound of period
harpsichords. The tuning of the
harpsichord and the intonation of the
wind and string instruments are not in
accordance with the principle of equal
temperament adopted today, but according
to the "meantone" system, i. e. in
certain keys the major third is tuned
absolutely purely. Enharmonic changes
are impossible, since each note has only
one identity; e. g. G#, which is tuned
purely in relation to E, cannot be used
as Ab. If remote keys are employed,
certain notes have to be re-tuned. The
advantages of this system of tuning,
which was customary during the 17th
century and well on into 18th, are
greater purity of intonation when
playing in the most commonly used keys,
together with the emphasizing of the
genuine personal characteristics of
different tonalities, which equal
temperament tuning renders absolutely
imperceptible.
In the string sonatas of Biber and the
two suites of Muffat the viola da gamba
is joined by a violone: "...If the
musicians are sufficient in number the
large bass known as the violone or
double-bass will lend especial majesty,
although it is not yet used in the
ballets of the school of Lully".
The instrumentation of Muffat’s
"Concerti" is particularly interesting.
According to his own directions they
could be played either as chamber music
by three to five stringed instruments,
or "to make more majestic harmony", with
solo and tutti as string concertos. "lf,
however, there are some among you
musicians who can play sweetly and
skilfully upon the French oboe, you may
well use the best two of chem instead of
two violinists, and a good bassoonist
instead of the bass player taking part
in the continuo. I have often performed
the fist... Concerto in this way, to
good effect." Muffat was therefore
already recommending the oboe, which had
been developed in Paris only a short
time before, as a solo instrument.
In all these works, in accordance with
the practice of the period when they
were composed, reptitions have been
varied by the addition of improvised
embellishments, and passages written in
notes of equal value have frequently
been performed in a dotted rhythm:
"...It is to be observed that the values
of certain notes are altered somewhat
for the sake of greater elegance..."
Above all in Muffat's Suite for strings
his directions concerning the elegant
manner have been followed scrupulously:
"The melodies of the ballets in the
style of the renowned J. B. Lully are so
to be played on the violin... that
anything more charming or beautiful coul
scarcely be imagined... The
embellishments add lustre to the ballet
music like glittering precious
stones..."
Nikolaus
Harnoncourt
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Instrumentarium
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- Violine, Jacobus
Stainer, Absam, 1658
- Violine, Jacobus Stainer, Absam, 1677
- Violine, Klotz, Mittenwald, 18. Jh.
- Violine, Klotz, Mittenwald, 18. Jh.
- Viola, Marcellus Hollmayr, Wien 17.
Jh.
- Pardessus de Viole, Ludovicus Guersan,
Paris, 1742
- Tenor Viola da
Gamba, Brescia, um 1580
-
Bass Viola da Gamba, Jacob
Prescheisn, Wien 1670
- Bass Viola da
Gamba, deutsch, um 1760
- Violone, Antony Stefan Posch,
Wien 1731
- Oboe, P. Paulhahn, Anfang des
18. Jh.
- Oboe, J. Bauer, Wien, 18. Jh.
- Fagott, Wien 18. Jh.
- Cembalo, Kopie eines ital.
Kielflügels um 1700 von M.
Skowroneck
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Other Editions
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- Archiv
Produktion "Privilege" - 2547 004 - 1 LP -
(c) 19?? |
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Nikolaus
Harnoncourt (1929-2016)
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