| |
Johann Heinrich Schmelzer, Violin Sonatas. Romanesca
(Andrew Manze, violin; Nigel North, theorbo; John Toll, harpsichord and
organ). Harmonia Mundi USA, 1996. [HMU 907143.]
Reviewed by Peter Wollny*
1. Schmelzer and His Music
1.1 Together with his younger compatriot and
assumed student Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber, Johann Heinrich Schmelzer is
one of the main exponents of Austrian violin and ensemble music before 1700.
Schmelzer, who was born around 1620, entered the Imperial court chapel in
1649 as a violinist and during the next thirty years climbed up step by
step in its hierarchy, becoming concert master, vice-Kapellmeister, and
finally in 1679 even Kapellmeister of an ensemble that, during that time,
was dominated by Italian musicians. As early as 1660, Schmelzer was described
as "the most famous and probably the most accomplished violinist in Europe." Four years later, in 1664, he tried to confirm this reputation by publishing
a set of six Sonatae unarum fidium seu a violino solo, which appeared
with a humble dedication to the then newly appointed cardinal Carlo Caraffa.
Schmelzer's sonatas of 1664 have always been regarded by scholars as a landmark
in the development of a highly idiomatic and virtuosic violin technique
north of the Alps. After the publication of Giovanni Antonio Pandolfi Mealli's
somewhat dry violin sonatas (Innsbruck, 1660), Schmelzer's works are the
first in that genre to be published by a non-Italian composer outside Italy.
It is not surprising, however, that the collection is highly indebted to
Italian models, most noteworthy to Marco Uccelini's violin sonatas of 1649.
Nevertheless, Schmelzer's collection is independent enough from its models
to claim more than mere historical interest.
1.2 Despite the recognition of the Sonatae
unarum fidium as one of the most influential and innovative collections
of the Austrian Baroque and despite their publication in the renowned
Denkmäler der Tonkunst in Österreich series (vol. 93,
1958) as well as in the easily accessible Wiener Urtextausgaben of Universal Edition (ed. Friedrich Cerha, Vienna, 1958), the works have
hardly ever attracted any playersand consequently no complete recordings
of the set has ever been on the market until now. (Schmelzer's ensemble
sonatas, on the other hand, have been quite popular, particularly in recent
times.) Thus, tracking down recordings even of single sonatas of the Sonatae
unarum fidium, requires considerable time and research: Sonata quarta
appeared in the late 1950s on one of the first (and nowadays very rare)
LPs of Nikolaus Harnoncourt's Concentus musicus, while Sonata terza was
issued in 1983 by the ensemble London Baroque on an LP entitled Von
Venedig nach Wien, which was part of EMI's legendary Reflexe
series. In this light the recent recording by Romanesca is most welcome
as something truly new.
2. The Performances
2.1 The lack of popularity of the Sonatae
unarum fidium at first seems somewhat puzzling. It is understandable
that in the beginning stages of the early music movement, baroque violinists
were not yet capable of mastering the enormous difficulties of Schmelzer's
works; this, however, is hardly the case any more. A more serious obstacle
lies in the fact that it is an extremely difficult task to revive seventeenth-century
virtuosic violin music in a palatable way for the modern ear, to make sense
of the highly acrobatic passages, the abrupt changes of tempo, meter, and
affectin other words, to produce a satisfactory listening experience
for modern audiences.
2.2 Romanesca has confronted this problem
and solved it admirably. Andrew Manze's violin playing is, in addition
to its superb technical mastery, both sensitive and colorful. His stylistic
empathy with Schmelzer's works is perhaps best represented in the various
toccata-like sections, where we can admire both the composer's inventiveness
and the performer's imagination. Only occasionally was I struck by Manze's
making use of higher positions on the lower strings, which I would consider
anachronistic.
2.3 The excellent continuo group contributes
to the liveliness of this recording. John Toll frequently alternates between
the organ and the harpsichordeven within the same workand
the theorbo is also used as a kind of added register. The alternation
of harpsichord and organ within the same piece wasto my knowledgefirst
introduced about twenty years ago in a famous recording of early Italian
violin music by Musica Antiqua Köln, and in recent times has been
used quite frequently. There are many advantages to a varied and colorful
continuo group, especially with music composed for a solo instrument or
voice and especially on sound recordings, where so much of the attraction
of a live performance is per force missing. In the case of Schmelzer's
violin sonatas, however, I do see one problem (which bothered me somewhat,
at least when repeatedly listening to the CD): the high degree of sectionalization
in most of the sonatas is reenforced by a too fanciful use of colors in
the continuo, which occasionally threatens to break the works apart as
artistic unities.
2.4 These are minor points, however. Romanesca
has achieved a very fine and historically informed recording of an extremely
complex andin more than one respectdifficult repertoire, which
should delight any lover of seventeenth-century violin music. It is to
be hoped that more will follow.
Return to beginning
*Peter Wollny (wollny@rz.uni-leipzig.de) is
a research fellow at the Bach-Archiv Leipzig, coordinating editor for the
Neue Bach Ausgabe, and a lecturer at the University of Leipzig.
Return to beginning
Copyright Statement
Copyright © 1997 by the Society for
Seventeenth-Century Music. All rights reserved.
[1] Copyrights for individual items
published in The Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music (JSCM)
are held by their authors. Items appearing in JSCM may be saved
and stored in electronic or paper form, and may be shared among individuals
for purposes of scholarly research or discussion, but may not be
republished in any form, electronic or print, without prior, written permission
from the author(s), and advance notification of the editors of JSCM.
[2] Any redistributed form of items
published in JSCM must include the following information in a form
appropriate to the medium in which the items are to appear:
This item appeared in The Journal
of Seventeenth-Century Music in [VOLUME #, ISSUE #] on [DAY/MONTH/YEAR].
It was authored by [FULL NAME, EMAIL ADDRESS], with whose written permission
it is reprinted here.
[3] Libraries may archive issues of
JSCM in electronic or paper form for public access so long as each
issue is stored in its entirety, and no access fee is charged. Exceptions
to these requirements must be approved in writing by the editors of JSCM,
who will act in accordance with the decisions of the Society for Seventeenth-Century
Music.
[4] Citations to articles from JSCM
should include the URL as found at the beginning of the article and the
paragraph number; for example:
Jonathan Glixon, "Far il buon concerto: Music at the Venetian
Scuole Piccole in the Seventeenth Century," Journal of Seventeenth-Century
Music 1 (1995) <http://www.sscm-jscm.org/v1/no1/glixon.html>,
par. 2.3.
This document and all portions thereof
are protected by U.S. and international copyright laws. Material contained
herein may be copied and/or distributed for research purposes only.
|
|