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1 CD -
8.43772 ZS - (c) 1987 |
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1 LP -
SAWT 9536-A - (p) 1969
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GAMBENSONATEN · TRIOSONATE
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Johann Sebastian BACH
(1685-1750) |
Sonata
in G major for Viola da Gamba and
Harpsichord, BWV 1027 |
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11' 42" |
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A1 |
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- Adagio
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3' 10" |
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1 |
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- Allegro ma non
tanto
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3' 37" |
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2 |
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- Andante |
2' 07" |
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3 |
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Allegro moderato
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3' 05" |
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4 |
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Sonata
in D major for Viola da Gamba and
Harpsichord, BWV 1028 |
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13' 08" |
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A2 |
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- Adagio |
1' 47" |
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5 |
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- Allegro |
3' 40" |
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6 |
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- Andante |
3' 46" |
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7 |
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Allegro
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4' 11" |
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8 |
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Sonata
in G minor for Viola da Gamba and
Harpsichord, BWV 1029 |
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13' 32" |
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B1 |
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Vivace |
5' 33" |
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9 |
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Adagio |
4' 49" |
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10 |
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- Allegro |
3' 38" |
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11 |
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Sonata
in G major (Trio Sonata) for two
Flutes and Continuo, BWV 1039 |
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12' 35" |
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B2
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- Adagio |
3' 34" |
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12 |
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- Allegro ma non
presto
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3' 41" |
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13 |
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- Adagio e piano
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2' 25" |
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14 |
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- Presto |
3' 06" |
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15 |
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Nikolaus
Harnoncourt, gamba, violoncello
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Instruments: |
Frans Brüggen,
Leopold Stastny, flutes |
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Viola da gamba: Jacobus Stainer,
Absam 1667 |
Herbert Tachezi,
harpsichord |
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Violoncello: Andrea Castagneri,
Paris 1744 |
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Flutes-Traversières: A. Grenser,
Dresden 1750 | Copy after Hotteterre
by F. v. Huene, Boston |
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Harpsichord: after Italian
instruments by Martin Skowroneck,
Bremen |
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Luogo
e data di registrazione |
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Vienna
(Austria) - March/April 1968
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Registrazione:
live / studio |
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studio |
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Producer |
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Wolf
Erichson
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Prima Edizione
LP |
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Telefunken
- SAWT 9536-A - (1 LP) - durata
42' 17" - (p) 1969 - Analogico
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Edizione
"Reference" CD
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Tedec
- 8.43772 ZS - (1 CD) - LC 3706 -
durata 42' 17" - (c) 1987 - AAD |
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Cover |
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Detail
aus einem barocken Bilderrahmen
mit König David, Musen, Tugenden
und Lastem. Buchsbaumholz /
Holland gegen 1670, mit
freundlicher Genehmigung des
Museums für Kunst und Gewerbe,
Hamburg
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The viola
da gamba is, in contrast
to the violin,
essentially an introvert
and soft-sounding
instrument intended from
the outset for small
rooms. Since this
fundamental peculiarity
of the gamba was
sel-understood and
generally known at the
time when the sound of
all the string
instruments was
amplified (roughly from
1780), no attempt was
made then - even though
success seemed assured -
to preserve the gamba
for the new era of
musical dynamics, the
instrument sooner being
dispensed with
altogether. The
essential features of
the gamba’s tone were,
however, not known any
longer when it was
rescued from oblivion at
the beginning of this
century. The
reinforcement of tone
that had not even been
attempted a century
earlier was therefore
carried out at this
time, thus robbing the
instrument of its rnost
important
characteristics. There
is no possibility of
replacing the gamba by a
modern instrument
without upsetting the
balance, unless of
course one alters the
entire instrumentation.
It is very interesting
to study in Bach`s
chamber music how
important or unimportant
its realization in sound
was to the composer, why
a work has been
conceived for just this
instrument and no other.
In any case, only a few
generations before Bach
the realization in sound
was left almost entirely
to the performer - a
flute sonata for example
could be played just as
well on an oboe or a
violin. Even many of
Bach’s contemporaries
still composed in this
manner, and as long as
the particular technical
possibilities or the
special tone ‘qualities
of the various
instruments were not
deliberately used by the
composer, this ‘ad
libitum’ instrumentation
is entirely legitimate.
It is the purely tonal
aspect of the instrument
that Bach would seem to
have employed most
frequently; it appears
to have been of
particular importance to
him. He thus uses a
violino piccolo in the
First Brandenburg
Concerto without there
being any technical
necessity for it,
without even exploiting
all its possibilities,
and similarly a
‘scordatura’ (retuned)
violin for the G major
Trio Sonata, BWV 1038 -
in these cases he was
clearly only concerned
with the sound effect
thus achieved. It is
similar with his use of
the viola da gamba, This
instrument was, in
Bach’s time, just in the
process of being
displaced from its
pedestal as the most
noble and distinguished
of solo instruments, yet
it was still in fashion,
particularly in France.
It seems as though the
German composers
regarded the gamba
altogether differently
to, for instance, the
English or the French,
who had made the gamba
the most noble and
highly developed solo
instrument beside the
lute and the
harpsichord. (The
Italians almost
completely ignored it in
favour of the violin,
and wrote practically
nothing for it.) With
the exception of Kühnel
and Schenk, who followed
French models, the
German composers such as
Schmelzer, Kerll,
Buxtehude, Telemann and
Handel wrote technically
for the gamba just as
for any other melodic
instrument; they were
thus only concerned with
its distinguished tone.
Bach is entirely in this
German tradition in his
treatment of the gamba.
His many solos for it in
the passions and
cantatas could,
technically speaking, be
performed just as well
on other instruments; he
here demands the gamba
only on account of its
special sound and the
associations this
evokes. The only
exception is the gamha
solo in the St. Matthew
Passion (Bass aria
“Komm, süßes Kreuz”) in
which the gamba is used
entirely in the manner
of the French virtuosi.
Bach`s three gamba
sonatas are therefore
gamba music in an
entirely different sense
to the sonatas and
suites of, for instance,
Marais and Forqueray. In
Bach`s gamba sonatas the
gamba and the
harpsichord are
absolutely equal
partners who have strict
three-part writing to
perform in such a manner
that the gamba performs
one part and the two
hands of the
harpsichordist the other
two. This technique of
composition, which he
also applied in his
violin sonatas, was
quite unusual and new
for that period, Its
special feature is not
so much that the
harpsiduord plays two
fully written out parts
instead of the usual
continuo, but that the
principal and subsidiary
voices are equally
distributed between the
two instruments, the
gamba thus frequently
having to accompany the
harpsichord.
Bach originally wrote
the first of these three
sonatas for an entirely
different instrumental
combination, namely as a
trio for two flutes and
basso continuo. Since it
has also been recorded
in this form on this
disc, every listener can
easily judge for himself
how much the different
instrumentation affects
and influences the
essential substance of
the piece. In the flute
version the two upper
parts lie at the same
pitch, the bass part
being figured as in
every triosonata, and
performed with
improvised
harmonization. ln the
gamba version the
composer has transposed
the part of the second
flute an octave downward
without any major
changes to form a gamba
part, the first flute
and bass parts now
forming the harpsichord
part without the
addition of any chords.
The strict three-part
writing naturally
asserts itself far more
strongly in this version
than in the harmonized
flute version. An
interesting point that
clearly demonstrates the
significance of the
Italian “tempo”
indications in Bach’s
time - namely that they
are above all
instructions for
expression - is that the
third movement of this
sonata is designated
"Andante” in the gamba
version and "Adagio e
piano" in the flute
version.
The Second Sonata in D
rnajoris probably the
most characteristic of
all of the gamba. Even
though no chordal
technique is required in
it, the technical
demands of the two
Allegro movements are
typical of the
instrument. ln the
second, third and fourth
movements the strict
three-part writing is
abandoned in places in
favour of a solo with
continuo accompaniment,
as a result of which the
gamba comes more into
the foreground as a
soloist. Nevertheless,
in order to underline
the equality of the
partners, the big gamba
cadenza accompanied by
the harpsichord in the
last movement is
preceded by a smaller
one for harpsichord with
gamba accompaniment. ln
this sonata the bottom
string of the gamba must
be tuned down to
contra-B if it is played
on a six-string
instrument.
The Third Sonata in G
minor has an almost
"concertante" character.
lt is considerably more
complex in its structure
than the other two
sonatas. The suspicion
has been voiced in many
quarters that it has
been derived from a
concerto. l would sooner
regard it as an attempt
to continue to its
logical conclusion the
principle begun in the
Second Sonata, the
contrast between
continuo and obligato in
the harpsichord part
roughly corresponding to
a concertante solo-tutti
contrast. Three-part
writing again prevails
in the slow movement,
though the bass here
does not participate in
the motif treatment of
the two upper parts -
the gamba and the treble
of the harpsichortl. The
Finale is in three
parts, each being
absolutely equal in
importance as in the
First Sonata.
The three sonatas are
thus formally built upon
one another: the First
in pure three-part
writing in which each of
the three parts is
absolutely equal in
importance to the
others; the Second
already treats the gamba
somewhat more in an
idiom peculiar to itself
the threepart writing
being replaced in very
few passages by solo
writing with continuo
accompaniment; in the
Third the newly-found
mode of writing with
occasional “concertante”
passages is further
developed, this form
being granted absolute
precedence over the
technique of the solo
instrument. This sonata
has thus been composed
indeed with technical
feasibility in view, but
with no special
consideration for
technical
characteristics peculiar
to the gamba. The three
sonatas are specifically
intended by Bach for
gamba and harpsichord.
They can most easily be
performed with musical
plausibility on these
instruments since the
necessary balance
between the parts is
automatically present,
and the garnba in
particular stands out
sufficiently from the
harpsichord on the hand,
and blends most happily
with its tone on the
other. Both the
necessary unity and
necessary diversity of
tone can thus be sooner
achieved here.
Nikolaus
Harnoncourt
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