Boccherini: 3 Cello Sonatas / Facco: Balletto in C Major / Porretti: Cello Sonata in D Major
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Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805) Cello Sonatas The Italian cellist and composer Luigi Boccherini was born in Lucca in 1743, the son of a double-bass player. His...
Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805)
Cello Sonatas
The Italian cellist and composer Luigi Boccherini was
born in Lucca in 1743, the son of a double-bass player.
His family was distinguished not only in music but also
boasted poets and dancers among its members. His
elder brother Giovanni Gastone, born in 1742, was
both dancer and poet, the author of the text of Haydn's
Il ritorno di Tobia and of the libretti of some earlier
stage works of the Vienna court composer, Antonio
Salieri. He later became official poet of the Coliseo de
los Canos del Peral in Madrid, a theatre to the concerts
in which Boccherini had contributed music. His sister
Maria Ester was a dancer and married Onorato Viganò,
a distinguished dancer and choreographer. Her son,
Salvatore Viganò, who studied composition with
Boccherini, occupies a position of considerable
importance in the history of ballet.
By the age of thirteen Boccherini was appearing in
concerts as a cellist. In 1757 he went with his father
and older brother and sister to Venice and Trieste and
the following year he appeared with his father in
Vienna, where they were both invited to join the court
orchestra, returning to Vienna for two further seasons
in 1760-1761 and 1763-1764. In the intervening
periods he appeared in Lucca and in Florence. In 1764
Boccherini succeeded in achieving appointment as a
cellist in the Cappella Palatina in Lucca and undertook
engagements in Padua and Cremona, among other
places. In 1766 he joined with his fellow-townsman,
the violinist Manfredi, leader of the Cappella Palatina,
the latter's teacher Nardini and the composer and
viola-player Cambini in serious study and performance
of the quartets of Haydn and of Boccherini's own early
quartets, and after the death of his father in August of
that year he went with Manfredi to Genoa, where he
seems to have composed at least one of his two
oratorios for the Oratorians. In the autumn of 1767 he
set out from Genoa with Manfredi, with the intention
of travelling to London, staying first in Nice and then
for some six months in Paris, where they won
considerable success. Here Boccherini's first set of six
string quartets was published, and sets of string trios.
In France Boccherini and Manfredi won considerable
success and Boccherini himself also continued his
work as a composer, in addition to his performances as
a virtuoso. In 1768 the pair left for Spain, appearing
first at court with an Italian opera company.
Establishing himself in Madrid, Boccherini was
appointed composer and virtuoso di camera to the
Infante Don Luis, younger brother of King Carlos III,
after a cooler reception from the King and the Prince of
the Asturias, his heir. Part of the following period he
spent in Madrid and part at the Palace of Arenas de San
Pedro in the province of Avila, where the Infante
retired after a morganatic marriage. Members of the
Font family were employed by the Prince as a string
quartet, for which Boccherini wrote quartets and with
whom he performed his own string quintets. He
renewed his association with Francisco Font in later
years. After the death of Don Luis in 1785, Boccherini,
who had spent some fifteen years in his service,
received a pension from the king and the promise of a
position in the Real Capilla that was not fulfilled. He
found employment, however, with the Benavente-
Osuna family in Madrid, directing the orchestra of the
Countess-Duchess and providing music for her salon.
Here he was one of a distinguished international
company that included his friend, the painter Goya. At
the same time he was appointed court composer to
Friedrich Wilhelm, nephew of Frederick the Great,
who succeeded his uncle as King of Prussia in 1787. In
this latter position he provided the cello-playing king
with new compositions under the same kind of
exclusive arrangement as that which he had earlier
enjoyed with Don Luis. There is, however, no evidence
that Boccherini ever spent any time in Prussia. After
the death of King Carlos III in 1788, the new king,
Carlos IV, established a chamber ensemble and in 1795
a chamber orchestra, in neither of which Boccherini
was involved. With the unexpected death of Friedrich
Wilhelm II in 1797 Boccherini's employment there
came to an end, when his request for a continuation of
his position and a pension was refused, while the
Benavente-Osuna family moved to Paris in 1799.
Boccherini received support from Lucien Bonaparte,
the French ambassador, and remained busy to the end
of his life, although visitors reported that he lived in all
the appearance of poverty, now without any substantial
patronage after Lucien Bonaparte's return to Paris and
saddened by the death of his second wife and his
remaining daughters. He died in Madrid on 28th May
1805.
Boccherini's style is completely characteristic of
the period in which he lived, the period, that is, of
Haydn, rather than that of Mozart or Beethoven. He
enjoyed a reputation for his facility as a composer,
leaving some 460 or so compositions. A great deal of
his music is designed to exploit the technical resources
of the cello, in concertos, sonatas, and, particularly, in
chamber music for various numbers of instruments,
including a remarkable series of works for string
quintet with two cellos, the first of which is given a
concertante part. His works include twelve cello
concertos and more than 32 cello sonatas. The three
sonatas included here represent, in the Sonata in C
major, the young composer, the writer of descriptive
music in his Allegro alla Militaire in the Sonata in G
major, with its eighteenth-century battle, its ordered
battalions, drum-rolls and the battlefield itself. The
recently discovered Sonata in C minor shows the
influence of Spain, with a final movement suggesting a
Spanish dance.
The composer, keyboard-player, violinist and
cellist Giacomo Facco was one of the many Italian
musicians working in the eighteenth century at the
Spanish court. He served as a member of the Capilla
Real and taught the children of Don Luis and Don
Carlos, the future King Luis I and King Carlos III. The
Balletti a due violoncelli are the first works for cello
that we know of that were written in Spain. The six
suites were written about 1723 with the two cellos
treated as a duo, an unusual procedure at this period
A cellist in the Capilla Real between 1734 and
1783, Domenico Porretti enjoyed a considerable
reputation as a player and was much admired by the
famous singer Farinelli. He seems to have written 24
cello concertos and a work for four cellos mentioned
by Padre Antonio Soler, the whereabouts of all of
which are unknown. The sonata included here was
published very recently and was found in the collection
of scores at the castle of Schonborn-Wiesentheit in
Germany. Porretti was the father of Joaquina,
Boccherini's second wife.
First cellist at the Convent of the Incarnation and
of the Duke of Osuna, Pablo Vidal served in the Casa
de Osuna orchestra directed by Boccherini and lived in
Madrid at Leganitos No.22, 4º Principal. Otherwise we
know relatively little about him. He offered two cellos
for sale in the Diario de Madrid on 15th April 1796 and
also announced the sale of a concerto of his, with a
Cello Method advertised eight days later. In
September 1798 he announced in the Gaceta a work
called Arpegio Armonico de violonchelo y bajo
(Harmonic Arpeggio for Cello and Bass), the source
of the present Andante gracioso.
Josep Bassal and Keith Anderson
Balletto No. 3 in C major for 2 Cellos (more info)
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I. Preludio - 1:00
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II. Allemanda - 2:08
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III. Sarabanda - 1:57
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IV. Gavotta - 2:10
Cello Sonata in D major (more info)
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I. Andante - 6:20
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II. Allegro - 7:28
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III. Adagio - 2:27
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IV. Allegro - 2:38
Cello Sonata in C major, G. 74 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 5:20
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II. Largo - 4:11
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III. Allegro - 4:15
Cello Sonata in G major, G. 5 (arr. for 2 cellos) (more info)
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I. Largo - 2:51
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II. Allegro - 6:23
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III. Menuetto - 3:29
Cello Sonata in C minor (more info)
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I. Andantino - 5:42
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II. Adagio - 2:33
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III. Allegretto - 4:46
Andante grazioso (more info)
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Andante grazioso - 5:12