Francesco Geminiani (1687-1762) Concerti Grossi Vol. 2 Op.3, Nos. 5 & 6 ? Op.7, Nos. 1-6 The violinist and composer Francesco Geminiani was one of those...
Francesco Geminiani (1687-1762)
Concerti Grossi Vol. 2
Op.3, Nos. 5 & 6 ? Op.7, Nos. 1-6
The violinist and composer Francesco Geminiani was one of those
Italian musicians who found a ready livelihood in England in the first half of the
eighteenth century. Born in Lucca, probably in 1687, he was a pupil of Corelli and of
Alessandro Scarlatti in Rome, after earlier violin lessons from his father, whom he
succeeded in Lucca in 1707 in the Capella Palatina, the principal musical establishment of
the city. He was released from his obligations there in 1710, as a result of the alleged
frequency of his absences, and led the opera orchestra in Naples from the following year.
Here he was referred to as furibondo,
reference to a tendency to freedom in rhythm that was not always welcome, a trait perhaps
acquired from his teacher Corelli, who had had his own problems in Naples. According to
Charles Burney, who cannot always be trusted in these matters, he was demoted to the viola
section for his remaining time in Naples. In 1714 Geminiani moved to London, where he
enjoyed immediate success as a performer and the patronage of Johann Adolf Baron von
Kielmansegg, the Hanoverian courtier who had been instrumental in bringing Handel to
Hanover and helping to establish him in England. Geminiani dedicated his first set of a
dozen violin sonatas to von Kielmansegg in 1716 and was indebted to the Master of the
King's Horse for his introduction to the court of King George I, before whom he played,
accompanied, at his own insistence, by Handel.
Geminiani won the support of a number of the nobility in
England and exercised very considerable influence also through his pupils, including the
young violinist Matthew Dubourg, who spent a considerable part of his life in Dublin,
where he led the orchestra at the first performance of Handel's Messiah,
Michael Festing, later Master of the King's Musick, and the Newcastle composer Charles
Avison. Charles Burney, whatever his later thoughts on the subject, admits in a letter of
1781 that as a young man "Handel, Geminiani and Corelli were the sole Divinities of
[his] Youth", although he was later "drawn off from their exclusive worship . .
.by keeping company with travelled and heterodox gentlemen , who were partial to the Music
of more modern composers whom they had heard in Italy". Indebted as he was to his own
teacher Corelli, Geminiani derived his own style of writing largely from him. Evidence of
this may be seen in his publication in 1726 and 1727 of Corelli's twelve violin sonatas as
concerti grossi. Through the agency of the Earl of Essex it was proposed in 1728 that
Geminiani should become Master and Composer of State Music in Ireland, but from this
position he was, as a Catholic, excluded and the honour went instead to his pupil Dubourg.
In London Geminiani continued teaching and performing, taking
part in series of subscription concerts and in 1732 publishing two sets of concerti
grossi, Opus 2 and Opus 3. He extended his activities, at the same time,
to Ireland, where Matthew Dubourg was now established, continuing his connection with
Dublin as occasion and Dubourg demanded during the following years. Quarrels with the
London publisher Walsh, who had pirated Geminiani' s compositions as he had Handel's,
would have been settled by the granting of the royal privilege of exclusive rights to his
compositions in 1739 and a similar licence in France the following year. Other
publications followed in the 1740s, notably his Opus 7 concerti grossi in 1746 and a set of cello
sonatas listed as Opus
5, in the same year, works later arranged for violin and harpsichord. He
travelled abroad to the Netherlands and to Paris, presumably attending the performance in
the latter city of a staged version of his musical interpretation, later published in
concerto grosso form, of an episode in Tasso's Gerusalemme
liberata, under the title The Enchanted Forest.
It was in 1748 that Geminiani published his Rules for Playing in a True Taste and the fuller A Treatise of Good Taste in the Art of Musick in the
following year. In 1751 he published his very influential The Art of Playing on
the Violin, a vital source of information on contemporary practice. Of less
importance are his Guida
armonica and The Art of Accompaniment, with a later supplement to
the former and a final The Art of Playing the Guitar or Cittra appearing in
Edinburgh in 1760, published by his former pupil Robert Bremner.
Geminiani finally settled in Dublin, at the invitation of
Dubourg, although there were still visits to Scotland and to England. The last concert of
his of which there is any record was in Dublin in 1760, when he was still able to give a
masterly account of himself, through his artistry concealing the physical weakness of age.
He died in Dublin in 1762.
The form of the concerto grosso owes much to Geminiani's
teacher, Arcangelo Corelli. Written as early as the 1680s, but published only posthumously
in 1713, Corelli's twelve concerti epitomize a form that was to appeal to a very wide
public, attracting both professional and amateur performance. If the dominant instrumental
form of the period was the trio sonata, a composition for two melody instruments, with a
figured bass line for cello or viola da gamba and keyboard, the concerto grosso was an
extension of this. The latter form contrasts a small solo group, usually of two violins,
cello and harpsichord, known as the concertino, with the main body of the now generally
four-part string orchestra and its keyboard instrument. It was easy enough to transform
the sonata into a concerto by allowing the main body of the orchestra, the so-called
ripieno players, to reinforce the louder sections, leaving softer passages to the
concertino. The concerto grosso developed soon more individual concertino parts that
differed in elaboration from those of the ripieno or concerto grosso. In origin, then, the
concert grosso may be seen as a trio sonata writ large, a trio sonata arranged for
orchestra. It should be added that both trio sonata and concerto grosso existed as either
secular da camera compositions or as sacred da chiesa works, the former akin to a dance
suite in a number of movements and the latter incorporating more solemn fugal elements in
the second and often the fourth of its four movements. The rigid distinction between the
two forms, clear enough in Corelli, did not continue.
The first set of original concerti grossi by Geminiani, after
those earlier works based on Corelli, was published in London in 1732, followed by a
second edition in 1755 of both Opus 2 and Opus 3, printed for the author by John Johnson, in
Cheapside, in score for the first time, as well as in parts, as in 1732, but now corrected
and enlarged, some thought to the detriment of the works. For this new edition it seems
that he borrowed from Dr Burney a transcription that the latter had made many years
before, not having the originals by him. Burney adds that Geminiani failed to return the
manuscript.
The present volume includes two concerti from Opus 3. In this collection the ripieno, unusually, is
without a viola, while a solo viola is included in the concertino, a procedure possibly
dictated by purely practical considerations. The fifth of that set, the Concerto grosso in B flat major, Op,3, No.5, is in
the usual four movements. The first of these is an Adagio that makes some use of dotted
rhythms before a compound rhythm Allegro. It is followed by an E flat major Adagio,
leading to a final triple-metre Allegro.
The Concerto in E minor, Op. 3, No.6, follows a similar
pattern, with a solemn opening Adagio and a first Allegro of fugal suggestion. There is a
very short second Adagio that serves, as so often, as a simple transition to the final
Allegro.
Opus 7
was published in London by John Johnson in 1746. The collection is preceded by a
dedication to the Royal Academy, in which Geminiani takes the occasion of pointing out the
unsatisfactory nature of ill-informed praise, which is "like jarring Dissonance on
the Ear" and declaring his concerti to be designed for the discerning, and, in
particular, the Academy. The concertino is again expanded to include a solo viola,
while now violas are included in the ripieno. The first of the set, the Concerto in D major, Op. 7,
No. l, starts with an Andante, here a
slow introductory movement that finds room for the expected contrast between the smaller
and larger groups of players. It is followed by a fugal movement, described by its title
as L'Arte
delta Fuga, à 4 parte reale, worked
out with the "great Study and Application" that Geminiani had claimed in his
dedication to have used. This ends with relative suddenness, to be followed by a slow
movement that moves from Andantino to a concluding Adagio. There follows an Allegro that
makes use of the compound rhythm expected in a final movement.
Concerto No.2 in D
minor has an opening slow movement marked Grave, including dramatic
dynamic and textural contrasts. This leads to an Allegro of fugal texture, again using
compound rhythms and making considerable use of descending scale patterns. There is use of
the fuller concertino in the succeeding Andante, before the final Allegro, in which it is
apparent that Geminiani is making marginally greater technical demands on his soloists
than had his teacher Corelli.
The Concerto No.3
in C major is described as composti
in tre stili diferenti (composed in three different styles) and is, in
consequence, in only three movements. The device of imitating the supposed musical or
behavioural characteristics of different peoples was not a new one. Among others Telemann,
in his Ouverture des nations,
had produced entertaining, if prejudiced, vignettes of the inhabitants, old and young, of
various countries. Geminiani offers a first movement Francese, which, in a spirited Presto
presents the French in lively and jerky rhythms and passages of three-part solo writing.
There is an appropriately stately conclusion, before the appearance of the English, a
solid Inglese movement, described as an andante con due flauti, which suggests unusual
optional alternative instrumentation. The Italians are less formal in the final Italiano,
an Allegro assai, which offers a Handelian triple-metre, with hints of Vivaldi in some of
its effects.
The fourth of the set, a Concerto
in D minor, starts with a moving Andante, an extended movement that makes ample
use of imitation and contrasts between concertino and ripieno. This leads to a cheerful
Allegro, dispelling any trace of melancholy. The original mode is restored for a last
movement that includes, in a spirited framework, an Adagio passage of gentler pastoral
suggestion. The Concerto
No.5 in C minor is in the form of a French overture, opening with the marked
dotted rhythms characteristic of the form. This is duly followed by an Allegro, a movement
of fugal texture. There is a brief transition, marked Grave, leading to the final Allegro,
an original and attractive movement, with a moving bass, all in the French style.
The set ends with the Concerto No.6 in B flat major, a work of greater
variety, that has a precedent in Corelli, except for its optional inclusion of a bassoon.
Here there are thirteen episodes, changes of speed and mood, contained, broadly, within
four movements. This offers a fine example of the variety possible within the traditional
form developed fifty years before by Corelli. Geminiani is, of course, relatively
conservative, writing music of a kind that was certain of a market in England and that
suited admirably his own style of performance. He is none the worse for that and is able
to impart to the form of the concerto grosso an unusual variety of texture and mood,
within the established general structure.
Capella Istropolitana
The Capella Istropolitana was founded in 1983 by members of the
Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, at first as a chamber orchestra and then as an orchestra
large enough to tackle the standard classical repertoire. Based in Bratislava, its name
drawn from the ancient name still preserved in the Academia Istropolitana, the orchestra
works in the recording studio and undertakes frequent tours throughout Europe. Recordings
by the orchestra on the Naxos label include The Best of Baroque Music, Bach's Brandenburg Concertos,
fifteen each of Mozart's and Haydn's symphonies as well as works by Handel, Vivaldi and
Telemann.
Jaroslav Kr(e)cek
The Czech conductor and composer Jaroslav Kr(e)cek was born in
southern Bohemia in 1993 and studied composition and conducting at the Prague
Conservatory. In 1962 he moved to Pilsen as a conductor and radio producer and in 1967
returned to Prague to work as a recording supervisor for Supraphon. In the capital he
founded the Chorea Bohemica ensemble and in 1975 the chamber orchestra Musica Bohemica. In
the Czech Republic and Slovakia he is well known for his arrangements of Bohemian
folk-music, while his electro-acoustic opera Raab
was awarded first prize at the International Composer's Competition in Geneva. He is
artistic leader of the Capella Istropolitana.