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Biber:
The Mystery Sonatas
Sonatas 1 - 15
& Passacaglia
Walter Reiter with Cordaria
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Two CD Set -
Early Music Review - December 2001
This is my recommendation for the month. I'm not a great fan for
letting myself be absorbed in music, but it was difficult not to hear some
sort of religious message in this fantastic playing. Every note, every
phrase took on some deep meaning. The performances (on a purely technical
level) are astounding: the variety of bow strokes (which Biber demands),
the ornamentation of repeats, the occasional colouring of the violin's
sound (when the music is portraying something like fluttering wings, for
example) - it's simply wonderful. The continuo section includes organ,
theorbo, harp, harpsichord, gamba, cello, lirone and regal, and produces
an impressive range of "accompaniments", if such a term must be
used.! I shall listen to this many times in the next few weeks, if only to
remind myself to never to scrape through these wonderful pieces ever
again!
Brian Clarke
MusicWeb - May 2002 The ‘Mystery Sonatas’ consist of 15 short suites for violin and
continuo whose inspiration lies in the so-called 15 mysteries of the
Virgin Mary; effectively 15 meditations which are sometimes directly
programmatic and sometimes more elusive. They divide into three groups of
five. The Joyful Mysteries are based on episodes in Jesus’s early life,
the Nativity for example; the middle group are the Sorrowful Mysteries
like ‘The Crown of Thorns’ etc; and the final group are the Glorious
Mysteries which continue the story from the Resurrection to the Assumption
and then to the Coronation of the Virgin. The whole work is capped off by
a grand unaccompanied Passacaglia for Violin. The whole sequence lasts
about two hours and a quarter and is therefore on two discs.
Biber composed these works for Archbishop Max Gandolph. Peter Holman tells
us that “Biber pointed out in his dedication that Max Gandolph was
strongly in favour of the Rosary in Salzburg”. Also we learn that “the
cycle was used in the traditional Rosary devotions in September and
October … and the faithful as they walked in procession would have
listened to appropriate biblical passages and commentaries and to Biber’s
music whilst meditating of their Rosaries”. The manuscript also contains
fifteen elegant roundels, which were relevant to the subject of each
sonata. Nine of these have been reprinted in black and white and are
scattered around the booklet. There is also a musical quotation from the
Sonata XI and the violin tunings needed for each sonata are given. Some
are quite extraordinary. But what makes these sonatas virtuoso
compositions for the performer and (I am sure for the composer) is that
once re-tuned the notation remains as usual, to correspond with the
continuo harmony. This technique is called Scordatura and many violinists
dread it. Walter Reiter appears undaunted and unflappable, more so than
any other player I have ever heard. The reason for some of these tunings
is quite obvious and indeed programmatic. For example the beautiful
‘Ascension’ sonata has a C major tuning, g-c-g-d. Contrast that with the
9th Sonata ‘Jesus carries his own cross’ in A minor, tuned to straining
point c-e-a-e in other words raised a 4th giving a rather strangled
effect.
Apart from these unique sets of tunings there are other programmatic
elements in the music. The ‘Resurrection’ sonata is the only one in one
continuous and untitled movement. It begins in total stillness - the dawn
of Easter Morning. The free recitativic tempo gradually builds so that in
the brightness of the morning sun the empty tomb is displayed. Then
enters, at first quietly, the Easter Chorale melody ‘Surrexit Christus
Hodie’. Incidentally the tuning in this sonata is so odd that the effect
is literally unearthly. In the ‘Ascension’ sonata the violinist is
expected with his terrifically difficult double stoppings to imitate a
choir of trumpets in the ‘Aria tubicinium’.
In the ‘Crucifixion’ sonata the rending of the veil over ‘the holy of
holies’ is vividly portrayed.
Most of the sonatas have several movements and several have dance titles.
Some have Aria’s followed by Variations. Dances include ‘Allmans’ and
‘Correntes’ which are slipped curiously into movements like ‘The
Visitation’ sonata (Track 5) and the ‘Nativity’ sonata (Track 8).
Presumably on the grounds of ‘why should the devil have the best tunes?’
Praise cannot be too high for Cordaria. For me this is quite simply the
best recording of this music I have ever heard. Credit should go of course
to Walter Reiter. Timothy Roberts on the chamber organ or harpsichord and
Elizabeth Kenny on the theorbo along with Joanna Levine on the gamba with
Frances Kelly, a very experienced influence, on the harp and Mark Levey on
a Lirone make a ‘dream team’.
Their blend, sensitivity and recorded balance are always immaculate,
beautiful and at times tear-jerking. Highly recommended.
Gary Higginson
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| — Disc 1 — |
| Sonata no. 1 (The Annunciation) |
|
| 1 |
Praeludium |
[2:56] |
| 2 |
Variatie |
[2:26] |
| 3 |
untitled |
[1:29] |
| Sonata no. 2 (The Visitation) |
|
| 4 |
untitled |
[1:35] |
| 5 |
Allaman |
[2:13] |
| 6 |
Presto |
[0:48] |
| Sonata no. 3 (The Nativity) |
|
| 7 |
untitled |
[1:59] |
| 8 |
Courente |
[2:54] |
| 9 |
Adagio |
[2:24] |
| Sonata no. 4 (The Presentation of the Infant Jesus
in the Temple) |
|
| 10 |
Ciacona |
[8:59] |
| Sonata no. 5 (The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the
Temple) |
|
| 11 |
Praeludium |
[1:36] |
| 12 |
Allaman |
[1:22] |
| 13 |
Gigue |
[1:07] |
| 14 |
Saraban |
[2:11] |
| Sonata no. 6 (Christ on the Mount of Olives) |
|
| 15 |
Lamento |
[9:56] |
| Sonata no. 7 (The Scourging at the Pillar) |
|
| 16 |
Allamanda |
[3:31] |
| 17 |
Sarab: Variatio |
[5:15] |
| Sonata no. 8 (The Crown of Thorns) |
|
| 18 |
untitled |
[3:23] |
| 19 |
Gigue & Double Presto, Double |
[4:26] |
| Sonata no. 9 Jesus carries the cross |
|
| 20 |
untitled |
[3:02] |
| 21 |
Courente, Double |
[3:45] |
| 22 |
Finale |
[1:49] |
|
|
|
|
Total running time: |
[69:36] |
| — Disc 2 — |
| Sonata no. 10 (The Crucifixion) |
|
| 1 |
Praeludium |
[1:26] |
| 2 |
Aria |
[1:46] |
| 3 |
Variatio |
[5:25] |
| 4 |
Variatio |
[2:07] |
| Sonata no. 11 (The Resurrection) |
|
| 5 |
untitled |
[10:45] |
| Sonata no. 12 (The Ascension) |
|
| 6 |
Intrada |
[0:48] |
| 7 |
Aria Tubicinum |
[1:26] |
| 8 |
Allamanda |
[2:03] |
| 9 |
Courente |
|
| Sonata no. 13 (Pentecost) |
|
| 10 |
untitled |
[5:01] |
| 11 |
Gavott |
[1:46] |
| 12 |
Gigue |
[1:35] |
| 13 |
Sarabanda |
[0:55] |
| Sonata no. 14 (The Assumption of the Virgin) |
|
| 14 |
untitled |
[3:56] |
| 15 |
Aria, Aria, Gigue |
[6:34] |
| Sonata no. 15 (The Beatification of the Virgin) |
|
| 16 |
untitled |
[1:40] |
| 17 |
Aria |
[4:45] |
| 18 |
Canzon |
[1:43] |
| 19 |
Sarabanda |
[2:16] |
| |
|
|
| 20 |
Passacaglia |
[10:55] |
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|
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Total running time: |
[69:03] |
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