Label: Challenge Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917233223
Catalog number: CC 72332
Releasedate: 07-09-09
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917233223
Catalog number: CC 72332
Releasedate: 07-09-09
The programme on this cd concentrates on suites composed by relatively unknown composers from the north of Germany; Christian Flor and Dietrich (Dirik) Becker. It includes 6 world première recordings from dance suites composed in the 17th century.
- Northern German dance suites from the 17th century
- With 6 world première recordings
- Works from rarely recorded composers
- Jörn Boysen has studied with Ton Koopman and Tini Mathot
Beckers collection ‘Musicalische Frühlings-Früchte’ was published in 1668 and is dedicated to the city council, who had appointed him to the position of City Capellmeister. Recent research suggests that, not only was Becker one of the most important violinists of his time, but that he was the first composer to use the sequence of Allemande - Courante - Sarabande - Gigue in ensemble suites.
Flor’s Suite in C opens with a Praeludium, a type of written-down improvisation. Short improvised preludes were a means of checking the tuning of the instrument and the quality of its tone, and of loosening the player’s fingers. An unscripted improvisation can be heard on this recording as a prelude to the Suite in G: it is based on a free selection of single dances and an air from Lully’s opera “Roland”.
The Suite in d starts with an Aria instead of an allemande and has no gigue. Every movement has a double, called Variatio in this case.
The ‘Hochzeitlicher Freuden-Klang’ is an occasional work, dated 18 April 1659. According to the front page, Flor composed it for the wedding of his friend Heinrich Elers, preacher at St. Johannis. The piece is a charming combination of instrumental suite with so-called ‘Generalbasslied’ or continuo song. These secular, strophic songs are mostly solos with continuo and instrumental ritornellos and belong to a genre that is typical of the music of Protestant Germany. Flor adds a quick Ballo to the Allemande – Courante – Sarabande – Gigue sequence and finishes the work with a beautiful slow cadence in which the singer calls on the couple to dance until it is time to go to bed. The Gigue in common time (C) shows the influence of English music, which entered North Germany via Hamburg.
Becker’s collection ‘Musicalische Frühlings-Früchte’ contains sonatas and suites as well as combinations of both forms. Sometimes we find a sonata preceding a suite of dances, thus playing the role of an introduction (e.g. in the Suite in G). This introductory sonata still keeps the Italian sonata form with the combination of slow and fast movements. In other places we find single sonatas which include dances, as in his sonata for 2 violins, violone and continuo, which ends with a quick gigue.
Stylistically, the two Anonymous suites from the Düben collection (Manuscript No.: IMHS 64:13) might be related to one or two different (North) German composers at the end of the 17th or the beginning of the 18th century. Neither suite follows the Allemande – Courante – Sarabande – Gigue sequence. Both are examples of a category of suites whose formation and disappearance was the direct result of their having been composed for specific occasions – for ballets or related dramatic performances. The first suite opens with a French Ouverture which surprises the listener with a furious bass solo that breaks into the polyphonic middle section. Another typically French feature is the Chaconne at the end, with virtuosic violin solos and shifting rhythmical accents.
The highlight of Suite no. II certainly is the beautiful Tombeau with its deeply expressive lament, performed by the first violin and accompanied by the bow vibrato of the rest of the group. The lament passes into a dance in ¾ which gives an impression of salvation after painful suffering. A chromatic Final(e) ends the Suite.
Flor’s Suite in C opens with a Praeludium, a type of written-down improvisation. Short improvised preludes were a means of checking the tuning of the instrument and the quality of its tone, and of loosening the player’s fingers. An unscripted improvisation can be heard on this recording as a prelude to the Suite in G: it is based on a free selection of single dances and an air from Lully’s opera “Roland”.
The Suite in d starts with an Aria instead of an allemande and has no gigue. Every movement has a double, called Variatio in this case.
The ‘Hochzeitlicher Freuden-Klang’ is an occasional work, dated 18 April 1659. According to the front page, Flor composed it for the wedding of his friend Heinrich Elers, preacher at St. Johannis. The piece is a charming combination of instrumental suite with so-called ‘Generalbasslied’ or continuo song. These secular, strophic songs are mostly solos with continuo and instrumental ritornellos and belong to a genre that is typical of the music of Protestant Germany. Flor adds a quick Ballo to the Allemande – Courante – Sarabande – Gigue sequence and finishes the work with a beautiful slow cadence in which the singer calls on the couple to dance until it is time to go to bed. The Gigue in common time (C) shows the influence of English music, which entered North Germany via Hamburg.
Becker’s collection ‘Musicalische Frühlings-Früchte’ contains sonatas and suites as well as combinations of both forms. Sometimes we find a sonata preceding a suite of dances, thus playing the role of an introduction (e.g. in the Suite in G). This introductory sonata still keeps the Italian sonata form with the combination of slow and fast movements. In other places we find single sonatas which include dances, as in his sonata for 2 violins, violone and continuo, which ends with a quick gigue.
Stylistically, the two Anonymous suites from the Düben collection (Manuscript No.: IMHS 64:13) might be related to one or two different (North) German composers at the end of the 17th or the beginning of the 18th century. Neither suite follows the Allemande – Courante – Sarabande – Gigue sequence. Both are examples of a category of suites whose formation and disappearance was the direct result of their having been composed for specific occasions – for ballets or related dramatic performances. The first suite opens with a French Ouverture which surprises the listener with a furious bass solo that breaks into the polyphonic middle section. Another typically French feature is the Chaconne at the end, with virtuosic violin solos and shifting rhythmical accents.
The highlight of Suite no. II certainly is the beautiful Tombeau with its deeply expressive lament, performed by the first violin and accompanied by the bow vibrato of the rest of the group. The lament passes into a dance in ¾ which gives an impression of salvation after painful suffering. A chromatic Final(e) ends the Suite.
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1Sonata and Suite in GSonata03:34
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2Sonata and Suite in GAllmand01:20
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3Sonata and Suite in GCourant00:57
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4Sonata and Suite in GSarband01:38
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5Sonata and Suite in GGique01:12
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6Suite in d for harpsichordAria & Variatio01:36
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7Suite in d for harpsichordCorrente & Variatio01:50
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8Suite in d for harpsichordSarabande & Variatio02:00
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9Suite no. II in eEntrée01:27
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10Suite no. II in eTombeau04:30
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11Suite no. II in eGigue01:05
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12Suite no. II in eAnglois00:48
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13Suite no. II in eMenuet00:50
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14Suite no. II in eFinal01:15
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15Suite in C for harpsichordPraeludium01:03
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16Suite in C for harpsichordAllemande02:01
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17Suite in C for harpsichordCourante01:10
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18Suite in C for harpsichordSarabanda01:59
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19Suite in C for harpsichordGigue02:05
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20Sonata in GSonata04:54
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21Suite no. I in eOuverture03:51
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22Suite no. I in eAllemande02:10
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23Suite no. I in eMenuet00:55
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24Suite no. I in eAir02:36
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25Suite no. I in eChaconne02:29
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26Suite in G for harpsichordPraeludium01:57
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27Suite in G for harpsichordBallet00:33
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28Suite in G for harpsichordAir Rolandi00:58
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29Suite in G for harpsichordMenuets01:26
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30Auf, höret meine Sinnen06:40