Showing posts with label Schmelzer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schmelzer. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 6, 2017

Gallery of Simple Examples, volume 2

I have posted a sequel to the gallery of simple examples (link to volume 1). The title is A Gallery of Simple Examples of Extended Rising Melodic Shapes, Volume 2: link to volume 2.

Here is the abstract:
This second installment of direct, cleanly formed rising lines offers examples from a variety of sources, ranging from a short early seventeenth century choral piece to Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony, and from Scottish fiddle tunes to Victor Herbert operettas.
Here is a combined table of contents for the two volumes, arranged chronologically and with the volume number indicated:
Praetorius, three-voice motet "Preis sei Gott in der Höhe"       -- vol. 2
Johann Heinrich Schmelzer, Partita ex Vienna, Courante      -- vol. 2
Böhm, Suite in F minor, Courante       -- vol. 1
Anon., Chelsea Stage    -- vol. 2
Anon., The Duchess of Gordon     -- vol. 2
Anon., The Kerry Jig       -- vol. 2
Anon., The Nabob        -- vol. 2
Anon., The Runaway Bride   -- vol. 2
Anon., Shepherds Jigg   -- vol. 2
Anon., Yankey Doodle      -- vol. 2
Mozart, 12 Menuets, K176n1       -- vol. 1
Haydn, String Quartet in D Major, Op76n2, III       -- vol. 1
Haydn, Symphony no. 86, III      -- vol. 1
Beethoven, 12 German Dances, WoO8n1       -- vol. 1
Hummel, from 6 German Dances & 12 Trios, op. 16      -- vol. 2
Schubert, Wiener-Damen-Ländler, D734n15       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Valses sentimentales, D779n13       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Ländler, D814n4       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Deutscher Tanz, D769n1       -- vol. 1
Schubert, Grazer Walzer, D924n9       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, sr., “Champagner Galop,” Op. 8      -- vol. 2
Johann Strauss, sr., Das Leben ein Tanz, oder Der Tanz ein Leben!, Op.49       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, sr., Exotische Pflanzen, Op.109       -- vol. 1
Johann Strauss, jr., Künstlerleben, op. 316       -- vol. 1
Brahms, “Über die See”       -- vol. 1
Tchaikovsky, The Nutcracker, March       -- vol. 1
Herbert,  Sweethearts, n7: "Jeannette and Her Little Wooden Shoes"      -- vol. 2
Herbert, Naughty Marietta, n17: "The Sweet Bye and Bye"      -- vol. 2
Herbert, Babette, n23: Finale III      -- vol. 2
Prokofiev, Classical Symphony, Gavotte      -- vol. 2
Gershwin, Shall We Dance, "Slap That Bass"      -- vol. 2
Waxman, Rebecca, "Hotel Lobby Waltz”      -- vol. 2 

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 6; 200th post

"Margarita" is from Schmelzer's Balletti francesi, written in 1669 for a production of Cesti's opera Nettuno e Flora festeggianti. The numbers are Allemanda, Aria, Courente, Margarita, Sarabanda, Retirada.

I admit that I placed this piece here to allow a small joke on the occasion of the 200th post to this blog. But, surprise, "Margarita" does not refer to the cocktail—it is Margaret, far better known as the Spanish Infanta painted multiple times by Velasquez than as the wife of the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I.

This is a bright and stately march that was most likely meant for the ingress of the Empress on stage (family members frequently participated in ballets and other staged events in the court). It is especially interesting for the sharp timbral distinction in tonal space between the trumpets and the first violin and for the three-part Ursatz design that results (note especially the ending).

This, incidentally, is the last in the 17th-century Vienna series.


Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 5

Today another dance from Johann Heinrich Schmelzer's second ballet for a production of Cesti's Il pomo d'oro in 1667. The numbers in this ballet are Gran ballo, Aria, Branle di Morsetti, Sarabanda per la terra, Balletto per il mare, Trezza, Aria Viennense, and Gigue. In an earlier post I looked at "Trezza," today the Branle di Morsetti.

In what has become a recurrent theme in this series, the Branle opens with a clearly defined tonal space of ^5-^8, from which a line proceeds, but in this case extending from ^5 rather than ^8. Note that the first strain even works out an interruption form (^5 down to ^2 in the antecedent, ^5 finishing on ^1 in the consequent), a design that seems anachronistic for what was already then considered an old-fashioned dance.

In the second strain a largely simple ascent from ^5 to ^8 is preceded by a neighbor note figure.


Monday, April 17, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 4

Here is the sarabande from what is either a ballet or other stage piece: Fechtschule (Fencing School). The numbers are Aria I, Aria 2, Sarabande, Courente, Fechtschule, Bader Aria.

Typical features are the well-defined initial tonal space ^5-^8 (circled), and the continuation from ^5. The second strain is unusual, not only for Schmelzer but for the repertoire of music with ascending cadence gestures, in the expansion of ^7. Note the unfoldings that help justify this reading. Whether an Urlinie would be a primitive ^5-^7-^8 or ^8-^7-^8 depends on which note in the initial tonal space you take as the focal note for the whole dance.



Sunday, April 16, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 3

Today's dance by Johann Heinrich Schmelzer is from the second of two ballets he wrote for a production of Cesti's Il pomo d'oro in 1667, an event that successfully initiated Italian opera into Viennese musical culture. The numbers in this ballet are Gran ballo, Aria, Branle di Morsetti, Sarabanda per la terra, Balletto per il mare, Trezza, Aria Viennense, and Gigue.

Here a triad space (circled) is defined at the outset: C#5-E5-A5), but as in the courante in the first post in this series, the continuation is firmly from E5, or ^5. The second strain has the longest stepwise ascent to ^8 that I have seen anywhere, beginning from E4 in bar 6 and ending on A5. Above and below the staff, I've identified two ways of parsing the upper half of this line.



Saturday, April 15, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna, part 2

Continuing the series of posts on music by Johann Heinrich Schmelzer, here is another courante from from DTÖ volume 56. The suite is titled Partita ex Vienna, and its five numbers are Branle de village, Courente, Sarabande, Brader Tantz zu Wien, and Alio modo. I have no further information on the piece, as the introduction to volume 56 was published separately (that is, not included in the music volume).

In terms of melodic design, this is the simplest of the pieces in this series of posts: strong emphasis on ^5 throughout and an uncomplicated treatment of the upper register resulting in a simple ascending Urlinie.


Friday, April 14, 2017

Music in 17th century Vienna

Johann Heinrich Schmelzer was one of the leading musicians in the Viennese court in the seventeenth century. His career is closely associated with Leopold I, the Holy Roman Emperor from 1658 to 1705 (Schmelzer died in 1680).

Particularly known throughout his life as a violin virtuoso, Schmelzer joined the court musicians as a young teen, though the first record of an official appointment is in 1649, when he would have been in his mid to late twenties. He was director of instrumental music no later than 1658, and three volumes of his own music were published between then and 1664. It is possible that Antonio Bartoli was influential in Schmelzer's training as a violinist. The senior musician came to the court in 1624 (at the age of 19) and became widely known as an excellent violinist. He was appointed Kapellmeister in 1649, after which time he focused on the introduction of Italian opera to court performances.

The music readily available to me is instrumental: sonatas for one or more violins, and orchestral music for ballets incorporated into operas or meant for other staged performances. Dances from suites discussed in this series of posts come from DTÖ volume 56, Wiener Tanzmusik in der Zweiten Hälfte des Siebzehnten Jahrhunderts, edited by Paul Nettl (1960).

This courante is typical in its treatment of tonal spaces in the principal melodic part. A clear definition of the fifth A4-E5 is reinforced at the beginning of the second strain. A fairly complex treatment of the upper register ensues. The primitive Urlinie, ^5-^7-^8, that I have traced is probably the best abstraction for bars 19-28, but the reader will note that I have not attempted to "finish" the analysis by incorporating the several unfoldings.


Biographical information from "Johann Heinrich Schmelzer" and "Antonio Bartoli," by Rudolf Schnitzler and Charles E. Brewer, articles in Oxford Music Online. Brewer has also published a book on the topic: The Instrumental Music of Schmeltzer, Biber, Muffat and their Contemporaries (New York: Routledge, 2016).