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              CD: MDT 
               
                            
             
          
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            Bernhard Joachim 
              HAGEN (1720 - 1787)  
              Sonatas for Lute and Strings  
              Sonata in F [13:57]  
              Sonata in E flat [12:27]  
              Sonata in C [10:09]  
              Sonata in B flat [10:08]  
              Sonata in a minor [12:36]  
              Sonata in A 'Pastorella' [13:17]  
                
              John Schneiderman (lute), Elizabeth Blumenstock (violin), William 
              Skeen (cello)  
              rec. no date given, Baker Estate, Pebble Beach, California, USA. 
              DDD  
                
              DORIAN DSL-90907 [72:38]   
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                  The life and oeuvre of Bernhard Joachim Hagen is indicative 
                  of the state of the lute in Germany from the mid-18th century 
                  onwards. It was still popular among amateurs: the catalogues 
                  of the music publisher Breitkopf of the 1760s contain a large 
                  number of compositions for or with lute. But most professional 
                  players also played other instruments, since the instrument 
                  was in decline at least among court orchestras. Bernhard Joachim 
                  Hagen is just one example.  
                     
                  Not that much is known about Hagen. The main data come from 
                  an entry in the Historisch-biographisches Lexicon der Tonkünstler, 
                  published in 1790-92 by the German scholar Ernst Ludwig Gerber. 
                  Thanks to him the Christian names of Hagen are mostly given 
                  in the wrong order: Joachim Bernhard. But his Sonatina per 
                  il Liuto per B.J. Hagen shows that his proper name was Bernhard 
                  Joachim. He learned to play the lute and the violin at an early 
                  age, and may have been a pupil of his older brother Peter Albrecht, 
                  who had been a pupil of Geminiani in London and was an organist 
                  in Rotterdam in the Netherlands from 1731 until his death in 
                  1777.  
                     
                  Bernhard Joachim's first position was at the court of Bayreuth 
                  where he was appointed, not as a lutenist, but as a violinist. 
                  Even so, this was one of the few courts where the lute was still 
                  in demand. That was mainly due to Margravine Wilhelmine, the 
                  younger sister of Frederick the Great of Prussia, who married 
                  Frederick who was to become Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth 
                  in 1735. Wilhelmine played the harpsichord and developed a passion 
                  for the lute. When she heard Silvius Leopold Weiss play in 1728 
                  it made a great impression on her. At the time very little was 
                  going on when she arrived in Bayreuth. She immediately appointed 
                  architects to build a palace, and in 1748 a new opera house 
                  was opened which was one of the largest in Europe.  
                     
                  She also attracted musicians in order to establish a court orchestra. 
                  By 1738 the orchestra consisted of 17 musicians, among them 
                  the brothers Jakob Friedrich and Johann Stephan Kleinknecht, 
                  both flautists, the violinist Johann Daniel Lenthardt and the 
                  lutist Adam Falckenhagen. The Kapellmeister was Johann 
                  Pfeiffer, who was appointed in 1734. In 1737 Hagen joined the 
                  court orchestra as violinist. In this capacity he must have 
                  been quite skilled, as he regularly acted as a substitute for 
                  Pfeiffer. It seems he never acted as lutenist at the court: 
                  when Falckenhagen died in 1754 he was not succeeded by Hagen, 
                  but by Paul Charles Durant about whom hardly anything is known. 
                   
                     
                  In 1758 Wilhelmine died at the age of 49. The opera house was 
                  sold, and musical activities were greatly diminished. The orchestra 
                  wasn't disbanded, though: when Pfeiffer died in 1761 Jakob Friedrich 
                  Kleinknecht succeeded him as Kapellmeister. But when 
                  in 1763 the Margrave died without an heir the House of Brandenburg-Bayreuth 
                  merged with the House of Brandenburg-Ansbach. The court moved 
                  to Ansbach in 1769, and here Hagen remained active as violinist 
                  until his death.  
                     
                  Hagen's whole oeuvre centres around the lute, and is preserved 
                  in one source, a collection of manuscripts which is now in the 
                  Augsburg State Library. These comprise twelve lute sonatas, 
                  two lute concertos, a duo for two lutes, a duo for lute and 
                  violin, a number of arrangements for the lute of pieces by other 
                  composers, and the six trios recorded here. They are all in 
                  three movements, in the order fast-slow-fast. The two treble 
                  parts are more or less independent. Motifs in one are often 
                  imitated in the other. There are also passages in which the 
                  treble instruments play in parallel motion. The cello delivers 
                  the harmonic support. The bass part of the Sonata in B flat 
                  is missing, and has been reconstructed by William Skeen.  
                     
                  These trios are examples of the galant style, and are 
                  written for entertainment. That doesn't mean they are mere easy-listening. 
                  They are very well written, and the two melody parts reflect 
                  the skills of Hagen on both instruments. Notable is the fact 
                  that the violin is played with a mute with a view to a satisfying 
                  balance between the two treble instruments. The Sonata in A, 
                  with the title 'Pastorella', is the most remarkable. Here the 
                  violin is required to play scordatura, which means that 
                  it is played in a different tuning. In the second movement the 
                  lute plays glissandi, a technique not unknown to the 
                  baroque era, but regularly used only since the 19th century. 
                   
                     
                  Bernhard Joachim Hagen may not be the most famous composer of 
                  music for lute in music history but he certainly deserves the 
                  attention given by John Schneiderman, Elizabeth Blumenstock 
                  and William Skeen. They deliver very fine performances, technically 
                  immaculate, with excellent ensemble. Several movements give 
                  the lutenist opportunities to play a cadenza, and John Schneiderman 
                  uses them well. The recording has just the right intimacy which 
                  gives the listener the impression of being very close to the 
                  players, and sharing their obvious enjoyment of the music. The 
                  booklet contains extended information about the composer and 
                  the music, which I have gratefully used for this review (*). 
                   
                     
                  Lute aficionados are not the only audience for this disc. This 
                  is first-rate chamber music, eloquently performed by these three 
                  fine musicians. Not to be missed.  
                     
                  (*) To my astonishment Hagen doesn't have an entry in New Grove 
                  (edition 2001), which is a serious omission.  
                     
                  Johan van Veen  
                     
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
               
             
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