Johann Friedrich FASCH (1688 - 1758)
Orchestral Works - Volume 2
Concerto for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, strings and bc in D (FWV
L,D5) [19:10]
Overture for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, bassoon, strings and bc in a minor (FWV K,a1)
[25:51]
Sinfonia for strings and bc in g minor (FWV M,g1) [10:10]
Concerto grosso for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, bassoon, strings and bc in G (FWV L,G13)
[18:37]
Tempesta di Mare, Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra/Gwyn Roberts, Richard Stone
rec. live, October 2010, March; May 2011, Presbyterian Church of Chestnut
Hill, Philadelphia, PA, USA. DDD
CHANDOS CHAN 0783 [74:12]
Johann Friedrich FASCH (1688 - 1758)
Orchestral Works - Volume 3
Overture for 3 trumpets, timpani, 2 horns, 2 oboes, bassoon, strings and bc
in D (FWV K,D2) [8:13]
Concerto for recorder, strings and bc in F (FWV L,F deest) [8:09]
Concerto for violin, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, strings and bc in D (FWV L,D8)[10:00]
Overture for 2 horns, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, strings and bc in F (FWV
K,F1) [20:28]
Concerto for lute, strings and bc in d minor (FWV L,d1) [15:20]
Konzertsatz in F (FWV L,F3) (allegro) [3:24]
Tempesta di Mare, Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra/Gwyn Roberts, Richard Stone
rec. live, October 2010, October ; December 2011; March 2012, Presbyterian
Church of Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, PA, USA. DDD
CHANDOS CHAN 0791 [66:20]
Johann Friedrich Fasch is one of the leading composers of the German baroque.
For a long time his music has been overlooked, but in recent years it has been
enjoying a revival. Especially in the last decade or so several discs have appeared
which are devoted to his instrumental music.
Most of his oeuvre dates from his time as Kapellmeister at the court
of Anhalt-Zerbst from 1722 until his death. Fasch wasn't just a prolific composer,
he was also an avid collector of music. This resulted in a large collection
of music which he could perform with the musicians of his chapel. Parts of this
collection were purchased, but Fasch also exchanged scores with colleagues.
In her liner-notes to the second of the two discs by La Tempesta di Mare Barbara
M. Reul calls it a "file sharing system". Many of Fasch's compositions have
been found in the archives of the court of Darmstadt, where Christoph Graupner
was Kapellmeister. Fasch had studied with him. He also had close contacts
with the chapel of the court in Dresden, especially Kapellmeister Johann
David Heinichen and concertmaster Johann Georg Pisendel. A number of compositions
by Fasch have been preserved in the library of the Dresden court. Some of them
may have been especially written for Dresden.
That could explain the prominent role of woodwind instruments in his orchestral
music. The chapel in Dresden was at that time probably the best in Germany.
It had many virtuosos in its ranks including flautist Pierre-Gabriel Buffardin
and oboist Johann Christian Richter. It is quite possible that the concertos
with a solo part for the violin were written for Pisendel, the best violinist
of his time. The Concerto for lute in d minor (Vol. 3) was almost certainly
composed for Silvius Leopold Weiss, Germany's most virtuosic and famous lutenist.
The connection with Dresden is also relevant in regard to the size of the performing
ensemble. The chapel in Zerbst was rather small: four singers and around a dozen
instrumentalists. It is very likely that the court orchestra in Dresden was
considerably larger and that may justify the size of Tempesta di Mare on these
discs, which includes 15 strings plus woodwind, lute or theorbo and harpsichord,
in some pieces joined by horns and/or trumpets and timpani.
Fasch was one of the most prolific composers of Overture-suites for orchestra
in Germany, alongside Telemann and Graupner. These two discs include two specimens.
The most common scoring of such works was two oboes, bassoon, strings and continuo.
In these two works this scoring has been extended by two flutes; in the Overture
in F (Vol. 3) Fasch also added a second bassoon part and two horn parts.
Both Overtures include passages in which the winds play solo, especially in
the overture and some of the dances. Each of the two Overtures has two movements
called aria or air which are of a more cantabile character. The
Overture in D (Vol. 3) is different: it has just three movements, and
could have been written for a special occasion, considering the large-scale
scoring for three trumpets, timpani, two horns, two oboes, bassoon, strings
and continuo. The brass and timpani keep silent in the middle movement, as was
common at the time. In the fast movements, and especially the opening ouverture
they have quite brilliant parts to play.
The horns also play an important part in the Concerto in D which opens
Vol. 2. In the catalogue
of Fasch's works it is ranked among the violin concertos, but the winds
- pairs of flutes, oboes, bassoons and horns - can also regularly be heard in
solo passages. One could probably compare this work with Vivaldi's Concerti
con molti stromenti. In particular in the first movement the horns take
a prominent role and play the cadenza towards the end. Vol. 3 also includes
a Violin concerto in D (FWV L:D8), and again the violin has to
share its solo role with pairs of woodwinds. The middle movement has the scoring
of a quartet: flute, oboe, violin and basso continuo, without tutti passages
for the strings.
At the other end of the spectrum as far as the scoring is concerned are the
concertos for lute and recorder. It is appropriate that in both concertos the
number of strings involved in the performance seems to have been reduced. These
two concertos are reminiscent of Vivaldi's concertos. As has been mentioned
already, the lute concerto was almost surely written for Silvius Leopold Weiss.
Barbara Reul suggests the recorder concerto could have been written for a guest
artist who was visiting Zerbst. It is impossible to put a date on most of Fasch's
compositions, but in his time the recorder was becoming obsolete, and therefore
this concerto is one of the relatively few by German composers which have come
down to us.
It is often written that Fasch represented a link between the baroque and early
classical styles. That seems a little exaggerated, but some works are quite
modern and could well be late compositions. One example is the Konzertsatz
in F which closes Vol. 3. Another is the Sinfonia in g minor (Vol.
2), one of twenty pieces with this title in Fasch's oeuvre. It is for strings
and bc, and the first movement is dominated by dramatic chords. Brian Clark,
in his liner-notes, compares the piece with an opera overture, written to grasp
the audience's attention. Whether it has been used as such is impossible to
say; Fasch did compose four operas though all have been lost. Could this piece
have been used in Dresden which was famous for its opera? Also interesting is
the third movement which is a fugue; the subject reminds me of the subject of
the allegro (also in the form of a fugue) from the Symphony in d minor by Wilhelm
Friedemann Bach. In the closing movement we hear drum basses which frequently
appear in orchestral music of the mid-18th century.
These discs are the second and third in what seems to be a project to explore
the oeuvre of Johann Friedrich Fasch. The first volume was also reviewed here.
These are again live performances, but there is no sign of that. These could
easily be studio recordings. I was generally positive about the interpretations,
but missed some dynamic shading. I found that less of a problem here; it seems
the ensemble has grown into the Fasch idiom.
I have greatly enjoyed these two discs primarily because of the music. Fasch
proves to be one of the masters of the German baroque, and there are plenty
of original ideas in the compositions on these discs. The playing of the ensemble
is very good, and the winds deserve special mention for their important and
impressive contributions; not least the horn players who have such an important
role.
These discs are very valuable contributions to our knowledge and appreciation
of Fasch’s oeuvre.
Johan van Veen
http://www.musica-dei-donum.org
https://twitter.com/johanvanveen
Valuable contributions to our knowledge and appreciation of the Fasch oeuvre.