Rosenmüller was born at Oelsnitz in Saxony. He studied at the University
of Leipzig, worked at St. Thomas’s and died in Wolfenbüttel. Despite all
this, these sonatas, to quote the fascinating and detailed booklet essay
(in CPO’s usual incredibly small print) by Jörg Hillebrand are “clearly
the fruits of his labours in Venice and may be regarded as the crowning
conclusion of his Italian period.”
The twelve sonatas are therefore typical of their period, influences and
place: They are short - the longest is just over eight minutes - and have
at least three sections in contrasting tempi. In fact there are often five
sections and sometimes more. Dance rhythms play a strong part in the faster
pieces. An older style polyphony switches easily with a more searching harmonic
palette. The parts range from two - that is a bass line with continuo and
melody over - to a five-part texture.
The instruments employed by the twelve members of Musica Fiata include a
chitarrone, bass viol, dulcian, which is a bassoon and features prominently
in the quite arresting
Sonata VIII. There are also violins and ‘Zinken’
- a German cornetto. The booklet also lists Posaunen, which are early trombones.
As you move through the CD the instrumentation varies pleasingly. This does
mean that unless you want to hear the sonatas in numerical order you will
find that the instrumentation holds your interest. I have listed the sonatas
above in the order in which they appear. The performances are sensitive,
lyrical and clearly balanced, ornamentation where used, is beautifully in
keeping.
Rosenmüller was forced to leave his employment in Leipzig due to an accusation
of pederasty and flew to Venice. This proved a bonus for German instrumental
music because he was able to earn a living as a trombonist in St. Mark’s
Venice. What he must have played and heard in the 1650s and 1660s is mind-boggling.
Schütz would have been around as would Cavalli (d.1676), and the opera composer
Antonio Cesti (d.1669). There was an increasing interest in opera and theatre.
Giovanni Legrenzi (d.1690) had also been prolifically writing sonatas and
seems to have had some influence on Rosenmüller.
Incidentally there is a disc which enables you to contrast sonatas by Rosenmüller,
Legrenzi and Stradella. This is worth seeking out. It’s by The Rare Fruits
Council under Manfredo Kraemer (
Ambronay
AMY028) which I reviewed in 2011.
Rosenmüller also composed many, rather vivid, Latin-sacred works for voices
and instruments. These are in an Italian style which would have suited Venetian
taste. Not surprisingly therefore Rosenmüller’s sonatas sometimes inhabit
a sense of the dramatic with weird chromatic passages. There are daring
modulations as for example in
Sonata I with its lovely cornetto part
as well as sudden tempo changes. These are always imbued with a sense of
Germanic logic.
Quite rightly the booklet essay highlights four of the more interesting
sonatas. I will draw some of them to your attention now to enable you to
gain a deeper view of the music.
The
Sonata II in two parts consists of slow movements with short
Allegro passages scattered about its eight minutes. The final
Largo
is especially ‘sumptuous’ (Hillebrand) The
Sonata VII has a chromatically
rising figure which obviously brings Bach to mind. At the end it fades away
like sighs at the end of a love-lorn aria.
Sonata I and
Sonata
IV are highlighted in the booklet but I would instead draw to your attention
Sonata VI for strings. It is in three parts. The first begins with
a wild presto full of virtuoso scales. This but quickly subsides into a
cadence point before a slow, rather lugubrious chromatic fugal section begins.
An
Adagio of about four bars leads into a gentle, imitative, compound
time polyphonic section. This becomes rather free before another expressive
Adagio takes hold, but only briefly as a repeat of the opening
(almost) bursts in to end the sonata amid excitement. This bears a strong
resemblance to the pattern of Legrenzi’s sonatas. The final track is the
joyous
Sonata X in five parts with cornetto to the fore. Here Heinrich
Biber (d.1704) came to mind especially in its more solemn moments but also
in its fanfare figures.
This disc is from a somewhat specialist area but it’s wonderfully played
and will give much pleasure especially to lovers of the early baroque.
Gary Higginson
This disc is from a somewhat specialist area but it’s wonderfully played
and will give much pleasure especially to lovers of the early baroque.