Chamber music in the
Vienna Double Bass Archive
by Alfred Planyavsky, translated by James Barket
The
chamber-music opportunities available to the largest and
lowest-sounding string instrument of the orchestra are naturally fewer
than those available to the smaller, handier string
instruments. Nevertheless, the viewpoint prevalent in music
literature inferring that the double bass is not well-suited for or
demanded often in chamber music is in need of revision. Its
stereotype as a sixteen-foot "orchestral instrument" has disguised its
actual function in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Especially since the majority of research has failed to point out that
human-sized string basses under various names that go back to the end
of the fifteenth century (Groß Geigen-Bassus -- Agricola, 1529, violone contrabasso -- Genassi, 1542; Doppelter Baß -- Hans Vogel, Nuremberg 1589; and viole grande quasi come me
-- Rome, 1493) have been used in settings as small as a trio.
These instruments were played standing, and they correspond to the
primary written and illustrative criteria used in the recognition of
double-bass instrument.
Thus,
originally, the double bass was neither a sixteen-foot nor an
orchestral instrument. As a result of the often inaccurate and
cliché-filled representation of the historical role of this
instrument ("Des Basses Grundgewalt!"), the fact that double-bass
instruments of various sizes known as Violone were an
integral part of musical practice before they became known as "double
basses" (including variations in other languages). These
instruments were routinely scored in the eight-foot as well as the
sixteen-foot register.
Many players have felt a
contradiction between the demands put on the instrument in the
orchestra and its written representation. This century has
witnessed a flood of "contributions" to the history of the double bass
that attempted to clarify to all of the world the disproportion between
science and fiction in this genre.
Unfortunately, many of these attempts concentrated on individual
characteristics and failed to "pull the bow" over the complete
five-hundred-year history of this instrument. The significant
point: the "partielle Identitä (equivalence}" of the double bass with the Groß Geigen-Bassus of the high renaissance and the Violone
-- the dominant string-bass instrument of the thorough-bass period --
was not recognized and thus was not reflected in any of these early
contributions.
Since the nineteenth century,
equally ambitious cellists and gambists have competed for the violone
literature, and much of it appeared in publication for violoncello
without commentary. The term Violone disappeared from musical practice without any reflection on the historical facts. In my Geschichte des Kontrabasses,
I attempted to support my research with authentic sources instead of
previous editions and contemporary performance practice.
Unfortunately, many of these sources had been erroneously dismissed
earlier as "unproductive." The efforts of this book toward more
systematic documentation were greeted by the Austrian Ministry for
Study and Art (Österreichische Bundesministerium für
Unterricht und Kunst, Overall Section Leader, Hans Temnitschka) with a
ten-year stipend that made the Vienna Double Bass Archive
possible. The desire and readiness of the Austrian National Bank
(General Director Adolf Wala) to support our efforts has ensured the
continuation of the Archive.
The present CD should preserve
some examples of the chamber-music repertoire of our archive.
These examples complement the already well-known archive-produced
performances of concert literature with various invited soloists.
Our choice of repertoire was guided by the motto: away with the world
wide conception double bass chamber music limited only to the "Trout
quintet--septet--octet, etc." and such seekers of world success
that hope only for a place in the archive of repeat performances.
Since we could reach back to the beginning of true instrumental music
in our search (Willaert, Lasso), and we were also interested literature
that followed, including contemporary music, we had to come to a
decision. At first, we decided to concentrate on the period
before and around 1800. This allowed us to bring forth only
music originally written for double bass. These pieces best
express what composers expected from the double bass in chamber music.
The special appeal for me as a
double bassist was the satisfaction of overcoming the usual
instrumentation at quartet concerts through captivating
programming. Typically the double bassist does not appear in such
concerts until the finale with such works as the Dvorak quintet or Eine kleine Nachtmusik.
Should the double bassist be allowed to become the primary impetus for
such concerts so frequently? It is no secret that colleagues
reacted at first with reluctance to the choice of such unknown
literature as performance repertoire. Among them were the elite
of the Vienna Philharmonic (first concertmaster, principal second,
first viola, solo cellist, and a prominent pianist). Two hundred
years of chamber music were on the program! The experience
demonstrated, with much thanks to the professionalism of the
players, great success in the acceptance of such a quantum leap
in programming and eventually (after the first ten reviews) led to
enthusiastic support.
The nonprofessional friends of
music may very well ask why the archive was created in Vienna.
The answer has been discussed abundantly in the subject
literature. It reaches from the "mannsgroßen Violen"
(Violone according to Hans von Francolin 1560), to the gamba quintet
with violone of Philipp de Monte (1575) to the report about the
"splendor and shine of the court music in Vienna" of Michael Praetorius
(1619). In this last example, Praetorius especially praises the
rich sound of the "großen Baßgeigen 'Italis Violone" of the traditional Viennese instrumentation.
The close family connections of
the Habsburgs to the noble houses of Italy created a continual exchange
of artists over the Alps. Therefore, in 1623 G. B. Buonamente
was able to lay the ground work for the great flowering of the trio
sonata in realm of the Viennese court. J. H. Schmelzer, H. I. F.
Biber, J. J. Prinner, J. M. Zächer, A. Poglietti, or H. G.
Kielmannsegg created sonatas (suites, ballets, partitas, etc.) in the
seventeenth century scored similarly to Bach's Brandenburg Concertos
from two decades later. Today if they have not been lost, such
compositions are usually performed in orchestral style. However,
instructions in the accompanying text speak of solo performances ("for
five instruments" or "with a violone"). Thus Schmelzer wrote an Aria
with orchestra and a solo quintet of "five obligato strings: 2 violins,
2 violas, violone" in 1670. Schmelzer, who was one of the most
visible string players of his time, designated some of his works as
"Viennese" and thereby became perhaps the earliest and certainly the
most important founding father of Viennese instrumental music.
Through this viewpoint, one could speak with patriotic rapture of
Schmelzer's Arias or Ballets for Violin, 2 viols, violone, and cembalo as instrumentation forerunners of the Trout quintet.
The tradition of solo performances is also verified in Prinner's lightly-scored instrumental works. Prinner, in his Musicalischen Schlissl of 1677, mentions "parts for 2 violins, viola, gambe, and violone," that he composed "concertweis." Neither Prinner nor Daniel Speer in Ulm (Grundrichtiger Unterricht,
1687) mention a bass violin tuned in fifths. On the contrary,
Prinner confirms the use of two different sized double-bass instruments
that have illustrative evidence from the time of Orlando di Lasso.
According to Prinner, one was tuned F1-A1-D-F-sharp-B. This instrument later developed into the Viennese Ouart-Terz Violon
(with the high B string tuned to A). Prinner was a piano teacher
at the Viennese court and authored the as of yet earliest known playing
instructions for the violin, viola, gamba, and double bass. This
has been overlooked in violin-gamba research up until now. At the
same time, the methodology for the cello has nothing to offer during
this period.
In the eighteenth century,
Viennese music reached its absolute high point through the divertimento
literature, the string quartet, and the symphony. Essential
prerequisites to this development were created by the claims of some Hofkapellmeister/composers
concerning the great possibilities of the instrumentalists. The
good reputation of the "Viennese men" was also praised by J. Mattheson
from as far away as Hamburg. Courts from all over Europe sent
scholars to Vienna for training. As one of the prize objects of
the Habsburg empire, the Vienna Court Chapel had at its disposal
numerous instrumentalists and virtuosos from all parts of the
monarchy. In 1732, Johann Joseph Fux reported to the Kaiser that
the trumpet player, Johann Heinisch had "with great luck (!) found
certain notes on the trumpet that the Capellmeister had
always wanted, but no other trumpet player could produce."
Unfortunately, the trumpet concertos have disappeared from practice
just as quickly as the violone concertos of the classical period.
An essential quality factor came
out of the personal contact that the composers had with the
instrumentalists. In their double function as Kapellmeister,
composers were well able to observe the technical possibilities of the
players and put them to good use. It is well-known that many of
Europe's leaders were fond of music. However, under the Habsburgs
there were many that earned recognition above and beyond amateur status
and were regarded as first-rate musicians. Kaiser Leopold I led
opera performances from the cembalo and as such had a unique viewpoint
on the qualification of "Bassi al Cembalo" in the performance
of the recitatives. Special performance feats were given as
presents from the private purse of the Kaiser. Georg Hametter, who Fux
praised as "very useful in accompanying in the Opera with his violone,"
was mentioned numerous times. He designated the double bassist
Anton Schnautz as "such a virtuoso, who has earned much fame as a court
violonist". I will mention only one example of many concerning
the personal interest that the Kapellmeister of this time
took in his musicians. As one musician applied for a position
and maintained that he played violin as well as violone, Fux added in
that "he was not useful as a double bassist considering the difficulty
of the parts at present. Perhaps he could be a decent violinist,
but he is at best a poor bassist."
With the evaluation of the
historical role of the violoncello, its strong affinity with the viola
has been basically ignored. Ten years after the violoncello had
been designated in a musical dictionary for the first time in 1703 by
Sebastién de Brossard ("une Petite Basse de Violon ... Quinte de Violon,"
therefore Viola!). Johann Mattheson greeted the violoncello as
"shoulder-viole ... with which one can negotiate faster passages easier
than with the large machine (große Baßgeigen).
However, the double bass remained "no less necessary for arias and even
recitatives in the theater." The practices of the nineteenth
century put aside such statements from the time of Bach and favored the
cello-like bass sound. This in spite of the fact that Bach
himself had designated the double bass as a "subject of the highest
necessity." Doubts concerning the inclusion of the double bass
for functions outside of the orchestra ignore the fact that Handel and
Bach raised the level of the orchestral double bass so high,
that the transition from recitative playing to chamber music playing
was no longer called into question.
In quick succession the double
bass was integrated in all instrumental works of the early eighteenth
century. The gradual turn away from the recitative allowed the
creation of chamber music without the thorough-bass function.
Composers utilized the double bass in duos (J. Ch. Mann, L. Borghi, Dittersdorf) trios (I. Holzbauer, A. Lotti, J. Haydn, Albrechtsberger) quartets (Wagenseil, M. and J. Haydn, Telemann, Mozart) as well as in quintets (A. Filz, M. and J. Haydn, Dittersdorf, Albrechtsberger, Hoffmeister) etc.
R. Klavsky (diss. Vienna, 1911)
already demonstrated the "dominant role of the double bass in the
church works of Georg Albrechtsberger and Michael Haydn." In his "Divertimento a tre in F
of 1767, Fux's student Albrechtsberger connected himself with the
extensive trio sonata literature of his teacher and took the deciding
step from thorough-bass literature to genuine three-voice divertimenti,
fifteen quartets, six string quintets, and seven string septets. Surviving from Michael Haydn are, among others, four trios, seven string quartets, five quintets, and two
sextets with double bass (still appearing sometimes with the
designation violone). Double bassists of the nineteenth century
were obviously shocked, since the transformation from the violone (most
often with 4 or 5 strings and frets) to the modern double bass (most
often with 4 strings and no frets) seemed to exclude them from the old
literature. Whenever any of the manuscripts of these works were
awakened from their archive, there was the question of whether the
violone could not have actually been a violoncello. The
publishers of the few new editions decided for the most part on the
more practical violoncello and justified the decision as being
compatible with "new concepts of sound (neuen Hörgewohnheiten)."
Obviously not every one of these works can be considered an enrichment
of the chamber music literature. However, certainly some of them
can be measured with other compositions common in today's
repertoire. In any event, the frequent presence of the double
bass in this genre at least requires some rethinking from the typical
judgement.
Although remaining largely
unreflected in Viennese research, a large body of concert literature
developed in the middle of the eighteenth century. Included here
are the earliest double-bass concerto and around three dozen concertos
and concertante chamber music, all of which appeared within the span of
four decades. This intense interest, unprecedented within string
literature, is without doubt due to the unique sound of the
above-mentioned Viennese violone (Wiener Quart-Terz Violon).
All of the Viennese classical masters used this instrument in
non-orchestral works. Beginning with the concerto by Joseph Haydn
(cir. 1763, now lost), concertos followed by K. Kohaut (1765), D. J.
Kneissel, B. R. Roslaub (Burgsteinfurt, Concerto No. 3), Dittersdorf
(2), W. Pichi (2), A. Zimmermann, J. K. Vanhal, F. A. Hoffmeister (3),
L. A. Kozeluch, and J. M. Sperger (18). The most important
representatives of the Viennese school were: Josef Kämpfer
(1734-after 1796); Friedrich Pischelberger (1741-1813); and Johannes
Mathias Sperger (1750-1812). The playing of these musicians did
not go unknown to Leopold Mozart, who (after his first visit to Vienna)
added the following remarks to the double bass article in the second
edition of his Violinschulë: "One can bring forth
difficult passages easier with the five-string violone, and I heard
unusually beautiful performances of concertos, trios, solos, etc. (on
this instrument)." W. A. Mozart also added a contribution to the
classical concert literature of the double bass. The obligato
part of the concert aria K. 612 marked the high point of the solo music
for the double bass of the classical period and at the same time,
marked the end of this genre.
We experienced the most exciting
event of our labor with the archive through the resurrection of a
string quartet of Joseph Haydn from two hundred years of slumber.
Joseph Haydn was the most successful composer of his time and was
somewhat careless with the handling of his list of works. Thus
later, several works were incorrectly attributed to him. The
manuscripts show signs of frequent use, and the authentic purpose is
often diluted by many generations of local traditions. The music
archive of the Benedictine Abby at Seitenstetten (Upper Austria)
preserves the only known copy of a Divertimento in C for two violins,
violoncello (alternative for viola) and bass, whose cover had to be
replaced with a new one and lists Joseph Haydn as the composer.
Objections against the authentic attribution to Haydn were as
follows. Haydn did not mention this piece in his list of
works. Of course there are other works later correctly attributed
to Haydn that he did not list. Also, the inclusion of a double
bass within a string quartet was used as an argument against an
authentic attribution to Haydn. With that comes new confirmation
of the usual interpretation of this theme that, as mentioned above, was
typical for the seventeenth and eighteenth century. Ernst Fritz
Schmid, whom Haydn research can thank for his valuable insights, has
spoken for the authenticity of this quality work, whose strong
movements betrays the mark of the master. During the rehearsals,
concertmaster Gerhart Hetzel felt certain parallels with some figures
in the c-major violin concerto. Also, the alternative
instrumentation viola/violoncello adds manifold substantiation to the
work. What turned the scales for me was the fact that Hoboken
recognized the Divertimento from Seitenstetten as authentic (Hob.II/5).
Through the examination of old music inventories, one finds many
examples of string quartets that include the double bass and that can
be interpreted as reminiscences of the through bass. The
traditional quartet instrumentation has many forerunners. At the
same time that Hummel published Joseph Haydn's Quartet op. 2 (still in
five movements) for two violins, viola, and violoncello, G. Ch.
Wagenseil composed "Six sonatas for three violoncellos and bass" in
Vienna. In 1804, Wagenseil's "six sonatas for violin,
violoncello, and bass" was published by Traeg in Vienna. Of the
near forty string quintets by George Onslow, most were conceived with
variable instrumentation's. The interchange between
viola/violoncello and violoncello/double bass was common.
Through my theoretical and
practical experiences with the Vienna Double Bass Archive, I maintain
the no ambitious double bassist should have trouble performing chamber
music with original double-bass parts 365 days per year. In the
realm of our concerts, we produced five Austrian premiers, thirteen
premier performances, and twenty eight modern premiers. The works
listed as evidence in Die Geschichte des Kontrabasses
include 770 duets, 665 trios, 470 quartets, 730 quintets, 390 sextets,
275 septets, 280 octets, and 250 nonets (non including works from
the thorough-bass period that are too numerous to list).
Alfred Planyavsky, Vienna, September 1996
Translated by James Barket
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