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Album
Biber: The Rosary Sonatas / Manze, Egarr, Mcgillivray
Release Date:
07/01/2016
Label:
Harmonia Mundi
Catalog #:
507321/22
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr , Andrew Manze , Alison McGillivray
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WISH LIST
Works on Recording
Notes and Reviews
Dare I say that this must be Andrew Manze's best disc so far? In a catalog that includes his unsurpassed, standard-setting performances of sonatas by Tartini, Rebel, Uccellini, Telemann, Bach, and Corelli--not to mention other sonatas by Biber, this one is impressive not only for the by-now expected technical virtuosity, stylistic facility, and the perfectly in-sync partnership of Manze and Richard Egarr, but also--and perhaps most remarkably--for the sound of Manze's violin. Biber wrote these 15 sonatas employing
scordatura
(or alternate tuning), thus assigning unique sonic characteristics to each of the 15 sacred "mysteries". Sometimes the differences are subtle, in other cases
Read more
they are more dramatic, and they are realized here like never before.
This is achieved by Manze's decision to use a single violin for all the sonatas, retuning it as required with "one set of equal-tension strings, made of sheep gut, without any metal covering." As a result, we can hear to striking effect the differences in the violin's voice and character as it changes according to the composer's concept of each sonata. By adding more or less tension to the strings, by reconfiguring the usual intervallic relationships between one string and its neighbor and thus creating a whole series of different resonating effects, a violin can be sweetly alluring one minute and coldly hard-edged the next. In between these sounds is an array of timbres and voices uncommonly heard (as we do here) coming from four strings and a wooden box--albeit, in this case, an Amati wooden box.
Violinists who tackle the considerable difficulties of Biber's formidable lines and sometimes extreme alternate tunings often use a set of pre-tuned instruments--but Manze's approach makes for a far more dramatic listening experience as we realize this one violin's transformation from the Five Joyful Mysteries (Annunciation, Nativity, etc.) to the Five Sorrowful Mysteries (Crucifixion and Death), and ending with the Five Glorious Mysteries (Resurrection, Ascension, Assumption of Mary, etc.). But as Manze points out in his relatively brief but very helpful notes, we should not become distracted in these works with attempts to identify strict programmatic effects that Biber may or may not have intended. Rather, to fully appreciate these complex yet eminently listenable and highly appealing sonatas, we should take a more contextual approach, for example "seeing" the picture of Christ on the cross rather than trying to hear the sound of the hammering of nails.
Of course, you can't help but be totally engrossed in Manze's playing, which is so free of artifice and effort that it leaves us free to revel in and wonder at the sheer range of expression he achieves in this monumental tour de force--arguably the most challenging two hours of music in the violin repertoire. And the engineering is so true to the music's purpose and to the instrument's tonal characteristics that we don't even have to try to hear--and feel--the effects of Biber's ingenious "mistunings". It helps that the performers chose to use only one accompanying instrument (Egarr switches between organ and harpsichord) so, as Manze suggests, to be faithful to the music's original purpose, evoking "an intimate, private atmosphere suitable for prayer and meditation."
The opening bars of the Praeludium to the first sonata (The Annunciation) are breathtaking--the violin seems to be emerging from another world, and Manze holds us spellbound, suspended for the next two minutes in awed anticipation, quickly satisfied by the gorgeous, spinning flourishes and richly sonorous double-stops of the following Aria, and ending in a series of strange, short, improvisatory utterances. The next two hours are full of enough technical feats and interpretive artistry--both grand and almost imperceptibly subtle--to keep violin aficionados enthralled for a very long time. How Manze does it is another mystery we can add to the 15 he performs here.
[Note: For those interested in knowing more, the program concludes with a discussion/demonstration by Manze titled "Scordatura briefly explained."] [8/16/2004]
--David Vernier, ClassicsToday.com
Read less
1.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 1 in D minor, Annunciation
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr (Organ) , Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
6 Minutes 3 Secs.
2.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 2 in A major, Mary's Visit
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Harpsichord)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
6 Minutes 50 Secs.
3.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 3 in B minor, The Nativity
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Harpsichord)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
7 Minutes 24 Secs.
4.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 4 in D minor Presentation
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr (Organ) , Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 2 Secs.
5.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 5 in A major, Child Jesus in the Temple
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Harpsichord)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
7 Minutes 25 Secs.
6.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 6 in C minor, The Agony in the Garden
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 22 Secs.
7.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 7 in F major, The Scourging of Jesus
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
10 Minutes 51 Secs.
8.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 8 in B flat major, The Crown of Thorns
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr (Harpsichord) , Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
6 Minutes 13 Secs.
9.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 9 in A minor, Carrying the Cross
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr (Organ) , Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 25 Secs.
10.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 10 in G minor, The Crucifixion
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Richard Egarr (Harpsichord) , Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 41 Secs.
11.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 11 in G major, Resurrection
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
7 Minutes 30 Secs.
12.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 12 in C major, The Ascension
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Harpsichord) , Alison McGillivray (Cello)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
8 Minutes 40 Secs.
13.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 13 in D minor, Holy Ghost
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
8 Minutes 15 Secs.
14.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 14 in D major Assumption
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 37 Secs.
15.
Mystery Sonatas (15) for Violin and Basso Continuo: no 15 in C major, Crowning of the Virgin Mary
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin) , Richard Egarr (Organ)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
circa 1676 Salzburg, Austria
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
12 Minutes 8 Secs.
16.
Passacaglia for Violin solo in G minor
Composer:
Heinrich Ignaz Biber
Performer:
Andrew Manze (Violin)
Period:
Baroque
Written:
17th Century Bohemia
Venue:
Lyndhurst Hall, Air Studios, London, UK
Length:
9 Minutes 21 Secs.
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