Solo Violin Partitas and Sonatas (Hilary Hahn, Violin)
Reviews
Gary Lemco
Reviewed 2021-10-30
Reviewed 2021-10-30
J.S. Bach: Solo Violin Partitas and Sonatas (Hilary Hahn, violin)
Label: Decca, 2018
Reviewed: Gary Lemco 2020-04-13
Bach composed his solo violin sonatas and partitas (suites) between 1707 and 1717, at Weimar, likely using the Johann Paul von Westhoff’s solo works (1796) as his model. Bach “invented” no original “forms” in music, but rather perfected models from the various centers in Europe. These works were left unpublished until 1802, and only in 1936 did Yehudi Menuhin undertake the first integral recording. Himself a fine violinist, Bach took the traditional “Church Sonata” with for his model: four sections: a slow introduction followed by a fugue, a lyrical slow movement, and a fast finale. The Sonata in G Minor begins seriously with a four-note G-minor chord, the two lower strings ringing freely. The melody is elaborate, weaving long lines between harmonic pillars. The ensuing Fugue is concise yet architecturally astonishing: each of the 3 sections is demarcated by repeated cadences, which are subsequently different in texture, figuration, and contrapuntal devices. The Siciliano is in the relative major. The dance is characterized by its 12/8 meter and a dotted-rhythm melody. The concluding Presto is a wild perpetual motion of single notes but with implied polyphony, causing metric instability.
Bach’s Partita No. 1 is a Baroque dance suite that contains four dances: Allemande, Corrente, Sarabande, and a Bourrée, the latter replacing the customary Gigue. Following each dance is a “Double,” essentially variations on the preceding dance using the same underlying harmonies. The Allemande follows established conventions with its quadruple meter, its moderate tempo, and an upbeat that launches the work. After a ceremonial opening, triplets are introduced, bringing about rhythmic diversity. The Double that follows unfolds in even, melodic sixteenths. The Corrente is in a jaunty triple meter. Its Double truly expresses the “running” meaning of the word corrente, with its quick scalar sixteenth notes marked “presto.” Bach’s Sarabande is noble and in triple meter. Its song-like Double is in 9/8 meter and consists almost exclusively of triplets. Labeled tempo di Borea, this lively Bourrée is in duple meter and propelled by an upbeat quarter note. In the Double that follows, Bach dissolves the rhythm heard previously into running notes that outline the melodic and harmonic contour.
Sonata No. 2 in A Minor opens with a Grave (solemn and slow), lyrical and highly ornamented. Violinist Christian Tetzlaff, in his liner notes, associates this sonata with a Passion cantata where tritones and sweeping gestures depict Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane: “Why have I been left alone? Why is nobody to stand by my side?” The Fugue parallels the G-minor Sonata’s fugue with a subject of exactly the same length; yet it is far more extensive, filled with skips, runs, and leaps, while contrasted by a falling chromatic line. The major-key Andante is a lyrical cantilena sung over a bass line of repeated notes. In the words of violinist Miriam Fried, “It is hard to imagine a more beautiful, melodic movement [that]expresses the most intimate secrets of the soul with the utmost calm and serenity.” The finale is a dazzling Allegro, with Italianate virtuosity employing echo-like dynamics.
Reviewed: Gary Lemco 2020-04-13
Bach composed his solo violin sonatas and partitas (suites) between 1707 and 1717, at Weimar, likely using the Johann Paul von Westhoff’s solo works (1796) as his model. Bach “invented” no original “forms” in music, but rather perfected models from the various centers in Europe. These works were left unpublished until 1802, and only in 1936 did Yehudi Menuhin undertake the first integral recording. Himself a fine violinist, Bach took the traditional “Church Sonata” with for his model: four sections: a slow introduction followed by a fugue, a lyrical slow movement, and a fast finale. The Sonata in G Minor begins seriously with a four-note G-minor chord, the two lower strings ringing freely. The melody is elaborate, weaving long lines between harmonic pillars. The ensuing Fugue is concise yet architecturally astonishing: each of the 3 sections is demarcated by repeated cadences, which are subsequently different in texture, figuration, and contrapuntal devices. The Siciliano is in the relative major. The dance is characterized by its 12/8 meter and a dotted-rhythm melody. The concluding Presto is a wild perpetual motion of single notes but with implied polyphony, causing metric instability.
Bach’s Partita No. 1 is a Baroque dance suite that contains four dances: Allemande, Corrente, Sarabande, and a Bourrée, the latter replacing the customary Gigue. Following each dance is a “Double,” essentially variations on the preceding dance using the same underlying harmonies. The Allemande follows established conventions with its quadruple meter, its moderate tempo, and an upbeat that launches the work. After a ceremonial opening, triplets are introduced, bringing about rhythmic diversity. The Double that follows unfolds in even, melodic sixteenths. The Corrente is in a jaunty triple meter. Its Double truly expresses the “running” meaning of the word corrente, with its quick scalar sixteenth notes marked “presto.” Bach’s Sarabande is noble and in triple meter. Its song-like Double is in 9/8 meter and consists almost exclusively of triplets. Labeled tempo di Borea, this lively Bourrée is in duple meter and propelled by an upbeat quarter note. In the Double that follows, Bach dissolves the rhythm heard previously into running notes that outline the melodic and harmonic contour.
Sonata No. 2 in A Minor opens with a Grave (solemn and slow), lyrical and highly ornamented. Violinist Christian Tetzlaff, in his liner notes, associates this sonata with a Passion cantata where tritones and sweeping gestures depict Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane: “Why have I been left alone? Why is nobody to stand by my side?” The Fugue parallels the G-minor Sonata’s fugue with a subject of exactly the same length; yet it is far more extensive, filled with skips, runs, and leaps, while contrasted by a falling chromatic line. The major-key Andante is a lyrical cantilena sung over a bass line of repeated notes. In the words of violinist Miriam Fried, “It is hard to imagine a more beautiful, melodic movement [that]expresses the most intimate secrets of the soul with the utmost calm and serenity.” The finale is a dazzling Allegro, with Italianate virtuosity employing echo-like dynamics.
Recent airplay
Presto (3:32)
Music Casserole — Sep 17, 2022
Siciliana (3:31), Fuga (5:26), Sonata No. 1 in G Minor, BWV 1001. Adagio (4:47)
Mix Tape: Drunks & Milkmen Edition — Jul 05, 2022
3, Sonata No. 1 in G Minor, BWV 1001. Adagio (4:47)
ModernTekNews — Jun 15, 2022
Fuga (8:07)
Music Casserole — May 21, 2022
Andante (6:33)
Music Casserole — Apr 23, 2022
Courante (3:42), Tempo Di Bouree ((3:27), Presto (3:32), Siciliana (3:31)
ModernTekNews — Apr 20, 2022
Charting
2022-04-13 — 2022-06-15
Classical/Experimental
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Jun 19 | 1 |
| May 22 | 1 |
| Apr 24 | 2 |
Track listing
| 1. | Sonata No. 1 in G Minor, BWV 1001. Adagio (4:47) | ||
| 2. | Fuga (5:26) | ||
| 3. | Siciliana (3:31) | ||
| 4. | Presto (3:32) | ||
| 5. | Partita No. 1 in B Minor, BWV 1002. Allemande (7:30) | ||
| 6. | Allemande – Double (4:12) | ||
| 7. | Courante (3:42) | ||
| 8. | Courante – Double (3:31) | ||
| 9. | Sarabande (4:02) | ||
| 10. | Sarabande – Double (3:35) | ||
| 11. | Tempo Di Bouree ((3:27) | ||
| 12. | Tempo Di Bourree – Double (3:15) | ||
| 13. | Tempo Di Bourree – Double (3:15) | ||
| 14. | Fuga (8:07) | ||
| 15. | Andante (6:33) | ||
| 16. | Allegro (5:50) |