Methodical Sonatas for Violin (Flute) and Bc: Volume 6

Telemann, Georg Philipp

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Telemann Methodical Sonatas for Violin (Flute) and Bc: Volume 6

he two volumes of the original edition of Telemann’s twelve “Methodische Sonaten”, to which the present sonatas belong, have the following title: SONATE METODICHE / à Violino Solo o Flauto traverso / Opera XIII (1728) and Continuation des / SONATES METHODIQUES / à Flûte traverse ou à Violon (1732).  But this is not simply a question of a repertoire that can be performed equally well on both instruments.  The slight variation in the order of naming the instruments has its significance.  By observing certain fingerings and motifs that are idiomatic to the flute or the violin, one may find a clue to the ascription of the individual sonatas to one or the other instrument.  Nos. 3, 4, 7, 8 and 10–12 contain typical flute passages, while only in the last movement of No. 5 do typically violinistic fingerings occur (double-stopped unisons on e’’).  The remaining sonatas can be described as neutral and thus equally suited to both instruments.

The twelve sonatas, which are composed with four movements each in the first volume and five in the second, are found in the keys of C major – C minor – D major – D minor – E major – E minor – G major – G minor – A major – A minor – B minor – B-flat major.  Apart from their purely musical value, their significance rests on the additional characteristic that Telemann intends by calling them “methodical”.  The preface talks only in general terms of the “singing style”, but contemporary advertisements in the press are more specific:

“[The sonatas] will be very useful to those who wish to apply themselves to cantabile ornamentation”.

Telemann gives the solo part of the slow movements, which appear in first or second place, in two versions: on the first stave the simple melodic line, and on the second the same with added ornamentation.  Comparison of the two different readings should help to familiarise musicians with the way in which to "grace” a plain melody by means of French “essential ornaments” and Italian “impromptu variants on the simple intervals”, and so, by alternating between them, to perfect his taste.

- Urtext of the Telemann Edition

- Score with a lightly realised continuo and two playing scores (melody instrument, basso continuo with figured bass)

Seiffert, Max
BA2246
9790006419074
Baerenreiter Germany

Contents

  1. Sonata in D minor TWV 41:d2 [Telemann, Georg Philipp]
  2. Sonata in C major TWV 41:C3 [Telemann, Georg Philipp]

Additional Information

Baroque Period
Flute, Violin