MP3 Stephen Mattingly - Franz Shubert - Complete Chamber Music With Guitar
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Single items of this product are available separately.
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Terzetto, D. 80 - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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Das Dorfchen, D. 598b - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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Naturgenuss, D. 422 - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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Geist der Liebe, D. 747 - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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Die Nachtigall, D. 724 - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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Fruhlingsgesang, D. 740 - Six Lieder for Male Voices and Guitar
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15 Original Dances for Violin and Guitar - from D. 365
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Allegro moderato - Quartetto, D. 96
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Menuetto
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Lento e patetico - Quartetto, D. 96
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Zingara
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Tema e variazioni - Quartetto, D. 96
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Die Nacht - Lied for Baritone and Guitar
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Complete chamber music with guitar
13 MP3 Songs
CLASSICAL: Art songs, CLASSICAL: Chamber Music
Details:
Total Program [1:11:20]
Christopher Diaz, bass
Reggie Mobley, tenor
Charles Snell, tenor
Jeffery Wienand, baritone & bass
Beth Newdome, violin
Evren BilgenoÄlu, viola
Barbi Risken, flute
Zlatina Staykova, cello
Stephen Mattingly, guitar
Recorded at Florida State University, Opperman Music Hall, October-November, 2005
Engineered by Sean Ryan and Mark Josiah Henkin
Produced and Edited by Stephen Mattingly
Design: Shannon Bonatakis
Mastering: Clear Note 2007
On the Cover
Schubertâs artistic contemporaries often depicted him performing for his friendsâ at the Atzenbrugg palace outside Vienna. These outings usually included light sport, games, and dancing accompanied by the guitar and violin. One such festival at Atzenbrugg inspired Schubert to compose his Atzenbrugg Dances for piano, Op. 33 and Op. 9; a set of 15 waltzes from Op. 9 were arranged for violin and guitar and published during Schubertâs life. Schubert was certainly familiar with this duo as seen in the cover art. Here the composer is seated next to a guitarist as a violinist plays before them. This etching is titled Ballspiel in Atzenbrugg by Ludwig Mohn (1820), and is based on a composite drawing by Franz von Schober, who sketched the background, and Moritz von Schwind, who drew the figures in the foreground. This piece is significant because both Schober and Schwind were close friends to Schubert.
The Guitar in Biedermeier Vienna
During Schubertâs lifetime, Vienna was enjoying a more carefree social lifestyle of post-war celebration, referred to as the Biedermeier period. At this time, citizens among the growing middle-class experienced systems of censorship that discouraged public discussion of the oppressive ruling class. In stark contrast to the harsh political environment, Biedermeier social life was characterized by an air of optimism and relaxed, bourgeois socializing that lasted from 1815-1848 and strongly influenced the course of daily life in Vienna. Amidst this casual atmosphere was the ever-present sound of a new, lighthearted, musical tradition that included songs, dances, and serenades accompanied by the increasingly popular guitar.
Before considering the guitarâs direct significance to Schubert, it is important to note that in the early nineteenth century, the guitar enjoyed remarkable popularity among upper and middle-class society throughout Europe. Notable composers from across the continent provided guitar works for this resounding public demand. In his dissertation on Mauro Giuliani, Thomas Heck cited Vienna as the source of the modern classic guitarâs birth and cultivation. Given the guitarâs frequent use in vocal accompaniment and Schubertâs exposure to the instrument, it seems natural to consider his relationship with the instrument.
The most controversial point about Schubertâs relationship with the guitar lies in the fundamental question of whether he played the instrument. Due to unsubstantiated assumptions by guitar enthusiasts such as A. P. Sharpe, fictitious statements have filled the gaps in music history and cast Schubert as a practicing guitarist who relied upon the instrument to compose. In his Schubert biography, Sharpe states that âFor years Franz Schubert, not possessing a piano, did most of his composing on the guitar which hung over his bed and on which he would play before rising.â Sharpeâs infamous quote is not supported by evidence in any form and amounts to nothing more than myth. A class mate at the Imperial Seminary, Anton Stadler, confirms that Schubert composed at the desk with no piano and no guitar.
According to Kay Griffen Belangia, estate records show that Schubert owned two guitars during his life. Other sources including Spring Ulrike at the Vienna Museum and the Vienna Schubertbund have confirmed this report. The Vienna Museum has one of these guitars in its collection; an instrument built in c.1805 by Bernard Enzensperger. The Vienna Schubertbund has a guitar built in 1815 by Johann Georg Staufer that was in Schubertâs possession.
Schubertâs Repertoire with the Guitar
Manuscripts and Works Published/Arranged: 1797-1828
In the nineteenth century, it was common to allow publishing houses to make guitar arrangements of vocal accompaniments. Not only was the guitar closely associated with vocal accompaniment, but the public demand for so-called Haus Musik made the inexpensive scores an excellent promotional tool for any composerâs career. Finally, there is sound documentation that the guitar was frequently used to accompany Schubertâs part-songs and Lieder in Schubertâs presence.
There is primary source material proving that Schubert wrote for the guitar. The following works exist in manuscript with guitar accompaniment: Terzetto, D. 80, Quartetto, D. 96, and Das Dörfchen, D. 598a. This first version of Das Dörfchen is not included in the First Complete Schubert Edition and is not featured on my recording of Schubertâs complete chamber music with guitar. In place of this version is the second version (Das Dörfchen, D. 598b) which is featured in the Schubert Edition as Op. 11, no. 1. The editions compiled and edited for this recording will be available in print soon.
Works for Male Voice Trio and Quartet
Schubert composed several part-songs with guitar accompaniment included in the published score. These works were the focus of Richard Longâs article Schubertâs âLostâ Works for Guitar (Soundboard; Spring, 2002). For Schubert, most of these pieces were intended for âa capellaâ performance. Although professional choirs and vocal ensembles would easily perform the works âa capellaâ after regular rehearsal, accompaniment was needed for impromptu performances and amateur gatherings. Johann Herbeck, in his introduction to the New Edition of Choruses by Franz Schubert; published by C. A. Spina in 1865, relates that during Schubertâs time âchanges were made to the accompaniment as neededâ and that âit doesnât matter which accompaniment form one uses whether you are met with a piano or a guitar.â More remarkable is his observation that âSchubert himself thought of the accompaniment more as a harmonic basis or simple support of the voicesâ¦â This sentiment was shared by one Biedermeier singer who writes: âIf an instrumental accompaniment is given, then one uses it to perform on a cembalo, piano, guitar or whateverâ¦if an instrumental accompaniment is missing, then it would be improvised.â
In the first Complete Schubert Edition published by Breitkopf and Härtel, editors Eusebius Mandezewski and Johannes Brahms decided to include the previously published guitar accompaniments with these vocal quartets. The select works that were published in the First Complete Schubert Edition with guitar accompaniment are from Op. 11 and Op. 16. The works for male quartet that make up Schubertâs Op. 11 are Das Dörfchen (D. 598b) , Die Nachtigall (D. 784), and Geist der Liebe (D. 747). Geist der Liebe was performed at a Gesellschaft concert on March 3rd, 1822 and again on August 27th, 1822 with the guitar accompaniment played by a Mr. Schmidt. Guitarists such as Johann Umlauff participated in the first performances of these works. At a more intimate gathering, Mauro Giuliani was among the company that formed male voice quartets. The publication of Op. 16 including Naturgenuss (D. 422) and Frühlingsgesang (D. 740) carried the words âmit willkülicher Begleitung des Pianoforte oder Guitarreâ (with obbligato accompaniment of piano or guitar).
Schubert had undoubtedly attained some level of understanding the guitar when he completed a Terzetto, D. 80 for two tenors, and bass, with guitar accompaniment on September 27th, 1813. This work is one of his earliest for male voices. Also titled Kantate by Schubert, this work was dedicated to the honor of his fatherâs name day in Schubertâs own words at the end of the manuscript: âzur Namensfeier meines Vatersâ. Reliable sources backed by previous investigation show the premier was given on October 4th, 1813 by brothers Ignaz, Karl, and Ferdinand accompanied by Franz on the guitar. Some scholars believe this was not the only instance in which Schubert accompanied his brothers on the guitar.
It is interesting that documented performances of these works included only one man on each part. No standard doubling was practiced for the performance of the vocal quartets during this time. It seems, however, that Schubertâs works were usually performed by soloists. This partitioning recalls the group of students with whom Schubert sang during his studies at the Seminary and allows greater dynamic balance with guitar accompaniment.
Quartetto, D. 96
Further contact with the guitar and compositions for the instrument came through the quartet Schubertâs father held with his friends. It was for this ensemble that Schubert arranged Matiegkaâs Noturno, Op. 21 by rewriting significant portions and adding a cello part to the work originally for flute, viola, and guitar. The original was published in Vienna by Artaria and Company in 1807, seven years before Schubert dated his manuscript âFebruary 27th, 1814.â Hints to the origins of Schubertâs arrangement are found throughout the work, most notably on the title page where Schubert began to write the word âTerzetto,â crossed out this and wrote in his own title âQuartetto.â Schubert did not however make any direct note of Matiegkaâs original title Noturno. He indicated, nevertheless that several variations in the final movement would remain the âsame as in the printed trio.â
Comparative analysis of guitarâs role in the second Trio with the surrounding movements, suggests Schubertâs true capabilities as a guitarist. In the Trio II Schubertâs original writing for the guitar reverts to the more simple arpeggiated figures and block chords like those found in the Terzetto, D. 80. The reduced texture of the guitar part indicates Schubert perception of its position in the ensemble, and provides solid evidence of Schubertâs narrow, yet capable knowledge of the instrument.
Works for Solo Voice and Guitar: Die Nacht, WoO (c. 1840)
Between 1840 and 1842 Schubertâs friend and colleague, Franz von Schlechta arranged and copied works for his own performance on the guitar. In all there are 99 volumes dedicated to guitar music for solo, duo, and vocal accompaniment. While only a few works are included by famous Viennese composers such as Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn, Schubertâs works span 39 volumes (51-89) in this project. Die Nacht is one work included in this collection. Upon first glance this manuscript seems to be the only surviving Lied with original guitar accompaniment, but after closer investigation the evidence supporting such claims takes on a more complex form. Most interesting in Schlechtaâs copy is that, lying easily on the instrument, the accompaniment seems as if it were originally conceived for the guitar. However, the same Lied appears at the end of the volume transposed to C major. Here, additional text on the title page states that the work was âarranged by J. N. Huberâ, a known guitar arranger in Vienna during Schubertâs lifetime. This may refer to the arrangement of a lost piano manuscript or simply to the transposition from the original key. In any case, this Liedâs contribution to the understanding of the guitarâs place as an accompanying instrument is immeasurable.
Original Dances, D. 365 (1816-July 1821): Diabelliâs Arrangement
The character of these works is at the heart of Schubertâs Biedermeier experiences. However, they belie the masterful abilities of the composer with their characteristic Biedermeier simplicity in their use of simple homophonic texture and bucolic, folk-like melodies.
13 MP3 Songs
CLASSICAL: Art songs, CLASSICAL: Chamber Music
Details:
Total Program [1:11:20]
Christopher Diaz, bass
Reggie Mobley, tenor
Charles Snell, tenor
Jeffery Wienand, baritone & bass
Beth Newdome, violin
Evren BilgenoÄlu, viola
Barbi Risken, flute
Zlatina Staykova, cello
Stephen Mattingly, guitar
Recorded at Florida State University, Opperman Music Hall, October-November, 2005
Engineered by Sean Ryan and Mark Josiah Henkin
Produced and Edited by Stephen Mattingly
Design: Shannon Bonatakis
Mastering: Clear Note 2007
On the Cover
Schubertâs artistic contemporaries often depicted him performing for his friendsâ at the Atzenbrugg palace outside Vienna. These outings usually included light sport, games, and dancing accompanied by the guitar and violin. One such festival at Atzenbrugg inspired Schubert to compose his Atzenbrugg Dances for piano, Op. 33 and Op. 9; a set of 15 waltzes from Op. 9 were arranged for violin and guitar and published during Schubertâs life. Schubert was certainly familiar with this duo as seen in the cover art. Here the composer is seated next to a guitarist as a violinist plays before them. This etching is titled Ballspiel in Atzenbrugg by Ludwig Mohn (1820), and is based on a composite drawing by Franz von Schober, who sketched the background, and Moritz von Schwind, who drew the figures in the foreground. This piece is significant because both Schober and Schwind were close friends to Schubert.
The Guitar in Biedermeier Vienna
During Schubertâs lifetime, Vienna was enjoying a more carefree social lifestyle of post-war celebration, referred to as the Biedermeier period. At this time, citizens among the growing middle-class experienced systems of censorship that discouraged public discussion of the oppressive ruling class. In stark contrast to the harsh political environment, Biedermeier social life was characterized by an air of optimism and relaxed, bourgeois socializing that lasted from 1815-1848 and strongly influenced the course of daily life in Vienna. Amidst this casual atmosphere was the ever-present sound of a new, lighthearted, musical tradition that included songs, dances, and serenades accompanied by the increasingly popular guitar.
Before considering the guitarâs direct significance to Schubert, it is important to note that in the early nineteenth century, the guitar enjoyed remarkable popularity among upper and middle-class society throughout Europe. Notable composers from across the continent provided guitar works for this resounding public demand. In his dissertation on Mauro Giuliani, Thomas Heck cited Vienna as the source of the modern classic guitarâs birth and cultivation. Given the guitarâs frequent use in vocal accompaniment and Schubertâs exposure to the instrument, it seems natural to consider his relationship with the instrument.
The most controversial point about Schubertâs relationship with the guitar lies in the fundamental question of whether he played the instrument. Due to unsubstantiated assumptions by guitar enthusiasts such as A. P. Sharpe, fictitious statements have filled the gaps in music history and cast Schubert as a practicing guitarist who relied upon the instrument to compose. In his Schubert biography, Sharpe states that âFor years Franz Schubert, not possessing a piano, did most of his composing on the guitar which hung over his bed and on which he would play before rising.â Sharpeâs infamous quote is not supported by evidence in any form and amounts to nothing more than myth. A class mate at the Imperial Seminary, Anton Stadler, confirms that Schubert composed at the desk with no piano and no guitar.
According to Kay Griffen Belangia, estate records show that Schubert owned two guitars during his life. Other sources including Spring Ulrike at the Vienna Museum and the Vienna Schubertbund have confirmed this report. The Vienna Museum has one of these guitars in its collection; an instrument built in c.1805 by Bernard Enzensperger. The Vienna Schubertbund has a guitar built in 1815 by Johann Georg Staufer that was in Schubertâs possession.
Schubertâs Repertoire with the Guitar
Manuscripts and Works Published/Arranged: 1797-1828
In the nineteenth century, it was common to allow publishing houses to make guitar arrangements of vocal accompaniments. Not only was the guitar closely associated with vocal accompaniment, but the public demand for so-called Haus Musik made the inexpensive scores an excellent promotional tool for any composerâs career. Finally, there is sound documentation that the guitar was frequently used to accompany Schubertâs part-songs and Lieder in Schubertâs presence.
There is primary source material proving that Schubert wrote for the guitar. The following works exist in manuscript with guitar accompaniment: Terzetto, D. 80, Quartetto, D. 96, and Das Dörfchen, D. 598a. This first version of Das Dörfchen is not included in the First Complete Schubert Edition and is not featured on my recording of Schubertâs complete chamber music with guitar. In place of this version is the second version (Das Dörfchen, D. 598b) which is featured in the Schubert Edition as Op. 11, no. 1. The editions compiled and edited for this recording will be available in print soon.
Works for Male Voice Trio and Quartet
Schubert composed several part-songs with guitar accompaniment included in the published score. These works were the focus of Richard Longâs article Schubertâs âLostâ Works for Guitar (Soundboard; Spring, 2002). For Schubert, most of these pieces were intended for âa capellaâ performance. Although professional choirs and vocal ensembles would easily perform the works âa capellaâ after regular rehearsal, accompaniment was needed for impromptu performances and amateur gatherings. Johann Herbeck, in his introduction to the New Edition of Choruses by Franz Schubert; published by C. A. Spina in 1865, relates that during Schubertâs time âchanges were made to the accompaniment as neededâ and that âit doesnât matter which accompaniment form one uses whether you are met with a piano or a guitar.â More remarkable is his observation that âSchubert himself thought of the accompaniment more as a harmonic basis or simple support of the voicesâ¦â This sentiment was shared by one Biedermeier singer who writes: âIf an instrumental accompaniment is given, then one uses it to perform on a cembalo, piano, guitar or whateverâ¦if an instrumental accompaniment is missing, then it would be improvised.â
In the first Complete Schubert Edition published by Breitkopf and Härtel, editors Eusebius Mandezewski and Johannes Brahms decided to include the previously published guitar accompaniments with these vocal quartets. The select works that were published in the First Complete Schubert Edition with guitar accompaniment are from Op. 11 and Op. 16. The works for male quartet that make up Schubertâs Op. 11 are Das Dörfchen (D. 598b) , Die Nachtigall (D. 784), and Geist der Liebe (D. 747). Geist der Liebe was performed at a Gesellschaft concert on March 3rd, 1822 and again on August 27th, 1822 with the guitar accompaniment played by a Mr. Schmidt. Guitarists such as Johann Umlauff participated in the first performances of these works. At a more intimate gathering, Mauro Giuliani was among the company that formed male voice quartets. The publication of Op. 16 including Naturgenuss (D. 422) and Frühlingsgesang (D. 740) carried the words âmit willkülicher Begleitung des Pianoforte oder Guitarreâ (with obbligato accompaniment of piano or guitar).
Schubert had undoubtedly attained some level of understanding the guitar when he completed a Terzetto, D. 80 for two tenors, and bass, with guitar accompaniment on September 27th, 1813. This work is one of his earliest for male voices. Also titled Kantate by Schubert, this work was dedicated to the honor of his fatherâs name day in Schubertâs own words at the end of the manuscript: âzur Namensfeier meines Vatersâ. Reliable sources backed by previous investigation show the premier was given on October 4th, 1813 by brothers Ignaz, Karl, and Ferdinand accompanied by Franz on the guitar. Some scholars believe this was not the only instance in which Schubert accompanied his brothers on the guitar.
It is interesting that documented performances of these works included only one man on each part. No standard doubling was practiced for the performance of the vocal quartets during this time. It seems, however, that Schubertâs works were usually performed by soloists. This partitioning recalls the group of students with whom Schubert sang during his studies at the Seminary and allows greater dynamic balance with guitar accompaniment.
Quartetto, D. 96
Further contact with the guitar and compositions for the instrument came through the quartet Schubertâs father held with his friends. It was for this ensemble that Schubert arranged Matiegkaâs Noturno, Op. 21 by rewriting significant portions and adding a cello part to the work originally for flute, viola, and guitar. The original was published in Vienna by Artaria and Company in 1807, seven years before Schubert dated his manuscript âFebruary 27th, 1814.â Hints to the origins of Schubertâs arrangement are found throughout the work, most notably on the title page where Schubert began to write the word âTerzetto,â crossed out this and wrote in his own title âQuartetto.â Schubert did not however make any direct note of Matiegkaâs original title Noturno. He indicated, nevertheless that several variations in the final movement would remain the âsame as in the printed trio.â
Comparative analysis of guitarâs role in the second Trio with the surrounding movements, suggests Schubertâs true capabilities as a guitarist. In the Trio II Schubertâs original writing for the guitar reverts to the more simple arpeggiated figures and block chords like those found in the Terzetto, D. 80. The reduced texture of the guitar part indicates Schubert perception of its position in the ensemble, and provides solid evidence of Schubertâs narrow, yet capable knowledge of the instrument.
Works for Solo Voice and Guitar: Die Nacht, WoO (c. 1840)
Between 1840 and 1842 Schubertâs friend and colleague, Franz von Schlechta arranged and copied works for his own performance on the guitar. In all there are 99 volumes dedicated to guitar music for solo, duo, and vocal accompaniment. While only a few works are included by famous Viennese composers such as Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn, Schubertâs works span 39 volumes (51-89) in this project. Die Nacht is one work included in this collection. Upon first glance this manuscript seems to be the only surviving Lied with original guitar accompaniment, but after closer investigation the evidence supporting such claims takes on a more complex form. Most interesting in Schlechtaâs copy is that, lying easily on the instrument, the accompaniment seems as if it were originally conceived for the guitar. However, the same Lied appears at the end of the volume transposed to C major. Here, additional text on the title page states that the work was âarranged by J. N. Huberâ, a known guitar arranger in Vienna during Schubertâs lifetime. This may refer to the arrangement of a lost piano manuscript or simply to the transposition from the original key. In any case, this Liedâs contribution to the understanding of the guitarâs place as an accompanying instrument is immeasurable.
Original Dances, D. 365 (1816-July 1821): Diabelliâs Arrangement
The character of these works is at the heart of Schubertâs Biedermeier experiences. However, they belie the masterful abilities of the composer with their characteristic Biedermeier simplicity in their use of simple homophonic texture and bucolic, folk-like melodies.
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