diumenge, 30 de gener del 2022

BERNHARD, Christoph (1628-1693) - Missa 'Durch Adams Fall'

Giovanni Battista Salvi 'Sassoferrato' (1609-1685) - Saint Cecilia


Christoph Bernhard (1628-1693) - Missa 'Durch Adams Fall'
Performers: Vаncouvеr Chamber Choir; Iοn Wаshburn

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German music theorist, composer and singer. He is best known for his discussion of musical-rhetorical figures in Tractatus compositionis augmentatus. The birthplace given above is documented in a funeral poem by Bernhard’s brother-in-law C.C. Dedekind and is confirmed by Walther; the birth date appears in Müller-Blattau (1963) without documentation. Mattheson states, no doubt erroneously, that Bernhard was born in Danzig in 1612. According to Dedekind, Bernhard studied in Danzig (probably with the elder Kaspar Förster and possibly Paul Siefert) and in Warsaw (very likely with Scacchi); Mattheson’s assertion that Bernhard studied in Danzig with Balthasar Erben must also be in error for Erben did not become Kapellmeister at the Marienkirche until 1658, well after Bernhard was established in Dresden. At some point Bernhard also studied law. He began singing as an alto at the electoral court in Dresden under Schütz probably in 1648 and received a contract with the elector’s ensemble on 1 August 1649. Shortly thereafter he travelled with the royal retinue to Gottorf for a wedding. The music was directed by Agostino Fontana, a virtuoso Italian singer serving as Kapellmeister to Christian IV of Denmark; Bernhard remained in Denmark to study with Fontana for about a year. On 1 August 1655 Bernhard was promoted to vice-Kapellmeister at Dresden. With the accession of the italophile Johann Georg II as Elector of Saxony in 1656, Italian musicians gained greater influence at court. These included G.A. Bontempi, Vincenzo and Bartolomeo Albrici, Gioseppe Peranda and Dominicus Melani. Bernhard made two trips to Italy, supported by Johann Georg II, to gain more first-hand experience of Italian music, musicians and singing technique. He married Christina Barbara Weber on 28 October 1659. Growing tension between the German and Italian musicians was probably the main factor in Bernhard’s decision in 1663 to follow his former colleague Matthias Weckmann to Hamburg. There he succeeded Thomas Selle as Kantor of the Johanneum and civic director of church music in Hamburg. There were six other contestants for the post, and he obtained it by one vote. 

Weckmann had helped make him known in Hamburg by performing a piece of his own under Bernhard’s name. Bernhard accepted the Hamburg offer on 18 October 1663 and was installed on 9 February 1664. The city fathers greeted his arrival in elegant style and completely remodelled his house, which Bernhard gratefully acknowledged when dedicating his Geistliche Harmonien (1665) to them. The fact that Bernhard was taken into membership of the brotherhood Englandfahrer shortly after his arrival in Hamburg indicates the esteem in which he was held. Visits from Johann Rist (in 1666) and the younger Kaspar Förster (in 1667) provided occasions for chamber music at Bernhard’s house. Bernhard must also have participated in the weekly concerts of the collegium musicum founded by Weckmann in 1660. In addition to performing the most up-to-date works from Venice, Rome, Vienna, Munich and Dresden, they joined with Reincken, Buxtehude and Theile in cultivating learned counterpoint as an esoteric art; Bernhard’s Prudentia prudentiana, in four-part invertible counterpoint, was imitated by Buxtehude two years later (buxwv76/1). The years of Bernhard and Weckmann’s joint activity formed one of the highpoints of 17th-century musical life in Hamburg. Just before Weckmann’s death (on 24 February 1674) Johann Georg II called Bernhard back to Dresden to supervise the education of his two grandsons, and he was installed on 31 March 1674 with instructions to teach them religion, reading and writing. He also resumed his post as vice-Kapellmeister. In 1676 he supervised a new edition of the Dresden hymnal, combining the Lutheran chorales with Schütz’s settings of the Becker Psalter. Johann Georg III, who became elector in 1680, soon decided to reduce his musical establishment in order to cut costs. All the Italians either left or were dismissed, and from 24 August 1681 Bernhard was the sole Kapellmeister, as well as inspector of the music library; he held both positions until his death. With the accession of Johann Georg IV in 1691 he was serving his fourth Elector of Saxony.

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