diumenge, 25 de setembre del 2022

VEJVANOVSKY, Pavel Josef (1633-1693) - Missa Salvatoris (1677)

Bon Boullogne (1649-1717) - La Justice assure la Paix et protège les Arts (c.1688)


Pavel Josef Vejvanovský (1633-1693) - Missa Salvatoris 4 Voces in Conc (1677)
Performers: DRS Singers; Cappella Musica Antica; Christoph Cajöri (conductor)

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Moravian composer, trumpeter and music copyist. He studied at the Jesuit college at Opava, where he is mentioned in a register of students from 1656 to 1660. At this time he became acquainted with H.I.F. von Biber and P.J. Rittler and started to compose. A letter of 15 June 1661 records his appointment as a trumpeter to the administrator E.F. Castelle, who directed activities at the court of the Prince-Bishop of Olomouc, Leopold Wilhelm (a son of Emperor Ferdinand II), who spent much of his time away from Olomouc. Throughout his life Vejvanovský used the title of Feldtrompeter, although he was not qualified to do so. He remained at Kroměříž and in 1664 entered the service of the new prince-bishop, Karl Liechtenstein-Castelcorno, as principal trumpeter and as Kapellmeister; his duties also included the copying of music, and many sets of parts in his hand survive. He possessed his own valuable music collection, and was mainly responsible for the formation of the famous one belonging to the bishop. He seems to have been on very close personal terms with his patron and was one of the highest paid court servants: with a salary in 1690 of 180 florins, he ranked third in the list of the prince-bishop's establishment and is described in various documents as ‘Hof-und Feldtrompeter’. He appears also to have been director of the choir at the collegiate church of St Mořice, where many of his works were performed during his 32 years at Kroměříž. The record of his burial states that he was ‘about 60 years old’ at his death. All of Vejvanovský's surviving works are found at Kroměříž. Of the 137 works noted in the music inventory from 1695, 127 are complete or in sketches; many doubtful works also exist. Since he played the trumpet it is no surprise to find that he made considerable use of it. In both vocal and instrumental music he wrote for trumpets and trombones in a manner technically superior to that of most of his contemporaries. An exception among them was J.H. Schmelzer, whom Vejvanovský knew and with whom he may well have studied for a time, since his music shows many traits of the school of Schmelzer and others associated with the court of Emperor Leopold I in Vienna. In his trumpet writing he sometimes called for a tromba brevis, which was tuned a tone higher than the normal trumpet. The Missa clamantium (1683) includes the direction ‘two clarinos may be added ad libitum, but they ought to be one tone higher’. In conjunction with information from contemporary German and Italian sources, these specifications can doubtless be interpreted as references to the smaller variety of trumpet known as the tromba piccola or tromba gallica, which was in D rather than C (the usual tuning for military trumpets). One of Vejvanovský's most exceptional pieces of trumpet writing is the church sonata (IV/43), for solo trumpet, strings and continuo, that bears the reference ‘Be mollis’, alluding to what for a trumpet was an unusual tonality. As in a number of other instances, Vejvanovský cleverly employed here the lowered 7th harmonic of a natural trumpet and used several non-harmonic notes to score for the instrument in G minor rather than in the more usual key of C major. In many of his works it is possible to detect the influence of old modal music compositions, including the melody of the Austrian Christmas song Joseph lieber, Joseph mein, once thought to be a Czech folksong.

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