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WORLD
PREMIERE RECORDING
THOMAS BALTZAR Complete
Works for Unaccompanied Violin
PATRICK WOOD
$12.95 ~ MS1224
Click
HERE for an interview with Patrick Wood on WWFM Radio
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"Thomas
Baltzar is a little-known German violinist and composer who is
getting a well-deserved airing in this new premiere recording...This CD
represents his complete output of unaccompanied violin music, and is
also the first-ever recording of this once-innovative music. What’s so
striking about the pieces is their early use of polyphony. One immediately
thinks of Bach when hearing the pieces; though composed around 1660, 25 years
before Bach’s birth, it’s almost as if they are primitive strains of his
writing. Baltzar’s compositions stand out for their early use of double-stops
and scordatura... British-Mexican violinist
Patrick Wood thoughtfully plays the works. His tone is even, pure, and warm, and
his intonation is spot-on. His light, gentle playing adds just the right shimmer
to the simple beauty of each short piece." Strings ~ July 2008
"[Baltzar's]
complete music for solo violin, excellently played by Patrick Wood, is
impressive as well as historically important." Turok's
Choice ~ June 2008
"Bach
[raised] the art to its peak in his iconic Sonatas and Partitas, but Baltzar
appears to have helped set the scene...preludes, allemandes and courantes are
early models of compositional concision and elegance. The pieces are...endowed
with sophisticated turns of phrase and harmonic personality. Certainly the
discernment and imagination Baltzar invested in his unaccompanied works were
destined to provide curious violinists with ample technical challenges, as well
as musical rewards. Patrick Wood is one of those violinists. [He] makes a
splendid case for Baltzar, playing the collection with graceful and fervent
assurance. His sound is rich and nuanced, his command of the difficulties
complete." Gramophone ~ May 2008
"Patrick
Wood plays with precision and appropriate gravity, elucidating the polyphonic
textures of Baltzar’s music with admirable clarity and he benefits from a good
recorded sound. His performances have an air of conviction and certainty that
put the case for Baltzar very effectively... All with an interest in the history
of the violin repertoire, or in the ‘English’ music of the seventeenth
century should hear this CD." MusicWeb
International ~ May 2008
" English-born
violinist Patrick wood deserves much credit for his re-discovery of this
important lost composer. The present MSR release by Wood of Baltzar’s Complete
Works for Unaccompanied Violin marks their world premiere recording. These
performances are distinguished by their purity of tone and their austere sound.
The latter is particularly notable in the four last pieces on the disc. In Wood’s performances, the haunting sound of Baltzar’s
Preludes, Allemandes and Sarabandes comes to life once more. These pieces,
infinite treasures in a small space, sound well upon repeated audition, too."
Atlanta Audio Society ~ May 2008
"It
should not be surprising if the name of German-born violinist and composer
Thomas Baltzar is unfamiliar to listeners, for his name and most of his
compositions have been all but lost to oblivion. Thanks to violinist Patrick
Wood, however, we have this short set of recovered works for solo violin.
Written some 65 years before Bach would write his Solo Sonatas & Partitas,
Baltzar's compositions already show him to be an unrecognized innovator in his
extensive use of polyphony throughout his works. The final four tracks on the
album also show Baltzar's use of scordatura — a procedure by which an
instrument is tuned to different open strings than usual to produce a different
color to its sound — which was an unknown technique in Germany at the time.
Wood's playing does great justice to Baltzar's works and speaks well of his
exhaustive efforts to unearth them. His playing is very strong and muscular,
much like Nathan Milstein's playing of Bach. Intonation is quite precise, and
his voicing of the polyphonic texture of the music allows listeners to follow
the melody easily as it wends its way through the range of the violin. ...this album is a welcome discovery of unheard solo
violin music performed convincingly." All Music Guide ~ March 2008
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Little
is known about the early life of Thomas Baltzar. He was born in Lübeck
in 1630 or 1631, into a family of musicians active in the community for several
generations: his father and two of his brothers were town musicians (ratslautenisten),
as were his uncle, grandfather and great-grandfather, and two of his
great-uncles were organists. Baltzar’s brother Joachim learned composition,
the cornett and the violin from Nikolaus Bleyer, and although there are no
records to show where Thomas received his musical instruction, Bleyer is a
likely teacher.
In England, Baltzar later came to be known as "the Swede," not because
he was Swedish, but because he had recently been employed at the court of Queen
Christina in Sweden. Records from the year 1653 suggest that he may not have
stayed very long. He certainly did not stay beyond the end of 1654, as the
Lübeck archives list him as a town musician in early 1655.
By March of 1656, Baltzar had arrived in England, where he was to spend the rest
of his life. During the period of the English Commonwealth there was no Royal
Court at which musicians could be regularly employed, so it is primarily through
accounts of music-making in private houses that we can see the stir Baltzar
caused. John Evelyn describes Baltzar’s playing in his diary, and writes
"though a very young man, yet so perfect and skillfull as there was nothing
so crosse and perplext, which being by our Artists, brought to him, which he did
not at first sight, with ravishing sweetenesse, and improvements, play
off..." It is clear that Baltzar’s playing produced only wonderment.
Evelyn continues, "I stand to this houre amaz’d that God should give so
greate perfection to so young a person... nor can I any longer question, the
effects we read of in Davids harp, to charme maligne spirits, and what is said
some particular notes produc’d in the Passions of Alexander..." The
accounts of the extraordinary power of music in the stories of David and
Alexander the Great (and the Greek myths of Arion and Orpheus) were often cited
as examples of the potential effects of great music or great musical
performance.
But Baltzar’s playing went beyond expectations not only because he played
"with that wonderfull dexteritie," but because he produced something
no one had heard before. Evelyn writes "In Summ, he played on that single
Instrument a full Consort, so as the rest, flung-downe their Instruments, as
acknowledging a victory..." The idea of several voices being produced
simultaneously by one instrument is, of course, familiar to us from the Sonatas
and Partitas for solo violin by Bach, written about 65 years later in the 1720s,
and there was a tradition before Bach of many-voiced (polyphonic) writing for
solo violin, in the music of Biber and J. J. Walther. For some time it was
supposed that Baltzar had merely brought this tradition to England from Germany,
but the dates make that theory implausible: at the time of Baltzar’s playing,
Biber and Walther were eleven and six years old respectively, and the earliest
of their violin works date from well after Baltzar’s early death in 1663.
In 1658, Baltzar was "entertained by Sir Anthony Cope of Hanwell House,
Banbury," as a private musician to the house, and his performances in
nearby Oxford are documented in the historian Anthony à Wood’s _Life and
Times_. Baltzar continued to amaze. At the house of William Ellis, à Wood
"did then and there, to his very great astonishment, heare him play upon
the violin. He then saw him run his fingers to the end of the finger board of
the violin and run them back insensibly, and all with alacrity and in very good
tune." At another performance, one of the audience "did, after his
humoursome way, stoop downe to Baltzar’s feet, to see whether he had a huff
on, that is to say to see whether he was a devill or not, because he acted
beyond the parts of a man." It seems that even before Paganini, Tartini and
Corelli, the Devil had already claimed his instrument.
In 1660, when the royal court was reestablished, Baltzar was employed first in
the King’s Music and a year later in the much smaller King’s Private Music
with only two other violinists. The appointment was not to last long. The burial
register of Westminster Abbey in London records: "July 27 1663 Mr. Thomas
Balsart, one of the Violins in the King’s service." He is buried in the
Cloisters, although the grave itself cannot be identified. Anthony à Wood
wrote: "This person being much admired by all lovers of musick, his company
was therefore desired; and company, especially musicall company, delighting in
drinking, made him drink more than ordinary which brought him to his
grave."
Baltzar’s solo violin music presents two extraordinary innovations. The last
four pieces on this recording are examples of scordatura, the technique
of tuning the violin’s strings to unusual pitches for a particular sonority.
Baltzar’s use of scordatura is among the very first outside of Italy.
The second innovation is polyphonic music for solo violin, a style which he
either created on his own, or at the very least an idea he raised to an
unprecedented level of complexity and sophistication. There is evidence to
suggest that he transferred some of the English viol idiom (which was more
chordal) to the violin, but this evidence dates from the latter part of his
life, and doesn’t account for the singular impact of Baltzar’s playing
immediately upon his arrival in England.
This recording gathers all of Baltzar’s existing solo violin works from
several sources, some printed and others in manuscript; it is a step
towards making the music of this exceptional and innovative musician better
known. Let us hope there is more.
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British-Mexican violinist
Patrick Wood studied
as a postgraduate at the Royal Academy of Music in London, and holds a BA
and MA with honors in Modern Languages from Oxford University. He began to
play the violin in Mexico City as a pupil of Icilio Bredo, later
studying at the Royal Academy and with Erick Friedman and Eugene Drucker
in the United States. As a soloist and chamber musician, he has performed
widely throughout Europe and the US, at venues such as St.
John's Smith Square (London), the Lausanne Academy (Switzerland), Sala
Radio Television España (Madrid), the Saalbau in
Neustadt-an-der-Weinstrasse (Germany), the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall (Troy,
NY), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City), the Art
Museum (Philadelphia), the Corcoran Gallery (Washington, D.C.), and Merkin Hall
(New York City). Mr. Wood has performed under the direction of Mstislav
Rostropovich, Sir Colin Davis, and Christopher Hogwood, among others. He
has performed in public masterclasses with Ruggiero Ricci, Erick Friedman,
Igor Oistrakh and Pierre Amoyal. He is a regular performer with the
Berkshire Bach Society, appearing as soloist alongside artists such as
Eugene Drucker of the Emerson Quartet, Carol Wincenc, Aldo Abreu and
Kenneth Cooper. His chamber concerts in the Musica Viva Festival of New
Jersey have been broadcast across the United States on WWFM the Classical
Network, and his performance of Saint-Saens' Introduction and Rondo
Capriccioso has been heard in the UK on BBC Radio. Mr. Wood has served
as concertmaster of New York Philomusica, is a soloist and
Concertmaster for the Vermont Mozart Festival, and performs with the New
York Chamber Soloists. From 1989 to 1997, Mr. Wood was a member of
The English Mozart Players, as both soloist and Concertmaster with
the group in the UK and throughout Europe.
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PRELUDE in G major
ALLEMANDE and VARIATION in G minor
COURANTE in G minor
SARABANDE in G minor
PRELUDE in C minor
ALLEMANDE in C minor
ALLEMANDE in B-flat major
SARABANDE in B-flat major
ALLEMANDE in C major
SARABANDE in C major
PRELUDE in G major (2)
ALLEMANDE in B minor by John Jenkins, with Variation by Baltzar
A SET OF TUNINGS (scordatura)
I. ALLEMANDE in A major
II. ALLEMANDE in A major (2)
III. COURANTE in A major
IV. SARABANDE in A major
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