Volume 12, no. 1:
Brent Wissick*
The Cello Music of Antonio
Bononcini: Violone, Violoncello da Spalla, and the Cello “Schools”
of Bologna and Rome
Exordium
Antonio Maria Bononcini
(1677–1726) and his better known brother, Giovanni (1670–1747)
were famous during their life times as both composers and cellists.
Surprisingly, only one Bononcini cello sonata, published in a 1748
English collection, was generally known and performed in the modern
early music revival. That piece was attributed only to a “Signor
Bononcini” but was usually assumed to be by Giovanni, who had
spent time in London during the 1720s and 1730s. More attention was
rightfully focused then and in modern scholarship on his numerous
cantatas and successful operas, in which, however, he frequently participated
as a cellist. Antonio was also famous for operas and cantatas, but
held his small place in the early music revival mainly with a choral
work. Some of this began to change in 1996 when A-R Editions published
a volume of fifteen cello sonatas by Antonio, edited by Lowell Lindgren.
I had some small role in motivating that edition, having contacted
Lindgren in 1992 for information and advice about some Bononcini cantatas,
and having a special interest in both Italian Baroque repertory and
in music conceived by cellists on their instruments. He told me about
twelve sonatas by Antonio that he had seen in a Paris manuscript over
twenty years before. I ordered a copy from the Bibliothèque
Sainte-Geneviève and began performing some of the pieces in
1993. Lindgren began work on his edition in 1994 and we communicated
frequently, often observing that these twelve sonatas were unlike
any other known cello music of the time. I continued to study the
pieces and eventually added to my repertoire the three others that
he had edited. I performed several of them in a lecture-recital at
the 1997 meeting of the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music held
at Florida State University. Still, I could not explain why those
twelve pieces from the Paris manuscript were so different from the
other three and from most other well-known cello pieces from late
seventeenth-century Bologna. A new way of considering the problem
came from reading a 1998 article about the violoncello da spalla
by Gregory Barnett, followed by considerable experimentation. The
process suggests that a symbiotic relationship of performers and scholars
is still possible in our post-modern era. I could not have done this
work without the knowledge and insights shared by musicologists, but
without instrument in hand they could not test certain physical concepts.
I will take this notion further, proposing that several physical conditions
and processes contributed to some of the variations in style we observe
in late seventeenth-century Italian cello compositions.
1. Introduction
2. Violone,
Basso, and Bass Violin
3. The
Bolognese Tuning
4. The
Violoncello da Spalla
5. Bowing:
Underhand and Overhand
6. Left
Hand Issues
7. Similarities
with Colombi’s Violin Music
8. Bononcini’s
Later Sonatas
9. Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
Notation
Examples
Audio
Examples
Video
Examples
Figures
1.
Introduction
1.1 Antonio
Bononcini was only 15 when he penned a flamboyant Laudate pueri
for soprano, solo cello, and continuo (Example
1, Audio
1).1
He was already a working cellist at San Petronio in Bologna, a city
famous for its cellists. Giovanni Battista Vitali (1632–92),
Petronio Franceschini (1650–80), Domenico Gabrielli (1651–90),
and Giuseppe Jacchini (1663–1727) were some of the best known
players of the instrument who also composed, but their surviving pieces
are nothing like this Laudate pueri. Where did this young virtuoso
get his style? Gabrielli’s “Ricercar Primo” is admittedly
one of his plainer pieces but sets a vivid contrast with Antonio’s
obbligato (Example
2, Video
1). Bononcini’s cello writing is active in a bright, tenor
range when compared to the warm, slow moving bass of Gabrielli’s
Ricercar. I believe that young Antonio played the violoncello
da spalla, a small cello strapped around the shoulders. Unfortunately,
no pieces or ensemble parts survive labeled da spalla, even
though it is described in numerous sources and pictured as a way of
playing violoncello. Antonio’s older and even more famous brother
Giovanni Bononcini was also a Bologna-trained cellist. Presumably
it was he who is listed on a 1690 pay list in Venice alongside Antonio
Caldara as a player of viola da spalla.2 In his 1686 letter
of application to San Petronio, Giovanni described himself as playing
any string instrument, and during his 1687–8 appointment he
was on the violin payroll.3
1.2
Gregory Barnett has observed that a crude sketch from ca.1669 showing
a player labeled Bononcini with a large instrument up on his shoulder
must certainly be Giovanni Maria Bononcini (1642–78), the father
of Antonio and Giovanni.4
Was da spalla technique part of the Bononcini family tradition?
Giovanni Maria, who was usually listed as a violinist, died when the
boys were very young, so it cannot be claimed that he taught them directly.
We know they studied counterpoint with Giovanni Colonna at San Petronio,
but who taught them cello? Did they also play cello down on their legs
as youths, as I believe they did later in their careers? With whom did
they study violin? There is no explicit evidence that young Antonio
played in the way that his father seems to be pictured in Figure
1.
1.3
Given the lack of explicit documentation that Antonio also played da
spalla, it seems necessary to return to the music itself for evidence.
But one Laudate pueri, even with five sections, is not really
enough to demonstrate that a performer devoted himself to a particular
technique or style of playing. Lowell Lindgren has convincingly dated
the twelve sonatas by Antonio (that survive only in a mid eighteenth-century
French manuscript) as coming from the early 1690s as well.5 They certainly look like the Laudate
pueri (Example
3, Audio
2).
1.4
Briefly, my argument that Antonio worked these pieces out on a violoncello
da spalla will evolve around the observation that Antonio’s
youthful solo cello parts are constructed largely around certain kinds
of musical figures placed on the top two strings (d and a)
in high positions, in contrast to most of the cello music by his older
Bolognese contemporaries and presumed mentors, Gabrielli and Jacchini,
which lie more generally on middle strings and frequently require a
C–G–d–g tuning. Those pieces are almost always
in the bass clef, while Antonio’s are rather consistently written
in tenor clef, which generally indicated tenor violin, tuned G–d–a–e′,
Antonio’s pieces clearly need an a string rather than a
g string, but because they sometimes go below G, they
are most likely not for tenor violin. They do however fit the tuning
given for the violoncello da spalla by Bartolomeo Bismantova
(C– or D–G–d–a).6
In fact, when Antonio’s early pieces use the pitches below G,
D is usually the lowest (Example
4a, Example
4b).
1.5 Antonio’s
early cello pieces behave more like Emilian violin sonatas than they
do Emilian music for bass instruments. On the other hand, the cello
music of Gabrielli and Jacchini (and their Bolognese tuning: C–G–d–g)
emerges with a certain acoustic and physical logic from the earlier
Modenese violone/basso pieces of Colombi and Vitali. It is important
to examine some of the features in this “Bolognese Cello School”
repertory to see that young Antonio was using an alternate version
of the instrument and very different technique. A thorough study of
the emergence of this school is beyond the scope of the present study.
I offer here some particular aspects of how some of these performer/composers
might have tuned and played their instruments in contrast to a player
of the violoncello da spalla. In the process, I will frequently
be looking at ways in which these musicians might have used their
bodies and their instruments to create various styles of music.
2.
Violone, Basso, and Bass Violin
2.1 The
remarkable work of Steven Bonta has established that in seventeenth-century
Italy the term violone most often referred to a bass violin rather
than a large viola da gamba as it usually did in Germany.7 This affirms the obvious
relationship of the name “violoncello,” a diminutive,
to its antecedent. The cello or violoncino was clearly thought
of as a small violone. But how did Italian players tune their
violoni to begin with? Mersenne had shown a tuning of B1-flat–F–c–g
for the basse de violon, and French dances sometimes used the
low B-flat, but earlier Praetorius had given both the C and B-flat
tunings. Italian writings are silent on the issue, so scholars and
players turn to the music for evidence. The fact that much music by
Monteverdi goes no lower than C has been used to argue that
the C tuning predominated fairly early in Italy. John Dilworth asserts
that “having the instrument in a flat key made ensemble playing
awkward.”8 However, there are several solo pieces for violone that
actually require pitches below C and/or employ multiple stops
requiring the B-flat tuning, suggesting that violone players may have
frequently used this tuning for both solo and ensemble bass violin
parts in Italy (see G.M. Bononcini, opp.3 and 4, ca.1670). I have
played through hundreds of bass parts using both tuning systems, and
once one learns the B-flat fingerings, it is not particularly awkward.
2.2
Giuseppe Colombi was best known as a violinist in Modena, but like most
string players of his time and region, he not only understood other
bowed instruments, but probably took his turn at the bass as well. The
composer Tomaso Motta for instance described himself as a “musico
di violino e di violone” on the cover of a 1681 publication.9 Colombi’s “Tocatta a violone
solo” requires a B1 on several occasions. It
rarely lingers on the bottom string however, with the bow arm frequently
returning to the physical comfort and better response of the middle
strings (Example
5, Video
2; in the video I play with an underhand bow-hold, discussed in
Section 5
2.3
Colombi’s “Chiacona per basso solo” is even a tighter
piece musically, arguably more composed than improvised. He also wrote
several chaconnes for violin which at first glance contain many of
the same conventional figures. More careful study, however, suggests
that he applied these figures discreetly to where they would sound
and feel best on either a large basso tuned in B-flat or a
small violin. I am convinced that he worked out his pieces with instrument
in hand in a very physical way. The ground in the “Chiacona
per basso solo” (admittedly, “violone” is
not in the title) is, for instance, laid down mid-instrument where
the bow arm is comfortable alongside the body when the instrument
rests on the legs or floor. (This is in clear contrast to his violin
chaconnes, which begin on the top two strings of the violin, where
the bow arm is close to the body while holding the instrument on the
left arm and therefore also most comfortable.) If the basso/violone
is tuned in B-flat, the tonic F and dominant C are either sounded
or reinforced by open strings, resulting in a great deal of sympathetic
resonance (Example
6, Video
3). Measures 17–20 center around the mid-instrument open
c string and require an open g as the top string to
play the double stops (Example
7, Video
4). In measure 65, the manuscript shows a double stop of two Fs.
Clearly this needs to be filled in with a third: a on the C
string, since the two Fs are not on adjacent strings. The resulting
triple stop is a familiar one to many cellists. It is very comfortable
on later cellos but probably represented the limits of high position
playing on large bass violins with long, thick necks (Example
8, Video
5). The final statement of the ground is on the lowest strings
ending on an open F (Example
9; Audio
3 for the entire piece).
2.4
In 1671, G.M. Bononcini states in the violone o spinetta partbook
of his Arie, correnti, sarabande, gighe e allemande a violino
(op. 4, Bologna, 1671), that “one should bear in mind that the
violone will produce a better effect than the spinet, since the basses
[i.e., the parts] are more appropriate to the former than the latter
instrument.”10 I would like to consider what other
elements were considered “appropriate to the violone”
in addition to the obvious sustained bow sound not available on the
spinet. It is then easier to consider what might have been appropriate
to the cello or da spalla. Giovanni Vitali, for instance, always
titled himself as “suonatore di violone” on the title
pages of his publications, although later in his career others described
him as a player of violoncello. His manuscript partitas for violone
probably served as study material for apprentice players or practical
solos for other professionals and are presumably good examples of
what is appropriate to the instrument. They reveal their origins as
written-out improvisations: showy at times, but evolving out of things
that are comfortable and immediate from an instrument in the hands
of a skilled player. Again, they linger on middle strings of the instrument,
rarely go above c′, and hardly demand more rapid passages than
had been asked in violone parts by Cazzati in the 1660s or even Legrenzi
or Cima before that. They never go below C, so do not require
B-flat tuning in that sense, but the Bergamasca in C (the second piece
in a set of nine) has several double stops that require the B-flat
tuning much in the way of the Colombi chaconne. Just as there were
many effective tonic/dominant open strings in that piece in F, this
Bergamasca makes its opening impression by sounding the expected I–IV–V
using mainly open strings (Video
6). The open c is arguably just as useful as a sonority
in the middle of the instrument as it would be an octave lower as
the lowest note of the instrument, perhaps more so in the days before
covered bottom strings.11 I propose that a full-voiced
mid-range, gut-string timbre with many sympathetic vibrations from
the open strings in B-flat tuning was part of what was appropriate
to the violone, both in solos and ensemble music. It seems to have
been achieved with relative physical comfort for the left hand by
remaining in low positions with long resonant string lengths, and
by letting the bow arm linger on middle strings. The instrument in
this tuning is not necessarily awkward in ensembles or solos, but
obviously has only the g string representing a sharp-key tonic,
and it therefore tends to sound dark in keys like D, A, and E where
violins sound bright. In the key of C, however, it feels comfortable
and sounds full (Example
10, Video
7).
2.5
Domenico Galli composed a Trattenimento musicale sopra il violoncello
a’ solo (Modena, 1691) consisting of twelve solo suites. One
of these suites includes several low Bs while another has several low
B-flats. Could they be violone pieces incorporated into a collection
under the newer and more fashionable name violoncello? (Example
11, Video
8)
3.
The Bolognese Tuning
3.1 Several
cello pieces by Domenico Gabrielli from 1689 clearly require a tuning
of C–G–d–g for certain multiple stops. Luigi
Silva had noticed this in the 1950s. His photocopy of the Modena manuscript
is annotated with fingerings that show an open g.12 Anner Bylsma recorded several of the
pieces with this tuning, and more recently cellist/scholars Marc Vanscheeuwijck
and Bettina Hoffmann have referred to it in their respective Gabrielli
editions.13 Mark Chambers calls this the Italian tuning, but I
prefer to call it the Bolognese tuning, because it seems to be most
associated with that city.14 I am not convinced that it was much used in Venice
or Rome. Admittedly, the tuning is never notated explicitly in any
Bolognese source (as it is for instance in Bach’s Fifth Cello
Suite), but it is certainly needed to play a passage from Domenico
Gabrielli’s Sixth Ricercar, and many others (Example
12, Video
9).
3.2
The Bolognese tuning is arguably a raised alteration of the old B-flat
tuning rather than a scordatura of C tuning with a lowered top
string (Example
13). The invention of covered strings encouraged a general move
toward higher tunings on smaller instruments that still had a full bass
quality. It makes sense that initially the familiar violone gut g
string on top was retained while the bottom three strings were raised
a tone, resulting in a tuning of two fifths and one fourth. The two
G strings in this Bolognese tuning share a great deal of sympathetic
resonance when one or the other is sounded.
3.3
Gabrielli’s seven ricercars behave in many ways like the
Vitali and Colombi pieces for violone, which are in similar improvisatory
genres. They tend to linger on middle strings, which is comfortable
and familiar from continuo playing, before trying outer strings. Excursions
to high positions on the top string are brief. Players proud of their
new covered bottom strings, however, could now show them off with even
more rapid notes and wide skips than the old violone players had used.
The new cellos were, after all, somewhat smaller than the earlier bass
violins (Example
14, Video
10).
3.4
Gabrielli also wrote two cello sonatas with continuo, one in G and one
in D. Not surprisingly, the solo part in these pieces spends more time
on the top two strings than in the unaccompanied ricercars. Still, Gabrielli
often crosses below the written continuo in sections of very free idiomatic
writing. He cannot stay away from that new-fangled covered C
string (Example
15, Video
11)! There are two different manuscript versions of the Sonata in
G, both in Modena. The first is an accompanied “ricercar”
following the seven solos. Gordon Kinney stated that the second
version, which is titled “sonata,” is in the same hand,
but I do not agree.15
Bettina Hoffman has studied the scribal layers in the sources, and suggests
that the second version (F.416) is from a later date.16
The cellistic differences are chiefly on the top-string side of the
solo writing. The ricercar version is clearly for Bolognese tuning,
the sonata probably for what we now call standard tuning (C–G–d–a).
There are multiple stops in the first version much like those in Ricercar
6 that can be played only in G tuning. The second version is playable
in either tuning, but the chords have been re-voiced for an a
string by moving thirds around or including them where they were previously
implied. In addition, the continuo is slightly different in the two
versions, probably because the timbre resulting from the two different
tunings invites different ways of supporting the sound. The Bolognese
palette is perhaps richer and warmer but the standard tuning more brilliant
in high notes. We may gain more insight into this as research continues
into gauges and tension in seventeenth-century string making. In the
ricercar version, the soloist is voiced close to the continuo, allowing
prominent overtones to overlap or even blend, especially as parts cross.
The wide spread between solo and bass in in the sonata version looks
and feels however more like a violin sonata (Example
16, Video
12). I wish we knew more about who made this second version of the
piece. Of course it can be played on the legs in conventional violone
position, as I am sure Gabrielli himself played, but I wonder if it
was made by a player of violoncello da spalla, perhaps young
Antonio himself.
4.
The Violoncello da Spalla
4.1 The
violoncello da spalla may have had its origins as a procession
cello reinforcing vocal bass lines in sacred music. It may also have
been useful for entertainments, dance ensembles, and other chamber
music where mobility was required. Gregory Barnett suggests that it
was the perfect instrument for a seventeenth-century “strolling
strings” ensemble.17
Indeed in the violoncello partbook of Torelli’s opus 4, there
is an engraving of a musician with a very large fiddle on his arm
appearing to take a stroll in the countryside. The violin partbook
in the same opus shows a musician with a normal size violin (Figure
2, Video
13). However, some eighteenth-century images show the da spalla
players in stationary positions, either packed in a gallery at a large
ceremony as in the Bolognese Anziani engravings (in which hanging
the neck over the railing seems to conserve space) or seated like
Salvatore Lanzetti in a Parisian outdoor concert scene.18
Awkward and even comical as the technique seems to us, there must
have been something about playing da spalla that worked for
more than just walking with the instrument or covering a bass part
with a violin player when the violone player was sick. It may have
also been an acceptable way for nuns to play bass instruments.
4.2
I propose that young Antonio Bononcini (and perhaps others) discovered
that one could play with physical ease and virtuoso agility by playing
mainly on the top strings of the da spalla where the bow arm
is close to the body, and by frequent use of high positions, with the
hand near the body of the instrument, where the right arm is more comfortable
than when extended out towards the scroll. One can play on the low strings
in low positions with a small cello up on the shoulder, and certainly
procession players must have done this when playing bass parts and accompanying,
but it is fatiguing for long passages. However, it is surprisingly possible
to rest the bow on the top two strings and maintain an easy, flexible
position for the bow arm while producing soloistic tenor range music
(Figure
3, Figure
4, Figure
5).
4.3
Forty of the fifty movements in Bononcini’s Laudate pueri
and his twelve early sonatas begin on the top two strings and only employ
the bottom strings for occasional triple stops and brief bass doublings.
This is not initially surprising in a continuo sonata or obbligato which
we expect to lie mostly above the bass. It is, however, very unlike
the unaccompanied music for violone or cello lingering on middle strings
and even different from both versions of the Gabrielli Ricercar/Sonata
with continuo where he had crossed below his bass. In notation, Bononcini’s
pieces look very much like Colombi’s violin sonatas, but even
those sonatas employ lower strings more than young Antonio did. Moving
the bow to the lowest string of the violin is not difficult, but getting
over to the lowest string of a da spalla is a bigger physical
gesture, and young Antonio simply does not go there very much (Example
17, Audio
4, Example
18).
4.4
Many of the bowing figurations are ones that feel particularly easy
to produce on one high string with the bow arm alongside the body in
da spalla position. The same passages can of course be played
on a cello in da gamba position, but the bow arm must then be
held away from the body to reach the top string. That feels less good,
although obviously later cellists learned how to be comfortable there
as well. Perhaps they were inspired both by the da spalla players
and viola da gamba players to find a way to play in that register with
the cello on their legs (Example
19, Video
14).
4.5
Both the Laudate pueri and the twelve sonatas require a top a
string, as can be seen in the numerous double-stopped unisons. The violinists
who may have gravitated to da spalla playing would have felt
at ease with an a string. In marked contrast, one of Jacchini’s
sonatas shows a double-stopped unison g as its opening note,
confirming that he used the Bolognese tuning like Gabrielli, his teacher.
This may be the most explicit indication of the G tuning in any Bolognese
source. The double stems indicating such details are very clear in all
of the manuscripts as well as in an engraved edition of the Jacchini
sonatas.19
(Example
20, Example
21, Example
22.)
5.
Bowing: Underhand and Overhand
5.1 A
comparison of bowing figurations and patterns in the Bononcini pieces
and this same Jacchini sonata highlights the physical differences
between bowing da spalla and bowing with the instrument on
the legs or floor. Several scholars have noted that many seventeenth-century
and even eighteenth-century cellists used an underhand bow hold that
we more often associate with viola da gamba playing. A famous painting
of Florentine musicians shows the bass violinist Salvetti using this
technique alongside his overhand braccio colleagues. John Hill
has noted that Salvetti was listed as playing violone, cello, lirone,
viola da gamba, and violin, thus having a command of both overhand
and underhand techniques.20 Salvetti was clearly versatile even
by court musician standards of the time. Mark Smith observes that
most bass violinists (that is, violone players) in Italian paintings
are depicted underhand, and suggests that it was mainly French players
of basse de violon who were expected by Lully to match the
violinists and play overhand for ensemble uniformity.21
Italian ensembles, other than Corelli’s band, were not famous
for bowing uniformity. Many cellists continued to use an under-hand
bow hold throughout the eighteenth century, but I wonder if some were
converted to overhand playing by a stint on da spalla.
5.2
An engraving originally from 1688 that appears in the ca. 1700 Sonate a tre autori shows
an underhand player with cello resting on the floor. This of course
does not certify that Jacchini or cellist/engraver Buffagnotti played
that way themselves, but it invites a physical exploration. Smith suggests
that certain configurations of string crossings might indicate that
they were conceived in underhand technique. Several passages in the
Jacchini Sonata just discussed fit this indication. In m. 9 the lower
note feels good played “push” bow (up-bow) allowing the
hand to open and close in clockwise motions. By m. 11 the higher note
is on the strong beat, but the bowing has played through so that one
“pulls” (down-bow) on the top notes, continuing the impressive
but easy clockwise motions. The passage, even while using all four strings
and sometimes shifting to higher positions, lingers around the middle
ones, reminding us of Jacchini’s training in the school of Gabrielli
and Vitali (Example
23, Video
15, Figure
6).
5.3
Bononcini, in contrast, more often uses repeated-note figures in which
the bow arm can “scrub” the string energetically but efficiently
along the side of the body while holding the bow overhand with the instrument
in da spalla position (Example
24, Video
16; Audio
5 for the entire piece). He often achieves “shimmering”
effects with left hand or bow by employing an efficient overhand string
crossing of various clockwise motions, or else a repeated finger pattern
for several measures. They are not unlike some famous violin passages
by Corelli: virtuosic but notable for their elegant mechanics. Such
things are also seen in the violin music of Colombi but never in the
cello music of Gabrielli and Jacchini (Example
25, Video
17, Audio
6; Example
26, Audio
7).
6.
Left-Hand Issues
6.1 Bononcini
seems to have discovered some triple stops in high positions which
feel good da spalla and less good da gamba. Colombi
kept the lowest string of his basso open when using a triple
stop with high positions (see the “Chiacona per basso solo,”
discussed above in par. 2.3). Young Antonio experiments
with something quite different, using high positions on low strings
in several situations, including one with a doubled third when an
adjacent open d double stop would have been easily available.
This unusual voicing seems appropriate to the da spalla as
Bononcini may have used it (Example
27, Figure
7).
6.2
Bononcini also frequently employs a chord using a fingered open fifth
in his early works. This is somewhat awkward in da gamba positions,
because it either requires a difficult barré or else a “side
by side” fingering borrowed from fretted instruments; however,
it is natural to the diagonal left hand of a violinist, where the
pad of one finger can cover two strings rather easily. One of Antonio’s
later cello pieces, a sinfonia (see par. 8.4 below),
employs a different permutation of this chord, more natural to the
placement of the left hand when the cello is on the legs. This use
of the so-called “Boccherini” B-flat chord with its open
d in the middle, suggests, along with other details, that Bononcini
probably conceived this later piece for a conventional “leg”
cello. The two versions of the chord feel and sound quite different.
The da spalla chord is more brilliant, while the “da
gamba-Boccherini” voicing is warmer (Example
28, Figure
8, Example
29, Figure
9).
6.3
Another left-hand issue that emerges in these Bononcini pieces is the
stretch of the hand, particularly between the first and fourth fingers
in double stops. Bass viola da gamba music written by viol players for
which fingerings survive rarely demand large stretches, their technique
having emerged from other fretted instruments, like the lute, where
the hand is generally kept in a close position. Dance violinists, who
preferred not to shift their hands up and down the fingerboard, however,
seemed to have cultivated a fourth-finger extension which gave them
easy access to notes one tone above each normal position. Furthermore,
the left hand does this easily when the hand is in the diagonal mode
of violin playing. This may explain some major second double stops in
the Bononcini sonatas that are very difficult to play with a cello in
da gamba position, but which fall easily under the hand in da
spalla position. Several years ago, when Lowell Lindgren asked me
to test all the multiple stops in these pieces, I noted that several
double stops were only possible with the use of the thumb, standard
in eighteenth-century virtuoso cello music, but not thought to have
been used in the seventeenth century. That was before I had considered
this da spalla way and the resulting violinistic hand stretches.
Now it is of course possible that later cellists playing Bononcini’s
early sonatas in eighteenth-century Paris employed the thumb when they
played these pieces. I have already proposed here that Antonio himself
switched over to “da gamba” way cello playing later in his
career and therefore may have experimented with such things. Still,
the origins of these major-second suspensions on adjacent strings was
probably a violinistic da spalla fingering (1 and 4). There is
nothing quite like them in the cello music of Gabrielli and Jacchini,
but they are familiar from numerous violin works (Example
30).
6.4 The
use of thumb might have come from its use in tromba marina playing
(the Brescian cellist Luigi Taglietti was also listed as a player
of that instrument, for example).22 That is of course possible, but there is another family
of instruments that also employed this fifth finger. The thumb is
a standard part of lira da braccio technique and may have been
a useful fifth finger for bass notes on the da spalla where
it could cover bass notes on the lowest string. Turkish lute players
use it today, as do American folk guitarists. While later cellists
used the thumb to help achieve high, violinistic passages, it may
have been that da spalla players kept that finger integrated
into their technique by using it for occasional bass notes (Figure 10).
6.5
Most scholars of cello history agree that early cellists did not have
a consistent procedure for scale fingering with the left hand. We know
from surviving treatises that viola da gamba players in the seventeenth
century used a semitone system (each finger playing successive half
steps), but there were no contemporaneous cello or bass violin methods
(other than Bismantova’s one page for da spalla), since
those instruments were taught largely by the apprentice system. The
cello methods that were eventually published in the eighteenth century
employ several different systems often involving violinistic diatonic
fingerings in which successive fingers played both whole tones and semitones
as needed. Given that Bismantova actually provided a fingering chart
for da spalla using this violin system, it is not surprising
at all to see long passages in Bononcini’s early sonatas requiring
four fingers in rapid diatonic succession. This is hard to do on a big
cello played “gamba” style, but falls under the hand on
a small cello on the shoulder. Many small cellos do survive from that
time and are often described as children’s instruments, but they
were just as likely used for da spalla playing (Example
31, Example
32). The solo pieces for violone and even the cello pieces of Gabrielli
and Jacchini rarely require four fingers in many repetitions, suggesting
that they may have used semitone fingerings at least in low positions
where the distances are large. This is admittedly contradicted by Bismantova’s
fingerings for contrabass which barely consider the size of the hand.
7.
Similarities with Colombi’s Violin Music
7.1 Bononcinis
youthful cello pieces resemble Colombis violin music—as
opposed to his bass music—in many ways, suggesting that young
Antonio may have even learned some of Colombis pieces on the
violin, or at least seen and heard them often. The dotted rhythms
in both are rare in the cello music of Gabrielli (Example
33, Example
34). Colombi sometimes used double-stops on middle strings followed
by repeated top-string notes. Bononcini also used this type of figuration,
while his cello contemporaries did not (Example
35, Example
36). Colombi used a similar technique in a passage of eighth notes
that young Antonio may have imitated (Example
37, Example
38).
7.2
Much has been written about the Italian love for tremolo bowing.23
Curiously, solo violone music never employed it, nor did Gabrielli,
although northern European viola da gamba players certainly did so.
Colombi indicated it in his violin music with the word “tremolo,”
while young Antonio used a wavy line (Example
39, Example
40).
7.3
Gregory Barnett observes that these Bononcini pieces might be considered
a record of late seventeenth-century improvisation by a cellist.24
This statement is convincing, given their lack of counterpoint and frequent
repeated patterns over drones. The whole question of technical comfort
and quick access to familiar fingering patterns becomes of primary importance.
Even the most creative improviser relies on a grab bag of tricks, things
that fall under the hand in various keys (Example
41, Video
18).
7.4
It is not entirely clear from descriptions or pictures how instruments
were fastened to the body for da spalla playing, but I was surprised
to observe from various experiments of my own (assisted by instrument
builder John Pringle) that when the cello is slung over the shoulder
on a strap it feels quite stable and the left hand has considerable
mobility for fast shifts on the same string. A bass violin resting on
the floor or legs is also stable, but the longer string lengths and
thick neck of most instruments played that way may have not encouraged
those kinds of motions. Some violinists must have been more skilled
at shifting than others. Colombi’s pieces go rather high with
frequent leaps, while Corelli’s rarely extend past third position.
Violinists without chin rests must also hold the instrument while shifting,
which has at times been given as a reason for the limits on e′
string writing in much early violin music. That does not seem to have
been an issue for da spalla players. Certainly not all da
spalla cellists were equally agile, but young Antonio Bononcini
must have moved around quickly and lightly. I think he must have enjoyed
showing off (Example
42, Video
19)!
8.
Bononcini’s Later Sonatas
8.1 In
1694 Antonio followed his brother Giovanni to Rome where he would
have had contact with a whole new community of cellists, including
Filippo Amadei, Quirino Colombani, Giovanni Lulier (known as Giovanni
del Violone), and Nicola Haym—as well as a fellow Emilian, the
great violinist Corelli. Early in the 1690s some Roman musicians were
still designated as players of violone, but most of them reappear
in records within a few years listed as players of violoncello.25
What this does not tell us with certainty is whether this change was
simply a matter of naming (the administrator or scribe finally caught
up with fashion and called the instrument cello instead of violone)
or if some of the players finally acquired a smaller instrument worthy
of the new name and always tuned it in C rather than the old B-flat
way. Much effort has been made to prove that Corellis use of
the name violone in his publication of the opus 6 Violin Sonatas is
antiquated and always means violoncello. I argue that many of these
basses sound and feel very good in B-flat tuning even though they
can be played in standard C tuning. The continuo lines to the sonatas
in C major and F major are particularly rich, with open strings in
the middle of the instrument, and they make me believe that Corelli—who
was after all conservative—valued and trusted this traditional
fullness of sound when publishing an accompaniment for violone
or harpsichord. Perhaps the new breed of cellist was just a
bit too interested in sounding brilliant at the expense of the solo
violinist while someone defined as a violone player might offer a
more helpful accompaniment.
8.2
Whatever they may have played in continuo situations, it seems clear
that Roman cellists who wrote solos during the 1690s were using C–G–d–a
tuning and played on the legs more often than da spalla. There
is only one Roman picture I know of that shows a cellist playing on
the shoulder, a drawing by Sevin of a concert sponsored by Queen Christina
of Sweden.26 Furthermore, there is little in the
Roman solos that suggests whether underhand or overhand bowing technique
was more common. Filippo Amadei, known as “Sigr Pippo,”
later became famous for opera in 1720s London collaborating with both
Handel and Giovanni Bononcini. In the 1690s however, he played in the
orchestra of Cardinal Ottoboni. His surviving cello sonata (in D-WD)
is in D minor and works its way carefully from middle strings to a
string singing or C string richness. There are no double
stops, and it makes its case with warm sound rather than technical brilliance
(Example
43, Video
20).
8.3
Another Roman cellist of the time due for later fame was Nicola Haym.
His two early cello sonatas are short works staying close to middle
strings in low positions.27
They involve multiple stops which can only be played in A tuning. Some
of the string crossings are the type that work well with underhand bowing,
but they can be played either way, and they do look and sound much like
Corelli. Some of the double stops in the Sonata in A minor make one
wonder if Haym had developed use of the thumb. It reminds one of Antonio
Bononcini’s violinistic extensions of the left hand. But this
is clearly not da spalla music (Example
44, Video
21).
8.4
The later cello sonatas of Antonio Bononcini resemble these Roman
pieces rather than his early Bolognese music. The “Sinfonia
per camera” mentioned earlier is the most strikingly different.
It is after all in C minor and actually uses the open C string
which Sonata 5 of the early works, also in that key, did not. All
three movements of the Sinfonia start on c′ on the
a string but move quickly and frequently to the lower side
of the instrument, where it is more comfortable to play using the
leg system of holding the instrument and employing overhand bowing.
Some of the jig-like figures remind one of Corelli, but made cellistic.
It is not da spalla music. Was he now focusing his performance
efforts on leg technique? (Example
45, Video
22) There are multiple stops in the opening Cantabile but they
are never extended over drones and rarely in high positions. Here
again is that comfortable “Boccherini” chord (cf. par.
6.2; Example
46, Audio
08).
8.5
The “Sonata da camera detta La comodina” presents
a more diverse combination of technical problems, reminding us that
some of the elements of da spalla playing, particularly the comfort
with which one can remain in a high singing register, are still desirable
even when playing in a leg position. After all, the old violone players
had gone there sometimes and virtuoso viol players had been showing
off their high wire skills since the sixteenth century. The opening
Cantabile of the “La comodina” lingers mainly on the top
two strings with only a few low notes and three-note chords. One could
play it in da spalla position but it does not look or feel like
the early Bolognese pieces. There are no repeated figures over drones,
and the written-out ornaments look like the ones published by Roger
for the Corelli violin sonatas. The following Allegro straddles the
world between violin music and cellistic comfort. “La comodina,”
“little respite” in Lindgren’s translation, involves
wide leaps in the bowing that are a bit easier to play in da gamba
position than on shoulder, but I would not call them comfortable.
Perhaps the respite is in the beauty of the opening Cantabile and the
exuberance of the dance-like Allegro (Example
47).
8.6
There are two other cello sonatas attributed to a “Sigr Bononcini.”28
One was published in 1748 by Simpson in London and is already very
well known. It is generally assumed to be by Giovanni who had lived
in England but could just as easily be by Antonio, at least from a
purely cellistic standpoint. It feels somewhat like the Sinfonia or
“La comodina,” spending considerable time on the a
string with many comfortable multiple stops and frequent skips to
the low strings. The other sonata (in A-Wkm, Estense Collection), however, begs some new questions because
two of its chords cannot be played with A-string tuning. Its final
Sarabanda ends with a chord frequent in the music of Gabrielli, seeming
to require the old Bolognese cello tuning of C–G–d–g
(Example
48). However, the chord that ends the opening Largo affettuoso
is not possible in either that tuning or the standard one of C–G–d–a.
I noted this when I examined all the sonatas for Lowell Lindgren in
1994 and also pondered this small problem considering the suggestion
of Agnes Kory that this is an example of solo tenor violin repertory.29 Such an instrument, tuned G–d–a–e′,
certainly existed and may have had a role as an ensemble instrument
in various situations, but many examples that Kory gives for its use
could be more easily analyzed as da spalla music, particularly
those by Torelli and Caldara. She describes this Bononcini sonata
as virtuosic, but it is actually the least flamboyant of his cello
pieces. She also considers its one note below the staff a mistake.
In any case, the two chords I cited above are not playable on a tenor
violin either. There is, however, another instrument that is a plausible
candidate for this little sonata: the viola da gamba. The Italians
are known to have had little interest in that instrument by the middle
of the seventeenth century, but there were some Italian players, even
if they did not rival the French and German virtuosi. I have already
refered to Salvetti, the Florentine cellist in the famous painting
with Veracini who was listed as also playing viol, and there was Sciarli
in Rome during the 1690s. More plausible as an encouragement for writing
viol music than Italians such as these, however, would have been the
Austrian virtuoso players in the Hofkapelle in Vienna where the Bononcini
brothers worked in the early eighteenth century. Although this is
not a virtuosic piece, but it lies well on viol, perhaps having served
as a gift to a noble amateur (Example
49, Video
23).
8.7
Many of the Italians associated with the Imperial Court in Vienna wrote
for viols during their time there, including Ziani, Ariosti, both Bononcinis,
and the Austrian, Fux. Generally their solos were obbligatos in arias
from operas and cantatas, but Fux wrote a Canonic Sonata for two viols
with continuo, and Schmelzer composed sonatas for viol with violin and
continuo. Therefore, Bononcini would not have been alone in writing
a viol sonata in Imperial Vienna. The manuscript titles it a “Sonatta
a Violonello.” In 1994, Lowell Lindgren and I thought that “violonello”
was an alternate spelling for violoncello, but I now wonder if it may
have been a Viennese name for a large viola da gamba. The piece may
look like a cello sonata at first glance, but it is clearly for viol
(Audio
9).
9.
Conclusion
9.1 The
Laudate pueri and twelve sonatas that Antonio Bononcini wrote
when he was fifteen were almost certainly conceived on the violoncello
da spalla. They may be the most significant and clearly idiomatic
surviving solos for this once important way of playing the cello.
Young Antonio may have also played the cello on his legs and may have
learned this from Gabrielli or Jacchini at San Petronio, since string
players were frequently expected to play various sizes and types of
instruments. But Bononcini’s early works are nothing like the
cello solos by Gabrielli and Jacchini. Antonio’s early pieces
are more like the violin music of Colombi, but even so are tailored
to peculiarities of playing solos on a large instrument at the shoulder
rather than a small one. These Bononcini works anticipate the cello
writing of the eighteenth century. It would be interesting to know
who was his teacher/mentor for the da spalla.
9.2 The
cello music of Gabrielli and even Jacchini, while virtuosic and adventurous,
is more closely related to the older violone solos of Vitali, Colombi
and to some extent the pieces of Galli. All of these works linger
on the middle strings in contrast to Antonio’s top string preferences.
Many of the solos for violone actually require the B-flat tuning,
which can be shown to be effective for ensemble parts labeled “violone”
as well. The Bolognese tuning is more likely an alteration of this
B-flat tuning than it is a scordatura of what is called the
“standard” tuning. Even though a C–G–d–a
tuning was used by the early seventeenth century, it was probably
not as standard in Emilia as has been assumed, and may have been more
typical for da spalla players than for floor violone players
switching to smaller cellos to play on their legs. These violone players
and first generation “cellists” may have used underhand
bow technique in contrast to the violin and da spalla players.
9.3 Whatever
he played as a young cellist, Antonio seems to have written his later
solos for cello tuned C–G–d–a, played on
the legs. He may have already known how to do this or switched over
following some time in Rome, where there is less evidence of a da
spalla tradition than in Emilia or Venice. These few solos from
his later career are certainly more like the solos of Roman cellists
like Amadei and Haym than his youthful showpieces. They do explore
the lyrical top string more than the old violone solos had done, but
like them they frequently return to the comfort of the middle and
even bottom strings.
9.4 It
is hard to know whether Antonio continued to play his youthful da
spalla sonatas later in life when he may have been focusing on
cello played down. How would he then have managed passages
originally devised for a smaller instrument using violinistic technique?
Did he employ his thumb like tromba marina or lira players? Since
the twelve early sonatas survive only in an eighteenth-century French
manuscript, it is possible that at least one later cellist dealt with
this problem as well—or did he, like Lanzetti, sometimes use
the da spalla way?
9.5 Meanwhile,
one of Antonio’s later sonatas is most likely for viola da gamba
because it contains a chord that can be played only on that instrument.
Both Bononcini brothers had contact with viol players in Vienna and
wrote for them in opera arias. They understood how to write for the
instrument, even if not as effectively as they did for the cello.
9.6 The
cello music of Antonio Bononcini and his contemporaries offers a wonderful
opportunity to consider the relationship of the physical to the musical
during an age of experimentation, exploration, and transition in string
playing in general and cello playing in particular. Obviously many
ways of thinking and doing co-existed. As instrument makers, performer/composers,
mentors and students interact, many things can happen as they clearly
did in Italy during the 1690s. It is exciting to consider young Antonio
participating in this age of experimentation, at first creating brilliantly
and rather intuitively in response to his instrument (the da spalla)
and later responding to changes in both technique (leg position) and
style (Roman). Clearly many string players of the time experienced
similar journeys, such as those who moved from violone to violoncello.
The journey of Antonio Bononcini, however, stands out as a vivid record
of physical music making and enriches our understanding of the cello
in its early years.
Acknowledgements
The author is grateful
for help from a great many colleagues during the preparation of this
article, among them: Sally Sanford, Catherine Liddell, Andrew Lawrence-King,
Tina Chancey, Elaine Funaro, Tim Carter, Lowell Lindgren, Gregory
Barnett, John Moran, Elisabeth Leguin, Stewart Carter, John Pringle,
Linda Pereksta, Tom Cox, and Dwight Robinett. In addition he is grateful
for the support of the Institute of Arts and Humanities at the University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
References
* Brent Wissick (bswissic@email.unc.edu) is Professor of Music at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he teaches cello and early music ensembles. A member of Ensemble Chanterelle and the Atlanta Baroque Orchestra, he is a frequent guest with American Bach Soloists (San Francsico), Folger Consort (Washington, D.C.), Concert Royal (New York, Boston Early Music Festival, Dallas Bach Society, and Collegio di Musica Sacra in Poland. He is past-President of the Viola da Gamba Society of America, and has recorded on Albany and Koch International labels. His recording of the sonatas discussed in this article is available on Antonio and Giovanni Bononcini: Sonatas and Cantatas, Centaur Records, CRC 2630 (2003).
1 Antonio Bononcini, “Laudate pueri [Psalm 112], Canto solo col violoncello obligato di Antonio Bononcini a di 19 Feb 1693,” I-Bsp Lib.B.3.
2 Eleanor Selfridge-Field, Venetian Instrumental Music from Gabrieli to Vivaldi, 3rd ed. (New York: Dover, 1994), 342.
3 Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Colonna (1674–95): History-Organization-Repertoire (Brussels: Belgisch Historisch Instituut, 2003), 286–7.
4 The sketch, by the San Petronio violinist Pistocchi, is found in a violin partbook of G.M. Bononcini’s op. 3 and also includes a violinist playing a normal size instrument, labeled Archangelo, whom Michael Talbot identified as Corelli. See Gregory Barnett, “The Violoncello da Spalla: Shouldering the Cello in the Baroque Era,” Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society, 24 (1998): 81–106.
5 Lowell Lindgren, Preface to Antonio Bononcini: Complete Sonatas for Violoncello and Basso Continuo, Recent Researches in the Music of the Baroque Era 77 (Madison, Wis.: A-R Editions, 1996). The source of Sonatas 1–12 in this edition is F-Psg MS 1090.
6 Bartolomeo Bismantova, “Compendio musicale” (Ferrara; foreword from 1677, postscript from 1694; I-REm, p. 119.
7 Stephen Bonta, “Terminology for the Bass Violin in Seventeenth-Century Italy,” Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society 4 (1978): 5–42.
8 John Dilworth, “The Cello: Origins and Evolution” in The Cambridge Companion to the Cello, ed. Robin Stowell (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 9.
9 Gregory Barnett, “Musical Issues of the Late Seicento,” (Ph.D. diss., Princeton University, 1997), 279.
10 Peter Allsop, “Ensemble Music: In the Chamber and the Orchestra,” in The Cambridge Companion to the Cello, ed. Robin Stowell (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 164.
11 In fact, Steven Bonta has suggested that the invention of wire-wound bottom strings in 1660s in Bologna was what allowed makers to build the smaller bass violins called violoncello. Gut strings wound with wire have adequate mass to produce loud bass notes even with relatively short string lengths. See Stephen Bonta, “From Violone to Violoncello: A Question of Strings,” Journal of the American Musical Instrument Society 3 (1977): 75.
12 University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Luigi Silva Collection, box 4-22.
13 Marc Vanscheeuwijck, Preface to Domenico Gabrielli: Ricercari per Violoncello Solo (Bologna: Arnaldo Forni, 1998); Bettina Hoffmann, Introduction to Domenico Gabrielli: The Complete Works for Violoncello, Hortus Musicus 279 (Kassel: Bärenreiter, 2001).
14 Mark Chambers, “The Mistuned Cello” (D.M.A. diss., Florida State University, 1996).
15 Gordon Kinney, “The Musical Literature for Unaccompanied Violoncello” (Ph.D. diss., Florida State University, 1962), 196.
16 Hoffmann, Gabrielli, p. XI.
17 Gregory Barnett, “Musical Issues,” 280.
18 Gregory Barnett, “The Violoncello da Spalla,” 99–100.
19 Gregory Barnett, “Musical Issues,” 635. The Sonata in question was published as “Sonata a violoncello solo” no. 5 in Sonate a tre di vari autori (Bologna?, ca. 1700), an edition engraved by C. Buffagnotti. It also appears as no. 10 in a collection of the same name in moveable type (Bologna, 1697). In the second edition, the medium was not able to express double stems. Perhaps the Bolognese tuning was going out of style as well, in favor of the top a that da spalla players used.
20 John Walter Hill, “Antonio Veracini in a New Context,” Early Music 18 (1990): 545.
21 Mark Smith, “The Cello Bow Held Viol-way,” Chelys 24 (1995): 56.
22 Klaus Marx, New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., s.v. “Violoncello.”
23 Stewart Carter, “The String Tremolo in the Seventeenth-Century,” Early Music 19 (1991): 43–59.
24 Gregory Barnett, review of Antonio Bononcini, Complete Sonatas for Violoncello and Basso Continuo, edited by Lowell Lindgren in JSCM, vol. 5, no. 1.
25 Sven Hansell “Orchestral Practice at the Court of Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni,” Journal of the American Musicological Society 19 (1996): 400.
26 Stefano La Via, “Violone e Violoncello a Roma al tempo di Corelli,” Studi Corelliani 4 (1986): fig. 4.
27 See Lowell Lindgren, Introduction to Nicola Francesco Haym: Complete Sonatas, Part 2, Recent Researches in the Music of the Baroque Era 177 (Middleton, Wis.: A-R Editions, 2002).
28 The Sonata in A Minor (London: Simpson, 1748), is given in facsimile in the appendix to the Lindgren edition; and the sonata from the Estense Collection is Lindgren’s no. 15.
29 Agnes Kory, “A Wider Role for the Tenor Violin?” Galpin Society Journal 47 (1994): 147–51.
Notation
Examples
Unless otherwise stated,
the examples of pieces by Bononcini are based on Antonio Bononcini:
Complete Sonatas for Violoncello and Basso Continuo, ed. Lowell
Lindgren, Recent Researches in the Music of the Baroque Era 77 (Madison,
Wis.: A-R Editions, 1996), used by permission.
Movements are indicated
with a slash, e.g., “Sonata 2/4” for the fourth movement
of Sonata 2.
Example
1: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri, mm. 1–4
Example
2: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 1, mm. 1–26
Example
3: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/1, mm. 1–8
Example
4a: Bartolomeo Bismantova, Tuning for Violoncello da spalla
Example
4b: Bononcini, Sonata 12, mvt 1, m. 21
Example
5: Giuseppe Colombi, “Toccata a violone solo,” section
13
Example
6: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” mm.
1–8
Example
7: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” mm.
17–20
Example
8: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” m. 65
Example
9: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” end
Example
10: Giovanni Battista Vitali, Bergamasca, mm. 1–8
Example
11: Domenico Galli, Sonata X, Giga
Example
12: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 6, mm. 67–71
Example
13: Old B-flat and Bolognese Tunings Compared
Example
14: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 5, mm. 26–8
Example
15: Domenico Gabrielli, Sonata in G (version 1), mm. 1–7
Example
16: Domenico Gabrielli, Sonata in G (version 2), mm. 1–7
Example
17: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/1, mm. 1–10
Example
18: Giuseppe Colombi, Violin Sonata in A/1, mm. 1–6
Example
19: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/1, m. 4
Example
20: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/3, “Suscitans,”
mm. 37–9
Example
21: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/2, mm. 33–4
Example
22: Giuseppe Jacchini, “Sonata a violoncello solo,”
mm. 1–2
Example
23: Giuseppe Jacchini, “Sonata a violoncello solo,”
mm. 9–14
Example
24: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/5 “Sicut erat,”
mm. 1–5
Example
25: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/2, “Excelsus,”
mm. 3–5
Example
26: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/3, mm. 12–5
Example
27: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/1, end
Example
28: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri, m. 10
Example
29: Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia, m. 4
Example
30: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/2, mm. 30–1
Example
31: Bartolomeo Bismantova, Fingering for Violoncello da spalla
Example
32: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/2, mm. 21–3, with “Diatonic”
Fingering
Example
33: Giuseppe Colombi, Violin Sonata in A, mm. 27–30
Example
34: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/4, m. 11
Example
35: Giuseppe Colombi, Violin Sonata in A, m. 120, “Allegro
la guerra”
Example
36: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/2, mm. 21–3
Example
37: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a violino solo,” mm.
43–7
Example
38: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/4, mm. 41–7
Example
39: Giuseppe Colombi, Violin Sonata in A, m. 47 (tremolo)
Example
40: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 1/3, m. 26 (tremolo)
Example
41: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/4, m. 48
Example
42: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/4, mm. 20–1
Example
43: Fillippo Amadei, “Sonata a violoncello solo”/1,
mm. 1–8
Example
44: Nicola Haym, Sonata in A Minor/1, mm. 1–3
Example
45: Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia/2, mm. 1–9
Example
46: Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia/1, mm. 1–6
Example
47: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata “la Comodina”/1, mm.
1–5
Example
48: Antonio Bononcini, “Sonnata” (Lindgren no. 15)
end
Example
49: Antonio Bononcini, “Sonnata”/1 (Lindgren no. 15),
mm. 13–5
Audio
Examples
Audio
1: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri, mm. 1–4
Audio
2: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/1, mm.1–8
Audio
3: Giuseppi Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo” (complete)
Audio
4: Bononcini, Sonata 2, mvt 1, m.1–10
Audio
5: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/5, “Sicut erat,”
excerpt
Audio
6: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/2, “Excelsus,”
mm. 1–5
Audio
7: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/3, mm.12–5
Audio
8: Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia/1, mm. 1–6
Audio
9: Antonio Bononcini, “Sonnata”/1 (complete)
Video
Examples
Video
1: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 1, mm. 1–19
Video
2: Giuseppe Colombi, “Toccata a violone solo,” section
13
Video
3: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” mm.
1–8
Video
4: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” mm.
17–25
Video
5: Giuseppe Colombi, “Chiacona a basso solo,” m. 65
Video
6: Bergamasca Bass on Bass Violin in B-flat Tuning
Video
7: Giovanni Battista Vitali, Bergamasca excerpt
Video
8: Domenico Galli, Sonata X, Giga
Video
9: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 6, excerpt
Video
10: Domenico Gabrielli, Ricercar 5, excerpt
Video
11: Domenico Gabrielli, Sonata in G (version 1), mm. 1–7,
Bolognese Tuning
Video
12: Domenico Gabrielli, Sonata in G (version 2), mm. 1–7,
A Tuning
Video
13: Walking with Violoncello da Spalla
Video
14: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/1, m. 4
Video
15: Giuseppe Jacchini, Sonata a violoncello solo,
mm. 9–14
Video
16 Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/5 Sicut erat,
excerpt
Video
17: Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri/2, “Excelsus,”
excerpt from Example 25
Video
18: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/1, m. 48 excerpt
Video
19: Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 4/4, mm. 21–3
Video
20: Fillippo Amadei, “Sonata a violoncello solo”/1,
mm. 1–8
Video
21: Nicola Haym, Sonata in A Minor/1, mm. 1–3
Video
22: Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia/2, mm. 1–9
Video
23: Antonio Bononcini, “Sonnata”/1, m. 15
Figures
Figure
1: Giovanni Pistocchi, Sketch, ca.1669
Figure
2: Engraving, 1688, detail
Figure
3: Bolognese Anziani Ceremony, detail
Figure
4: Violoncello da Spalla on Top String in High Position
Figure
5: Violoncello da Spalla on Bottom String in Low Position
Figure
6: Carlo Buffagnotti, 1688 Engraving, detail
Figure
7: Left Hand Position in Antonio Bononcini, Sonata 2/1, end
Figure
8: Left Hand Position in Antonio Bononcini, Laudate pueri,
m. 10
Figure
9: Left Hand Position in Antonio Bononcini, Sinfonia/1, m. 4
Figure
10: Use of the Left Thumb