
Jean-Marie LECLAIR (1697 - 1764)]
Six Sonates en trio - Oeuvre IV
Sonata I in d minor, op. 4,1 [10:30]
Sonata II in B flat, op. 4,2 [10:38]
Sonata III in d minor, op. 4,3 [13:30]
Sonata IV in F, op. 4,4 [10:41]
Sonata V in g minor, op. 4,5 [14:30]
Sonata VI in A, op. 4,6 [11:06]
Ensemble Rosasolis (Guillaume Humbrecht, Marieke Bouche (violin), Nicolas Crnjanski
(cello), Julie Blais (harpsichord))
rec. 22-25 November 2012, La Ferme, Villefavard, France. DDD
MUSICA FICTA MF8018 [71:32]
Jean-Marie Leclair was one of the main violinists in France
in the second quarter of the 18th century. That was when most of his collections
of sonatas were printed. Leclair was educated as a dancer and a violinist,
and for some time acted in both capacities. His contact with the Italian violin
virtuoso Giovanni Battista Somis, pupil of Arcangelo Corelli, came at a key
moment in his career. He decided to concentrate on playing the violin and
writing for his own instrument. Leclair composed some music for the theatre
- which is lost, except his opera Scylla et Glaucus - but otherwise
his oeuvre comprises only music for violin.
Between 1723 and 1743 he published four books of sonatas for violin and basso
continuo. These show an increasing amount of virtuosity. The later books reflect
the development in his skills as a violinist and the influence of his teacher
Somis and - more generally - the Italian style. These, and the two sets of
violin concertos were probably written for his own use in the first place.
Most of them seem too complicated for amateurs. The trio sonatas are different:
such pieces were written for non-professional players and printed in large
numbers across Europe. Leclair's trio sonatas op. 4 are less demanding
than the solo sonatas.
They bear witness to the Italian influence in Leclair's compositional
style. With the exception of Sonata No. 3 they are all in four movements
and are modelled after the Corellian sonata da chiesa. The titles
of the movements are all in Italian. Only some refer to the dance: the fourth
movement of Sonata No. 3 is a sarabanda, Sonata No.
5 closes with a giga and Sonata No. 6 has a gavotta
as its third movement. There are none of the character pieces that were common
in French music of the time. Italian influence also comes to the fore in the
harmonic language in some movements. The time these sonatas were published
was also the time the galant idiom conquered Europe but its features
are largely absent in these sonatas. They are more complicated and include
more counterpoint than was usual in galant repertoire. Also notable
is the fact that the basso continuo often plays a quite independent role.
Although Leclair was clearly influenced by the Italian style his music reflects
the ideal of many French composers of the time: the mixture of the Italian
and the French idiom, generally called the goûts réunis. Traditionally
the French had problems with what they considered extremes in Italian music:
it was overly virtuosic and excessively theatrical. In the preface to his
op. 4 Leclair expresses his wish to moderate these features. He states that
"[an] important point (...) is to avoid that confusion of notes that
people add to vocal and expressive pieces, and that serve only to disfigure
them." This has to be interpreted as a warning not to add too many ornaments
to what he had written down. That was exactly the feature of Italian music
that many French music-lovers disliked. Leclair's preface reflects
his own style of playing which was described as pleasant and mellow in tone.
The members of the Ensemble Rosasolis have found the right approach to these
sonatas. Their performances are not devoid of brilliance and technically they
leave nothing to be desired. However, the content of these sonatas is always
in the centre: the artists avoid exaggerations in the ornamentation department,
exactly as Leclair required, and the smoothness and elegance which was the
feature of the composer's own playing comes certainly to the fore here.
This disc makes for more than an hour of pleasant listening. These trio sonatas
are excellent stuff, and the Ensemble Rosasolis manages to put that across
with verve.
Johan van Veen
http://www.musica-dei-donum.org
https://twitter.com/johanvanveen