The Sonata in C major (HWV 365), for recorder and basso continuo, was composed (probably before 1712) by George Frideric Handel. The work is also referred to as Opus 1 No. 7, and was first published in or shortly after 1726—in a collection of twelve sonatas titled Sonates pour un Traversiere un Violon ou Hautbois Con Basso Continuo Composées par G. F. Handel—purportedly in Amsterdam by Jeanne Roger, but now shown to have been a forgery by the London publisher John Walsh.[1] Walsh republished this sonata in 1731 or 1732 under his own imprint in a similar collection, containing ten of the earlier sonatas and two new ones, with the new title Solos for a German Flute a Hoboy or Violin With a Thorough Bass for the Harpsichord or Bass Violin Compos'd by Mr. Handel.[2] Other catalogues of Handel's music have referred to the work as HG xxvii, 15; and HHA iv/3,33.[3]
The pseudo-Roger, Walsh, and the Chrysander (based upon pseudo-Roger and Walsh) editions indicate that the work is for recorder ("flauto"), and published it as Sonata VII, though the autograph manuscript is missing the title page.[4] This autograph is a fair copy made most likely in 1712, but a reliable copyist's manuscript gives the instrumentation in Italian: flauto e cembalo, exactly as in Handel's complete autographs of the Sonatas in G minor, A minor, and F major.[5]
Movements
editThe work consists of five movements:
Movement | Type | Key signature | Time signature | Bars | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Larghetto | C major | 4 4 |
24 | Concludes with a one-bar adagio in G major. |
2 | Allegro | C major | 3 8 |
132 | |
3 | Larghetto | A minor | 3 4 |
43 | Concludes with an E major chord. |
4 | A tempo di Gavotti | C major | 4 4 |
46 | Three sections (4, 8 and 34 bars)—each with repeat markings. Cut-common time signature. |
5 | Allegro | C major | 3 8 |
64 | Two sections (16 and 48 bars)—each with repeat markings. |
(Movements do not contain repeat markings unless indicated. The number of bars is taken from the Chrysander edition, and is the raw number in the manuscript[clarification needed]—not including repeat markings.)
Three of these movements are related to other works by Handel:[4]
- Handel also used the second movement in the overture to the opera Scipione (1726)
- The third movement is a revised version of the third movement of the Oboe Sonata in F Major (1711–16)
- The fifth movement is related to the duet "Placa l'alma", from act 1, scene 4 of the opera Alessandro, (1725–26)
See also
edit- List of solo sonatas by George Frideric Handel
- XV Handel solo sonatas (publication by Chrysander)
- Handel solo sonatas (publication by Walsh)
References
edit- ^ Terence Best, "Handel's Chamber Music: Sources, Chronology and Authenticity", Early Music 13, no. 4 (November 1985): 476–499. Citation on 481–482.
- ^ Best 1985, 483.
- ^ Anthony Hicks, "Handel, George Frideric", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001): 10:801.
- ^ a b Best 1985, 480.
- ^ David Lasocki and Walter Bergmann, "Critical Report", in G. F. Handel, The Complete Sonatas for Treble (Alto) Recorder and Basso Continuo / Die gesamten Sonaten für Altblockflöte und Basso Continuo, edited by David Lasocki and Walter Bergmann, 67–79 (London: Faber Music Limited; New York: G. Schirmer, Inc.; Australia & Canada: Boosey & Hawkes; Kassel: Bärenreiter-Verlag; Tokyo: Zen-On Music Co. Ltd., 1979): 69 and 74n23.