Butt ImprovisedVocalOrnamentation 1991
Butt ImprovisedVocalOrnamentation 1991
Butt ImprovisedVocalOrnamentation 1991
REFERENCES
Linked references are available on JSTOR for this article:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/766493?seq=1&cid=pdf-
reference#references_tab_contents
You may need to log in to JSTOR to access the linked references.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
https://about.jstor.org/terms
Taylor & Francis, Ltd. and Royal Musical Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize,
preserve and extend access to Journal of the Royal Musical Association
JOHN BUTT
Since it has been observed that artistic singers and also instrumentalists have
somewhat digressed from the notes here and there, and thus have given
occasion to invent an agreeable kind of figure; for what can be sung with
reasonable euphony might well indeed also be written down.
Accordingly, composers in the last epoch already began to set down one
thing or another that was unknown to their predecessors, and seemed un
acceptable to the unenlightened, but charming to good ears and musicians
So that by our own time music has attained such a height that - in view of
the multitude of figures, particularly in the newly discovered and ever more
decorated stylo recitativo - it may indeed be compared to a rhetoric.'
1 'Nachgehends hat man observiret, daB kiinstliche Singer auch Instrumentisten . . . von den
Noten hier und dort etwas abgewichen, und also einige anmutige Art der Figuren zu erfinden AnlaB
gegeben; denn was mit verniinfftigen Wohl-Laut kan gesungen werden, mag man auch wohl setzen.
Dahero haben die Componisten in vorigem Seculo allbereits angefangen, eines und das andere zu
setzen, was den vorigen unbekant, auch den Unverstindigen unzuliBlich geschienen, guten Ohren
aber und Musicis annehmlich gewesen. BiB daB auff unsere Zeiten die Musica so hoch kommen, daB
wegen Menge der Figuren, absonderlich aber in dem neu erfundenen und bisher immer mehr
ausgezierten Stylo Recitativo, sie wohl einer Rhetorica zu vergleichen.' Christoph Bernhard,
Ausfiihrlicher Bericht vom Gebrauche der Con- und Dissonantien (MS), edited in Joseph Maria
Miiller-Blattau, Die Kompositionslehre Heinrich Schiitzens in der Fassung seines Schiilers Christoph
Bernhard (Leipzig, 1926), 147. For a translation of Bernhard's treatises see Walter Hilse, 'The
Treatises of Christoph Bernhard', The Music Forum, 3 (1973), 1-196.
2 Hellmut Federhofer, 'Christoph Bernhards Figurenlehre und die Dissonanz', Die Musik-
forschung, 42 (1989), 110-27.
3 Giovanni Maria Artusi, L'Artusi, ovvero, Delle imperfezioni della moderna musica (1600),
trans. Oliver Strunk, Source Readings in Music History, iii: The Baroque Era (London, 1952; repr.
1981), 33.
Nevertheless the a
purely sensual (an
by Vincenzo Galil
musical aesthetics
Bernhard's histor
and compositiona
penetrating study
celebrated women
order to avoid cla
composers to use
Italian works publ
an incidental feat
feature of the thematic material in several voices'.6
That Bernhard's theories were still significant in German-speaking
lands for several decades after his death is reflected by the numerous
copies of his treatises (for instance by Johann Kuhnau),7 and by the fact
that his figural treatment of dissonance was assimilated by writers located
as far apart as J. B. Samber and Mattheson. Particularly interesting is the
appearance of substantial passages from Bernhard - including that open-
ing this paper - in J. G. Walther's Praecepta of 1708, perhaps the most
significant theoretical source of compositional theory for the early
environment of J. S. Bach.8
Bernhard's assertion that the compositional style of his age was heavily
influenced by ornamental figures is certainly an interesting view of the
relationship between the roles of composer and performer in the German
Baroque. We might immediately ask whether his opinion as a theorist
reflects the reality of German compositional practice (his own included)
and whether this particular conjecture was seriously entertained by other
theorists of the age. Secondly - and more importantly - we might con-
sider the relevance of his comment to the study of performance practice
today. This question should be asked, regardless of the answer to the first;
for even if Bernhard does not reflect the practical or theoretical norm of
his age, his view could still be regarded as the product of an 'authentic
voice, one which should perhaps be taken into account if we are to
understand the context of music in mid-seventeenth-century Germany. If
this music can indeed be viewed from the standpoint of its composer-
performer status, modern concerns for historical performance can more
profitably be directed towards the music itself. Analysis would play a
more important part in the determination of a legitimate interpretation,
since much of the desired historical performance style lies already encoded
in the music, itself a distillation of 'original' performance practices.
An approach to these considerations is outlined in this article. First, the
basis of vocal ornamentation in seventeenth- and early eighteenth-
century Germany can relatively easily be assessed by surveying the large
body of contemporary literature addressed to the performer.' The ma-
jority of this is designed for the students in Latin schools, while some
primers - particularly the more advanced - cater for young performers in
court institutions. Such was the structure of education and the function
of music in Lutheran Germany that most of this material is directed
towards singers. Singing, at all levels, was a fundamental element in
general education, since it provided a vehicle for the dissemination of the
newly translated scriptures and particularly for that most potent tool of
Lutheran indoctrination, the chorale. Wherever instrumental practice is
also outlined in these writings, the nature of ornamental figures is essen-
tially the same as that prescribed for singers; sometimes differences be-
tween the two are mentioned, but seldom to any explicit degree.
The second stage is an examination of the ornamental figures described
in treatises specifically directed towards composition rather than perfor-
mance: do these reflect Bernhard's view that the composers were absorb-
ing and synthesizing the mannerisms of singers? If so, was this a literal
annexation of the figures concerned, affixing them to an existing musical
structure, or were ornamental devices to be integrated more tightly into
the compositional fabric? A study of selected compositions which show
composers consciously notating ornamentation derived from perfor-
mance style - and particularly those providing a simpler, unornamented
version concurrently - will help to establish how closely the theories cor-
respond to practice. The results of this study will qualify us to answer
more readily the second question posed at the outset: the relevance of the
cross-fertilization of performance and composition to modem concerns
with performance practice.
27 Beyer, Primae lineae, 60: 'Ob zwar in Singen die Variationes notarum heutiges Tages nicht
mehr in Usu, daB man auf denen Noten viel Coloraturen mache / wo sie der Componist nicht
gesetzt / auch sich solche bey langsamen Noten nicht wohl anbringen lassen; so habe doch nur etliche
wenige / wie auch die Variationes Cadentiarum zum blossen Exercitatio der Jugend / mit anhero
setzen wollen.'
28 Johann Rudolf Ahle, Kurze/doch deutliche Anleitung zu der lieblich- und 16blichen
Singekunst, 2nd edn ed. and annotated by Johann Georg Ahle (Miihlhausen, 1704), 80-1: 'Du
Esel / wariim tuhstu eine Coloratur hinzu? Hitte mir dieselbe gefallen / so wolte ich sie wohl selbst
gesetzet haben. Win du recht gecomponirte Gesange wilst corrigiren / so mache dir einen
eigenen / und laB mir meinen ungecorrzigirt. Allein man hat sich itzo wegen des passaggirens und
diminuirens nicht so sehr fiber die Vocalisten und Instrumentisten zu beschwehren / als fiber die
Componisten selbst. Din die wenigsten wissen die Figuras Musicas zu rechter Zeit / und an geh6rige
Orten an zu wenden'; Ahle also gives a good summary of recent clerical attacks, including that of
Muscovius.
29 Fuhrmann, Musicalischer- Trichter, 71: 'Zwar m6chte hier jemand einwerffen: Es wiren
diesem Capitel unterschiedliche Manieren specificirt, so ein Musicus vocalis gar nicht / sonder
ein Musicus Poiticus verstehen miiste. Antwort: Es ist wahr / aber wer nicht coclisch gucket /
siehet ohn mein Erinnern / daB ich diese delicias Poeticas einem Tyroni zum besten mit angeff
habe / damit derselbe bey Zeit der Componisten ihre Sprache in etwas verstehen lerne / w
If the composer h
tion, but the sing
newly acquired ar
ever understood t
time when he was
Praetorius, himsel
must have the na
understanding and
from the contex
knowledge of the
demonstrate. He d
but at the appropr
latter points he pr
the chapter ('Exerc
his narrative at t
Arte prattica & p
provised 'contrap
from Italian sourc
Friderici and Bern
for the rules of m
(as the 'fundamen
return to the note
cautious in polyp
pieces.31 However,
that the singer sh
that the notated c
the 'fundament' cl
diminution is the
specific chord.
Tutors which giv
ornamental figure
mal grounding in
mediately after de
he recommends t
piece belongs, bu
the harmonic stru
part of his Compe
Evidently, if Ber
formers on comp
There seems to be
sarily acquainted
34 Johannes Lippius, Synopsis musicae novae (Strasbourg, 1612), trans. Benito V. Rivera (Col-
orado Springs, 1977), 49.
35 Johann Andreas Herbst, Musica poetica (Nuremberg, 1643), 5: 'mancherley formen Art und
WeiB zu singen / damit der Gesang gezieret / formiret und ausgedrucket wird'.
36 Wolfgang Caspar Printz, Phrynis Mitilienaeus oder Satyrischer Componist (2nd edn, Dresden
and Leipzig, 1696), part 2, 44: 'es beydes einem Stinger / als auch einem Componisten sehr niitzlich
seyn k6nte'.
41 Ibid., 46: 'Ich will aber hier nicht handeln de Variatione, so geschicht conjunctionib
Dissonantiarum, und dergleichen / davon du gnugsam berichtet bist aus der Musicd Poeticd, s
de Variatione, aus welcher alle und iede Erfindungen eines Componisten fliessen.
42 Ibid., 66: 'Wer diese Figuren erfinden will / der setzt erstlich alle einfache / jedoch nu
schicklichen, Denn er mag darvon wegwerffen / was wegen des allzu grossen A mbitiss, oder
andern Mangels halber nicht zu gebrauchen ist: Hernach nimmt er eine nach der ander
denenselben / und setzt zu ihr eine jewede andere schickliche Figur, erstlich in eben der clav
welcher die letztere Note der ersten Figur stehet / wofern es sich nur schicken will; sintemahl w
solche Figuren in Vocal-Sachen hiibsch angebracht werden: Darnach in allen andern gesch
Intervallen / so wohl auff- als absteigenden.
Just as Printz the theorist shows clearly that the art of variation is
shared by composers and performers alike, so does the Leipzig cantor
Tobias Michael add diminution (or rather substitute simpler lines with
diminution) in the manner of the singer in some of the vocal lines for
the second part of his Musicalischer Seelen-Lust (1637). The preface to the
quinta vox shows that he is very much of the opinion that coloratura is the
privilege of singers. He is blatantly apologetic for having included lines of
coloratura since, in his experience, talented singers perform better if they
are given free rein in adding diminution: 'I cannot agree with those who
want to tie everything down to one manner, and still less with those who
are not satisfied with anything unless it is of their own making and
baking.'43 His patently formulaic coloratura (following 'Kapsberger's
style') is provided as an alternative for certain parts of the extant lines and
is included merely by way of example to assist the inexperienced (see
Example 1).
Despite Michael's claims that performers could have done this just as
easily, it is difficult to conceive how they could have improvised so freely
from the notated line (preserving only the first and last notes of the
original) without knowledge of the bass part, or, in the case of bar 31, of
each other's line. This consideration aside, Michael gives little attention
to the musical implications of the figured versions, just as if he were a
singer applying his favourite figures: in bars 25-7 the rhythmic and
melodic elements of the original imitation are obscured by the diminu-
tion; the diminution of bar 31 more successfully (and necessarily) relates
the simultaneous vocal parts of the original, although the contrary
motion is abandoned.
One of the most interesting commentaries on the relationship betw
performing and composing practice is to be found in J. G. A
Musikalisches Gespriiche (1695-1701). In two of the dialogues, Ahle
Latinized name thinly disguised by the anagram 'Helianus') answ
student who complains of forbidden parallels caused by the figuratio
the music. His response is that if such a figure were removed, the sin
would surely add it (since figures of the accentus variety are so o
added in progressions involving thirds). Such notes are so short in
that they cannot cause offence. Why should one forbid in notation th
which is common in singing and playing? If performers give such eleg
and gracefulness with the various figures (here there is a list of refer
to many of the vocal treatises already encountered) how can it be wron
the composer does the same?44 Helianus later substantiates this argum
by observing that 'intrinsically short dissonances' can neither mitiga
error nor cause one.45
43 'Daher ich derer Meynung nicht seyn kan / welche alles nur an eine Manier
wollen / vielweniger derer / welchen durchaus nichts gefillet / als was sie selber geschaffe
was ihres Gebackes ist.'
Example 1. Tobias
Kommet her zu mi
Cantus 25
Neh - met auff euch mein Joch/ Neh - met auff euch mein
A [Cantus diminutions]
euch mein
,Tenor
[Tenor diminutions]
Basso continuo
Joch/
Joch
Neh- met auff euch_ mein- Joch/ Neh - met auff euch mein Jochi
30
neh - met auffeuch/auff euch mein Joch/ neh - met auff euch mein Joch/
euch mein
euch mein
46 Walther, Praecepta, 182: 'Nur dieses ist darbey noch zu beobachten, daB dergl. Figuren mi
einer anstindigen Moderation angebracht werden miiBen, damit diejenigen Noten, so die Consecu-
tion zweyer Quinten machen, ganz unvermerckt von unsern Ohren vorbey streichen.'
47 See note 28 above.
48 Ahle, Musikalisches Herbst-Gesprdche, 39: 'Wer ein Musikalisches Geh6r und gutesjudicium
hat / und die Pathologiam Musicam versteht / der wird die Discordanzen wohl zugebrauchen
wissen / win / wie / u. wo er sol.'
Example 2. Joh
Johann Schell
Researches in t
51
Violin 1
Violin 2
Violin 3
Violin 4
vi 1 ,"v
Continuo
However, as t
to be gaining
seventeenth ce
- was quite un
damentals of
One always see
ground for it .
tions of disson
one will show o
As a rather co
grounded in t
saw dangers i
fundamentals
Obviously th
greatest of the
meister's conc
school of com
posers' use of
that of Bernh
of using disson
pleasant, and b
49 Andreas Werck
immer was Neues /
siones, und rechte r
bringen. Darum pr
Kunst.'
50 Christoph Bernhard, Tractatus compositionis augmentatus (MS), Miiller-Blattau, Die Kom
positionslehre, 63, 'Figuram nenne ich eine gewiBe Art die Dissonantzen zu gebrauchen, daB
dieselben nicht allein nicht widerlich, sondern vielmehr annehmlich werden, und des Componiste
Kunst an den Tag legen.'
k" - I I I I II b I I
I F
the starting-point
reduction reflects
mental contrapu
compositional ske
how many moder
that derived pure
However it is sig
figures of embe
practice; indeed in
with the historica
many of the figu
which Bernhard
embellishment).
superiectio or acc
nota and variatio
the second - are e
diminution treatis
poser remain aler
variations, a com
old-fashioned - s
know'.51 Bernhar
figures he has alr
practice.57 He clea
and the simpler ve
this is quite the o
20 years later), wh
coloratura (see abo
amples as models b
the first note of d
note for the simpl
versions with diminution first.
On the other hand, since most of the works are chorale-based, much of
the diminution was obviously composed around the notes of the original
melody; indeed Praetorius states in the introduction to no. 14, Wir
gliduben all, that he has 'somewhat diminished the chorale in the vocal
parts in the current Italian fashion, nach meiner Wenigkeit'.58 However
what is interesting is that in some places the diminution presents a far
more coherent musical structure than that of the simplified version. In
the second part of no. 15, Aus tiefer Not, the ornamentation links the
parts in bars 9-10 by sequential movement in thirds (see Example 4).
This produces a far more unified texture than that of the simplified parts
which bear no melodic relation to each other and lack the sequential
movement. Likewise in no. 24, Siehe wiefein und lieblich ist, the imita-
tion from the word 'und' is more consistent than that in the simpler ver-
sion (see Example 5). In the third part of this piece the two ornamented
voices imitate each other in short phrases; however the simplified version
in slower note values often lacks this consistency, since literal imitation
would have led to awkward dissonances.
Significant conclusions can be drawn from the case of Praetorius. Fi
as a composer, his practice was more sophisticated than that advoca
by the compositional theorists who suggested merely that the compose
imitate singers. The very act of notating coloratura caused its nature t
change from added ornament to musical substance, something wh
was also evident in the Italian repertory in the last decades of the
vious century.59 It may well be the composers' assimilation of figures
diminution and the - probably unconscious - subjection of them to
standard processes of composition which account for some of the b
compositional changes during the German Baroque. The increasin
authoritative use of figures by composers has also been amply dem
strated by the comments in vocal treatises of the late seventeenth and e
eighteenth centuries. However this process was clearly not a line
historical development since composers can be found in both catego
throughout the period concerned. But while the role of the figu
57 Maybe this practice of notating two versions of the music was influenced by the publication
Bartolomeo Barbarino's Secondo libro delli motetti (Venice, 1614); see Horsley, 'The Diminutio
Composition and Theory of Composition', 127. In any case there is a famous precedent in the
Possente spirto from Monteverdi's Orfeo.
58 'Dieweil ich auch in etlichen / dieser und dergleichen Art Concert-Gesinge / den Choral in
Vocal-Stimmen auf die jetzige italidinische Manier in etwas nach meiner Wenigkeit diminuiret / u
wie es sonsten genennet wird / coleriret und zerbrochen habe'.
59 Newcomb, The Madrigal at Ferrara, i, esp. 76-83.
simplex
simplexv Ii rr
Cantus 2
en
v rA ,r r
- en
Example 5. M
(Polyhymnia c
Gesamtausgabe
music text revis
20
simplex
Cantus 1
simplex
Cantus 2
-\V
rry,v !i;o
I I! ti
fein und leb-ich ist
suggests, in the preface to the second part of his Handleitung (1706) that
'a true musician's equally composer'.61 The vogue for relating music to
rhetoric (as is evident in the quotation from Bernhard at the opening)
auch gar niedlich und wohl herpfeiffen) .
ungeriiumtes als ein Redner / der aber stumm i
6F. E. Niedt - The Musical Guide, trans. an
(Oxford, 1989), 60.
may also have played a part in this association of composer and per-
former: he who writes a speech must equally be capable of delivering it,
and vice versa.
There may also be a strong social case for the closer association of com
posers and performers and the growing versatility of musicians in th
latter part of seventeenth-century Germany. First, the cantor's role was
moving from that of schoolmaster/musical instructor towards that of a
more purely practical musician who was expected both to compose eve
more demanding music and to direct the performance. Second, the roles
of organist and cantor were drawing closer together, so that such posts
could be - and often were - filled by someone capable of fulfilling both
roles (e.g. Buxtehude and J. S. Bach). Third, the cantor, as a more pra
tical musician, often achieved higher status as town music director (Bach
or even opera director (Telemann). Such increased mobility contribute
to a greater mingling of musical functions and styles. A glance at th
achievements of the pupils of J. S. Bach and the surviving testimonials h
wrote for them give a remarkable insight into the versatility expected o
the more talented practical musicians: most sang, played several in-
struments and also composed.
The growing importance of thoroughbass is another symptom of this
development: composition was increasingly learnt through the most prac
tical method, one which cultivates fluency in both composition and
performance. It is interesting that in the early eighteenth century com-
position is taught in the sequence (1) thoroughbass, (2) strict counter
point (e.g. Niedt, Heinichen and, later, Kirnberger), while in th
preceding century the sequence was precisely the reverse (e.g. Herbs
Criiger and Printz). The interaction between composer and performer is
also reflected in some of the definitions of music from the later part of th
seventeenth century. Both Printz and Walther define musica practica as
an art encompassing both musica modulatoria (performance) and musi
poetica (composition) while earlier German authors tended to reserv
musica practica for performance alone.62 The definition of Printz an
Walther persists in the writings of Murschhauser (1721) and Maier
(1741).63
Universit