Ballo del Granduca, for organ (doubtful; probably by Samuel Scheidt)

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AMG AllMusic Guide to Classical Music :

Ballo del Granduca, for organ (doubtful; probably by Samuel Scheidt)

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Review

Though Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck performed improvisations on the keyboard daily for many years in Amsterdam, we only have very scant traces of his actual surviving music. Fewer than 100 pieces survive, and nearly all are handwritten copies by other people. This unfortunately leads to the question of authenticity: how certain can anyone be that a given piece is actually Sweelinck's music? The situation is complicated by the fact that sometimes other musicians, such as Sweelinck's student Samuel Scheidt, contributed "guest" variations to the middle of a group of Sweelinck's works. (Master and pupil even made a set of variations completely in alternation, those on the "Pavana hispanica.") Scheidt has also been suggested as the composer of the variations on the so-called "Balletto del granduca," instead of Sweelinck. Whether these variations came from the teacher or the student -- or both in alternation -- we can still enjoy what wit and invention they display.

The "Balletto" (Little dance of the Grand Duke) that forms the basis for these variations offers the improviser a lot of leeway. It consists of a string of short and clearly cut musical phrases, with a basically chordal texture (begging for embellishment), and coming to rest on cadences on a large number of contrasting pitches. The first "variation" sets out the theme in this case, with little in the way of ornamentation. The second variation sets a more florid melody over the same harmonic bass that was established in the first; the third reverses the procedure, with a running bass line as an undercurrent to the simple chordal upper voices. In both cases, however, the composer adds more rhythmic interest to the other voices, as well, in the twofold concluding phrase. In the fourth variation, the running melodic voice moves consistently at twice the speed, and the fifth and final variation deploys two ornamental lines. Unfortunately, they allow some infelicities in the voice-leading to be a bit more prevalent; perhaps these were "guest" variations after all. ~ Timothy Dickey, Rovi

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
A Treasury of Harpsichord Favorites
Arjan Versluis pleet oude muziek & improvisations
Bob van Asperen: Harpsichord Recital 1991
Claviorgan 2003
Famous Works For Organ 1997
Great Organ Builders of America: A Retrospective, Vol. 5
Harpsichord in the Netherlands 1991
Historic Organs of Boston 2003
Historic Organs of Buffalo
Instruments from the Russell Collection 2001
J.P. Sweelinck: Fortune My Foe - Works for Harpsichord
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck: Harpsichord Music 2005
L'Orgue "Renaissance" de Saint-Savin-en-Lavedan
La Notte d'Amore 2004
Les Orgues Historiques (Historic Organs)
Les Orgues Historiques (Historic Organs)
Les Plus Belles Orgues 1994
Magic: Flanders Recorder Quartet and Friends 2000
Maxine Thévenot plays the Hellmuth Wolff Organ 2011
Miniatures: Renaissance Music & New Music 2012
Musical Treasures for the Organ 2009
Pavana: The Virgin Harpsichord 2002
Piet Kee plays Buxtehude & Sweelinck 1990
Preludes, Fugues & Variations
Sweelinck: Ballo del Granduca 2000
Sweelinck: Est-ce Mars; Ballo del granduca
Sweelinck: Keyboard Music 2003
Sweelinck: Organ & Keyboard Music 2004
Sweelinck: Organ Works 1994
Sweelinck: The Complete Keyboard Works [Box Set]
Sweelinck: The Complete Keyboard Works [Box Set]
Sweenlinck: Master of the Dutch Renaissance 2008
The Ahrend & Brunzma Organ 2009
The Cuckoo And The Nightingale 1993
The Great History of Belgian and Dutch Classical Music 1998
Treasury of Harpsichord Favorites
Twelve Organs of Edinburgh 2000

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