Special Collections
& Rare Books Division
Bach
Suite Comparisons
Luigi
Silva
Elizabeth
Cowling
Rudolf
Matz
Maurice
Eisenberg
János
Scholz
UNCG
Cello Music Collection
Special
Collections & Rare Books
Jackson
Library
UNC
Greensboro
Technical
Information
|
Bach Six Suites for Unaccompanied Cello
The Cello Music Collections at
the Jackson Library, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, contain
38 different editions of the Six Suites for Unaccompanied Cello, by Johann
Sebastian Bach. There are 26 of these in the Luigi Silva Collection alone.
The total number of complete copies of the Six Suites is 54. In addition,
there are three incomplete copies, three transcriptions with piano accompaniment,
and one arrangement of Suite Six with string orchestra accompaniment.
Many of these suites in each
collection have performance notes by the representative cellists, including
bowings and fingerings. Because Bach's autograph manuscript is lost,
cellists usually rely on three early manuscripts, all located in the Staatsbibliothek
zu Berlin, formerly the Staatsbibliothek Preussischer Kulturbesitz:
1. Anna Magdalena Bach (1730), 2. Johann Peter Kellner,
organist and cantor at Gafenröde (1726?), and 3. Wolfgang (Johann
Jacob Heinrich?) i Westphal,
organist at Hamburg and a student of Bach's. Contrary to the theory
that Bach purposely omitted any indications of bowing in order to give
the performer optimum flexibility, both the Kellner and Westphal editions
have precise bow- markings as well as some tempo indications, dynamics
and ornaments. It is thought that Westphal obtained his copy from
C.P.E. Bach and that it is probably the work of one of C.P.E.'s copyists.
By contrast, Anna Magdalena's manuscript has many errors and very few bowings,
ornaments, tempi, or dynamics. Facsimiles of these three manuscripts
are held in the oversize section of the Silva Collection. In addition,
this collection contains a manuscript in Silva's hand, which is a preliminary
draft of a projected edition, incorporating these three early editions
on parallel staves with Silva's own edition. Unfortunately this was
never published and is incomplete, lacking the Sixth Suite.
In spite of the research
done by Silva and others, much controversy still abounds over the ultimate
source of J.S. Bach's bowings. The archival section of the Silva
Collection contains several copies of an unpublished typescript, one copy
entitled: Old Music and Old Old Instruments - Some ideas about
Bach's own bowings in the Violoncello Solo Suites, by Luigi Silva.
In this document Silva advances the theory that Bach intended to be as
precise as possible on musical articulation, which Silva defines as the
patterns within the phrase, but to allow flexibility in tempi and dynamics.
Silva refutes the theory that few bowings were indicated in Bach's
original manuscripts of the cello suites and that those that exist are
awkward. In fact, he says, they contain more slurs than his violin works
of the same period. He discusses in detail the reasons that these bowings
seem awkward, believing that this is explained by the differences in the
Baroque versus the modern bow. The viola da gamba bow was curved in the
opposite direction from the bow of today and held with the hand underneath
the frog, making the stronger strokes the up-bows and the weaker ones the
down, opposite of what is produced by the modern bow. Therefore many
passages need to be reversed as to bow direction. Due to the nature
of the modern bow grip, passages which were planned for the upper half
of the bow, now fall more naturally in the lower half. This creates a different
musical effect than was perhaps intended. Differences of opinion
exist as to whether martelé and spiccato bowing were in use during
Bach's time.
His own projected edition
not with-standing, Silva deplored the practice of creating more and more
editions of the Suites, believing that: "This treatment of musical
articulation in the unaccompanied violoncello suites is a sort of wild
fowl that has undergone a series of moultings from time to time ... That
a completely different bird has come forth each time can be attributed
largely to high-minded, but unfortunately misdirected editorial efforts."
ii
Only in the cello suites does there seem to
be an unspoken license for wholesale edits. Although most scholar/cellists
would not dream of altering one note, even known mistakes, due to the widespread
practice, they think nothing of tampering with bowings, creating yet another
edition.
Having said this, the following
pages will compare like movements and editions of the same suite, demonstrating
the differences in performance notes, choosing from all five cellists
represented by the Collections. Of particular interest are the comparisons
of the Silva bowings from 1947 and 1956 and the Casals bowings from the
Elizabeth Cowling Collection.
Suggested reading:
1. Markevitch, Dimitry, "preface" of his ed. of
Six Suites, BWV 1007-1012 by J.S. Bach ( Bryn Mawr, Pa.: T. Presser,
2nd edition, 1985).
2. Markevitch, Dimitry, "Notes on the Six Bach Suites
for Cello," Carnegie Hall Program, (Great Barrington, Ma.: High Fidelity
Magazine, Oct., 1964), 12-13.
3. Silva, Luigi, "Old Music and Old Old Instruments,"
(typescript, Luigi Silva Collection, The University of North Carolina
at Greensboro, [194-?]).
4. Finholt, Tim, "Exclusive
Interview Conversation with Dimitry Markevitch." dir. John Michel.
1995. Internet Cello Society. 4 Apr. 2000.
5. Finholt, Tim,
"Interpretational Angst and the Bach Cello Suites." dir. John Michel.
1995. Internet Cello Society. 4 Apr. 2000.
6. Finholt, Tim, "A
Survey of Bach Suite Editions." dir. John Michel. 1995. Internet Cello
Society. 4 Apr. 2000.
Web site article written by Joan Velten Staples, Cello
Music Cataloger, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
This material may not be reproduced/republished in
any format without the expressed permission of Walter Clinton Jackson Library
of The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
i Markevitch, Dimitry, "preface" of his ed. of Six Suites,
BWV 1007-1012 by J.S. Bach, (Bryn Mawr, Pa.: T. Presser, 2nd ed., 1985),
iv.
ii Silva, Luigi, "Old Music and Old Old Instruments,"
(typescript, Luigi Silva Collection, The University of North Carolina
at Greensboro), 5.
|