London Viola Player, Violinist & Arranger For Hire

It’s nearly summer …

I have a friend who used to do sales and marketing for a music publishers. She would spend a couple of weeks in May subsumed in carol arrangements and desperately cheesy choral pieces while they decided what to promote heavily for the Christmas campaign, made promotional recordings, etc. etc.

In a rather similar way, once most gigging musicians have shaken off the New Year’s hangover, the next thing they have to do is start applying for every festival they can think of, and try to find all the ones they’ve never heard of. By way of illustration, The Filthy Spectacula have one festival slot confirmed already and have probably been in touch with dozens of festivals (though admittedly some of them said they weren’t making decisions on lineup till after Christmas).

So the summer really does start in early January for us musos. Now where did I put last year’s list of application details and deadlines …

Carl Stamitz: Musical notes

(Sorry for the awful pun; I couldn’t resist.)

If you didn’t read it, you might want to take a glance at the previous post on Stamitz’s life to get some context. There are two other contexts that are quite important for how I end up ‘coming in’ to his music though: one is contemporary performance of Classical music (in the restrictive sense); the other is the history of the viola, both played and composed for.

Even now, with the early music movement a permanent fixture of the concert and recording scene, a lot of programming of Classical (late 18th-century, if you like) music tends to be very canonical. There’s an underlying assumption, much more overtly stated if you move back a few decades but still active, that there are ‘essential’ composers and why would you bother playing, recording or listening to anything else? I’m much more familiar with this as a very derided critical approach in literary studies, but its practical outworking is still fairly secure in music management. For most purposes, the essential composers of the Classical were until very recently exactly three: Josef Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. Anyone else got played for very specific purposes (Clementi for student pianists, for example) or in single works only (Boccherini’s Minuet). In the last few years this has eased a bit; J C Bach has made occasional appearances on performance schedules and Michael Haydn rather more. But it is still very unusual to encounter what you might consider a second-rank Classical composer performed, compared to an only semi-major Baroque or Romantic one (where the group of possibly ‘essential’ composers is in any case much larger and more blurred around the edges). Stamitz would certainly count as such a composer.

There have been an apparently disproportionate number of very good composers who played the viola. Bach (a multi-instrumentalist in a very modern sense of the word) is said to have liked playing viola in his own orchestral pieces. Mozart is known to have written some of the viola parts in his chamber works to play himself – this lies behind the unusual instrumentation of works like the Kegelstadt trio (Mozart, viola; one of his pupils, piano; Stadler, clarinet). The list can be continued at length. However, focusing in a little towards Stamitz, there was a major shift taking place in the early- to mid-eighteenth century away from polyphonic writing, with lines that tended to be equally complex and important more or less wherever they sat in the pitch range, towards homophonic (chordal) writing, with usually one melody line at a given time, supported by various kinds of relatively straightforward harmonic figuration. One result was that second violin, viola and to some extent cello parts became considerably easier and more boring to play. Mozart, it is worth noting, chose to direct his compositions from the keyboard (probably always an early piano; filling in chords and textures more or less ad lib). Not many people would choose to direct Mozart from the violas. The emergent string quartet form (spearheaded chiefly by Haydn) gave the cello part considerably more freedom, but still tended to leave the middle parts (second violin and viola) with less to do.

One result of this was that the musicianship of viola players seems to have started to decline. This process would continue into the nineteenth century to the point where the viola section was usually where aged violinists retired to (!), playing violins strung to viola pitch (not unusual among small-handed learners today, but certainly never ideal from the point of view of tone) and notoriously weak links in a chain. It became a sort of third violin instrument. Whatever stage this had reached by Stamitz’s time, it is certainly true that there were very few active solo viola performers in the late eighteenth century. This was why none commissioned solo works from Beethoven or to my knowledge Haydn and only the Sinfonia Concertante from Mozart, in contrast to the large amounts of piano, violin, flute, and cello music (much of it now not very well-known) written as display pieces for career virtuosi. If a lot of violists were converted or (dare I suggest?) burnt-out violinists even at this point, it would logically lead to them playing violin showpieces as long as they were able to hold down solo careers at all.

In this context, it is unsurprising to find that there is very little music featuring the viola from the Classical period. (There isn’t much from the times immediately before and after, but that is a separate question.) Stamitz is a significant exception and probably so largely because he played it himself as an itinerant virtuoso, and finding very little existing suitable repertoire must have filled the gap with his own compositions. Not a vastly prolific composer in general, he nonetheless wrote (that I am aware of) at least six full-scale viola concerti, two duo sonatas with piano, and various shorter pieces for viola and orchestra, with or without another solo instrument (notoriously, a sinfonia concertante for viola, double bass and orchestra). He seems to have done something similar with the even more obscure viola d’amore, which he also played and wrote for.

Sticking largely to the viola, the question emerges: Why? We know Stamitz at least got paid work first as a violinist, and the least complex assumption is that he did actually take up viola as a young adult. What led him to use the somewhat neglected instrument as a virtuoso soloist, rather than sticking solely with violin? Playing some of his music, I am inclined to believe he must have had quite large hands for the size of instrument in use (the left has to do some fairly substantial stretches by the standards of a generation before Paganini), which may have made it more conducive; and by the time he wrote most of the surviving compositions for it, he clearly had an insight into the tone and characteristics of the instrument in itself, though that might have come simply from playing with ability and attention. However, it is tempting to speculate that mere chance (perhaps covering a vacancy at Mannheim) led him to pick up viola to start with, and that he partly stuck with it and gave it more attention on realising that here was a vacant niche, whereas violinists were everywhere to be found. (I may of course be biased here, having more or less that experience looking for freelance work in southern England at present!)

Because one thing Stamitz is not hugely characterised by as a composer is originality. Especially looking at the music not written presumably for his own performances, it is usually very well-crafted, but of its type to what might be held a fault. His formal repertoire is the stuff of introductory musicology: sonata form opening movements, with both halves repeated verbatim; slow movements, usually in ternary or ‘song’ form and often in the subdominant; finales very often rondos. Four-bar phrases, limited modulations but substantial use of chromatic leading to colour melody lines. Lots of melodies in parallel thirds and loud-soft echo repetitions of key phrases.

None of this is bad. Indeed, one of the results is that played with the right notes in the right places, even if not hugely well, the music is almost guaranteed to be pleasant to listen to, and if performed with care and a certain amount of (era-appropriate) flair, the emphasis on balance, cohesion and construction makes it highly satisfying to play. It will tend to stand or fall in someone’s estimation depending on how well they like the style of the period, and how far they consider completeness, balance and neatness equally valid musical goals to emotional impact and self-expression. (Personally, I prefer the former most of the time, in my art music anyway; but as we still live in a sort of post-Romantic era of the arts, I’m swimming against a bit of a tide in that.)

So equally with Stamitz’s viola music. The most interesting thing about it is by no means that it is original or striking unusual in the context of Classical music regardless of instrumentation. What makes it worth coming back to is that there seem to have been no other composers of similar ability writing for solo viola. There is perhaps not that much point playing Stamitz string quartets with Haydn, Mozart and the first half-dozen Beethoven ones available; a main reason for playing his clarinet concerto with the Mozart in existence might simply be variety (though there is certainly no reason not to play it); but the viola works are uncontested by anything in similar style. If you like the music of the late eighteenth century, and you play the viola, the only way you will satisfactorily combine the two without resorting to transcriptions is Carl Stamitz.

And taken in that context, it is notable that his pieces are not second-rate either. The Bb major sonata (the only one I have played, and one of only two that I am aware of) is a well-constructed and charming duo sonata, with a very even-handed first movement (a lot of it in three parts, the viola and the two hands of the piano), a slow movement largely led by the piano and a rondo finale in which the viola largely gets to show off in the episodes. Making the most of the instrument’s stronger and more distinctive lower register (where violin music heads upwards for more projection, good viola music heads downwards), the viola is often a third or even a tenth below the piano where they play in close harmony. All of this would not be that remarkable, were it not that most duo sonatas of the early Classical (and this includes earlier Haydn and Mozart) are very patently for keyboard with accompaniment (of violin, cello, or whatever it may be), and are often effectively performable with the piano part alone. Being a genuine duo sonata at all puts the Stamitz ahead of its time; that the keyboard’s partner is viola could be seen as a bonus to us violists. Alternatively, it could be suggested that accompanying a pianist would be a poor outlet for a virtuoso, though there are plenty of works for virtuoso string players where the piano hogs the limelight – Beethoven’s early sets of variations for cello and piano, for instance.

The tail end of Stamitz’s life betrays a woeful lack of financial judgment in the round. However, his seizing of a distinctive performance niche and moulding of creative activity into personally useful forms suggests someone who managed to be a businesslike musician without sacrificing the quality of his music to business conditions. Whether it is the usefully flexible trios for violin (or flute), second violin and cello (or viola), which evidently sold well (they were published as far away as England) and probably because so many combinations of instruments can play them; or the concerti which make perfectly conventional demands upon the orchestra, reserving occasional flights of musical fancy to the solo part which Stamitz would have been able to perfect before booking the pieces into concert advertising if necessary, his music is generally content to fit very well with its situation. Ironically, it then proves often similarly well-adapted as a resource for modern musicians under constrained circumstances (ie without millions of arts funding behind them – so that would be everyone since 2008 in fact). The first viola concerto is known as the orchestral (viola) audition piece par excellence – being pitched at the right standard for the purpose where almost nothing else is. Flexible chamber music is always useful. And while the high Classical style may not be all the artistic rage any more, it remains accessible, pleasing and inoffensive, which is always a good start for keeping the audience on side if you don’t know what to plug a programme gap with.

So here’s to Carl Stamitz: the pragmatic composer par excellence, and happily a writer of rather charming music to boot.

Carl Stamitz: biographical notes

This is really a lead-up post to some (probably highly unreliable and speculative) musings on Stamitz’s music, particularly but not only for viola. However, there are some interesting, not to say bizarre, things about his life that are perhaps handy to set up in advance and it would probably be a very long post all in one!

So, Stamitz was born in Mannheim (modern Germany, which wouldn’t become a unified country for another 150 years) just as Classical-style music was finishing the job of replacing Baroque in fashion – by the time he was an adult the process would be complete. His family were resident in Germany but of Bohemian (Czech) extraction, and so he was named Karel. As an adult, he generally used the German form Carl and eventually legally adopted it. We don’t know why – it may have sounded less foreign, or indeed more sophisticated, or just been easier to pronounce and spell. English and French publications of his compositions casually use the local version of his name (Charles), which confuses matters further but was not unusual at the time.

Stamitz senior was a musician and composer in his own right, and it seems to have been little more than a matter of course that Karel would follow his father’s career. Certainly the first we hear of him as an adult is as a violinist in the Mannheim orchestra (presumably part of the local noble’s establishment). Within a few years, however, he appears again in society letters, by this point having taken up the viola (and probably made it his main instrument) and started composing for it. We can’t be sure what the works being referred to are (there is a great deal of Stamitz known to have existed but now lost, so it might not be anything we now have anyway), but Stamitz is described as writing better for the viola than anyone else active at the time (though, as I’ll discuss in the other post, there wasn’t a great deal of competition).

At some point, Stamitz also took up the viola d’amore – a descendant of the Renaissance viol family, with sympathetic (resonating) strings, six or seven strings tuned in fourths and thirds rather than the fifths of the violin family, and a sweeter tone but less projecting power. Unlike its forebears, which were all played in cello position (upright), it was held under the chin, however, which may have made it an easier extra for Stamitz to pick up once already playing violin and viola.

At some point Stamitz’s ambition, or his independence from family, or his ability, or the financial needs of an expanding family, overtook the orchestral job in Mannheim and he took to working as a travelling virtuoso. This was a common enough musical avocation of the time – the very young Mozart’s performing tours around Europe are the best-known instance. It was insecure, of course, relying on being able to organise and book concerts in advance and have them sell well, but probably considerably more lucrative than the upper-servant type roles of musicians (rank and file performers anyway) in aristocratic establishments.

Stamitz seems to have made the most of his multi-instrumental abilities as a touring soloist, and probably traded on the distinctiveness of playing viola and viola d’amore to set him apart from what was probably a crowded market of violinists. There are a large number of known or surviving works for those instruments, accompanied by piano or orchestra, and it seems fair to assume that these were composed in the service of Stamitz’s performing career rather than the other way round, especially given the paucity of other works that would have been modern and showy enough for his purposes with the audiences of his day.

However, there were also at least two operas (lost) and various chamber music (mostly quartets and trios) that cannot be easily connected with a performance career, as well as solo works for other instruments (a clarinet concerto now considered second only to Mozart’s in the Classical period, for example). These were probably either commissioned by players (the most common way at the time for composers to make money without playing themselves), or in the case of the operas written in hopes of lucrative stagings. Some of Stamitz’s works were widely published, but copyright, particularly international copyright, was a murky business in the eighteenth century and it cannot be counted on that he gained much income from this.

Much to his wife’s financial frustration, in his forties Stamitz tried to pull back from touring – though given his schedule must have been more or less relentless, living hand to mouth as we know the family did and with no prospect of any pension, it is easy to understand the temptation. He moved his family to a different city and insisted on being more resident with them, but died virtually penniless at a few years under fifty. Papers found at his death suggest he had been trying to manufacture gold by means of alchemy, which would explain the declining interest in touring performance and the utter failure to produce any replacement income.

Stamitz’s after-history is a curious one, produced by trends of academic and musical fashion. Unsurprisingly, he was fairly rapidly forgotten as a performer. As a composer, he is treated by musicologists and music historians as significant, a leading figure of the ‘Mannheim school’ of composition and at least something of an innovator (he is credited with the first known example of left hand pizzicato, in his first viola concerto). However, at least until quite recently, his music has been extremely seldom played and little more often recorded. I will go into this more in the other post on his music.

There are some strangely modern features of Stamitz’s life. The apparently chance shift of main instrument, and making of a living chiefly from touring performance while composing in support of that, could be paralleled with many popular twentieth-century artists (and now that the money has gone back out of recording to live performance, it will probably become a more common pattern again). The ham-fisted attempt at a career change to avoid relentless touring, with disastrous financial results, is not uncommon either, though with better healthcare it is more likely that a modern Stamitz would recover from illness and be forced back on the road by sheer poverty, and more rock and pop musicians have found themselves financially hamstrung by exploitative management than literally trying to turn dross into gold. Nonetheless he is a fairly understandable figure in our times, I think.

Popularity contest

So, my new set of Soundcloud demos consists of (in the order of the playlist):

  • a Classical viola movement (the only one with any accompaniment)
  • a Baroque (specifically, Bach) violin movement
  • a folk fiddle hornpipe set
  • a jazz ballad
  • a sort of klezmer speeding-up rhapsodic take on two Irish reels, played on viola

Now I would have expected their popularity to be roughly in that order, perhaps with the Bach above the viola piece as Bach and specifically the unaccompanied string pieces are much better known than Carl Stamitz’s viola and piano sonatas (though, for the record, they and he deserve wider recognition. I might write a post or two on Stamitz in future); and with the last two in indifferent order, since 7-minute solo violin jazz ballads and solo viola trans-European folk cross-fertilisations are about equally obscure.

However, here are the stats to date:

  • Stamitz Allegro: 6 plays, 2 likes
  • Bach Presto: 2 plays
  • hornpipes: 4 plays, 1 like
  • Come Sunday: 3 plays, 1 like, 1 repost, 1 download
  • reels: 6 plays, 2 likes

Obviously the main conclusion is that this is too small a sample to draw any conclusions, but it’s tempting to draw two others:

  • The unusual has more draw than the already popular.
  • You don’t know what’s going to work with any audience without pushing a load of different things out and seeing what works.

Happy New Year!

The anti-individualist?

I’ve written about music as essentially collaborative rather than competitive before (and I know I should put a link here but, er, nah, no one ever follows them anyway … ), but a rather specific instance is in front of me now.

I don’t think of myself chiefly as a soloist (especially not in the sense of unaccompanied string player – I feel decidedly overexposed playing by myself in front of an audience and much prefer interaction, tending to see pianists as partners rather than accompanists when playing duo pieces with them) but rather as a group member. However, if there’s a wide-scope opportunity repeatedly coming under my nose for which I can reasonably apply as myself as well as working on a band application, then it would be foolish to ignore the opening – in this case a management company apparently looking to massively increase the numbers of musicians and ensembles on their books.

Of course, it goes with being chiefly a group player that what I’m preparing for performance at any given time is likely to be group parts, be it chamber, gigging band or orchestral. If at any given point I am working on some ‘solo’ (with or without piano) violin or viola music it is probably mainly by way of keeping technique up (and hopefully going further upwards – double stops currently under the microscope!) between and around ensemble performances.

My impression is that most starting-out professionals, at least, maintain a core repertoire of potential audition or recital pieces, partly at least from habit while in conservatoire studies and perhaps because most high-level musical training in this country seems to be directed more towards solo performance than ensemble work. If asked to choose their own pieces for audition, therefore, they will simply pick from the current set and polish them a little with an accompanist (probably one they already know). I (a) don’t have any regular accompanists because I’ve been doing barely any duo work, certainly nothing regular, since I stopped living with my parents and (b) have to look at things I’ve learnt but not got to performance standard or merely know of and haven’t played at all and try to guess what level is right to pitch at for audition purposes if I think or know I’m going to have to do one. (Incidentally I hate them, so fear the prospect of one from its remotest appearance on the horizon.) There’s a less codifiable version of the competitive diving puzzle here: do something too easy and the examiners won’t be able to tell if you’re really any good; do something too difficult and you won’t play it well enough.

Nonetheless, my application to be professionally managed has cleared the first hurdle (apparently) to the point where I get invoiced for the first part of the application fee; it only has to advance one more stage and I will need to do an audition, details currently unknown. So I’m going to be pulling pieces I didn’t much expect to revisit out of the pile and trying to second-guess questions I may never know the answer to for sure: how long a programme? or how many movements? how much contrast? one instrument or both? focus on Classical or Modernist (both in the technical sense)?

The things you let yourself in for by carpande Diem (no one correct my Latin) dutifully …

A demonstration

Well, five actually. There are now five new demo tracks in the relevant Soundcloud playlist! Featuring Classical, Baroque, folk, jazz and, er, interfolk fusion? styles, violin and viola, accompanied and unaccompanied performances … and more importantly, much better sound quality and rather better playing than the last lot! Go and take a listen, you might discover things you never knew about my playing …

Cutting a disc

Well actually of course no one cuts discs unless you’re after vinyl copies (from digital masters, of course) to sell for an extra price-bump up. Just like in general recording sessions involve no tape, though you might still say you’re taping, and the difference between an album, an EP and a single has become largely academic since they were all chiefly released on CD, never mind as files with no physical format.

Be all this as it may, I spent this afternoon in an increasingly chilly church recording what will hopefully be a new set of freelance / solo demos. We had to turn the heating off to avoid noise, and I think my fingers would have frozen solid if we hadn’t called it quits after about three hours – luckily I think I have what I need, though I haven’t listened to any of it back yet. Nice acoustic though. This was very much a family affair, so deep and sincere thanks to:

  • my brother Richard for engineering and supplying the recording kit
  • my mum Hilary for playing piano on one track and lending me her semi-Baroque set-up violin for another
  • my dad John for lending me his violin and viola (used on two tracks respectively)

And before you ask why I borrowed instruments instead of playing my own, if you were going home for a week to a house with two violins and two violas in it, would you take a viola or a violin with you? Especially if you had to take everything on the train and you were carrying your family’s Christmas presents? I rest my case.

Results hopefully to go up on Soundcloud within a few days. Watch this space!

Upgrading

So, some new activity over on my Soundcloud, which is more unusual than it probably should be for a freelance musician …

You can now find the BBC Introducing live lounge session I did with Sebastian Vale a few weeks back, up there for posterity (including nice interview check – thanks Sebastian!). If you really want to hear something daft before it’s totally out of season, there’s also a we-protest-at-doing-this-song version of Silent Night from my church‘s Beer and Carols service (in a local pub of course!) including me on highly tasteful and sensitive slide guitar!

And tomorrow afternoon I’m going to be doing some new recordings to replace and hopefully improve on the current batch of work demos. Gulp! Watch this space …

The old and the new

Here’s a bit of a Janus-headed post for this part of the year when we (supposedly, or if we’re obedient to the whims of Facebook’s middle management) are engaged in a lot of looking backwards and forwards.

Have you noticed how landing pages of websites with accounts used to look like:

Sign in

Sign up

And now they’re more like:

CREATE A NEW ACCOUNT!

already a member? log in

Somewhere along the way, some theorists of web publicity got together and decided acquisition is a better use of energy than retention, and this is one result.

But, erm, it doesn’t work if you actually want people to act on their online association with your brand. If the main goal is to collect lots of followers / likes / fans / whatever other word a social network uses (pets? square eyes? addicts?) so when you contact an industry professional you look impressive, then sure, hardly anyone bothers unfollowing (or equivalent) something so just go for acquisition. But for those of us with a certain amount of direct hustling going on as well as trying to get into bed with people that might sign big contracts with us, we’d like a bit more from our Facebook numbers in boxes please. Maybe if I’m playing a concert in the city you live in you’d actually come. Maybe if one of my bands stands to get a festival slot by one of those appalling ‘public vote’ faragos you’d vote. Maybe you’d actually listen to some music or even pay for some. And at that point I actually have to try and communicate and engage with people and make it feel like I want them to keep up with what I’m doing … I mean, of course I do! I’d do this anyway! The fact that it might coincide with career aims is sheerly fortuitous for all of us … er …

Which, if you’re wondering, is why I’m not always posting about depression or how to structure a worship song. They git hits, likes, follows – but not usually anything outside the blogosphere, not even feedback or comments. And I’d like to get a readership a little more interested in me as musician. Remember folks, always read the label (even on a blog).

Musical Christmas

Let’s face it, however profitable Christmas is to musicians, it can be a draining time on our patience and our taste. So, for those who really want to sabotage the next time they have to accompany ‘Away in a Manger’, or feel a burning desire to imitate Marty McFly’s ‘Johnny B Goode’ guitar solo every time they’re involved in ‘Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree’, here are some lesser-known and hopefully less saccharine Christmas favourites of mine that revive my faith in music a little at this point:

From the Squalor of a Borrowed Stable
Thorns in the Straw

And remember (if you can, amid too much to do, to many people to consider and the irony of being stressed over a holiday) to enjoy it. All twelve days if you can, and if you can’t at least 12 hours.

Happy Christmas!