Abstract

Carlo Ambrogio Lonati and William Babell did not have much in common. They probably never met, and the closest contact the two men ever had was that Babell might have heard Lonati's violin played by his companion, William Corbett. What connects Lonati and Babell, however, is the fact that their sonatas stand on either side of Archangelo Corelli. The young Corelli worked in Rome as a rank-and-file violinist in the orchestra of Christina of Sweden, which was then led by Lonati, nicknamed 'the queen's hunchback'. Lonati's startling virtuosity and his polyphonic writing for the violin may have inspired Corelli to develop these qualities further, smoothing out the rough edges of 17th-century expressiveness into a more classical idiom. Lonati's 12 sonatas (dated 30 January 1701) and Corelli's seminal op.5 sonatas (dated 1 January 1700) exemplify this step. Whereas Lonati's sonatas hark back to the previous century, Corelli's collection looks forward, providing a model for the next generation of composers such as Babell. Babell must have been familiar with Corelli's style through, for example, the presence in London of Corelli's pupil Francesco Geminiani. John Walsh, who was the first to print Corelli's sonatas in England, also published Babell's 24 sonatas in which the composer strives to imitate the Italian master closely. The only known manuscript source of Lonati's 12 sonatas, formerly held at the Sichsische Landesbibliothek, Dresden, was lost during World War II. Based on pre-war photographs, Christoph Timpe has issued a facsimile of the collection. On the surface it shows the same layout as several other Italian sets of violin sonatas of the period. The 12 sonatas are divided into six sonate da chiesa and five sonate da camera, culminating in an extended set of divisions on a ground bass, in this case a descending 4th in the major key. The collection also has a number of archaic elements, such as unexpected harmonic alterations, extrovert rhetorical gestures and a degree of virtuosity unknown to the following generation of Italian violinists. All arias display extensive polyphonic writing and hence doublestopping; top notes regularly reach the 5th, occasionally the 7th position. Six sonatas use scordatura, which was rarely employed in Italy, and then often by composers with strong connections to the North (e.g. Marini, Castrucci, Nardini, Campagnoli). Notably, Lonati's set is dedicated to Emperor Leopold I, in whose realm the use of scordatura was widespread. A few issues not mentioned in the editor's introduction

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