Congrats to Ali!

Alison Luthmers had a release party for her recording of J.H. Roman’s music for solo violin in April (see “Bookstore Events”) and, since then, there have been several enthusiastic reviews in the music press. The latest was in Early Music America. We reprint it here for those of you who might be interested. We have copies of Alison’s cd for sale in the shop.

J.H. Roman’s Inventive, Beguiling ‘Assaggi’

by Ken Meltzer
Published July 20, 2025

Johan Helmich Roman: Assaggi for solo violin. Alison Luthmers, violinRubicon RCD1140

Alison Luthmers: the curious ‘Assaggi’ title piqued her interest (Photo by Johnny Teyssier)

A new release from Rubicon Classics, a British label, features Canadian-American Baroque violinist Alison Luthmers performing four so-called “Assaggi” — a set of violin studies by Swedish composer Johan Helmich Roman (1694-1758). Solo violin music from this era has a rich lineage, from Biber and Bach to Telemann and probably Tartini, so this infrequently heard music by Roman is especially intriguing.

Known as “the father of Swedish music,” Roman was influential in his native land as a composer, instrumentalist, and leader of prominent music organizations. He spent time in the music capitals of Europe, absorbing a cosmopolitan, Italianate style from composers including Bononcini and Geminiani. From around 1715-21, studying and playing in London, Roman was a member of Handel’s Royal Academy of Music opera orchestra at the King’s Theatre, and was likely one of the 50 musicians who performed Water Music on a barge on the Thames in 1717. No wonder he was later known as “the Swedish Handel.”

Among Roman’s compositions are approximately 20 inventive works, from the 1730s, for solo violin given the composer’s own title: Assaggi. Common translations for the Italian word assaggio are “tasting” or “sampling.” In her liner notes, Alison Luthmers adds “essay,” “experiment,” “study,” and “attempt.” (Now living in Sweden, the violinist says it was this curious title that initial piqued her interest in the composer.)

As Luthmers writes, Johann Helmich Roman’s Assaggi explore “varying forms — some are full-fledged works with four or five movements, while others are just fragments.” The four Assaggi that Luthmers performs on this recording — in E minor (BeRI 312), A Major (BeRI 301), G minor (BeRI 314), and G minor (BeRI 320) — comprise, respectively, five, four, four, and three movements.

It appears that Roman preferred to assign neither movement titles nor tempo markings to his Assaggi. Among the 16 movements performed by Luthmers on this recording, only two (the second and fourth in the G minor Assaggi, BeRI 314) contain tempo markings. Several of the movements lend themselves to a leisurely approach. Luthmers views the elements of Roman’s Assaggi as an invitation for exploration and improvisation by the performer. Luthmers explains: “I took the liberty of adding cadenzas as well as repeats or da capos in many of the pieces.” The repeats afford Luthmers ample opportunity to explore ornamentation, as well as a variety of instrumental sonorities, dynamics, and articulation.

The recording was made in two sessions at Copenhagen’s Garnisons Kirke. Luthmers praises the Church’s acoustics for providing the opportunity “to explore the extremes of my instrument.” The variety of tone and dynamics Luthmers coaxes from her Baroque violin is impressive. But it is the sheer beauty and richness that provide the most profound and gratifying impression. These superb performances are documented in recorded sound that offers an arresting balance of presence, detail, and resonant warmth. A marvelous recital.

Ken Meltzer was program annotator for the Pittsburgh and Atlanta Symphony Orchestras, and still authors program notes for several U.S. orchestras, as well as reviewing recording for various publications.

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Ali will be back at Andy’s Corner on October 1 with the Bellevue String Quartet presenting a new program of folk and classical music called Nordic Bridges. Keep posted for more information.

Summertime

We’ll be open tomorrow and closed on Friday and Saturday to celebrate the coming of summer. Let’s hope that the season changes in more ways than one. Or, as Janis put it in the summer of love,

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3Dbn5TNqjuHiU%26pp%3D0gcJCdgAo7VqN5tD&ved=2ahUKEwjs27i_zPqNAxXNJBAIHXtTKZQQ78AJegQIFhAB&usg=AOvVaw2KJkS3MUJqLNX1LYzLOMIA

In the sand

Sometimes, it’s not such a bad thing to have your head in the sand, literally, that is, especially if you’re on the beach near Tarragona in Spain, a bit off the beaten tourist track, where we spent the weekend. With the phone filled with new horrors from the so-called real world outside, it can do you good to keep your head down and see what you find in the world around you. Anyway, here are a few pictures of what I found with my head in the sand that I send as a kind of electronic post card while you wait patiently for the shop to open again on Friday, June 13. Hope to see you then.

Off to Barcelona

We’ll be away from June 5 to June 12, so that means that the store will be closed next week as well as the following Thursday, June 12. So do stop by today if you’re in the neighborhood. You might just catch this one, which I usually play at some point each Saturday. If you haven’t heard of or heard Phil Ochs, you should!

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DrlVfVBFdMaM%26pp%3D0gcJCdgAo7VqN5tD&ved=2ahUKEwjVg_uAoc2NAxUmAxAIHbx2Gp8Q78AJegQIFBAB&usg=AOvVaw1GfHb274m2b10PxxHfXXg_

Heavenbound

In honor of Ascension day, which we will celebrate by being open for your browsing and shopping pleasure, we will be playing the Ascension oratorio by – who else? – Johann Sebastian Bach, whose music we play exclusively on Thursdays. If you can’t make it, or even if you can, have a look and a listen direct from Leipzig. It’s good for the soul even if you might not believe the tale.

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DUlyE7wQeYUw&ved=2ahUKEwjFvoLco8iNAxUXGBAIHZM6KRwQwqsBegQIXxAG&usg=AOvVaw37PzQHVe_QdzZXQ-mkQNrY

Fight fiercely, Harvard

As a Harvard graduate, who studied there when Henry Kissinger, one of the university’s professors, was actively helping the country’s president wage war in southeast Asia as national security adviser and later, after I graduated and moved to Sweden, as secretary of state, it is heartening to see Harvard in the forefront of the struggle against the current president’s efforts to wage war on his own country. In these tragic times, it seems appropriate to remember and sing along to the words of another Harvard graduate, the inimitable Tom Lehrer, in offering our support to the fight. This was one of the first songs he wrote, when he was still a college student in the 1940s, a “genteel” fight song, as he called it, before he wrote the politically satirical songs that were so popular in the 1960s and which we often play at the shop. He gave up song-writing in the 1970s, saying that he couldn’t write political satire after Kissinger won the Nobel peace prize. But his songs, and for that matter, he himself live on. Fight fiercely, Harvard!

https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-samsung-ss&sa=X&sca_esv=696a4842670b0588&sxsrf=AE3TifM7lZSddWTvPfEeKdzi0nRNkwyWww:1748159727072&q=tom+lehrer+fight+fiercely,+harvard&stick=H4sIAAAAAAAAAONgFuLQz9U3MM81SFbi0U_XNyw0zTKyzLYo1BL0LS3OTHYsKsksLgnJD87PS1_EqlSSn6uQk5pRlFqkkJaZnlECJFOLklNzKnUUMhKLyhKLUgB_8_8cUgAAAA&ved=2ahUKEwjTzqu8kr6NAxU0HBAIHTwYGKEQri56BAgeECk&biw=384&bih=783&dpr=2.81

The Boss Speaks

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3D6ZHWIYHlXOs&ved=2ahUKEwjWnvWZvaeNAxU1QlUIHYTOAf8Qx-ULKAB6BAhYEAE&usg=AOvVaw1UkLbXtr6yu9JrX5qvFxAB

It’s a pity he won’t be coming to Sweden, but you can see quite a bit of the concert on you tube. And to think he also grew up in New Jersey…

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DUaVabp8qO6g&ved=2ahUKEwiOh9jAjKqNAxVPJRAIHTRODOYQwqsBegQIIRAG&usg=AOvVaw2M_cn5WMkFAhGA5uSss9bC