&dCArcangelo Corelli, Sonate da Chiesa a tre\8, Op. 1 &dA(Due Violini, e Violone, o Arcileuto, col Basso per l'Organo) &dAIn Roma, 1683 This CCARH electronic edition of Corelli's Op. 1 is a strict transcription of the edition of J. Joachim and F. Chrysander, published 1888-1891 by Augener, Ltd., London, England. In his editorial preface, Chrysander states: "The figuring of the bass in the first Italian editions is rather less copious than in the present one, because I have availed myself of the additions made in the Dutch and English editions up to the year 1730, which give the chords fuller, without introducing any foreign elements into Corelli's harmony. "About the year 1725 an edition of these works was brought out by John Walsh in London, edited by Dr. Pepusch. However, it cannot be regarded as superior to the incorrect and careless English musical publications of that age, nor be treated as in any respect reliable." The only alterations I have made in transcribing this edition have been to omit changes to C-clef in the bass parts (almost all of which were not really necessary; I retained changes to G-clef, however), and to modernize note beaming on the rare occasions when this was called for. In a number of movements Chrysander (presumably following the 1683 edition) gives an apparently "proportional" time signature, a sign of imperfection (the so-called common-time symbol) next to a 3/2, 3/4, 3/8, or 6/8 signature (as, "C 3/2"). The meaning of this is uncertain. I was not able fully to reproduce this type of signature in the transcription, but I have added an editorial footnote in the first track (Violino 1) of each movement in which it occurs. These are: No. 2, mvt. 4; No. 5, mvts. 1 and 3 (the latter an especially interesting example); No. 6, mvt. 4; No. 9, mvt. 4; No. 10, mvt. 5. &dEListing of Footnotes &dE &dE &dAOp. 1, Sonata IV, Mvt. 4&d@ It is hard to believe that Corelli intended the Phrygian cadence of mm. 37-39 to be the final conclusion of this work. Probably this "forte" passage was intended to be played only as the first ending of this section; the repetition should probably conclude with the A minor cadence of m. 36, and the Violino 1 should close with an A5 half-note in the second half of that measure.