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Friday, November 19, 2021

Torelli, Concerto for two violins


The dialogue between soloist and orchestra
The idea of a dialogue between an isolated soloist and a supporting orchestra was not so far from the composers' minds at the end of the 17th century. After all, this had already been happening in opera for more than a century, when singers began to act as a solo instrument in charge of a melody, accompanied by a more or less dense orchestra. The human voice, of course, has always been the same, or at least it has never required technological advances for its development. The same is not true of instruments.

Technological improvements
During that century, the quality of the violin made by Italian craftsmen had been enjoying substantial improvements by the Lombard families Amati, Guarneri, or Stradivari. Thanks to this, the concertino group instrumentalists were able to add to the virtuosic exercises allowed by the concerto grosso a quality of sound unknown until then, which will demand special attention. The appearance of the solo instrument was just a step away. Technological improvement and the idea of dialogue between instrument and orchestra brought by the opera will go hand in hand so that the musical world of the West will know a new transformation of the expressive medium: the concerto for solo instrument and orchestra.

Giusseppe Torelli (1658 - 1709)
Torelli
It is the Veronese Giuseppe Torelli who has entered history as the creator of the new form or, at least, the first to use it more openly. Despite the discovery, little is known about his beginnings as a musician – as well as about his last years. Born in Verona, Italy, in 1658, he left the city in the early 1680s to take up the post of maestro di capella at the Cathedral of Imola in Bologna shortly afterward. He would later travel through Germany and also visit Vienna, returning to Bologna in 1701 where he would assume a position in the newly reconstituted musical chapel of San Petronio.

12 Concerti grossi with a pastoral
Torelli called his orchestral pieces symphonies, sometimes sonatas, but also concertos. His Concerti musicali opus 6, from 1698, shows passages for solo violin, not very abundant, certainly, nor very outstanding, but enough to distinguish a soloist in comparison with the concertino group of the concerto grosso.
The disintegration of the concertino group would come somewhat later with the posthumous publication of his 12 Concerti grossi with a pastorale Opus 8, from 1709, in which a violin –or two, as the music evolves- confronts the rest of the orchestra with passages where he can feel free to take the initiative. From here onwards, all that remains is to wait for the virtuoso performers to appear.

Concerto for two violins Op. 8 No. 5
From the Opus 8 series, the Concerto No. 5 for two violins in G major is presented here, in a performance by the Croatian Baroque Ensemble. For our current idea of a concerto, the work is very short. It lasts barely eight minutes and follows the fast-slow-fast scheme of only three movements that Alessandro Scarlatti had just consecrated for his Italian overtures: Allegro - Andante - Allegro.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Ernesto Lecuona, "Y la Negra Bailaba"


Ernesto Lecuona, the greatest composer the island of Cuba has ever given to the world, was at the height of his fame when his single song "Siempre en mi corazón" – part of the soundtrack of the eponymous film – was in close competition for an Oscar award for best song in 1942. He did not get it, but it mattered little to the author because his zarzuela Maria la O and the song Siboney had been applauded all over the world for more than ten years.

A fruitful composer
However, such pieces, famous in their time, are a tiny part of the composer's output born in Guanabacoa, a suburb of Havana, in 1895. The versatile and prolific creator of Malagueña is the author of about 400 songs, 37 orchestral works, eleven movie soundtracks, numerous zarzuelas, ballets, and even an opera. To all this must also be added more than 170 pieces for solo piano.

Ernesto Lecuona (1895 - 1963)
The native music
This last sphere is where Lecuona stands out to this day with vernacular brilliance. Highly valued as an interpreter of Liszt, Chopin, or Gershwin, the Cuban composer brought Afro-Cuban rhythms to the concert hall that were absent from the traditional stages until the end of the 19th century. Following in the footsteps of Ignacio Cervantes and others, Lecuona made it possible for local motifs and rhythms to occupy a space of their own, signaling with his work that Cuba and its music were also beyond the walls of Havana's elegant salons.

"Y la Negra Bailaba!"
The production of piano pieces occupied Lecuona mainly in the 1920s and 1930s. From those years are the eternal Comparsa and the unsurpassable rhythmic gem "¡Y la Negra Bailaba!"
The latter is presented here in a rendition by Cuban maestro Gabriel Urgell Reyes. It begins with two bars in charge of the left hand only, a common feature of many of Lecuona's piano pieces, a hallmark that, in a recital, allowed them to be immediately identified.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Salieri, Piano Concerto in C major


Better known today for the musical personalities with whom he was associated than for himself, the Italian musician Antonio Salieri nevertheless enjoyed wide recognition as a conductor and opera composer in Vienna and Paris during the 1770s and 1780s.

Of course, none of this was picked up by the 1984 film Amadeus, which, according to legend, decided to feature him as Mozart's alleged poisoner, albeit in a comedy tone.
The truth is that among the many illustrious pupils Salieri took in – Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt, Czerny –, there was one by the name of Franz Xavier Mozart, a son of Wolfgang Amadeus.
Then as now, no one is taught by someone who has poisoned his father.

Early years
Born in Legnago, today in the province of Verona, Italy, in 1750, Antonio Salieri received his first lessons from his older brother, and at the age of 18 he composed his first opera, La Vestale, now lost and probably not a major success.
But he recovered in 1771 with Armida, which for the 21-year-old Antonio Salieri was a great step forward, since it secured him a prominent position among the musical circles of Vienna, where he had arrived in 1766, under the guidance of Florian Gassmann, the court composer.

Antonio Salieri (1750 - 1825)
A prominent figure
Upon Gassmann's death in 1774, he assumed his position as well as that of director of the city's Italian Opera Company. This was followed by an increasingly successful career in Milan, Venice, and Paris. From then until 1790 Salieri would live his best years; he is one of the most prominent figures in musical Europe and occupies a social position that none of his talented contemporaries, including Mozart, could ever attain. There was, therefore, no need to poison anyone.

Piano Concerto in C major
Primarily a composer of operas, Antonio Salieri wrote a modest number of instrumental works. These include two piano concertos. The C Major Concerto, composed in 1773, is presented here.
Gallant in style, its movements are:

00        Allegro maestoso
08:58  Larguetto
16:00  Andantino

The rendition is by South Korean pianist Heeguin Kim, accompanied by the Amadeus Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Yongho Choi.