MANUEL DE FALLA AND JOAQUIN TURINA:
MAESTROS FROM ANDALUCIA
Notes
by Adam Kent
Spaniards in Paris
Writing
in the Spanish newspaper La
Vanguardia in
1912, Joaquín Turina offered the following description of his debut
in Paris at which his newly composed piano quintet was first
performed:
“Already
in place on stage and with the first violinist’s bow poised to
begin, we saw a fat gentleman with a huge black beard and an enormous
wide-brimmed hat rush in, flushed with haste. A minute later, in
absolute silence, the performance began. After a while, the fat
gentleman turned to his neighbor, a slight young man, and asked him,
‘Is the composer an Englishman?’ ‘No sir, he’s from Seville,’
replied the slight young man, completely stupefied. The performance
continued, and in the end they were as one, the fat gentleman
bursting into the artists’ room accompanied by the slight young
man. He approached me and with the utmost courtesy pronounced his
name: Isaac Albéniz. A half-hour later the three of us were
strolling arm-in-arm across the Champs-Elysées in the graying autumn
twilight; after crossing the Place de la Concorde we settled down in
a bar on Rue Royale, and there, amidst champagne and pastries, I
experienced the most complete metamorphoses of my life. There the
patria
chica began
to shine; there we spoke of Spanish music with ‘vistas towards
Europe,’ and from there I left completely changed in my ideas. We
were three Spaniards in our little group in a corner of Paris, and we
had to make great efforts for the music of Spain. In shall never
forget that scene, nor do I think will the slight young man, who was
none other than the great Manuel de Falla.”
Like
so many great Spanish composers of their generation, Joaquín Turina
and Manuel de Falla, both natives of Andalucía, established
themselves in Paris in the period leading up to the First World War.
There the two composers formed a life-long friendship, at one point
living as neighbors at the Hotel Kléber. Falla was already an
accomplished musician who had won two prizes in Spain in 1905—one
for pianists sponsored by the Ortiz y Cussó firm, the other
organized by the Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando for
composition. For this latter prize, Falla composed his first fully
mature masterwork, the one-act opera La
vida breve.
Paris was to provide a professional launching pad for Falla, a chance
to pursue the performances and publication of his music which had
eluded him in his native country. Contemporary French musical culture
also furnished Falla with much inspiration, especially the work of
Claude Debussy, with whom Falla eventually established a cordial if
sometimes tense relationship. Turina arrived in Paris in 1905
somewhat less fully formed as a musician. He came to study, enrolling
in the composition class of Vincent d’Indy at the Schola Cantorum
and the piano studio of Moritz Moszkowski. Indeed, as the above
anecdote makes clear, Turina’s devotion to a nationalistic idiom
evolved only after he had mastered a traditionally mainstream
approach to musical form and harmony.
Turina’s
posthumous reputation has suffered somewhat from the comparison with
Falla. The latter composer was indeed a rare phenomenon, an artist
who seemed to reinvent himself with each major work. It can be hard
to fathom that the composer of the perfumed, impressionistic Noches
en los jardines de España could
evoke the rawness of Andalusian gypsy culture in El
amor
brujo,
the elegance of eighteenth-century Castile in El
sombrero de tres picos,
and the siglo-de-oro mysticism of El
Retablo de Maese Pedro
all within little more than a decade. Turina, though, was a far more
prolific artist, who discovered his voice as a young composer in
Paris and produced an impressive body of work in a wide range of
genres. His style may not have evolved as dramatically as Falla’s,
but his musical presence is equally powerful and immediately
recognizable. The 125th
anniversary of Turina’s birth furnishes the ideal occasion to
juxtapose the work of these two maestros from Andalucía.
Manuel
de Falla (1876-1946)
Transcriptions from El Retablo de Maese Pedro, El amor brujo, and El sombrero de tres picos
El
Retablo de Maese Pedro
owes its existence to a commission in 1919 from Princess Edmond de
Polignac of an opera for marionette theater to be staged at her
Parisian residence. Falla settled on the titeres
scene from Cervantes’s Don
Quixote,
in which the novel’s eponymous hero witnesses a puppet show and
loses all perspective on the actuality of the drama. The acerbic,
neo-Renaissance style of the writing is enhanced by Falla’s use of
the harpsichord in the original instrumentation, one of the first
instances of newly composed music for that instrument in the
twentieth century and a harbinger of the wonderful harpsichord
concerto Falla would produce a few years later.
El
amor brujo was
inspired by the legendary gypsy bailarina
Pastora
Imperio, who in 1914 requested a work from Falla she could “sing
and dance.” The ballet which emerged is based on a scenario by
Martínez Sierra, who adapted a tale of love and obsession related to
him by the dancer’s mother. The music impressively evokes the cante
jondo
vocal style Falla would later study in such depth with Federico
García Lorca. The most celebrated numbers from the ballet—the
“Danza ritual del fuego” (Ritual Fire Dance) and the “Danza del
terror” (Dance of Terror)—owe their popularity to piano
transcriptions triumphantly connected to Arthur Rubinstein.
As
premiered in London in 1919, El
sombrero de tres picos
was the product of a collaboration between several of Europe’s
brightest stars. Falla composed the ballet score, Pablo Picasso
provided costume and scenic design, and Leonid Massine undertook the
choreography in a production by Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes de Monte
Carlo. The scenario, popular in origins, was based on a novel by
Antonio Pedro de Alarcón. The famed “Danza del molinero”
(Miller’s Dance), a ruggedly masculine farruca,
was composed on twenty-four hours notice at the suggestion of
Diaghilev, who felt his lead male dancer Massine needed a solo to
complement the more extensive “Danza de la molinera” (Dance of
the Miller’s Wife) already in the score. This dance has also
achieved notoriety in the piano transcription heard tonight.
Pièces espagnoles
Along
with La
vida breve,
the Pièces
espagnoles
were the first fruits of Falla’s compositional maturity. Each of
the four pieces evokes a particular region (colony, in the case of
“Cubana”) of Spain in an idiom at once polyphonic in texture and
impressionistic in sonority. The collection—begun in Spain before
Falla’s departure for Paris in 1907—is dedicated to Isaac
Albéniz.
The
opening “Aragonesa” presents a lively jota
in alternation with a more languorous secondary thematic area,
derived from the triplet figurations of the first. “Cubana”
repeatedly juxtaposes measures of 6/8 and ¾ in the seductive style
of a Cuban guajira.
“Montañesa” recalls the delicate texture of Debussy’s work,
with its numerous bell imitations and fragmentary handling of
thematic materials. A lively middle section quotes a popular regional
folk song. The concluding “Andaluza” presages the gypsy outbursts
Falla would later immortalize in “Polo,” the last of the Siete
canciones populares españolas,
in the ballet El
amor
brujo,
and in the final movement of his Noches
en los jardines de España.
All four pieces end in quiet contemplation.
Fantasía bætica
Having
scored such a triumph with his transcription of the “Ritual Fire
Dance,” Arthur Rubinstein eagerly commissioned a piano solo from
Falla. The Fantasía
bætica,
completed in 1919, was originally entitled simply “Fantasía,”
but Falla’s London-based publisher Chester requested a more
distinctive name. “Bætica” is an allusion to the ancient Roman
province corresponding to modern-day Andalucía. The music, though,
has little to do with toga-clad senators and philosophers and much
more to do with the gypsy culture of that region. The work unfolds as
an epic sonata form, full of impressive guitar imitations, convincing
approximations of cante
jondo,
and the dark-hued state of obsessive possession sometimes termed
duende.
Rubinstein performed the work on several occasions, but ultimately
abandoned it, apparently disappointed by its length and difficulty.
It has been left to more recent generations of pianists to claim for
it its rightful place as one of the masterpieces of the Spanish piano
literature.
Joaquín
Turina (1882-1949)
Danzas fantásticas, Op. 22
The
three Danzas
fantásticas
were composed originally for solo piano in 1918, although they have
become better known in Turina’s orchestration. In their way, the
dances complement Falla’s Pièces
espagnoles,
in that each one alludes to a specific region of Spain. The pieces
were loosely inspired by La
orgía,
a novel by Turina’s friend José Mas. “Exaltación” is a jota,
the quintessential dance of Aragón, and is prefaced by the following
citation from Mas’s novel: “It seemed as if the figures of that
incomparable picture were moving inside the chalice of a flower.”
“Ensueño” is cast in the unmistakable 5/8 meter and dotted
rhythm of the Basque zortziko.
Mas’s words introduce the piece: “ The guitar’s strings sounded
the lament of a soul helpless under the weight of bitterness.”
“Orgía” is another Andalusian farruca,
whose rugged swagger is summed up in Mas’s effusive prose: “The
perfume of the flowers merged with the aroma of manzanilla,
and from the bottom of raised glasses, full of wine incomparable as
incense, joy flowed.”
Sanlúcar de Barrameda: Sonata pintoresca para piano, Op. 24
Sanlúcar
de Barrameda is a popular seaside resort at the mouth of the
Guadalquivir River on the Mediterranean, about 30 miles downstream
from Seville. Turina was familiar with the small town and premiered
his Sonata
pintoresca
there in the summer of 1922. The work is arguably Turina’s
masterpiece for solo piano, a perfect reconciliation of Andalusian
atmosphere and imagery with traditional formal procedures. Like of
most of the composer’s multi-movement works, Sanlúcar
de Barrameda
employs cyclical form, in which themes are reworked from movement to
movement. This stylistic tendency was a hallmark of most composers
who trained at the Parisian Schola Cantorum, a characteristic
Turina’s music shares with that of Vincent d’Indy, Guillaume
Lekeu, Ernest Chausson, and many others.
The
first movement, “En la torre del Castillo” (In the Castle Tower),
is a traditional sonata form, which lays out much of the thematic
material for the entire work. The second movement, “Siluetas de la
Calzada” (Silhouettes on the Promenade) is sparkling scherzo, which
quotes a processional theme from the first movement as its
contrasting middle section. Sanlúcar de Barrameda is noted for its
beautiful beach, immortalized in the sonata’s brooding third
movement, “La playa” (The Beach). The writing here is
particularly impressionistic in its evocation of oceanic imagery, and
at the end, sweeping arpeggios form a link with the final movement.
“Los pescadores en Bajo de Guía” (The Fishermen in Bajo de
Guía), an allusion to Sanlúcar’s fishing district, opens with a
strict fugal exposition. Throughout the movement, various
restatements of the initial theme recur as old-fashioned fugatos.
Some of the contrasting episodes recall material from previous
movements, but perhaps the most memorable bears an uncanny
resemblance to Gershwin’s “I’ve got rhythm!”

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