Guitar Collection Fernando Sor (1778 - 1839) and Dionisio Aguado (1784 - 1849) were key figures in the early history of the classic guitar, which emerged in...
Guitar Collection
Fernando Sor (1778 - 1839) and Dionisio Aguado (1784 - 1849)
were key figures in the early history of the classic guitar, which emerged in its present
form some two centuries ago. Both were born in Spain, where they received a sound, formal
education in music.
Sor's career was nomadic. He left Spain in 1813 having found
himself into a difficult political corner after the Franco-Spanish War, and lived in Paris
until 1815; from there he moved to London, where he worked as a performer and taught the
guitar and singing, remaining there until 1823, when he returned to Paris (where his
ballet Cendrillon was performed - he also became a successful composer of opera and ballet
music) en route for a tour of Berlin, Warsaw, Moscow (Cendrillon was performed there too)
and St. Petersburg. Thereafter he again went to live in Paris, but he had perhaps been
away too long, for he found his services were less in demand than he had hoped. He died
there, in, it is believed, reduced circumstances, of cancer of the tongue.
Aguado did not leave Spain until 1826, when he moved to Paris,
preceded by his reputation, and remained there until his return to Madrid in 1837. It was
in Paris, during Sor's second and last sojourn there, that the two men met and formed a
close friendship, living together for some time. Their playing techniques differed
radically: Aguado used the nails of his right hand in plucking the strings but Sor did
not; Aguado said that Sor's method gave a more beautiful sound, but it was too late for
him (Aguado) to change his technique. It was perhaps inevitable that they should play
together and it is reported that in November 1836 they played a duo concert in Paris. By
then Sor had already published several guitar-duo works and it may be significant that,
although some were comparatively easy to play, none predated Aguado's or Sor's arrival in
Paris. One of these was Les deux amis, Op. 41,
the parts of which were marked SOR and AGUADO.
The advent of a new instrument, with a new playing technique,
called for the provision of didactic material and an ample supply of this was forthcoming.
Both Sor and Aguado published tutor books in addition to a wealth of study pieces. Sor's Methode pour la guitare (Paris, 1830) was also
published in translations- parallel German and Italian (Paris and Bonn, 1831) and English
(London, 1832), and was later revised and added to by Napoleon Coste (Paris, ca 1845).
Aguado's (1825/1843, Madrid) has appeared in several later editions that are variously
unreliable, some even useless; a scrupulously faithful new one is published by Tecla
(London). Aguado also invented the tripodison, a stand on which the guitar rested,
relieving the player of the need to support it, but though Sor paid tribute to it there is
no evidence that he ever used one; neither, it seems, did many others, for it died a quiet
death.
The backbone of didactic material is the study (etude, studio
etc.), a piece focused on a particular aspect of technique or music. Sor composed 97 such
pieces in five variously termed sets: Op. 6 (Studios),
Op. 29 (Études/Studios), Opp. 31 and 60 (Lecons progressives), Op. 35 (Exercices tres
faciles). Those of Aguado are contained in his Method and are similarly divided
into Leccions and Estudios. "Lessons" were intended for early-stage students,
in order to develop certain basic techniques, whereas "Studies" were for those
of advanced levels. In Aguado's Method the Leccions
precede the Estudios, and Sor composed his Op. 31 because he realised that his
two preceding sets (Opp. 6 and 29), which he regarded as being complementary, were not
suitable for beginners. Many of those of his Op. 35 are by no means "tres
facile", but those of Op. 60 are among the easiest of all.
Aguado's didactic pieces were embodied in his Method and the
precise technical purpose of each was clearly explained. Only occasionally did Sor specify
the purpose of a study, but where it is musical it is clear, and as he himself explained,
where it is technical it can be clarified by reference to his Method. Both Sor and Aguado
provided adequate fingering for the left and right hands, invaluable in understanding
period practice and even interpretation, but not invariably followed by today's
performers. For example, the execution of Op. 31/19 involves, as Sor explains, a type of
right-hand fingering that is uncommon today, and the ultimate purpose of its use -
technical rather than musical- is now usually served by other means. Norbert Kraft uses
the modern mode of execution.
The minuets of Sor and Aguado are graciously dance-like,
redolent of those of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven - before he began accelerating them into
scherzos. The Minuet Op. 11/6 is one of a set of two themes with variations and twelve
minuets (ca. 1822); the other is the last movement of his Sonata Op. 22 - it was not then unusual to end a
sonata in this way. Aguado's Minuet and Andante are
from comparatively early collections.
Though Sor and Aguado were Spanish by birth their guitar music
is Viennese Classical in style and form, rarely showing any trace of their Hispanic
origins. Both combined fastidious craftsmanship with highly idiomatic writing for the
guitar, and showed leanings toward Romanticism, but though Aguado's music is clear-cut,
pleasing, and often brilliant, it never attains the poetic expressivity of that of Sor.
After the deaths of Sor, Aguado and their contemporaries the
guitar went into recession, squeezed out by the louder-voiced piano and the orchestra,
which better suited the scale of full-blown Romanticism. A later generation of virtuosi
followed in their wake, notably Napoleon Coste (1805- 83), Johann Kaspar Mertz (1806 -
56) and Giulio Regondi (1822 - 72), but the good times had passed. The guitar became
little more than a suitable pastime for well-bred young ladies and a minor inhabitant of
musical evenings, both domestic and in the salon. There it rested until a recovery,
gradual but more effective than politicians are wont to initiate, began through the work
of another Spaniard, Francisco Tarrega Eixea (1852 - 1909), whose crusade to restore the
guitar to a position of respectability culminated in the work of Andres Segovia (1893 -
1987).
Tarrega studied harmony and composition at the Conservatory in
Madrid, and followed a successful concert career throughout Europe, but his most
significant contributions were in the development of technique, composition, and the
refinement of the art of transcription, the arrangement of other music for the guitar. In
the mid-nineteenth century the construction of the guitar was modified by the luthier
Antonio de Torres (1817 -92), strengthening its projection. Tarrega's revision of playing
technique enabled advantage to be taken of this. Like Sor, Tarrega played without the use
of his right-hand nails, but though later generations have rejected this feature in favour
of Aguadoism Tarrega's technique formed the basis on which they built. He
published no method but his principles were transmitted by his students. These changes
created no pressing need for new technical study pieces, but Tarrega wrote 28 various
Estudios and four more so subtitled - The Estudio
brillante, not one of these, is an arrangement of a piano piece by Jean-Delphin
Alard (1815 -88). Most of his original compositions were salon pieces, in which he
displayed a strong gift of melody and cultured harmony, great charm and an occasional
touch of humour.
Most of Tarrega's dances were those which were popular in the
ballrooms of the day (polka, mazurka and waltz), but Maria was born of the then-current
revival of interest in earlier forms of music; it was fashionable to write pieces with
early-dance titles. Tarrega's Gavota bears only notional resemblance to the baroque
gavotte - his (here unrecorded) Pavana bears even less, but we may accept them both for
what they are, charming miniatures. Recuerdos de la Alhambra, a wistful tremolo study, is
the most famous of all his pieces and has been described as the guitarist's national
anthem; many countries have anthems of less charm.
1994 John W. Duarte
Norbert Kraft
The guitarist Norbert Kraft won early distinction in 1975, when
he was awarded the Grand Prize in the Canadian CBC Radio Competition, following this in
1985 with first prize in the Segovia International Competition in Mallorca. He enjoys a
substantial career as a concerto soloist and appears regularly with important orchestras,
particularly in Canada and in the United States of America, as well as in Europe and the
Far East. He was chosen to represent Canada at World Expo '90 in Osaka and again in
Seville in 1992. Norbert Kraft is a faculty member of the Manhattan School of Music in New
York and professor of guitar and chamber music at the University of Toronto and the Royal
Conservatory of Music. He is founder and director of the Toronto Guitarfest.