GRANADOS: Sentimental Waltzes / 6 Expressive Studies
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916) Piano Music 7 Enrique Granados was born on 27th July 1867 in Lerida, near Barcelona. Son of an army captain, he began...
Enrique Granados (1867-1916)
Piano Music 7
Enrique Granados was born on 27th July 1867 in
Lerida, near Barcelona. Son of an army captain,
he began his study of the piano in 1879 and the
following year he continued with Joan Baptista
Pujol (1835-1898) at the Academia Pujol. Three
years later he performed Schumann's Sonata,
Opus 22, in an academy-sponsored competition,
for which one of the jury members was the noted
composer Felipe Pedrell (1841-1922). The
sixteen-year-old Granados won the competition
and obviously impressed Pedrell, who began
giving Granados classes in harmony and
composition in 1884. In 1887 Granados went to
Paris, where he studied with Charles de Beriot
(1833-1914). He was highly influenced by the
latter's insistence on tone-production and pedal
technique. In addition, Beriot emphasized
improvisation in his teaching, reinforcing his
pupil's natural ability in the skill. After returning
to Barcelona in 1889, Granados published his
Danzas espanolas, which brought him
international recognition.
In his lifetime Granados gave concerts in
Spain, France and New York collaborating with
conductors such as Isaac Albeniz and Pablo
Casals, the violinists Eugene Ysaye and Jacques
Thibaud, pianists Mieczyslaw Horszowski and
Camille Saint-Saens. In addition to his numerous
piano works he composed chamber music, vocal
music, operas, and symphonic poems. He was
also a fine teacher and in 1901 he founded the
Academia Granados, which produced such noted
musicians as Paquita Madriguera, Conchita
Badia, and Frank Marshall.
In 1912 Granados met the American pianist
Ernest Schelling, who was the first pianist to
perform Granados' music outside Spain.
Schelling arranged for his works to be published
in New York and encouraged Granados in his
plans to convert the piano suite Goyescas into an
opera, later arranging for its premiere at the
Metropolitan Opera in New York. Terrified of the
ocean, Granados nevertheless sailed to New York
for the premiere of the opera on 28th January
1916. While in the United States he performed
numerous concerts, made piano-roll recordings,
and also performed at the White House in
Washington. He and his wife set sail for Europe
via Liverpool, but while crossing the English
Channel on the British ship Sussex, their boat was
torpedoed by a German submarine and they both
perished.
About the year 1912 Granados wrote: "My
motto has always been to renounce an easy
success in order to achieve one that is true and
lasting." Today he is universally recognised as
one of Spain's most important composers, with
music that is multi-faceted, although it is
essentially Romantic with some nationalist
characteristics. He has been variously described
as "the Spanish Chopin", "the last Romantic",
and by his compatriots as "our Schubert", but no
single characterisation adequately describes his
personality. He had a distinctive voice that is
instantly recognisable and entirely his own.
Granados was primarily influenced by midnineteenth
century European Romanticism,
especially the music of Schumann and Chopin.
The introverted luxuriance of his luminous
harmonies, his rich palette of pianistic colour,
loose formal structures and his vivid imagination,
always tinged with nostalgia, place him firmly
within the Romantic School. It has frequently
been commented that large forms, such as sonatas
and concertos did not attract him. His artistic
personality was better suited to shorter, rhapsodic
forms, especially those based on variations.
The manuscript of Valses sentimentales does
not have a general title The individual waltzes,
however, have some of the most romantic and
evocative titles used by the youthful composer.
Granados' teacher, Felipe Pedrell made an
isolated reference to Valses sentimentales while
mentioning other works by his student. The first
critical edition of Granados' piano works
therefore took the liberty of using the same title
for this collection of waltzes, in the belief that
Pedrell's reference, as well as the titles given by
the composer to the individual waltzes justify this
action. Valses sentimentales was composed about
1890, possibly as a preliminary study for another
collection of waltzes, Cartas de amor (Tracks
30--33). In two instances Granados used
melodies which he had first written for Valses
sentimentales as melodic material for Cartas de
amor. A melody found in Allegro appassionato,
the fifth waltz of Valses sentimentales, became the
principal melody of Suspirante, the second waltz
of Cartas de amor, and the conclusion of Allegro
final from Valses sentimentales was transformed
into the opening melody of Cartas de amor.
While Granados is known universally as a
composer and pianist, it is often forgotten that he
was also a highly esteemed teacher. He took his
pedagogic responsibilities very seriously and was
highly successful as a teacher, renowned for his
own distinctive method of teaching. He wrote
numerous works for his students including
Bocetos, 6 Estudios expresivos en forma de piezas
faciles, 7 Estudios, Cuentos de la juventud (Naxos
8.554629), and Allegro appassionato (Naxos 8.554628).
The manuscript of 7 Estudios is untitled and
undated. Each of the 7 Estudios was intended to
develop specific technical skills at the keyboard.
The level of difficulty of the individual studies,
however, is quite varied, ranging from elementary
to moderately complex.
6 Estudios expresivos en forma de piezas
faciles, composed about 1905, were written for
Granados' students as studies in musical
expression. The melancholy character of No. 3, El
caminante, contrasts with the tranquil rural
landscape depicted in No. 4, Pastoral, which is
interrupted by a rustic dance. No. 5, La ultima
pavana, was inspired by a poem written by Apeles
Mestres (librettist for several of Granados'
operas) with the title La condesa enferma (The Ill
Countess):
The Countess is ill
with a strange illness;
her eyes once shining
now dull...her feet have no will to serve her...
Three of the four pieces of Bocetos, Despertar
del cazador, El hada y el nino and La campana de
la tarde, were inspired by specific scenes each
with a unique atmosphere, and they are among
Granados' most expressive pedagogical works.
Granados published Exquise...! Vals tzigane
in an unknown magazine about 1900 under the
pen name "Henri Gaziel", an amalgam of his
name in French and the title of one of his operas
whose main character bears the same name. The
opera Gaziel, first performed in 1906, was
inspired by Goethe's Faust. Despite the use of the
pen-name, this thoroughly engaging waltz does
not seem to have any relationship to the opera
Gaziel.
Granados wrote L'himne dels morts at the
request of his colleague Eduard Lopez Chavarri
(1875¡V1970) for a special publication prepared by
the Circulo de Bellas Artes, Valencia, to raise
money for the victims of the flood of the Turia
river in 1897. Owing to the nature of the
composition it is unlikely that it was ever
performed in public. Writing in 1916, shortly
after Granados' death, Lopez Chavarri
commented that L'himne dels morts is a "hymn
for the drowned" and represented a "terrible
coincidence, [an] anticipation of fate. . [as if
Granados] was writing his own hymn!"
One of Granados' most intimate compositions,
Cartas de amor, was written about 1892 as an
engagement present for Amparo Gal Llovera, the
composer's fiancee. The couple were married in
1893 and had six children. Granados dedicated
two other works to his wife, Serenata (Naxos
8.555723) and his masterpiece, Quejas o la maja
y el ruisenor from Goyescas (Naxos 8.554403).
The Catalan instrument maker Baldomero
Cateura presented his Piano-pedalier Cateura in
Barcelona and Paris in 1898. Although no
surviving examples of the instrument are known
to exist, it was a piano equipped with four pedals
used to alter the timbre of the standard piano to
create special effects, such as prolonging certain
notes, augmenting the sound quality of the
strings, and imitating the timbre of the
harpsichord. Granados composed four works for
this instrument, A la Antigua -- Bourree (Track 34),
Minuetto (Track 35), La gondola -- Escena
poetica (Track 36) and Apparicion (Naxos
8.554629). A la Antigua -- Bourree was
dedicated to the composer Antonio Noguera and
La gondola - Escena poetica was dedicated to the
pianist Montserrat Sampere. The longest and
most significant of the four pieces, La gondola -
Escena poetica, was long considered to be a lost
work. The only known extant copy was
discovered in 2001 by the musicologist Laura
Guastevi at the Conservatori Superior de Musica
del Liceu, Barcelona. The score contains the
following text without attribution:
A tranquil night, moonlit night,
Venice sleeps while the lover's gondola
crosses the silver lake.
Douglas Riva
This performance follows the critical edition of the Complete Works for Piano of Enrique Granados,
published by Editorial Boileau, S.A., Barcelona, Spain, Alicia de Larrocha, Director and Douglas Riva,
Assistant Director.
Valses sentimentales, DLR VII:4 (more info)
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Vivo: Mis Iloros y anoranzas eran cantos tristes, DLR VII:4.1 - 2:54
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Andante, DLR VII:4.2 - 1:37
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Vivo: Nos habiamos apasionado mutuamente, DLR VII:4.3 - 1:04
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Dolente: No habia ya mas que tristeza donde faltara ella!, DLR VII:4.4 - 1:41
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Allegro appassionato, DLR VII:4.5 - 1:23
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Andantino amoroso, DLR VII:4.6 - 0:46
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Allegro pastoral en forma de vals, DLR VII:4.7 - 1:56
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Sentimentale, DLR VII:4.8 - 1:06
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Dolente, DLR VII:4.9 - 1:20
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Allegro final, DLR VII:4.10 - 1:24
7 Estudios, DLR IV:4 (more info)
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A major, DLR IV:4.1 - 0:35
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F sharp minor, DLR IV:4.2 - 0:21
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E major, DLR IV:4.3 - 0:24
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D flat major, DLR IV:4.4 - 0:24
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Allegro, G major, DLR IV:4.5 - 0:54
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C sharp major, DLR IV:4.6 - 1:33
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B flat major, DLR IV:4.7 - 0:31
6 Estudios expresivios en froma de piezas faciles, DLR IV:5.1 (more info)
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Tema y variaciones, DLR IV:5.1 - 3:12
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Allegro moderato, DLR IV:5.2 - 2:07
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El caminante, DLR IV:5.3 - 2:35
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Pastoral, DRL IV:5.4 - 2:20
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La ultima pavana, DLR IV:5.5 - 4:28
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Maria - Romanza sin palabras, DRL IV:5.6 - 1:18
Bocetos: Coleccion de Obras faciles, DLR IV:10 (more info)
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Despertar del cazador, DLR IV:10.1 - 1:34
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El hada y el nino, DLR IV:10.2 - 2:02
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Vals muy lento, DLR IV:10.3 - 6:29
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La campana de la tarde, DLR IV:10.4 - 2:26
Exquise...! Vals tzigane, DLR VII:7 (more info)
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Exquise...! Vals tzigane, DLR VII:7 - 3:17
L'himne dels morts, DLR V:5 (more info)
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L'himne dels morts, DLR V:5 - 2:24
Cartas de amor: Valses intimos, DLR VII:6 (more info)
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Cadencioso, DLR VII:6.1 - 1:25
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Suspirante, DLR VII:6.2 - 0:43
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Dolente, DLR VII:6.3 - 1:36
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Appassionato, DLR VII:6.4 - 0:49
A la Antigua: Bourre, DLR III:19 (more info)
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A la Antigua: Bourre, DLR III:19 - 4:06
Minuetto, DLR III:17 (more info)
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Minuetto, DLR III:17 - 3:39
La Gondola (more info)
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Escena poetica, DLR III - 6:34