Lorenzo Palomo (b. 1938) Nocturnos de Andalucia (Andalusian Nocturnes, 1996) Canciones espanolas (Spanish Songs, 1987-1994) Linked by friendship and...
Lorenzo Palomo
(b. 1938)
Nocturnos de Andalucia (Andalusian Nocturnes, 1996)
Canciones espanolas (Spanish Songs, 1987-1994)
Linked by friendship and by his Andalusian and musical roots
to the guitarist family of the Romeros, Lorenzo Palomo, responding to a request
from Pepe Romero, composed for him a full
Suite concertante for guitar
and orchestra (lasting approximately forty minutes) entitled
Nocturnos de Andalucia (Andalusian Nocturnes). It unfolds in six movements, each
with an expressive title: 'Brindis a la noche' (A Toast to the Night), 'Sonrisa
truncada de una
estrella' (Shattered
Smile of a Star), 'Danza de Marialuna'
(Dance of Marialuna), 'Rafaga' (Gust of Wind), 'Nocturno de Cordoba'
(Nocturne of Cordoba) and 'El tablao' (The Flamenco Stage). The suite was first
performed in Berlin on 27 January 1996, naturally enough with Pepe Romero
performing as soloist and with Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos conducting the Berlin
Radio Symphony Orchestra. It received such fervent applause that the artists
had to perform an encore of the fifth movement: 'Nocturno de Cordoba'.
The Cordoba in which the composer spent his childhood, the
Andalusia of which he forever dreamed, with its poetic echoes of Juan Ramon Jimenez
- 'Danza de Marialuna' takes its inspiration from the poet's verse 'La nina de blanco' (see
Una primavera
andaluza) - and musical
echoes of flamenco, provide a constant inspiration for this very original work,
which is both colourful and very deeply felt. Palomo shows great compositional
skill in writing for groups of instruments. Although a large orchestra is used,
consisting of pairs of woodwind, four French horns, two trumpets, three trombones,
tuba, timpani and a rich array of percussion, the problem of the balance
between orchestra and the smaller sound of the guitar has been resolved. The orchestra
is often heard
tutti, but the sound diminishes progressively, giving way
naturally to the guitar. Conversely, in the passages for solo guitar,
instruments and orchestral sections are added gradually to enable the transition
from the guitar's dialogue with woodwind, strings or percussion to full
orchestral outbursts to be realised in the most seamless of ways. Echoes of Spanish
folk-melodies, rhythms of Andalusian song and dance, lyricism and light, are
the characteristics of this unique work. Somewhat reluctantly, but with understanding
for the request of performers, who often encounter difficulties in programming
such a long
concertante work, Palomo offers the option of omitting some
movements in order to present an abbreviated version, a sort of "suite de la
suite".
Since its première in Berlin,
Nocturnos de Andalucia has
been performed on fifty occasions in Germany, Spain, France, Switzerland, Italy, Norway, Japan, the United States (in eleven different cities), and Cuba. The official Spanish première took place at the National Auditorium on 11 October
1996, during the Madrid Autumn Festival, with Pepe Romero, the Madrid Symphony
Orchestra and the conductor Frühbeck de Burgos. The same soloist and conductor
won the greatest acclaim for this work in the course of the American tour of
the Spanish National Orchestra in 2001.
During his years in San Diego, California, from 1976 to
1981, Lorenzo Palomo attended a concert in Los Angeles, given by the famous
Catalan soprano Montserrat Caballe, whom he already knew from his days in Barcelona. She encouraged him to compose some songs for her voice and he set to the task immediately.
This was, in fact, the origin of the vocal cycle
Del atardecer al
alba (or
Recuerdos de juventud).
Two years later they met again, this time in Berlin, and she told him that she was interested in the songs that she had received from
him.
Finally, in a recital at New York's Carnegie Hall on 27
February 1987, Montserrat Caballe, accompanied by Miguel Zanetti, gave the
first performance of the songs, to warm acclaim. The composer, who was present,
enjoyed this exceptional success, which proved to be of key importance for his
career, since it had a highly positive influence on the New York music critics.
This success was repeated soon after at London's Covent Garden, and the
International Music Company of New York arranged to take charge of the
publication and world distribution of Palomo's vocal works.
As could be expected, the composer did not take long to
return to the concert song genre and in 1992 he wrote the cycle
Una
primavera andaluza (An Andalusian Spring), a set of six songs, all based on
verses by Juan Ramon
Jimenez: 'Los alamos del rio'; 'La nina de blanco'; 'Solo tú'; 'Llueve, llueve';
'Alborada' and 'Eres tan bella'.
The première of this new song cycle took place at the Berlin
Opera, with the soprano Karan Armstrong and the pianist Hans Hilsdorf. Not long
afterwards, at a suggestion from the conductor Miguel Ángel Gomez Martinez,
Lorenzo Palomo orchestrated both these song cycles. In their new symphonic
version,
Del atardecer al alba and
Una primavera andaluza were
first given in Malaga by Marussa Xyni and the City of Malaga Orchestra under
Gomez Martinez on 15th April 1994.
The Malaga concert included the première of two more songs
by Lorenzo Palomo, 'Tientos' and 'Plenilunio', both of which had been written
for Montserrat Caballe a short time before and are based on poems by Antonio Gala.
The same artists would perform them with notable success in Hamburg (October
1995) and Madrid (February - March 1996), while Maria Bayo would win success in
Bilbao with her first public performance of Palomo's vocal music. The two
cycles were published in New York and the two songs based on verses by Gala were
published by SEEMSA in Madrid.
It is very interesting to observe up to what point Palomo's
close contact with opera has left its mark on the character of his songs.
Indeed, in many of these pieces miniature dramas or, more exactly, small 'scenes',
can be perceived, rather than concert songs in the traditional sense. This is
the case in the cycle
Del atardecer al alba, with the song entitled 'Madre,
cuando yo me case' (Mother, when I marry), in which the orchestral
accompaniment has a clearly narrative rôle, or in 'Cancion de la adelfa y el rio'
(Song of the Adelfa and
the River), which is approached as a theatrical dialogue between the two 'characters'.
Even 'La puerta entornada' (The Door ajar) could be said to be influenced by
opera, with its highly contrasting alternation between the orchestral part
(lively and light) and the vocal part (very lyrical and expansively sung); the
same result may be heard in the masterpiece 'La nina de blanco' (The Maiden in
White), in the cycle
Una primavera andaluza, in which an evocative harp
seems to sparkle and the almost ecstatic lyricism of the song is energized by
the orchestral interludes. Lastly, expressive and poetic intimacy reign in such
pieces as 'La muntanya d'amatistes' (The Amethyst Mountain) in the first cycle
or 'Los alamos del rio' (The Poplar Trees by the River) in the Juan Ramon
Jimenez cycle, while in 'Llueve, llueve' (Rain, Rain) the composer writes music
that is in a certain sense impressionistic, with its almost pictorial
expressivity. 'Serrana' (Song of the Mountain), before reaching its impressive
treble ending, is nearer to folk-music than any other of these songs.
The body of Lorenzo Palomo's concert vocal music shows him
to be one of the most successful composers in upholding the genre of Spanish
song expressed in a contemporary language. These pieces by Palomo are distinctively
Spanish without recourse to traditional melodic turns of phrase and
stereotypical harmonies or rhythms. All his music is, moreover, graced with an unquestionably
personal and distinctive orchestration.
Jose Luis Garcia del Busto
Spanish author and
music critic (Madrid, Spain)