Respighi: Suite in E major
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Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936) Suite in E major Variazioni sinfoniche Preludio, corale e fuga Listening to the early orchestral works of Respighi all...
Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936)
Suite in E major Variazioni sinfoniche Preludio, corale e fuga
Listening to the early orchestral works of Respighi all
recorded here for the first time, one would never
suppose the composer to have been Italian. They belong
to the earlier period of Respighi's career, before the
water-shed of his development, which, in his own
judgement, came at the age of 37, in 1916, the year of
Fontane di Roma. If Respighi had lived no longer than
this, posterity would have seen him as a very talented
Bologna composer, a former pupil of the violinist
Federico Sarti, of Luigi Torchi and, for composition, of
Giuseppe Martucci, with a predilection for a form of
music largely neglected at that time in Italy: the
symphonic. Bologna was, in fact, the centre of Germanoriented
tendencies, and the whole musical atmosphere
of the place, where Respighi, like Toscanini, served as
orchestral players, exercised an influence on the
composer that deserves further detailed treatment.
Respighi had first studied German and French
composers even more seriously than he had the Italian
masters, writing music that contains more or less overt
tributes to the former, in, for example, sonatas, quartets,
orchestral suites and songs. These works he eventually
put on one side, but never destroyed, although very few
were published in his life-time.
Another very important influence on Respighi's
early symphonic work came from the Russian school. In
1900-1 and 1902 he accepted a contract from the
Imperial Theatres of St Petersburg and the Bolshoy in
Moscow as a viola-player for two seasons of Italian
opera. This brought him an introduction to Rimsky-
Korsakov, who immediately recognised his talent and
gave him lessons over a period of five months. In
between his two stays in Russia, Respighi took a
composer's diploma at the Conservatory of Bologna
with his Preludio, corale e fuga, his second work for a
large symphony orchestra. Other important events in
Respighi's early career include the two periods he spent
in Berlin, in 1902 as an occasional and somewhat
dissatisfied pupil of Max Bruch and in 1908 as a piano
coach in the singing-class of Etelka Gardini Gerster. In
1913 he was appointed professor of composition at the
Liceo di Santa Cecilia in Rome, where he remained until
his death in 1936.
Respighi had his Symphonic Variations performed
for the first time at the Bologna Conservatory on 24th
June 1900 and took the score with him to Russia, where
Rimsky-Korsakov was favourably impressed by the
work. Still neo-classical in form, the work gives the
impression of a tribute to the romanticism of Cesar
Franck and Brahms. It consists of a series of
passacaglia-like variations, preceded by an introduction
and the actual passacaglia theme in D minor,
transformed, in various episodes, into a march, an
adagio and a scherzo. The climax comes in a fugue,
introduced by the organ, leading to a triumphant
restatement of the theme in D major. Already Respighi
shows a masterly command of writing for brass. The
orchestration includes a cor anglais, two harps and
organ, with timpani, the only percussion instrument
used. The Variazioni sinfoniche is still a long way from
the Metamorfoseon of 1930, but shows the composer's
early interest in variation form.
The Preludio, corale e fuga is conceived on a larger
scale and is double the length, although in a similar
style. It was orchestrated in Russia and is dated March
1901. It is possible that Rimsky-Korsakov himself
supervised the work, although this is not apparent from
the music, which, in any case, was presumably sketched
out before Respighi went to Russia. This time there is a
touch of Saint-Saëns, with a clear initial reference to the
Organ Symphony, while we may suspect the ending as a
possible reference to Strauss's tone-poem Also sprach
Zarathustra. The scoring is for a similar orchestra to that
used in the Variazioni sinfoniche, without the organ, but
with percussion. Unlike Cesar Franck's work of the
same title, Respighi's work amalgamates the three
musical forms into one piece, which develops in a cyclic
and almost symphonic way. The Corale is dominant and
subject to development from its original form to a lyrical
episode with violin solo, to re-appear in the final section.
The Preludio is built up into a series of chords that form
the basis of the Corale itself, followed by the actual
theme, with its reminiscence of Saint-Saëns, but this last
has also a scherzo-like function in the central episode,
serving eventually as a development of the Fuga.
Martucci was sufficiently impressed to declare Respighi
not a pupil but already a master.
Manuscript versions of the Suite in E major survive
from 1901 and 1903. Of the former there is no record of
performance, while the Adagio of the second version
was given on 23rd May 1907 under the direction of
Pietro Cimini. It seems probable that the second version
was at some point played in its entirety, since the
original orchestral material contains markings and
corrections by the musicians. The first version of the
Suite has in brackets the additional title Sinfonia, a
description perhaps rejected for reasons of modesty,
since Respighi's only work of this kind is the Sinfonia
drammatica of 1914. It is tempting to retain the title
'Symphony' for the second version, in the orchestral
material of which (and not in the score) some
inappropriate movement titles appear - I. Nella foresta,
II. Visione, III. Danza and IV. Eroica. The work may be
seen as a particularly elaborate example of the
symphony, with appropriate movement key
relationships of E major, D flat major, B minor / B major
and E major. It is in fact only the second movement that
is characteristic of a traditional suite, an arrangement, in
the same key, of a love-duet from the first act of the
opera Semirâma, a work that Respighi withdrew after its
first performance. Some more music of Semirâma can
be heard in this Suite. There is considerable musical
interest in the scherzo, with its trio of Russian character,
while the first and last movements are clearly linked to
the music of Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov and, even
more, to that of Dvofiak. Nevertheless, whatever his debt
to these composers, Respighi uses a more advanced
technique of development. Apart from a short excursion
into the pathetic before the affirmation of the march in
the finale, the work is optimistic.
The period of three years between the Suite and
Burlesca saw the composition of two more suites, both
for string orchestra, one with organ and the other with
solo flute, and the comic opera Re Enzo. The stylistic
differences between these works and Burlesca are
obvious and it is tempting to regard the latter work as the
beginning of Respighi's impressionism. It had its
première in Bologna in May 1906. Contrasting elements
in the form of scherzoso interventions, which Respighi
intended as justification of the title, serve this purpose,
while sustaining the development of the lyrical main
theme. Allusions to other composers may be fewer, but
there is already a tendency towards the symphonic
poem, with suggestions of the sounds of water to be
heard later in Fontane di Roma and passages
anticipating the comic mood of Belfagor. The work is
scored without trombones, but with four French horns
and double wind, and delicate writing for celesta and
harp.
In 1913 Respighi appeared as a conductor of his
own works in ten different Italian cities. In the same year
he started work on the Sinfonia drammatica and his third
opera Marie-Victoire. Ouverture carnevalesca was first
performed under the direction of the composer in
Bologna on 19th April of the same year. This work is in
form the most Italian of Respighi's early orchestral
compositions, using as it does the Saltarello, although
the secondary theme has a Russian touch. The work is
scored for large orchestra, with tuba, glockenspiel and
drums. In spite of its rather dense harmonic structure,
the instrumentation never becomes overloaded,
providing an admirable work for an enterprising
orchestra. An earlier version of the ending has been
restored for the present recording, showing the
composer in an almost indecently hilarious mood.
Abridged from original notes by Adriano
Variazioni sinfoniche (Symphonic Variations), P. 28 (more info)
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Symphonic Variations - 12:20
Preludio, corale e fuga, P. 30 (more info)
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Prelude, Chorale and Fugue - 17:44
Burlesca, P. 59 (more info)
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Burlesca - 7:23
Ouverture carnevalesca (Carnival Overture), P. 99 (more info)
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Carnival Overture - 8:41
Suite in E major, P. 51 (more info)
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I. Adagio - Allegro vivo - 9:03
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II. Adagio - 8:05
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III. Allegretto vivace - 5:10
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IV. Allegro energico – Marziale e sostenuto - 10:34