Guitar Recital: Goran Krivokapic
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Goran Krivokapić - Guitar Recital Werthmüller J.S. Bach D. Scarlatti Bogdanović Franz Werthmüller's music sits comfortably between Joseph Haydn,...
Goran Krivokapić - Guitar Recital
Werthmüller J.S. Bach D. Scarlatti Bogdanović
Franz Werthmüller's music sits comfortably between
Joseph Haydn, 37 years older, and Fernando Sor, nine
years older. Though closer in time to Sor, he seems to
have absorbed more of the older composer's style, at
least in the brisk Allegro that opens his Sonata in A
major, Op. 17, in a high-spirited fashion, and in the
exhilarating momentum of the Presto that concludes it.
Haydn, who liked to finish his symphonies with an uptempo
movement, might have approved. The warm and
eloquent melody of the Lento, however, is more of
Werthmüller's time, at the beginning of the Romantic
movement that was to usher in Weber, Schumann and
Chopin. The sonata was transcribed, presumably from a
piano version, by the nineteenth-century Austrian
guitarist and composer Franz Pfeifer.
'Good, great and universal music remains the same
no matter what instrument sounds the notes'. The
opinion of Ferruccio Busoni, composer, piano virtuoso
and arranger of formidable skill, is almost universally
echoed by modern musicians and musicologists, but the
old belief that it is somehow wrong to play violin music
on the guitar still persists in some quarters. Bach himself
was a habitual transcriber and arranger, and that surely
ought to be enough to convince the doubtful. The
advantages of a guitar transcription include a great
clarity in polyphony while still retaining an essentially
string sound. Bach himself arranged movements from
his Violin Sonatas, so guitar arrangers and transcribers
are not working in the dark. Nevertheless, decisions
have to be made - when, or if, to arpeggiate chords, as
the violin necessarily must when more than two adjacent
strings are involved; whether to expand a violin's fournote
chord with the guitar's two additional strings,
whether to acknowledge that it was originally a violin
piece or whether to treat it as a new piece for guitar, and
so on. It is known that Bach owned a lute, though
whether he could play it with any degree of proficiency
is uncertain: in performance he remained a keyboardplayer
par excellence. Busoni, among whose students
was Sibelius, was an arch-romantic, as his arrangement
for piano of Bach's D minor Chaconne shows. A
generation later, Segovia's Chaconne arrangement for
guitar was much less romantic, though nowadays it
would not be considered to be in accordance with
modern thinking and beliefs. An arrangement invariably
echoes the perceptions of its own time, not those of the
period in which the work was originally composed. The
demanding fugue of the Sonata in C, BWV1005, is
known familiarly among English-speaking guitarists as
'London Bridge', the melody of which can be
recognised in the opening bars, although obviously Bach
had no knowledge of traditional English song.
Domenico Scarlatti's father Alessandro was a
significant figure in music, the composer of some six
hundred chamber-cantatas. So attractive are the almost
equal number of harpsichord sonatas written by his son
Domenico, however, that we tend to ignore his father's
great contribution. Graceful, spirited, yet full of
technical problems for keyboard-players and guitarists
alike, these sonatas by the younger Scarlatti have a
universal appeal that shows no sign of diminishing.
Together with Handel and J.S. Bach, Domenico Scarlatti
was one of the three major composers of the period, all
born in 1685 and all giants in Baroque music. He
actually competed, in a friendly way, with Handel, in an
event organized in Rome, when Handel was judged the
better organist and Scarlatti the better harpsichordist. It
said that the two composers held each other in some
esteem. Domenico Scarlatti was employed at the court
of the King of Portugal, where he taught the Infanta
Maria Barbara, who became his favourite pupil and
whom he followed to Spain, where he spent the rest of
his life. Although he wrote operas, cantatas and sacred
music, the keyboard sonatas remain his most memorable
work, evidence of a deep fascination with the
possibilities of a single instrument with its opportunities
for melody, counterpoint and polyphony. Bach's
sometimes lengthy working-out of a contrapuntal
pattern, as in the fugue of BWV1005, was not for
Scarlatti, who was more interested in the brilliant effect
of rapid articulation, often in thirds and sixths, and many
other technical devices such as hand-crossing, wide
leaps and elaborate arpeggiation, though there is poetry
and profundity there too. As to his music's suitability for
the guitar, it is sufficient to point to his many years of
residence in Spain, where exposure to that instrument
must have been a daily occurrence; there are many
'echoes' in his music that support the view that the
guitar must have made a deep impression. Some of the
sonatas are impossible to play adequately on one guitar,
for the simple reason that, while a keyboard player has
ten independent digits, a guitarist needs both hands to
play one note. A great many of the sonatas, however,
transcribe very well, and the gradual improvement in
guitar technique over the last twenty or thirty years
means that more and more of them are falling into the
scope of the guitar. Scarlatti's own introduction to the
first published sonatas warns the player against being
too critical, to be aware instead of the humanity and
thereby to 'increase by this way your own pleasure'.
Certainly this humanity is an important part of his
music, and a factor in its continuing popularity. The
three sonatas played here are fairly representative of
Scarlatti's vivid style, slow alternating with fast, the
deceptively simple technique of K. 208 contrasting with
the fireworks of K. 209.
Dušan Bogdanovi´c was born in Belgrade and knows
the rhythms of his native Serbia very well. It is
interesting, therefore, that his first musical interests were
rock, pop, jazz and South American music. His eventual
realisation that Balkan music is generously endowed
with its own unique rhythms has resulted in a steady
flow of compositions that have enriched the
contemporary repertoire. The very opening of Sonata
No. 2 seems to breathe a Balkan air, and this underlying
rhythm pervades the entire work, binding the
movements together as strongly as any of the more
formal structures of Western music. It is at its most
prominent in the concluding Allegro ritmico, where it
supports some fingerwork of an almost oriental
intricacy, a challenge for any guitarist, but a delight for
the listener. The intervening movements, one as slowly
expressive as its title indicates, the other with the
seemingly contradictory title of 'melancholy joke',
complete a sonata very much of our time, complex yet as
rich in inventiveness as any classical sonata of the past,
though perhaps more in terms of rhythm than of
harmonic structure.
© 2005 Colin Cooper
Piano Sonata in A major, Op. 17 (arr. F. Pfeifer) (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:31
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II. Lento - 6:33
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III. Rondo Vivace - 3:36
Violin Sonata No. 3 in C major, BWV 1005 (arr. G. Krivokapic) (more info)
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I. Adagio - 2:48
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II. Fuga - 7:55
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II. Largo - 2:55
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IV. Allegro assai - 4:58
Keyboard Sonata in E major, K.162/L.21/P.162 (more info)
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Keyboard Sonata in E major, K.162/L.21/P.162: Andante - Allegro - 7:16
Keyboard Sonata in A major, K.208/L.238/P.315 (more info)
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Keyboard Sonata in A major, K.208/L.238/P.315: Adagio e cantabile - 4:11
Keyboard Sonata in A major, K.209/L.428/P.209 (more info)
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Keyboard Sonata in A major, K.209/L.428/P.209: Allegro - 5:06
Guitar Sonata No. 2 (more info)
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I. Allegro deciso e appassionato - 3:53
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II. Adagio molto espressivo - 2:19
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III. Scherzo malinconico - 2:56
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IV. Allegro ritmico - 3:12