Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936) Piano Music Ottorino Respighi was born in Bologna in 1879 and studied the violin and viola at the Liceo Musicale there from...
Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936) Piano Music
Ottorino Respighi was born in Bologna in 1879 and studied the violin and
viola at the Liceo Musicale there from 1891 with Federico Sarti. At the same
time he took lessons in composition, at first from the musicologist Luigi Torchi,
who had returned to Bologna from the Liceo Rossini in Pesaro in the same year,
and later from the composer Giuseppe Martucci, who was director of the Liceo in
Bologna until 1902. In 1899 Respighi completed his studies and the following
year went to St Petersburg as principal viola-player at the Imperial opera. In
Russia, where he spent the seasons of 1901-1902 and 1903-1904, he took lessons
in composition and orchestration from Rimsky-Korsakov.
During the first decade of the new century Respighi won a reputation as a
performer, while pursuing his growing interest in earlier music and in
composition. In Berlin in 1908 and 1909 he attended lectures by Max Bruch, but
to relatively little effect. The influence of Rimsky-Korsakov, however, remained
with him, guiding his bold use of orchestral colour in the music he wrote. These
years brought a series of compositions. In 1902 a piano concerto of his was
performed in Bologna and his Notturno of 1905 was played in New York
under Rodolfo Ferrari. In the same year his opera Rč Enzo was staged in
Bologna, to be followed five years later by Semirama, these operas
proving successful enough to bring about his appointment in 1913 as a teacher of
composition at the Liceo Santa Cecilia in Rome
In 1919 Respighi married the singer Elsa Olivieri-Sangiacomo and in 1924 he
became director of the Santa Cecilia, resigning two years later to devote
himself to composition, although he continued to teach and to perform in
concerts and recitals as a conductor and as an accompanist to his wife. He died
in 1936 at the house he had named after one of his most famous works, I Pini,
referring to the symphonic poems Pini di Roma (Pines of Rome), one of
three effective and now familiar works of his associated with aspects of the
city, Feste Romane (Roman Festivals) and Fontane di Roma (Fountains
of Rome).
In 1917 Respighi published his first set of arrangements of ancient dances
and airs, the Antiche arie e danze per liuto, orchestral versions of
earlier Italian lute music, transcribed from tablature. He made further
arrangements from the same source for piano. As in the arrangement of Rossiniana
for Dyagilev's La boutique fautasque, he remains generally faithful to
the original harmonies, avoiding the more radical procedures used by Stravinsky
in Pulcinella. The keyboard-writing, however, is designed for the modern
piano, using with discretion the fuller possibilities of the instrument The
transcriptions start with Balletto detto Il Conte Orlando, by Simone
Molinaro, who spent his career in his native Genoa. Molinaro's first book of
music for lute, in tablature, was published in Venice in 1599. The dance, in D
major, frames a contrasting minor section. It is followed by a Villanella, the
work of an anonymous composer of the late sixteenth century, transcribed with
contrasted tone-colours. The Gagliarda is taken from the work of Vincenzo
Galilei, father of the scientist Galileo and a scholar who led the way in
Italian music to dramatic monody in a search to revive the ancient Greek union
of music and poetry. The dance includes a central episode over a repeated bass.
The Italiana is from an anonymous source of later in the same century, a
gentle dance, lightly accompanied. The fifth piece is an anonymous Siciliana,
to which a running accompaniment is added, assuming greater power when this
turns into accompanying octaves and the embellishment of rapid scales is added.
The Passacaglia, with its repeated pattern, is transcribed from a work of
1692 by Conte Ludovico Roncalli, who published in that year in Bergamo his Capricci
armonici sopra la chitarra spagnola (Harmonic Caprices for the Spanish
Guitar). These six pieces were published by Ricordi in 1919 To these are added a
transcription of the Campanae Parisienses (Les cloches de Paris/The Bells of
Paris), attributed to Marin Mersenne and drawn by the late nineteenth
century musicologist Oscar Chilesotti from Jean-Baptiste Besard's Thesaurus
harmonicus, novus partus of 1617. Besard's compilations are of particular
interest for their inclusion, in French lute tablature, of a quantity of lute
music by contemporary composers, Italian, French and English. There follows a Bergamasca,
a dance, with its repeated harmonic and rhythmic pattern, by Bernardo
Gianoncelli, known as il Bernardello and dated to 1650.
Respighi's Valse Caressante is in the popular salon style that its
title suggests, presenting very characteristic contrasting thematic material in
a work that is finely crafted, however light its content. It is followed by his Canone,
one of a group of pieces published in 1936, in a lyrical interpretation of
the technical device suggested in its title. Notturno reflects the
influence of Debussy in its reflection of the serene beauty of the night,
leading, in its central section, to a climax of grandiose arpeggios and spread
chords, before the return of the opening mood of tranquillity. A Minuet to follows,
a neo- classical interpretation of the traditional dance-form, with an added
ingredient of excited agitation in its trio section. Respighi's Studio makes a
particularly French use of more elaborate piano textures. It is here followed by
his Intermezzo-Serenata, a gently mellifluous piece, with a singing
melody emerging through an arpeggio accompaniment. This is drawn from Respighi's
first opera, Rč Enzo.
The Sonata in F minor, published posthumously fifty years after
Respighi's death, is almost operatic in style, at least in its melodic content.
The exposition of the first movement offers two contrasting subjects, in the
tonic key and, with a triplet accompaniment, in the key of D flat major. There
is a central development of this material, which then returns in the customary
recapitulation. The slow movement, very properly, moves to the related key of A
flat major, with a singing melody accompanied by the triplet rhythms of an inner
part. New keys are explored in a movement that always retains the singing
quality of its melodies The Sonata ends with an Allegretto in B
flat minor, a movement that introduces an element of excited agitation in its
first thematic material, contrasted with a more lyrical theme.
The Tre Preludi sopra melodie gregoriane (Three Preludes on Gregorian
Melodies) are dated 1921, but were apparently written two years earlier,
completed on the island of Capri during the summer of 1919. They reflect
Respighi's new interest in Gregorian chant, an enthusiasm aroused by his former
student, now his wife, Elsa Olivieri-Sangiacomo, an interest that brought, in
1921, the Concerto Gregoriano for violin and four years later the Concerto
in modo misolidio for piano and orchestra. The three Gregorian preludes in
1925 became the first three movements of the orchestral Vetrate di chiesa (Church
Windows). The Gregorian melodies are used with great freedom, although they form
the melodic, modal basis of the three pieces. The first moves from an opening
Phrygian mode, exploring different material in its central section, while
maintaining the same general mood of meditation. The stormy second prelude
allows the Gregorian melody at first to bass octaves, its relatively sinister
opening section followed by a more lyrical central passage. The return of the
opening leads to an expressive Largo, with contrasts of register, as one
echoes another. Something of the earlier agitation returns in the concluding
section. The third prelude opens with a melody heard against a repeated note, a
continuing feature in music of contemplative serenity.
Konstantin Scherbakov
Konstantin Scherbakov was born in 1963 in Barnaul, Siberia, where he received
his first piano instruction. In 1978 he began study with Irina Naumova at the
Gnesin School in Moscow and from 1981 to 1986 was a pupil of Lev Naumov at the
Tchaikovsky Conservatory. He has won prizes at the Montreal International
Competition, the Busoni Piano Competition in Bolzano and in 1983 won first prize
at the Moscow Rachmaniov Competition. Other awards include second prize in 1991
at the Concours Geza Anda in Zurich and Geza Anda Television Prize for his
interpretation of Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto. In the same year he
won second prize at the International Competition Premio Valentino Bucchi in
Rome, a competition dedicated to music of the twentieth century. Konstantin
Scherbakov has given concerts in over a hundred cities in Russia and also has
regular engagements in France, Switzerland, Italy, Germany and Czechoslovakia.
His recitals in Italy have included a cycle of Prokofiev Piano Sonatas at
a festival devoted to the work of that composer and a four recital cycle of
piano music by Rachmaninov. He has recorded extensively at home and abroad and
in addition to his concert activities is a member of the teaching staff of
Moscow Conservatory, where he is assistant to Lev Naumov.