Alfredo Casella (1883-1947) Paganiniana Op. 65 Serenata Op. 46bis La Giara Op. 41bis Born into a musical family in Turin, Alfredo Casella showed early...
Alfredo Casella (1883-1947)
Paganiniana Op. 65
Serenata Op. 46bis
La Giara Op. 41bis
Born into a musical family in Turin, Alfredo Casella showed early ability as
a pianist. His father, like his two uncles, paternal grandfather and godfather,
Alfredo Piatti, was distinguished as a cellist, but it was from his mother that
he had his early piano lessons. At the age of twelve, on the advice of the
composer, pianist and conductor Giuseppe Martucci, director of the Liceo
Musicale in Bologna and a family friend, and of the old violinist Antonio
Bazzini, director of the Milan Conservatory, it was decided that he should study
at the Paris Conservatoire. With the death of his father in 1896, after some
years of illness, he and his mother moved to Paris, where, in November, he began
his studies. There, in 1901-1902, he attended the composition class of Gabriel
Faure, while from the beginning he had studied the piano with Louis Diemer and
harmony with Xavier Leroux. He remained in Paris for some nineteen years,
associating with Ravel and with the Romanian George Enescu, admiring Debussy and
the Russian Stravinsky, but above all at first influenced by Mahler and Richard
Strauss, and by performances of Wagner he had first heard in Turin under
Toscanini. After leaving the Conservatoire in 1902 he embarked on a career as a
pianist and harpsichordist, primarily working in chamber music and as an
accompanist. It was at this period that he wrote his first two symphonies. In
1911 he embarked on an intended series of popular symphony concerts at the
Trocadero, conducting, as he had done intermittently over previous years, but
the series had to be abandoned after the first five concerts. The general
artistic atmosphere of Paris had its influence on him and the weightier
influence of Mahler and Strauss was replaced by that of composers such as
Stravinsky and Albeniz, all of which suggests a certain eclecticism.
Casella 's career in Paris reached a height of contemporary distinction with
the 1914 performance of his song-cycle Nolle di Maggio, a setting for low
voice and orchestra of poems by Giosue Carducci, a scholar and writer who had
devoted his attention to a patriotic revival of interest in the Italian past.
The work had a mixed reception. By 1915 Casella had realised that his future lay
in Italy. In that year he settled in Rome, teaching the piano at the Liceo
Musicale di Sta Cecilia until 1923 and thereafter, during the following decade,
responsible for a master-class at the Liceo. It was here that he found himself a
figure of importance in a circle of young Italian musicians who shared his
ambition to bring a country that generally seemed musically provincial and
backward into the mainstream of the European music with which he had been
familiar in Paris.
In 1917 Casella established the Societa Nazionale di Musica, which later
became the Societa ltaliana di Musica Moderna and then, in 1923, he set up, with
rather different aims, the Corporazione delle Nuove Musiche, affiliated to the
International Society for Contemporary Music, which had been founded in Salzburg
in 1922. In the earlier society various composers found a place, including
Respighi, Malipiero, Pizzetti, Castelnuovo-Tedesco, the conductor and composer
Vittorio Gui and Puccini's generally acknowledged successor Riccardo Zandonai.
The Corporazione, however, aimed to introduce a wide international spectrum of
contemporary music to Italian audiences. The new organization, which continued
for the next five years, was established in conjunction with Malipiero and with
the strong moral backing of Gabriele d'Annunzio and soon the very practical
financial support of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge. The composers in the earlier
society, which, over three years, had served its own limited purpose, were
obviously divergent in their styles and aims and there were serious divisions,
when, subsequently, more conservative composers such as Respighi, Pizzetti and
Zandonai attacked the progressive tendencies of the 1930s, which continued in
spite of this and in spite of the banning of Italy from the ISCM in 1939.
Casella, however, remained a leading figure in the crusade to bring to the
Italian public a wider awareness of contemporary musical trends abroad,
something he was able in part to achieve by his own work as a concert pianist
and as a conductor.
Not confining his interest to the promotion of contemporary music, Italian
and from abroad, Casella also had a deep interest in earlier Italian music,
demonstrated in his realisations and arrangements, as well as in his writing. He
was a leading figure in Italian music in his time, director for some years of
the Venice Festival of Contemporary Music and in 1939 playing an important part
in establishing the Settimane Musicali Senesi for the performance of early
Italian music, in conjunction with the activities of the Accademia Musicale
Chigiana that Count Guido Chigi Saracini had started in Siena in 1932.
Casella's active career, during which he embraced to some extent the
patriotic principles of Mussolini's fascism, finding an element of operatic
inspiration in the Abyssinian campaign, continued until the onset of illness in
1944, something that still did not prevent him from continuing in performance
until shortly before his death in 1947. The last of his seven operas, La rosa
del sagno, based on his orchestral work Paganiniana of the year
before, was staged in Rome in 1943, the year of his Harp Sonata and of
his related Concerto for piano, percussion and strings.
Three stylistic periods have generally been identified in Casella's career as
a composer. The first of these spans the period until 1913, during which he was
subject to various influences. From 1913 until 1920 he indulged in more
experimental modernism, while the final period of his creative life brought
together earlier elements, now in a style that was purely personal in its use of
counterpoint and its drawing of inspiration from earlier Italian music.
Casella's grandfather, the cellist Pietro Casella, had been a close friend of
Paganini and had taught the latter's son Achille. In 1942 Casella completed a Divertimento,
under the title Poganiniana, making use of melodies taken from
Paganini, while avoiding the melody so familiar for its use by Brahms,
Rachmaninov and others. Paganiniana, Op. 65, was later to be re-used for La
rosa del sogno (The Dream Rose) in 1943, for which Aurel von Milloss,
director of ballet at the Rome Opera, provided choreography for which the
original work is well suited. The Divertimento starts with a perpetuum
mobile, followed by a little Polka, a more expressive Romanza and
a final Tarantella. In all four movements there is something of
Stravinsky in the instrumentation and the chromatic alterations in what still
remains fundamentally diatonic harmony.
Something of the same idiom is apparent in Casella's Serenata, Op. 46,
written in the space of six weeks in late 1927 and dedicated to his then friend,
the composer and director of the Rome Conservatorio di Sta Cecilia, Giuseppe
Mule. Originally scored for clarinet, trumpet, violin and cello, it was composed
in response to an invitation that Casella discovered by chance among the papers
on his desk for a chamber composition for between three and six instruments as
an entry to a competition by the Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia. Having
sent his entry before the end of the year, the closing date, Casella then forgot
about it but was delighted when the Serenata, from among the 645
compositions submitted, shared the first prize with Bartok's Third String
Quartet. He subsequently arranged the work for chamber orchestra. A lively march
starts the Serenata, a movement that, very properly, has its own
contrasting trio section. The second movement is a Notturno, introduced
in ominous and dramatic tones, before the appearance of a mysterious
night-melody, its underlying menace replaced by a characteristic folk-tune,
Casella's only use of such a device in this work. The Gavotta, as often
enough in Casella's work of his later period, suggests the idiom of Stravinsky's
Pulcinella. It is followed by an expressive Cavatina, to be played
with feeling but without exaggeration of this element. Its string textures
provide a gentle contrast to what has gone before. Calm is dispelled by the
final Neapolitan movement, a Tarantella.
Casella wrote his ballet, the choreographic comedy La Giara (The Jar)
in 1924 at the suggestion of Erik Satie, with whom he had had no contact for
some time. In a letter of 1918 to the musicologist Henry Prunières, Satie had
expressed privately his agreement with the latter's dislike of Casella's music
at the time, which Prunières had felt to be lacking in sincerity and shifting
too easily from the style of Faure to that of Stravinsky. Satie adds that
Casella's music is always lacking in intelligence, dressing his Romans as
Cossacks. This was, of course, a judgement of Casella's second period and it
must be presumed that Satie had now changed his mind. He himself was at work on Relache
(Respite), an instantaneous ballet with a cinematographic entr'acte and Queue
de chien by Rene Clair, to a libretto and decor by the surrealist Francis
Picabia and choreography by Jean Borlin for the Swedish Ballet of Rolf de Mare.
Casella later discovered the reason for Satie's action. It seemed he had
quarrelled with Les Six and in particular with Poulenc, as Casella records in
his autobiography, and was anxious to avoid an invitation for a composition
being extended to any of that group. The Ballets Suedois had been established by
de Mare in Paris in 1920 and he had seemed to share with Dyagilev the ability to
make use of contemporary artistic trends to serve his purpose. He now wanted an
Italian ballet, as Casella discovered when he arrived in Paris, something to
compete with Manuel de Falla's Three-Cornered Hat, with its
characteristically Spanish plot, decor and music. La Giara was completed
in 45 days and staged on 19th November 1924 at the Theatre des Champs-Elysees
with choreography by Borlin and decor by Giorgio di Chirico. It was produced at
the Rome Opera House in 1928 in tandem with Stravinsky's The Nightingale, the
latter being coldly received. The score makes use of popular Sicilian tunes and
combines the purely Italian element with the wider European, described by
Castelnuovo-Tedesco as sharing equally rustic comedy and the old opera buffa.
The suite derived from the score was dedicated to the conductor Willem
Mengelberg, who was to serve on the Philadelphia jury that chose Casella's Serenata
in 1928 and who conducted the first performance of the suite, which took
place in New York.
For the new ballet Casella took a story by Pirandello that his friend Mario
Labroca had once intended to use as the basis for a comic opera, Pirandello's
story, set in Sicily, concerns the litigious Lollò Zirafa and a great jar he
has ordered to contain the oil from an olive-harvest, a jar chest-high and
well-rounded. The jar breaks in two and to mend it he engages a man from a
neighbouring village who has perfected a wonder-glue that will stick anything.
Lollò Zirafa demands that the jar also be given additional reinforcement and
this can only be done from inside the jar. Needless to say, once the work is
complete, Uncle Dima Licasi is trapped inside and can only get out by breaking
the jar again. Since Lollò does not want the jar broken, he pays Dima Licasi in
the jar but is presented by his lawyer with a series of possibilities, since, if
he does not release the prisoner, he may be charged with kidnapping and have to
pay compensation to Licasi. Dima Licasi could, of course, buy the broken jar,
but a dispute arises about the price to be set on it, since it was, in any case,
broken when Licasi arrived. For the moment, though, the latter is happy to
remain in the jar, smoking and drinking with the cheerful peasants, to Lollò's
anger. Eventually, at the end of his tether, Lollò pushes the jar over and it
rolls into an olive-tree and breaks.
The score opens with an evocative Preludio that Prunières might
unkindly have attributed to the influence of Faure, veering more decidedly
towards Stravinsky in the first vigorous interruption and still more in the
echoes of the latter as the Danza popolare siciliana (Sicilian
Folk-Dance) begins, although this idiom is intermittently softened as the dance
continues.
La storia della fanciulla rapita dai pirati (The story of the girl seized
by pirates) offers a vocal interlude, gently lilting, Danza di Nela (Nela's
Dance) provides a chance for witty allusion, before the heavy-footed Entrata
dei contadini (Entrance of the Villagers) and the celebratory Brindisi (Drinking-Song),
strongly rhythmic Danza generale (General Dance) and lively Finale.
This recording was made in conjunction with RSI Radio Svizzera Italiana, RETE
2
Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana
The Orchestra della Svizzera italiana has existed under its present name
since 1991. It had earlier been established in Lugano in 1935 as the Orchestra
of Italian Swiss Radio and Television, then an ensemble of some thirty players,
based on a smaller group that had worked with the Italian Swiss Radio since its
foundation in Lugano in 1933. Directed initially by Leopoldo Casella, who
continued his association until 1968, the orchestra had Otmar Nussio, who was
for many years head of the music section of Radio Svizzera italiana, as
principal conductor from 1938 to 1968. The period brought a broadening of
interest in contemporary music, developed further with Edwin Loehrer,
chorus-master from 1937 to 1981. From 1969 to 1990 the permanent conductor was
Marc Andreae, with a similar encouragement of contemporary music, particularly
the work of Swiss composers. The orchestra has collaborated with musicians of
the greatest distinction, including Mascagni, Honegger, Wolf-Ferrari, Milhaud,
Hindemith, Frank Martin, Luciano Rerio, Hans Werner Henze and Stravinsky. It was
for this orchestra that Richard Strauss, in 1947, wrote his Duet-Concertino
in F major, Op. 147. The orchestra has also played under the direction of
the greatest conductors of the century, including Ansermet, Stokowski, Ormandy,
Markevitch, Monteux and many others. In addition to its work in the concert-hall
and broadcasting studio at home, the Orchestra della Svizzera italiana has
appeared at international festivals and in major musical centres throughout
Europe.
Christian Benda
Christian Benda comes from a long-established family of Czech musicians and
composers. With the support of Paul Tortelier, for whom he often conducted, he
was launched on a musical career by Pierre Fournier. He has taken part in
numerous international festivals, including Nikolaus Harnoncourt's Styriarte,
the Steirischer Herbst, the Prague Spring, La Roque d'Antheron, the Schwetzingen,
Luxemburg and Hong Kong Arts Festivals and has conducted performances with
musicians of the calibre of Lazar Berman, Michel Beroff, Mikhail Rudy, Till
Fellner, Boris Pergamenschikow, Josef Suk, Pierre Amoyal and Simon Estes. His
collaboration with Barbara Hendricks started in 1995 when, at the invitation of
Prague Castle, he conducted a concert with her and the Prague Chamber Orchestra
for President Vaclav Havel in the baroque gilded Spanish Hall reserved for
exceptional events. With Barbara Hendricks he then toured Latin America, Asia
and Europe. Christian Benda makes a speciality of appearing as a soloist in
concerts in which he also conducts major items of the symphonic repertoire. His
many recordings include orchestral works by Malipiero, J.S. Bach's Musical
Offering, the Hamburg Symphonies of C.P.E. Bach (Naxos 8.553285), the
Cello Concertos of Carl Stamitz (Naxos 8.550865), the complete Violin
Concertos of Haydn, the Cello Sonatas of Boccherini
and the complete works for cello by Schumann and for cello and piano by Martinu.
Of particular interest are recordings by Christian Benda's ancestor Jiři
Antonin Benda, notably his symphonies (Naxos 8.553345-6) and melodramas (Naxos
8.553408-9).