ROMANTIC HARP (THE)
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The Romantic Harp Grandjany Pierne Faure de Falla Salzedo Rota The importance of France in late romantic harp repertoire will be evident from the repertoire...
The Romantic Harp
Grandjany Pierne Faure de Falla Salzedo Rota
The importance of France in late romantic harp
repertoire will be evident from the repertoire included in
the present recording, culminating in the Ballade of the
great French harpist Carlos Salzedo, who went on to
develop a wide range of possible techniques and
sonorities. It was largely through the work of French
performers and teachers that the instrument developed
from an elegant salon appurtenance to an essential
feature of the modern orchestra, with an independent
and characteristic repertoire of its own.
Born in Paris in 1891, the harpist Marcel Grandjany
had his early musical training with a relative, Juliette
Georges Grandjany, winning a scholarship at the age of
eight to study the harp with Henriette Renie. A year later
he started classes of solfège at the Conservatoire, where,
from 1902 until 1910, he was a pupil of Alphonse
Hasselmans. He made his Paris debut with the Concerts
Lamoureux Orchestra in 1909, and after a relatively
brief period of military service was from 1915 to 1918
organist and choirmaster at the Sacre-Coeur Basilica. His
connection with America came with a period of fourteen
years as a teacher at the American Conservatoire at
Fontainebleau, and, after his London debut in 1922, his
first appearance in New York two years later.
He toured widely in Europe and North America and
was co-founder of the Quintette Instrumental de Paris,
for which composers such as Vincent d'Indy and Albert
Roussel wrote works. From 1936 he made his home in
America, taking out American citizenship in 1945. He
taught at the Manhattan School and from 1938 at the
Juilliard School as well as for some time also in
Montreal. Distinguished as a performer and as a teacher,
he also wrote a quantity of music for the harp, all of it
well suited to the instrument, including original
compositions and transcriptions. His Fantaisie on a
Theme of Haydn, Op. 31, an introduction, theme and
five variations, was published in 1953.
Marcel Tournier was also a pupil of Hasselmans at
the Paris Conservatoire. One of the five sons of a Paris
luthier, like his brothers he followed his father's demand
that all should learn a string instrument, entering the
Conservatoire at the age of sixteen. He studied harmony,
counterpoint and composition with Lenepvu, Caussade
and Widor respectively, and won the second Prix de
Rome in 1909. He succeeded Hasselmans at the
Conservatoire in 1912, continuing there until 1948,
when he was succeeded by Lily Laskine. He had a
strong influence as a teacher, while his compositions for
the harp make a significant addition to the repertoire of
the instrument. His impressionistic Vers la source dans
le bois (Towards the fountain in the wood) was written
in 1922.
Precocious as a composer, with an oratorio first
performed when he was twelve, Nino Rota studied at the
Milan Conservatory, thereafter taking private lessons
first with Ildebrando Pizzetti and then with Alfredo
Casella. His career brought a long association with Bari
Conservatory, of which he was appointed director in
1950. A versatile composer, he wrote some eighty film
scores, including collaborations with Fellini, Zeffirelli
and Visconti, and the score for Coppola's The
Godfather. His Sarabanda e toccata for harp, its neoclassical
form suggested in its title, was written in 1945,
three years before his concerto for the instrument. The
Sarabande moves from a chordal opening to a feer
section, while the Toccata suggests the musical
language of Poulenc.
A pupil of Jules Massenet and of Cesar Franck at the
Paris Conservatoire, Gabriel Pierne succeeded the latter
as organist at Ste Clotilde, later distinguishing himself as
a conductor, notably as deputy and then successor to
Edouard Colonne at the Concerts Colonne. His
Impromptu-caprice, a well-known showpiece for the
harp, dates from 1887. It starts with a cadenza, before
the introduction of a melody of particular charm, which
is to return in conclusion, after a livelier Bolero at the
heart of the work.
The first Spanish Dance from Manuel de Falla's
opera La vida breve has lent itself to a variety of
arrangements, whether for violin or guitar. It is perhaps
even more effective in a harp transcription that adds a
wider range of sonorities. The opera itself, finally recast
in two acts, was first staged in Nice in 1913, when there
seemed no immediate prospect of performance in Spain,
where it had, in 1905, been awarded first prize in a
competition for Spanish opera. The dance is heard in the
second act at the wedding of Paco and Carmela, after the
former's betrayal of the young gypsy girl Salud, who, in
the final scene, is to die at his feet.
The French composer Gabriel Faure studied at the
Ecole Niedermeyer in Paris, where, by good fortune, he
met Saint-Saëns, who was then teaching the piano at the
school, and was later his deputy organist at the
Madeleine. He eventually secured a position at the Paris
Conservatoire, of which he became director in 1905.
Faure's musical language bridged a gap between the
romanticism of the nineteenth century and the world of
music that had appeared with the new century,
developing and evolving, but retaining its own
fundamental characteristics. His harmonic idiom, with
its subtle changes of tonality and his gift for melody, is
combined with an understanding of the way
contemporary innovations might be used in a manner
completely his own. He made an unforgettable
contribution to French song repertoire, and his Une
Châtelaine en sa tour ..., Op. 110, for harp, written in
1918 for the harpist Micheline Kahn, is derived from a
setting of a poem from Verlaine's La bonne chanson.
The song, Une Sainte en son aureole (A Saint in her
halo) continues with a second line that gives the harp
piece its title, the character of the work summarised in
the following lines Tout ce que contient la parole /
Humaine de grâce et d'amour. Faure's Impromptu,
Op. 86, also known in a version for piano, was originally
written in 1904 for harp as a morceau de concours for
the Conservatoire.
The Canadian composer Kelly-Marie Murphy has
won a considerable reputation and a number of
important awards in her own country and in the United
States. Her concerto for harp and orchestra And then at
night I paint the stars ..., its title taken from a letter of
Vincent Van Gogh to his brother, was commissioned by
the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Toronto
Symphony Orchestra to mark the retirement of Judy
Loman as principal harpist and is dedicated to her. Its
third movement, Scintillation, a title earlier familiar
from Salzedo, is in the form of a cadenza that can be
heard as a piece by itself, in its original context leading
to the final movement of the work, Morning Sky.
A musician of unusual precocity, Sergey Prokofiev
completed his composition studies at the St Petersburg
Conservatory in 1909, continuing there in the piano
class of Anna Esipova, pupil and former wife of
Leschetizky. It was in these years, from 1906 to 1913,
that he wrote a set of ten piano pieces, the seventh of
which, Prelude, was dedicated to his fellow-student, the
harpist Eleanora Damskaya. The Harp Prelude easily
lends itself to transcription for the harp itself, with
romantic cascades of notes in music that lacks anything
of Prokofiev's frequent astringency.
A graduate in piano and harp from the Paris
Conservatoire, Carlos Salzedo moved to New York in
1909, serving initially as principal harpist in the
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra under Toscanini. He was
active in the promotion of new music, established the
harp department at the Curtis Institute and taught at the
Juilliard School. As a composer and performer he
exercised a strong influence on harp performance,
exploring the possibilities of the instrument and its
varied timbres. His Ballade, a standard virtuoso element
in modern harp repertoire, is one of a set of three pieces
published in 1913, and, as a relatively early work,
reflects a harmonic vocabulary familiar from the works
of his French contemporaries. It was dedicated to
Hasselmans, his teacher.
Keith Anderson
Fantasy on a Theme of Haydn, Op. 31 (more info)
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Fantasy on a Theme of Haydn, Op. 31 - 7:57
Vers la source dans le bois (Towards the Fountain in the Wood) (more info)
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Vers la source dans le bois (Towards the Fountain in the Wood) - 4:18
Saraband and Toccata (more info)
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Saraband and Toccata - 7:26
Impromptu-Caprice, Op. 9 (more info)
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Impromptu-Caprice, Op. 9 - 5:59
La vida breve, Act I: Danse espagnole No. 1 (more info)
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La vida breve, Act I: Danse espagnole No. 1 - 4:15
Une Chatelaine en sa tour, Op. 110 (more info)
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Une Chatelaine en sa tour, Op. 110 - 4:41
Impromptu, Op. 86 (more info)
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Impromptu, Op. 86 - 8:31
And then at night I paint the stars: III. Scintillation (more info)
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And then at night I paint the stars: III. Scintillation - 3:55
Ten Pieces, Op. 12: VII. Prelude in C major (arr. for harp) (more info)
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Ten Pieces, Op. 12: VII. Prelude in C major (arr. for harp) - 2:38
Ballade, Op. 28 (more info)
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Ballade, Op. 28 - 9:46