Leonardo Balada (b. 1933)
Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No. 2 Concerto for Four
Guitars and Orchestra
Born in Barcelona on 22nd September, 1933, Leonardo Balada
graduated at the Conservatorio del Liceu there, and at the Juilliard School in
1960. He studied composition with Vincent Persichetti and Aaron Copland and
conducting with Igor Markevitch. Since 1970 he has been teaching at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh, where he is University Professor of
Composition. Some of his best known works were written in a dramatic
avant-garde style in the 1960s, and he is credited with pioneering a blending
of ethnic music with those avant-garde techniques in later works. His
compositions are performed by the world's leading orchestras under the most
distinguished conductors, and works have been commissioned by many outstanding
organizations in the United States and Europe, with some composed for leading musicians.
A large number of his compositions have been recorded by major record
companies. Balada's extensive range of works includes, in addition to chamber
and symphonic compositions, cantatas, two chamber and three full-length operas,
Zapata and Christopher Columbus. He has received several international
composition awards.
The Concerto for cello and orchestra No. 2, 'New Orleans'
(2001), in two movements, Lament and Swinging, is in the style Balada has
practised during the last three decades. In essence it is a blending of ethnic
musical ideas with avant-garde techniques, a now much-used trend which he
pioneered in such works as Sinfonia in Negro-Homage to Martin Luther King
(1968) and Homage to Casals and Sarasate (1975). Here his style translates into
a symbiosis of melodic-harmonic Afro-American ideas and tone clusters,
aleatoric devices and textural structures. The first movement is slow and
lyrical, inspired by Negro spirituals. The soloist sings like a Black voice,
introverted, sorrowful, and intensely dramatic. The second movement is virtuoso
for the soloist and the orchestra as well. Here the jazzy rhythms appear in a
fully swinging manner, brilliantly and in an extroverted fashion. The concerto
was first given by the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra in Berlin in 2002
conducted by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos with the cellist Michael Sanderling, to
whom the work is dedicated.
The Concerto for four guitars and orchestra (1976) is one of
four works Balada has composed for guitar and orchestra, itself resulting from
his Apuntes, a guitar quartet composed in 1974, a suite of several essays with
geometric ideas. These four concertos span the composer's three stylistic
periods. While Concerto No. 1 (1965) falls within the first period,
neoclassical in character, Persistencies-Sinfonia Concertante for amplified
Guitar and Orchestra (1972) and the present concerto fall into the second, his
avant-garde period. The fourth concerto, the 1997 Concierto Magico (Naxos
8.555039) belongs to his third period in which ethnic ideas mix with very
contemporary sonorities. The Concerto for four guitars was composed in the
traditional three-movement format but its basic material is very abstract. The
first movement consists of a structure of canonic layered chromatic lines and
mechanistic repetitions that may remind us of baroque constructions. In the
second the guitars perform exclusively harmonics and the strings and
high-pitched percussion contribute to the soloist's delicate fabric, which is
like a gigantic music box. The third brings repetitive structures with
harmonies and rhythms constantly evolving in an intense and virtuoso manner.
The concerto was commissioned by the Tarrago Guitar Quartet who gave the first
performance with the City of Barcelona Orchestra conducted by Antoni Ros Marba
in 1977.
Celebracio (Celebration), written in 1992 and commissioned
by the Generalitat of Catalonia and the Bank Bilbao-Vizcaya for the millennium
of Catalonia, has an eventful character as well as some historical
connotations. The work starts with a simple idea of medieval colour introduced
by the solo double bass and cello. Soon afterwards the woodwind introduce
melodic cells derived from Catalan folk melodies, in an accumulative and
spontaneous manner which is combined with the medieval idea previously stated.
The central and principal part of the work follows. Here, a motor-like idea
develops all those first motifs in a perpetual motion until the end. Throughout
the central section of the composition, those folk and medieval motifs have
been transformed gradually into contemporary and universal ones. The motor-like
pace of the music could suggest a baroque device as well as a contemporary
minimalist one. In short, it all has been construed as a fast-moving evolution
of the centuries. Balada's style in Celebracio is the result of several
techniques which form not an eclectic mosaic but a unified sum of all the
parts. This concept of metamorphosis, assumes the union of diatonic, polytonal
and atonal devices, dense and complex textures balanced with simple and
transparent lines. The work was first performed in Barcelona in 1992 by the
Prague Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jir˘i Be˘lohlavek.
In Passacaglia (2002) the baroque musical form of the same
title, a constantly repeated melodic line, is presented in a very free and
surreal manner. The initial three notes of the motif are of solemn character,
but slowly transform into a theme of popular character. Something similar
happens to the music itself which begins in a dogmatic way and arrives at a
popular Spanish pasacalle, simple and direct. While the European passacaglia is
descended from the Spanish pasacalle, in this work the events are inverted.
Here the passacaglia eventually becomes a Spanish pasacalle. Passacaglia was
written for the Fifth Cadaques International Conducting Competition and was
first given in July 2000 conducted by the finalist contestants. Neville
Marriner gave the actual première with the Cadaques Orchestra in Madrid in
2003.
Composer's Note
It seems to me that the two strongest, more exotic and
dramatic folk cultures in the western world are the Spanish-Gypsy and the
Afro-American. Both reflect some sort of oppression but curiously they express
themselves in a different manner. While the text in Spanish flamenco singing
generally deals with sensual love and jealousy, the Negro Spiritual reflects
love for Jesus as consolation for desired justice and freedom. Is there
anything more powerful that a well delivered flamenco performance or the deep
exotic expressions from the singing of a Negro Spiritual choral group?
In my blending ethnic ideas with contemporary sonorities the
sounds of those two ethnic expressions take an important place in my work. This
trend started with Sinfonia in Negro-Homage to Martin Luther King (1968) on the
Afro-American side and Homage to Sarasate (1975) for the Spanish.
Before becoming interested in folk ideas, my compositions
reflected the most radical style by denying any room to traditional melody or
harmony. For a decade my compositions experimented with the so-called
avant-garde, typical of the 1960s, with dramatic and angular works like
Guernica, Maria Sabina and Steel Symphony.
On this disc, Concerto for four guitars and orchestra
belongs stylistically to that avant-garde period. On the other hand Cello
Concerto No. 2, 'New Orleans', is an expression of the ethnic style. In my case
ethnicity is no longer nationalism but rather internationalism for its approach
is global, not local. On this disc for instance, Celebracio makes use of Catalan
traditional melodic ideas, while in other works these ideas are of Irish,
Mexican, Latvian or American origin. For the same reason de Falla and Gershwin
made use of the impressionist techniques of their time, my ethnicity reflects
the sounds that have been developing around me.
The fourth of my works here, Passacaglia, seems to point to
a new direction in my output, a development I am just coming to grips with.
This could be identified with transformation or metamorphosis of the very
nature of the musical materials. Is this the result of my affinity to
surrealism, the influence of some memorable years in the 1960s when in New York
as a young composer I collaborated with the master of surrealism Salvador Dali?
If I examine my most recent works I see a trend. In Passacaglia a classical
passacaglia transforms itself into a popular Spanish pasacalle. In Prague
Sinfonietta the music, which starts like Mozart's Prague Symphony, evolves into
a sardana, the national dance of Catalonia, In Symphony No. 5 - American the
first movement is an avant-garde setting of drama and tension and the last a
joyful American ethnic square dance. I seem to be taking a new turn in which
the metaphysical nature of the music is being played with.
Leonardo Balada