GRANADOS: Album of Melodies / Cardboard Soldiers / The Mermaid
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Enrique Granados (1867-1916) Piano Music 8 Enrique Granados was born on 27th July 1867 in Lerida, near Barcelona. Son of an army captain, he began his study...
Enrique Granados (1867-1916)
Piano Music 8
Enrique Granados was born on 27th July 1867 in
Lerida, near Barcelona. Son of an army captain, he
began his study of the piano in 1879 and the following
year he continued with Joan Baptista Pujol (1835-1898)
at the Academia Pujol. Three years later he performed
Schumann's Sonata, Opus 22, in an academy-sponsored
competition, for which one of the jury members was the
noted composer Felipe Pedrell (1841-1922). The
sixteen-year-old Granados won the competition and
obviously impressed Pedrell, who began giving
Granados classes in harmony and composition in 1884.
In 1887 Granados went to Paris, where he studied with
Charles de Beriot (1833-1914). He was highly
influenced by the latter's insistence on tone-production
and pedal technique. In addition, Beriot emphasized
improvisation in his teaching, reinforcing his pupil's
natural ability in the skill. After returning to Barcelona
in 1889, Granados published his Danzas espanolas,
which brought him international recognition.
In his lifetime Granados gave concerts in Spain,
France and New York collaborating with conductors
such as Isaac Albeniz and Pablo Casals, the violinists
Eugène Ysaÿe and Jacques Thibaud, pianists
Mieczyslaw Horszowski and Camille Saint-Saëns. In
addition to his numerous piano works he composed
chamber music, vocal music, operas, and symphonic
poems. He was also a fine teacher and in 1901 he
founded the Academia Granados, which produced such
noted musicians as Paquita Madriguera, Conchita
Badia, and Frank Marshall.
In 1912 Granados met the American pianist Ernest
Schelling, who was the first pianist to perform
Granados's music outside Spain. Schelling arranged for
his works to be published in New York and encouraged
Granados in his plans to convert the piano suite
Goyescas into an opera, later arranging for its première
at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Terrified of the
ocean, Granados nevertheless sailed to New York for
the première of the opera on 28th January 1916. While
in the United States he performed numerous concerts,
made piano-roll recordings, and also performed at the
White House in Washington. He and his wife set sail for
Europe via Liverpool, but while crossing the English
Channel on the British ship Sussex, their boat was
torpedoed by a German submarine and they both
perished.
About the year 1912 Granados wrote: "My motto
has always been to renounce an easy success in order to
achieve one that is true and lasting." Today he is
universally recognised as one of Spain's most important
composers, with music that is multi-faceted, although it
is essentially Romantic with some nationalist
characteristics. He has been variously described as "the
Spanish Chopin", "the last Romantic", and by his
compatriots as "our Schubert", but no single
characterisation adequately describes his personality.
He had a distinctive voice that is instantly recognisable
and entirely his own.
Granados was primarily influenced by midnineteenth
century European Romanticism, especially
the music of Schumann and Chopin. The introverted
luxuriance of his luminous harmonies, his rich palette of
pianistic colour, loose formal structures and his vivid
imagination, always tinged with nostalgia, place him
firmly within the Romantic School. It has frequently
been commented that large forms, such as sonatas and
concertos did not attract him. His artistic personality
was better suited to shorter, rhapsodic forms, especially
those based on variations.
All of the compositions recorded here are works of
Granados's juvenilia composed between 1884, the year
he began studying with Felipe Pedrell in Barcelona
(followed by further studies in Paris, 1887-1889), and
ending about 1895. As a group they are generally
immature works of a young composer striving to find
his own individual artistic personality. Many of these
pieces are somewhat similar to one another, being
sketches or brief compositions characterized by an
unfocused formal structure and harmonic ambiguity.
Very few of them are firmly rooted in one tonality.
Granados frequently vacillated from one tonality to
another and had a tendency to place the final cadence of
a given composition on the dominant, consequently not
concluding the work in the original tonality. The fact
that many of these works were not highly developed
would tend to suggest that most were never revised by
the composer.
Granados's early works are typical of a young
composer focusing on his own personal inspirations,
exploring themes of nature and varied emotions. Many
works are written in salon-style. Quite a number of the
compositions are interrelated by style or by theme,
including works with similar titles such as marches and
mazurkas, pieces which include women's or composer's
names in the titles and works inspired by Oriental
themes, in which the Orient refers to countries where
Arabic is the spoken language. It is impossible to know
the exact order of composition of Granados's early
works since apart from the manuscript titled Álbum de
Melodias, Paris 1888, only two other early works are
dated, Elvira (1885, the earliest known published
composition by Granados, dedicated to his piano teacher
Juan B. Pujol) and Dans le bois (1888).
As a group the juvenilia give few indications of the
quality of Granados's mature compositions. There are,
however, two specific traits found in both his juvenilia
and in his mature works alike. His inclination to have the
final cadence of a work on the dominant of a tonality,
rather than the tonic, may be heard in Track º, Allegro
vivace, as well as in masterworks such as Quejas o la
maja y el ruisenor and El fandango de candil from
Goyescas (Naxos 8.554403). Another unusual feature of
Granados's artistic personality which may be seen in his
juvenilia as well as in his mature compositions is his
reliance on repetition as a means of development,
frequently repeating a melody numerous times and
varying it only by tonal colour as may be heard in Track 0,
Andante.
A curious characteristic of his early manuscripts,
differing from his later ones, is the extreme carelessness
with which he notated the early manuscripts, often
neglecting to include a key signature or the required
sharps and flats necessary for their proper performance.
With the exception of Elvira, Los soldados de carton
and La sirena none of the juvenilia were published
around the time of their composition. It is not known if
Granados lacked the opportunity to publish his other
juvenilia or whether he did not consider them
appropriate for publication.
Carezza was dedicated to the composer's student
Pepita Conde, daughter of Granados's first patron. The
Italianised title conveys something of the tastes of the
period for Italian music, especially opera. Granados
probably intended Carezza and other salon-style works
such as La sirena, Los soldados de carton, Elvira and
Clotilde for performance in the Conde family salon or
other similar settings. The light-heartedness of these
works is in contrast to the passionate and melancholy
Dolora. Dans le bois was included in a letter sent by
Granados from Paris to fellow composer Amadeu Vives
in June, 1888 and was probably not intended for
performance or publication. Granados's arrangement of
Marcha Real, the Spanish national anthem, is a
harmonization of the original melody written by an
anonymous composer.
The manuscript titled Álbum de Melodias, Paris
1888 is a fascinating document. Although the title would
appear to date the works included in the manuscript as
having been composed during Granados's stay in Paris
between 1887 and 1889, the considerable stylistic
differences found between them leads to speculation that
Granados might have written some compositions in
Barcelona before leaving for the French capital. The
manuscript includes compositions for piano solo, both
complete and incomplete, musical sketches and
melodies without accompaniment. In addition it
contains many drawings by the composer (a cannon,
silhouettes of tiny soldiers, two typical Parisians, among
others) as well as spontaneous commentaries such as
'Primero yo, despues yo, y luego...naide [sic]' (First me,
then me and then...no one) and 'Viva la alegria!!'
(Long live happiness). There are also numerous titles for
works for which no music was composed: Marcha
fúnebre (Funeral March), Viva tu cuerpo sandunguero -
Sevillanas (Long live your graceful body - Sevillanas)
and Para el abanico de La Srta. xxx P.B (For the fan of
Miss xxx P.B.) Only complete original compositions
found in the manuscript are recorded here.
The works Beethoven?, Chopin...! - Mazurka and
Wagner - Melodrama are Granados's engaging studentimitations
of the compositional styles of the three
composers. In Preludio en fa Granados would appear to
have been influenced by Chopin's Prelude, Op. 28, No. 3,
and the further influence of Chopin is also clear in
Granados's Mazurkas. Primavera, sub-titled Romanza
sin palabras (Romance Without Words) could have been
inspired by Mendelssohn's Songs Without Words.
Allegro vivace, dedicated to Granados's colleague, the
brilliant pianist Joaquim Malats, is the finest work
included in Álbum de Melodias, Paris 1888, revealing
the direction which Granados's later compositions
would take and hinting at his future artistry.
Douglas Riva
Carezza (Caress), DLR VII:3 (more info)
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Carezza (Caress), DLR VII:3 - 6:32
Dolora, DLR III:7 (more info)
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Dolora, DLR III:7 - 2:15
Clotilde, DLR III:3 (more info)
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Clotilde, DLR III:3 - 2:15
La sirena (The Mermaid), DLR VII:2 (more info)
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La sirena (The Mermaid), DLR VII:2 - 3:37
Dans le bois (In the Forest), DLR III:11 (more info)
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Dans le bois (In the Forest), DLR III:11 - 1:48
Marcha Real (Royal March), DLR III:22 (more info)
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Marcha Real (Royal March), DLR III:22 - 3:26
Soldados de carton (Cardboard Soldiers), DLR III:21 (more info)
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Soldados de carton (Cardboard Soldiers), DLR III:21 - 2:47
Elvira, DLR III:2 (more info)
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Elvira, DLR III:2 - 3:52
Album de melodias, Paris 1888, DLR III:2 (more info)
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Prelude in F major - 1:57
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Andante - 3:16
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En el abanico de Maria de Alba (For the Fan of Maria de Alba) - 1:17
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A Sara (For Sara) - 1:33
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Oh... - 0:30
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Passats (Past Memories) - 2:18
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En la playa (At the Beach) - 1:21
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Enyoranca (Nostalgia) - 1:40
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Lejos de ti (Far from You) - 0:44
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Cuatro notas (Four Notes) - 1:29
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Beethoven - 3:03
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Chopin - Mazurka - 1:52
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Wagner - Melodrama - 1:19
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Mazurka in E flat major - 2:46
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Mazurka in G minor - 1:49
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Mazurka in F major - 2:12
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Pregant (Praying) - 1:35
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Cantos Orientales: La esclava (The Slave) - 2:12
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Cantos Orientales: La escalva muerta (The Dead Slave) - 2:05
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Cantos Orientales: Conte (A Tale) - 1:42
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Cantos Orientales: Primavera (Spring) - 1:43
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Cantos Orientales: Allegro vivace - 5:04