Julian Orbon (1925-1991)
Three Symphonic Versions Symphonic Dances Concerto
Grosso
Julian Orbon was born in Aviles in the northern Spanish
region of Asturias, on 7th August 1925, and he spent most of his childhood in
that region, with the exception of a year's visit to Cuba. His mother died when
he was young and in 1940 he and his father, the pianist and composer Benjamin
Orbon, left Spain permanently for Cuba. There he studied with the composer Jose
Ardevol with whom in 1942 he co-founded the Musical Renewal group, an
association of young composers promoting Cuban musical nationalism, although he
would later distance himself from them. Of greater importance in terms of his
musical thinking was his involvement with the writers and artists associated with
the Origenes (Origins) magazine, founded in 1944, whose editors advocated
originality and universality, and the convergence of American, Spanish and
European artistic ideas -- and in which Orbon published articles on Falla,
Tristan, and various aspects of musical style and theory. In 1945 he wrote his
Symphony in C and that same year was awarded a grant to study at the Berkshire
(Tanglewood) Music Center with Copland, whose influence is evident in the works
Orbon composed during the 1950s. Before his thirtieth birthday then, Orbon had
established a solid reputation for himself in Cuba, writing symphonic and
chamber music as well as works for piano and guitar.
In 1954 his Tres versiones sinfonicas won the Juan de
Landaeta Prize at the International Festival of Caracas, thereby confirming his
status as one of the most representative of Spanish American composers. Two
years later he wrote the Himnus ad galli cantum, and in 1958 he received a
grant from the Koussevitzky Foundation to compose the Concerto grosso.
Orbon was involved, in the cultural arena, in the shaping of
the Cuban Revolution. His ethical and religious beliefs, however, soon brought
him into conflict with the direction taken by the Castro regime. Disillusioned,
he chose exile, in 1960 accepting an invitation from the Mexican government to
teach at the National Conservatory.
As he grew older and his life circumstances changed, Orbon
became more reflective and introspective. Once in exile he searched for his
musical roots by delving into the traditions and originality of
Spanish-American music. Although he finally settled in New York in late 1963,
he retained his Spanish nationality, considering himself Asturian, Spanish and
Cuban, and was thrilled, therefore, to be invited to visit Madrid in 1967 for
the Iberian-American Festival of Music. He made his final trip to Asturias in
1986 and his memories and nostalgia inspired one of his final works: Libro de
cantares. He died in Miami on 21st May 1991.
There are several stylistic constants in Orbon's music which
colour the greater part of his production. These include the use of variation,
which he considered central to the Hispanic musical spirit, references to
Spanish music, from the medieval to Falla, the presence of folk music,
especially Latin-American rhythms, a sensibility for transparent timbres and
fondness for guitar-like pizzicati, and an assimilation of different musical
currents, from the tonal to the atonal, all interconnected and reflected
through his own personal prism.
Despite the presence of such constants, Orbon's production
was by no means static. Changes in his circumstances and the broadening of his
musical education are reflected in his music, which gradually became more
internalised. Three distinct stylistic phases can be distinguished. The first
covers the pre-1950 works, whose music is optimistic, tonal, luminous, full of
open spaces, its roots lying in the Spanish tonadilleros, Falla and Cuban
music. Of overwhelming importance in the second phase is Orbon's time at
Tanglewood, the specific influence of Copland, his contact with other American
musicians, and his assimilation of contemporary European music. The tonality of
the previous period is now blended with modal, even atonal harmonizations,
while the use of rhythmic ostinati, uneven metres and polyrhythms gives
strength and depth to the hybrid nature of Orbon's music. The third phase,
finally, is characterized by introspection and the grief of the exile.
The three works on this CD belong to the second period. Tres
versiones sinfonicas was first performed in Caracas, in 1954, by the Venezuela
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Juan Jose Castro. The first movement, Pavana,
with its Coplandian orchestration, features two themes. The first of these
appears in the opening bars of the work, and takes its inspiration from a
pavane by the sixteenth-century Spanish composer Luis de Milan. The second is
heard on the cello and introduces us to the rhythmic and insistent Cuban sound.
The central movement, Conductos, whose theme is varied melodically throughout
the movement, is a contemplative evocation of medieval music, inspired by the
French medieval composer Perotin, leader of the Notre Dame school. Xylophone is
based on a Congolese rhythmic ostinato, to which are added orchestral textures
and different rhythmic bases which infinitely transform and embellish the
African folk motifs.
The Danzas sinfonicas were first performed in 1957 in
Florida by the Miami University Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Heitor
Villa-Lobos. These brilliant and masterful orchestrations mark the increasingly
Latin American character of Orbon's music. The first dance, Obertura,
constructed on the initial insistent rhythmic and melodic cell, demonstrates
the composer's use of repetition. The Gregoriana is a daring Allegro in which a
plainsong melody, sketched out in the opening bars by the strings, becomes part
of a dance of uneven metre. The Declamatoria is a slow dance, full of hints of
pre-Colombian modality, while the Danza final, with its unmistakably Venezuelan
feel, crystallizes the essential aspects of what Orbon called "the American
musical imagination": irregular time signatures, a reminder of the courtly
dances of eighteenth-century Spain which give their rhythm to guajiras and the
sounds of the Mexican coasts and the Venezuelan plains, and bass ostinati
creating a kind of chaconne above which variations freely develop.
The Concerto grosso was written for string quartet and orchestra
and was first performed in New York by the Orchestra of America in 1961,
conducted by Richard Korn. It is the musical expression of an older man who has
come to the realisation that his world of Caribbean clarity is disappearing and
who is taking refuge in his own personal emotional universe, and as such can be
seen as a transitional work, leading towards his final creative phase. The
first movement, Moderato, opens in transparency with a guajira-like motif on
the orchestral strings which is then taken up by the solo quartet. The
development is complex but cohesive, Romantic echoes, motivic variations and
anticipations of the other movements interlacing with one another. The Lento is
one of Orbon's most beautiful and dramatic compositions. Its reflective nature
with religious references implicit in the modal music tautens uneasily every
time the solo quartet enters. This tension culminates in a central processional
march of archaic flavour, with touches of both the medieval and Falla at his
most intense. The last notes of the slow movement herald the final Allegro, a
movement of rhythmic subtlety and tonal balance, with an open and varied
harmony in which there are occasional glimpses of atonality. As the movement
develops, brief melodic and rhythmic motifs look back to the previous two
movements, like a reinvention of memory, now ultimately refined through the
filter of time.
Ramon Garcia-Avello
English Version: Susannah Howe