TURINA: Romantic Sonata on a Spanish theme / Fantasy Sonata / Magical Corner
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Joaquin Turina (1882-1949): Piano Music 2 Sonata romantica Sonata Fantasia Rincon magico Concierto sin orquesta Spanish music is renowned for its use of...
Joaquin Turina (1882-1949): Piano Music 2
Sonata romantica Sonata Fantasia Rincon magico Concierto sin orquesta
Spanish music is renowned for its use of folk-based
themes, and Joaquin Turina's is no exception to this
rule. He moved to Paris in 1905, however, and as he
completed his musical training at the conservative
Schola Cantorum at around the age of 23, he was
becoming increasingly fascinated by the new music
coming out of France. Two years later, though, came a
momentous meeting with Isaac Albeniz in Paris; the
latter, on 3rd October 1907, after attending the première
of Turina's Piano Quintet, Op. 1, in the Salon
d'Automne, took the young composer by the arm and
said to him, "Your Franckian quintet will be published,
I promise you that, but you must give me your word not
to write any more music like that. You, a Sevillian, must
base your work in Spanish or Andalusian folk-music."
Turina took the advice of Albeniz, whom he so admired,
although his French surroundings and Romanticism
would continue to have a profound influence on his
compositions.
The Romantic Sonata on a Spanish theme, Op. 3, is
the result of an intermingling of as yet unconsolidated
aesthetic principles and styles. It was written in 1909,
when Turina was grieving over the recent death of
Albeniz. In its first movement he picks up on a process
often used by Albeniz, that of quoting a well-known
theme, in this case a motif from a familiar Spanish folksong
El vito, a theme much used by Spanish composers,
including Falla, Joaquin Nin-Culmell, Manuel Infante
and Regino Sainz de la Maza. The opening movement
takes the form of four variations on the main theme.
After three introductory bars in which the left hand
establishes, pianissimo, an obsessive rhythm, the theme
from El vito quietly appears, played very expressively
by the right hand (the fourth bar is marked 'Très
expressif'). The formal skills of the 27-year-old Turina
are apparent in each of the carefully constructed
variations. These combine his natural sense of the
picturesque, encouraged by Albeniz, and the influences
of his cosmopolitan Parisian surroundings. The
movement's ending, a dolcissimo pppp, has clear
touches of Albeniz. A very different atmosphere is
presented by the second movement, marked Vif et gai.
This scherzo is unmistakably the work of Turina, and
acts as a bridge to the final movement. The Final begins
with a mysterious slow passage in which a descending
sextolet comes to the fore, conjuring up a hazy
landscape, with touches of Debussy. This never fully
develops, yielding in bar 35 to the forceful Allegro with
which the sonata comes to an close. Here the theme from
El vito makes a lively comeback, now delivered in a
more sophisticated harmonic idiom. Three long, even
but resounding chords, bring the work to an end with
further echoes of Albeniz. The sonata, dedicated of
course to the memory of Isaac Albeniz, was first
performed on 15th October 1909, by Turina himself at
the Grand Palais des Champs-Elysees, as part of a
concert organized specifically as a tribute to the late
composer.
Turina originally called his Sonata Fantasia, Op.
59, 'Sonata andaluza' despite there being little of
Andalusia in its music, but in the end had the good sense
to give it its more appropriate title. Composed in 1930
and dedicated to the musicologist and critic Josep
Subirà, the work came out of a particularly fruitful
period for Turina, especially in terms of piano music:
within a twelve-month period he also wrote the first set
of Danzas gitanas, Op. 55, the second collection of
Ninerias, Op. 56, the Partita in C, Op. 57, and Tarjetas
postales, Op. 58. Although he introduces elements of the
zambra and garrotin (Andalusian dances) into the
Allegro molto moderato, he here moves away from his
traditional colourful writing and the Hispaniscism
advocated 23 years earlier by Albeniz and instead gives
himself over to a sophisticated and deliberately
Impressionistic idiom, especially in the marvellous slow
openings to each of the two movements of this atypical
sonata. The second of these, the Chorale with variations
seeks, and finds, in its calm figurations, the sense of a
solo guitar. The chorale, its beauty elusive, includes
passages of virtuosity, which momentarily interrupt the
general tranquility. Turina opts for a lively, conventional
and well-developed passage in a bright D major to close
a work whose true essence is to be found in its
wonderful slow sections. The Sonata Fantasia was
published in Madrid in 1931.
"I wanted to sing of love and sadness, searching out
that little corner of the Andalusian spirit that looks out to
the wider world; I have lived part of my life dreaming,
because I as a musician love melody. There, tragedy
loses its heart-rending edge, dance becomes purer and
wine is only perfume. I cannot sit at the piano with a farreaching
melody. I sing what pleases me and I feel a
response." 'Rincon', 'rincones', 'rinconcitos' ('corner,
'corners' and 'little corners') are words that frequently
appear in the world of Turina. The corner is an intimate,
private space, perhaps at times a space to be shared with
someone else. Turina did in fact explain the significance
of the corner here, with a note at the top of the score
saying it was "The corner of the composer's office. An
intimate and secluded place." This Rincon magico
(Magical Corner), its original version dated 1941, was
dedicated by Turina to his wife and children and bears
the epigraph Desfile en forma de sonata (Parade in
sonata form). A number of different characters appear as
the score progresses, specifically in the three variations
that complement the theme in the first movement. This
theme makes an expressive and sudden appearance after
an ethereal introduction of twelve bars. To clear up any
doubts about the source of this characteristic motif,
Turina adds in brackets the words "The composer".
After a lengthy exposition of the theme the three
variations follow one another, each one referring to a
different character. The first is entitled Regino y la
guitarra (Regino and the guitar), alluding to the guitarist
and critic Regino Sainz de la Maza, a close friend of
Turina and the dedicatee and first soloist of Rodrigo's
Concierto de Aranjuez. The second variation is built on
subtle semiquaver patterns almost always marked
dolcissimo, above which the song-like melody is given
to the left hand. Turina called this section Las melodias
de Paquita (Paquita's melodies). The third and last
leaves no doubt as to its subject, being clearly marked
Pepe, el pianista gaditano (Pepe, the pianist from
Cadiz), another close friend, Jose Cubiles, a co-founder
and co-director of the National Music Commissariat in
1940 who, along with Turina himself and Nemesio
Otano, gave the first performances of many of Turina's
piano works, as well as of Falla's Nights in the Gardens
of Spain.
The spirit hanging over the solemn, modal opening
of the lively second-movement Scherzo is that of the
Debussy of Children's Corner. Turina adds descriptive
titles here as well: its three parts are marked respectively
El dinamismo de Antonito (Antonito's dynamism), Los
farolitos de Carmen (Carmen's little lanterns) and
Antonito vuelve (Antonito returns). The third movement,
meanwhile, is a gentle "expressive and penetrating"
Lied, lilting in nature and marked Andantino. It is
headed La cancion de Lolita (Lolita's song), after the
soprano Lola Rodriguez de Aragon, a former pupil of
the great Elisabeth Schumann and star of the première of
the final version of Turina's Canto a Sevilla in 1934, and
of wonderful recordings of that work and of the songs Tu
pupila es azul and Los dos miedos, in which she was
accompanied on the piano by Turina himself.
"The composer and his family" are the protagonists
in the rhythmic Sonata that forms the dazzling finale to
this work. In it Turina displays his most virtuosic
resources, his writing both lavish and transparent but not
concealing its picturesque heart. Movement and work
conclude with a solemn four-bar fortissimo coda. By the
time he wrote Rincon magico, Turina was approaching
the end of his life, and his inspiration and the energy to
develop it were beginning to diminish. He broached the
work at least three times, between 1941 and 1946, when
it was finally published.
The Concierto sin orquesta (Concerto without
orchestra) is one of the many works by Turina that has
been neglected, yet fully deserves to be programmed
and enjoyed. It dates from 1935, and its manuscript
(annotated Ciclo pianistico VIII) carries a dedication to
the Navarrese pianist and composer Joaquin Larregla,
creator of the famous jota ¡Viva Navarra!. The first
movement opens with two bars of resounding chords
which give way to a brief measured passage that in turn
serves as a preamble to the Allegro moderato section.
This features the motif of an obsessively repeated note
that becomes the background for the development of a
broad theme in fifths and octaves in which Turina
amuses himself with his favourite combinations of
triplets. After a number of different episodes, the
original theme reappears, leading to a new cadenced
passage with Debussy-like glissandi, before culminating
in a sonorous coda. This appears to prepare the ground
for the pianissimo (and completely unconnected)
introduction of the introverted Molto adagio that brings
this original concerto to an end. Its sonority and rich
harmonies evolve towards an animated, extrovert
Allegro moderato, the intense lyricism of which leads
inexorably to an extended coda. This then picks up on
elements from tempo I, giving the whole a cyclical
unity.
© Justo Romero
English Version : Susannah Howe
Sonata Romantica (sobre un tema espanol) (more info)
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I. Tema y variaciones - 8:24
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II. Scherzo: Vif et Gai - 4:22
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III. Final: Lent - Allegro - 7:41
Sonata fantasia (more info)
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I. Lento - Allegro molto moderato - 6:05
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II. Coral con variaciones: Lento - 6:28
Rincon magico (Desfile en forma de Sonata) (more info)
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I. Tema y variaciones: Andante - 9:19
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II. Scherzo: Allegro vivo - 3:52
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III. Lied: Andantino - 5:38
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IV. Sonata: Allegretto ritmico - 5:10
Sanlucar de Barrameda (Sonata Pintoresca) (more info)
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I. Moderato - Allegro moderato - 5:44
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II. Molto adagio - 5:02