ESCUDERO: Illeta
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Francisco Escudero (1913-2002) Illeta When Francisco Escudero died in 2002, Basque cultural life lost one of its most eminent artists. Composer, conductor...
Francisco Escudero (1913-2002)
Illeta
When Francisco Escudero died in 2002, Basque cultural
life lost one of its most eminent artists. Composer,
conductor and teacher, this distinguished musician spent
his life creating an exceptional and very individual
catalogue of works embracing almost all musical genres.
Escudero was born in San Sebastian in 1913 and
began studying music with Beltran Pagola and Conrado
del Campo in Madrid. In 1932 he travelled to France and
Germany where he worked with Dukas, Le Flem and
Wolff, dedicating himself on his return to Spain to
composing, teaching and conducting. The French
influence is discernible in his early works, such as the
String Quartet in G, but much stronger is the essentially
Basque element to be found in his sacred and stage
works, such as the oratorio Illeta and the operas Zigor
and Gernika, as well as in the Concierto vasco para
piano. Later he tried out more modern techniques to
great effect in the Cello Concerto, and his final years
were particularly prolific, producing the "Ultreia"
Symphony, Sinfonia concertante and the Violin
Concerto, among other works. Escudero was awarded
the Gold Medal of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de
San Fernando and the Spanish National Music Prize
three times. He spent most of his life in his native
Basque Country, dying in San Sebastian in June 2002.
Escudero's artistic sensibility and imagination
stretched beyond purely musical considerations; his
style is principally characterized by a personal and
abstract conception of traditional Basque music, the
result of much time spent studying and dissecting its
themes and rhythms, and by a sound technical
background. This did not prevent his use of the boldest
avant-garde sound effects, which he integrated into his
own harmonic system, with a kind of tonal freedom that
resulted in frequent and unexpected clashes. Never one
to refuse a compositional challenge, Escudero always
came up with incredibly effective solutions,
demonstrating enormous skill in developing and
orchestrating motifs to create a musical fabric rich in
gesture and chromatic harmony.
His desire to portray the different aspects of the
Basque character, evident in previous works, reached
the heights of emotion in Escudero's Illeta, which
depicts the reaction of his countrymen to death. Xabier
Lizardi's poem Biotzean min dut (My heart is broken),
which deals with the grief experienced on the death of a
loved one, inspired him to compose this imposing
oratorio sung in the first person by the soloist and the
chorus, who, as the townspeople, join the baritone in his
mourning for the final farewell: the wake, funeral and
burial. Escudero provides vivid musical depictions of all
these, once again proving his mastery of a large
orchestra and massed voices in creating a deeply
spiritual setting as his response to the sentiments
expressed by the text.
The work's starting-points are a five-note motif,
reflecting the influence of Gregorian chant on traditional
Basque music, and a second theme introduced
immediately afterwards by the cor anglais, both of
which recur throughout the oratorio, acting as the links
between its different episodes. Illeta employs a wide
variety of descriptive effects and devices: at the
beginning we hear the bells tolling for the grandmother
who has died, and strident music representing cries of
grief; in the second part we can hear the mourners
rending their garments; and in the third part, the winter
wind gusting at night in an extraordinary and disturbing
orchestral interlude, and a tender, moving violin solo.
Escudero also successfully builds up different
atmospheres, such as the desolation of the townsfolk as
they intone the Lord's Prayer in Basque at the
beginning, and join in the liturgy with the Dies irae in
the third part. The play of different pressures and tonal
combinations helps clarify the soloist's range of feelings
-- intense grief, emotional emptiness, tenderness and
sadness -- culminating in a deeply moving finale on the
words "my heart is broken!"
Santiago Gorostiza
English Translation by Susannah Howe
Illeta (Funeral) (more info)
-
Gaubela (Wake) - 21:42
-
Eliza Bidean (Procession to the Church) - 11:27
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Illeta (Funeral) - 12:19
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Kanposantu Bidean (Procession to the Cemetery) - 3:44
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Eorzketa eta Azken Agurra (Burial and Final Farewell) - 9:48