Joaquin Rodrigo (1901-1999)
Concierto pastoral Fantasia para un gentilhombre
Dos miniaturas andaluzas Adagio para instrumentos de
viento
Joaquin Rodrigo was born on St Cecilia's Day, 22nd November,
1901, in Sagunto, in the Spanish province of Valencia. In 1905 an outbreak of
diphtheria impaired the young boy's vision and within a few years he lost every
vestige of sight. From the age of seven he attended the School for the Blind in
the city of Valencia, where, with his musical gifts becoming increasingly
apparent, he played the violin and piano, the latter being his favourite. Later
he took composition lessons with Francisco Antich Carbonell, renowned organist
and maestro at the local parish church. Having composed various apprentice
pieces, Rodrigo was awarded an Honourable Commendation in 1925 in a national
music competition for his orchestral work, Cinco piezas infantiles, first
performed by the Valencia Symphony Orchestra two years later.
In the autumn of 1927, the young composer, following the
precedent of so many Spanish musicians, travelled to Paris, enrolling at the
Ecole Normale de Musique. His teacher, Paul Dukas, one of the masters of early
twentieth-century French music, profoundly influenced Rodrigo, especially in
aspects of orchestration. In 1928, the French President awarded Manuel de Falla
the National Legion of Honour. Rodrigo was invited to perform his own piano
pieces at the ceremony, thus extending his growing reputation as composer and
virtuoso pianist. Around the same time, Rodrigo met Victoria Kamhi, a young
Jewish pianist from Istanbul, the daughter of a businessman. Despite various
difficulties, financial and otherwise, they fell in love and eventually married
in January 1933, but a year later hardship enforced months of separation, a
dilemma resolved only when Rodrigo was awarded a prestigious Conde de Cartagena
Scholarship, enabling him to be reunited with his wife in Paris. In 1936
disaster struck again when the Spanish Civil War began and the Scholarship fund
was no longer available. Eventually Rodrigo and his wife found refuge for
eighteen months at the Institute for the Blind in Freiburg. In 1938 he returned
to Spain for a brief stay at a summer school in Santander, but failing to
secure employment, was forced to return once more in Paris. In 1939 Victoria
suffered a miscarriage, yet somehow, despite such tribulations, Rodrigo found
the strength and inspiration to complete the Concierto de Aranjuez, a work
which would change his life.
Rodrigo went back to Spain shortly before the start of the
Second World War. Life there was extremely difficult, but with the help of
colleagues, including Falla, Rodrigo was soon offered sufficient employment to
earn a reasonable living. After years of deprivation, the tide began to turn
with the première in Barcelona of the Concierto de Aranjuez on 9th November,
1940, followed by performances in other Spanish cities. On 27th January, 1941
(the anniversary of Mozart's birthday), Rodrigo's daughter, Cecilia, was born.
Though there were to be many setbacks over the years,
Rodrigo's reputation as a great Spanish composer now began to gain
international esteem. Throughout his long life Joaquin Rodrigo wrote more than
two hundred compositions, creating a prolific variety of orchestral pieces,
concertos, songs and choral works, guitar, piano, violin, and other
instrumental music, increasingly in demand and appreciated world-wide.
Concerning his Concierto pastoral, for flute and orchestra,
Rodrigo has commented:
I composed this concerto, first performed in London in
October 1978, for the exceptionally gifted flautist, James Galway. The work is
divided into three movements, the first being in classical form, with first and
second themes, imposing exceptional difficulties on the soloist in the first
theme...The second theme has a more pastoral character, reminiscent of popular
Valencian style and contrasting with the frenzied speed of the first theme.
The second movement is an 'adagio' which interrupts a brief
'scherzo'. It comprises three themes, the first, nostalgic with short melismas,
the second, brief and rapid in the register of flageolets, and the third, with
more repose. In this movement the cadenza can be found, as is customary in this
musical form. The third movement is a rondo with the air of pastoral dance...
The Concierto pastoral has proved to be an exciting and
perennial addition to the flute repertory, attracting the finest soloists in
what constitutes a challenging artistic and technical tour de force.
James Galway, the proud dedicatee of Concierto pastoral,
also became fascinated by the possibilities of a flute transcription of
Fantasia para un gentilhombre, originally for guitar and orchestra. When Galway
sought Rodrigo's permission to arrange the work for flute and orchestra, the
composer willingly agreed, though he remained very attentive to the new score,
suggesting appropriate amendments. This concerto, written for Andres Segovia,
the guitar's greatest 'gentleman', and first performed by him in 1958, based
its inspiration on a selection of dances from a tutor by the
seventeenth-century Baroque guitarist and composer, Gaspar Sanz. Rodrigo's art,
which so often unites the glories of ancient Spanish music with
twentieth-century textures and techniques, offers a sumptuous orchestral
tapestry encapsulating the expressive themes of another age in modern colours.
Rodrigo's choice of movements in Fantasia para un gentilhombre
juxtaposes energy and elegance, sensitivity and robustness. A dignified Villano
is paired with the delicately imitative passages of the Ricercare, and the
expressive melodic contours of an Espanoleta complement the evocative Fanfare
of the Neopolitan Cavalry. After the haunting Danza de las hachas comes the
climactic Canario, a vigorous zapateado (stamping of the heels), from the
Canary Islands, spiced with a dazzling cadenza.
Some thirty years earlier, Rodrigo composed Dos miniaturas
andaluzas (1929) for string orchestra, but he could scarcely have anticipated
that the première would be delayed seventy years until 22nd November, 1999.
Here the introduction to Preludio (marked lento e cantabile), once again
recalls mysterious shades of the Spanish Renaissance, but a different vista
soon develops as Rodrigo's colourful sonorities create an essentially
Andalusian mood. The second movement, Danza, captures the ear with rhythmic
strumming effects, evoking guitars, a device Rodrigo emulated in several of his
concertos.
The splendour of Rodrigo's musical imagination is superbly
represented in Adagio para instrumentos de viento (Adagio for wind
instruments), first given in Pittsburgh in 1966 by the American Wind Symphony
Orchestra, to which it is dedicated. Rodrigo regarded this work as
'architecturally in the shape of a sonata without development, with two themes
one after the other in different tonalities, returning eventually in the same
key'. After the initial and quite extended lyrical statement, a brief outburst,
signalled by crescendo drum beats, leads on to a thrilling, very robust change
of mood followed by urgent fanfares. Then the first theme returns with gentle
nostalgia, slightly meditative and always profoundly Spanish. A trumpet call
suddenly disturbs such introspection, but this proves to be no more than a
short interlude as the piece progresses, after some moments of sound and fury,
towards its essentially serene conclusion. Implicit throughout the work is the
composer's subtle homage to the ancient tradition of the wind bands of his
native Valencia.
Graham Wade
(author of Joaquin Rodrigo, A Life in Music,
Vols 1 & 2 (in preparation),
Joaquin Rodrigo: Concierto de Aranjuez,
and Distant Sarabandes, The Solo Guitar Music of Joaquin
Rodrigo.)