Guitar Recital

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BACH / TARREGA / AGUARDO / ALBENIZ / MARTIN / etc
Guitar Recital
Jose Antonio Escobar, Guitar

[ Naxos Laureate Series / CD ]

Release Date: Wednesday 15 August 2001

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"Escobar's tone is outstanding" (American Record Guide)

"Naxos's production continues to be top-notch. Escobar's tone is outstanding and his music making does not always draw attention to itself, but proceeds with remarkable focus, direction, and purpos."
- Rings American Record Guide January/February 2002


Bach's Sei Solo BWV1001-1006 , dating from about 1720, were not the first works to be written for unaccompanied violin, but they were ground-breaking in the level of their technical difficulty, and in the skill and ingenuity with which the problems of realising complex and contrapuntal textures on an unaccompanied violin were solved. Bach had an intimate knowledge of the violin and may have been an excellent player, but it is likely that in writing these works he enjoyed the collaboration of Johann Georg Pisendel, the greatest violinist of the time. A bow can touch no more than two adjacent strings at the same time, so the presence of contrapuntal lines can only be suggested, a thing in which Bach was wonderfully adept; such problems do not exist with the guitar, the plucked strings of which, on the other hand, cannot match the violin's sustaining power. However, Bach reworked numerous bowed-string works for the harpsichord (or lute-harpsichord), so we may make similar adaptations with a clear conscience. The three Partitas are da camera works, largely containing dance movements, while the three Sonatas each contain a Fugue; that in BWV1001 is the shortest of the three Bach later reworked it for the organ, and it was adapted for the lute by J. P. Kellner.

Francisco Tárrega was a seminal figure in the history of the guitar, one who revived interest in the instrument at a time when it was at a low ebb. In this his own performing career played a part, but it was limited and without grandiose visions; it was, rather through other aspects of his work that his long-range influence has been felt. He defined the bases of good technique, though these were later modified by others to adjust to modern performing situations. His teaching was spread by his students, notably Emilio Pujol (1886-1980) and Miguel Llobet (1878-1938) - and through them Andrès Segovia (1893-1987) and his successors. In Tárrega's time the salon was the natural habitat of the guitar and both this and his didactic work are reflected in his compositions. Of his 78 original works, 28 are Studies, fifteen are Preludes; most of the remainder are Albumblätter, many of which are in the form of popular ballroom dances of the day. Collectively, his works are marked by refined craftsmanship and are utterly idiomatic to the guitar; their language is Romantic and their appeal lies in their melodic lines, sincerity of expression and clarity of form.

Paris was the meeting place in 1826 of two great Spanish guitarists, Dionisio Aguado and Fernando Sor, who became close friends and duo partners - "Les deux amis" of Sor's Op.41 (1829-30). Whilst Sor played without using the nails of his right hand (as did Pujol), Aguado, the more extrovert of the two, used them (as did Segovia and almost everyone else since) and stunned his audiences with his virtuosity and the volume of his sound - to which his use of the "tripodison" (a stand on which the guitar rested, separated from the player's body) no doubt contributed. Sor acknowledged the value of this device but it is not known whether he ever used one. The works recorded in this programme make it clear that Aguado's justifiable success did not rest solely on displays of idle virtuosity; his early training in music was thorough.

Two other names that are often mentioned in the same breath are those of Enrique Granados and Isaac Albéniz, yet in their lifestyles, characters and musical outlook they were poles apart. Granados presented musical Spain through the senses of a sensitive observer rather than a passionate participant, but Albéniz had his feet firmly on its soil. The island of Mallorca (Majorca) has been called 'The jewel of the Mediterranean'. The haunting opening of Albéniz's portrayal, a barcarolle, is reminiscent of the style of Chopin, who spent a winter there. Torre bermeja (The Crimson Tower) refers to any one of the many stone towers scattered throughout the Spanish countryside, one made of particularly red-coloured stone. The liveliness of the music may well portray village life and the gypsy festivities around the tower, rather than the tower itself.

Tracks:


Sonata in G minor BWV 1001
01. Adagio 03:50
02. Fuga 04:57
03. Siciliano 03:04
04. Presto 03:59


FRANCISCO TARREGA
Sueno
05. Sueno 02:07

Maria
06. Maria 01:22

Preludio No.1
07. Preludio No.1 01:10

Preludio No.5
08. Preludio No. 5 01:36

Rosita
09. Rosita 01:48


DONISIO AGUADO
Rondo II in A minor
10. Andante-Allegro moderato 09:01


ISAAC ALBENIZ
Mallorca
11. Mallorca 06:40

Torre Bermeja
12. Torre Bermeja 04:27


FRANK MARTIN
Quatre Pieces Breves
13. Prelude 02:27
14. Air 01:48
15. Plainte 02:42
16. Comme une Gigue 02:18


VICENTE ASENCIO
Collectici intim
17. La Serenor 04:11
18. La Joia 02:47
19. La Calma 03:01
20. La Gaubanca 01:51
21. La Frisanca 03:01