CB 112 Guitar Music
The programme was scripted by Mike Burrows 
and voiced by Rupert Kirkham ; broadcast on July 16th, 2011.
Intro Track:  Nortena, J Gomez-Crespo (3.27 min)
            Hullo, this is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham .  Today’s script was researched and scripted by Mike Burrows, and is a presentation of largely Spanish guitar-music. We have just heard Nortena, a piano-piece drawn from an Inca lullaby by the Argentinian composer, J Gomez-Crespo, 1900-1971,  and arranged by the great guitarist Andres Segovia, of whom more later.  Besides the lilt of melody, aided by the rhythmically defined though sweet-harmonied accompaniment, notice the use of rapping of the soundbox, an effect more resounding than can be gained by the tapping of strings con legno of a bowed instrument.
            “Only one thing is more beautiful to hear than a guitar, and that is two guitars,” so Chopin professed.  Developed from the lute and mandolin, the guitar has the lute’s fretted neck, but a flat-backed soundbox nipped in at the flanks that appears to owe something to the viol-family.  The breadth of the body and length of neck promote resonance and an ease in finding notes, it is light for its size and a comfortable shape to hold aslant the midriff and lower chest by left hand on neck and right elbow and forearm.  It comes in a variety of sizes, usually with four strings, its pubescent or matronly figure capable of a wide compass.  It does not require the speed of note-production needed on, say, the mandolin, to create a sustained sonority.  No other stringed instrument is easier to play well.  In its simplicity, it can be supremely expressive, neither as heavy nor as over-resonant as a piano, and less scratchy than a bowed instrument.  For centuries, it has been at home in most parts of the world, an instrument of choice for both colonialists and native peoples overtaken by European and American incursions.  Beginning among hired musicians and courtiers, its use has thus spread until in both acoustic and electrical forms, it has become a pillar in the edifice of modern blues, pop- or folk music.
            The Valencian, Joaquin Rodrigo (1901-99) wrote a number of concertante guitar-works in an approachable idiom that owes much to folk-music and Art-music in Spain Sagunto 
            Here is a movement, Canario, from his colourful four-movement Fantasia Para Un Gentilhombre, a homage to the 17th Century performer and composer Gaspar Sanz (c1650-c1710), the gentleman of the title, and based on songs and dances from Sanz’s published collections.  This Fantasia was composed in 1954 for performance by Rodrigo’s friend Segovia.  
            A Canario is a variety of lively dance from the Canary Islands .
Track One: Fantasia Para  Un Gentilhombre, Rodrigo ( 4.58 min)
            Often, we cry for the authentic, and decry the efforts of those who paid homage in the age before ours.  We can check on an original in this instance.  Gaspar Sanz’s Canario or Canarios in its solo-form shows us how brilliantly Rodrigo treats and develops his material.  
Track Two:  Canarios, Sanz (1.19 min)  
            Now, let’s hear the set of Six Catalan Folksongs by the Catalan guitarist-composer, Miguel Llobet-Soles (1878-1938).  Born in Barcelona Spain  to rule from Madrid Paris Barcelona Barcelona 
            Six Catalan Folksongs consists of:  The Son of the Mother (A religious song), Amelia’s Testament, Robber’s Song, The Nightingale, Heir of The Rieras, and Christmas Night.  We have heard the guitar dance, now let’s once again hear it sing.  
Track Three:  Llobet:  Six Catalan Folksongs (7.26 min)  
            The guitar originated in Southern Europe and always had its strongest advocates in Italy and Spain, where there were many gifted craftsmen and a love of music and dance of a kind that favoured its use, until the vogue for Grand Tours among the wealthy, and the coming of factory-manufacture, of mass-education, of a culture of home-making and the development of Empires and global trade-links.  The use of the lute and allied instruments had spread throughout Europe , and so the way had been well-prepared.  The guitar, like most instruments, had its periods of favour with the classes, cycles of fashion.   In this country and in much of Northern Europe, the guitar had a golden age from the first third of the Eighteenth Century until the middle-class guitar gave way to the pianoforte in the early to mid-Nineteenth Century, as the family instrument; in the colonies, pianos travelled remarkably, but it was easier to take a wind instrument, guitar or violin on a voyage to some out-of-the-way station!
            Undoubtedly, many Europeans knew the guitar from the experiences of well-heeled travellers in Spain  and Italy 
            The Eighteenth Century had many guitar-composers, but it was a Spaniard, Fernando Sors (1778-1839), who brought the guitar into the 19th.  He settled in England 
Track Four:  Theme And Variations, Fernando Sors (6.47 min)  
            Undoubtedly, even if the pianoforte cut in, the Nineteenth Century song and dance were good to the guitar, and not only in the development of the science of guitar-design.  The invention of genre-pieces, short ‘poetic’ pieces of a particular character for a particular instrument, grew out of the John Field or Chopin Nocturne, the Schumann Novelette and Liszt Harmonie.  This, and a certain - in some places political - penchant among nations towards the picturesque elements of ‘nationalism’, stimulated a massive growth in interest in music-making, and mass-market in sheet-music.  Mass-publication, using the new factory printing-processes both met and further increased the demand.   At the highest levels, it paid composers to write well-turned miniatures.  Throughout the Nineteenth Century, the audience for virtuosity and serious musical entertainment widened, and at home or in musical and other clubs, at one level of accomplishment or another, something of the genius of hero- or heroine musician rubbed off on the public.  A good piece contrasting slow or quick A and quick or slow B sections, with or without development, provided people with entertainment and a challenge.  We mentioned the vogue for Italianacy or Spanishry earlier, and from Spain 
            The Castilian, Francisco Tarrega y Eixea, 1852-1909, was the teacher of Llobet, whose Six Catalan Folksongs we heard earlier.   Tarrega was a virtuoso and composer, known internationally as the ‘Sarasate of The Guitar’.  He wrote many genre pieces for his instrument, but, more, transcribed many piano-pieces by his colleagues.  He was educated at Madrid Conservatory, pursued a national career as a performer and achieved great success in Paris  and London 
Track Five:  Recuerdos de la Alhambra, Tarrega (4.43 min)
            The two great pianist-composers in Spain America Leipzig  and Brussels  followed on his return to Europe .  He next went to Barcelona England England Paris Iberia 
            Here is an arrangement for two guitars by Llobet of a song, Bajo La Palmera, Beneath The Palm-tree, Number 3 of Cantos de Espana, Opus 232.  In this recording, it is performed by Julian Bream and John Williams.  The two parts demand concentration, but are both together and easily audible in partnership here.
Track Six:  Beneath The Palm Tree, Cantos De Espana, Op 232, No 3, Albeniz (5.34 min)       
An instrument for a lover to play - to serenade his girl in languorous, rippling phrases that create a sense of contented laziness; good humour or longing. An instrument to play rapid, syncopated rhythms on, plucking, sliding, damping - even tapping strings or rapping soundboard - at a dance.  The guitar has two personalities, sentimental, sensitive to the point of just-audible stillness, and vital, aggressive and predatory.  It sings, it can mimic human movement in sound, it is a percussion instrument.  Art music took some while to match folk-music in all its variety and primitive but spontaneous skill.
Here is a modern example of flamenco dance-music composed and played by the Andalucian, who is much influenced by the work of Segovia Jerez 
Track Seven:  Jerez 
From Granada Granada Segovia 
Track Eight:  Fandanguillo, Turina (3.57 min)
Estudio sin Luz, or Study Without Light is one of Segovia 
Track Nine: Estudio sin Luz,
To end our programme, here is a Pavanne by Luis Milan (c1500-flourished 1536-61), who served at the court of the Dukes of Valencia and wrote many collections of songs and pieces for the Vihuela.  The Pavane was a fashionable measure, so-called possibly because it was intended to be danced in the manner of a peacock - in English, it was the pavon or pavan; we have also the word pavonine, peacock-like.
This was Classical Break on Somer Valley FM and I’m Rupert Kirkham . Today’s script was researched and written by Mike Burrows.  We hope you enjoyed it and we look forward to having your company again, soon.  
Goodbye!
 Track Ten:  Pavanne, Luis Milan (1.35 min)      
copyright Mike Burrows 2011
 
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