Serenading in Lucca

It was just as well that I opted to hear the first of the two performances given of this year’s Barga Opera Festival main item, Vivaldi’s  serenata “Mio cor, povero cor,” in Lucca’s San Francesco church rather than Barga’s Fosso.  Not only was the 6 p.m. starting time more congenial to me, not only were the acoustics more hospitable to the music but Sardelli, who has done so much to bring Vivaldi’s operas back to life, was suddenly taken ill and could not conduct the Barga performance. (I gather he is now well on the way to recovery).

I can do no better than to translate Sardelli’s note to the serenata into English as it is full of useful insights.

“Among the seven surviving serenate by Vivaldi, RV 690 is undoubtedly the most singular, the least performed, the most interesting and the most problematic from the historical point of view. But what was a serenata in Vivaldi’s time? It was music to be performed outdoors in the evening. Serenate were songs or madrigals sung by the suitor under the beloved’s window and were usually accompanied by plucked instruments.  In aristocratic courts, however, the serenata became a type of mini-opera. It was a pastoral, Arcadian or heroic drama performed under moonlight in the gardens of noble residences on the occasion of weddings, birthdays and name days. A serenata was thus a theatrical experience outside of the theatre, one that was smaller in size, with fewer characters and usually divided into two parts, instead of the normal three acts of an opera.

Vivaldi’s surviving serenate testify to the splendour and richness of that age’s dramatic tastes. RV 690, however, gives musicologists a hard time. We do not know who the client was or the date and place of its premiere. A horrible event underlines the innocent pastoral intertwining of the amorous skirmishes of the two nymphs Eurilla and Nice and the shepherd Alcindo: the persecution of the Jansenist abbot Jean de Tourrei, exiled from France and at first welcomed in Rome and Florence, only to be betrayed by his guests, imprisoned in Castel Sant’Angelo and subjected to the tortures of the Inquisition from 1711 to 17I5. The serenata, usually a happy and carefree genre, in fact ends with the final demand of the two nymphs for an inquisition (aria “Punish, tear, kill”) for poor Alcindo, alias de TourreiI. It’s still unclear who the libretto’s author was. Perhaps the serenata was performed in Rome in the entourage of Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, patron of Vivaldi (as well as of Corelli, Scarlatti, Handel and many others). But since documents date the serenata between 1716 and 1719 (when Vivaldi had not yet arrived in Rome), the possibility remains that the opera was written and performed in Mantua or Venice. Apart from these puzzles, Vivaldi’s music stays clear, fresh and full of ideas and instrumental colours. The arias with oboes, bassoon obbligato and hunting horns witness the great richness of ideas in the composer’s maturity. This little known and performed beautiful and unique serenata does not even have a title! The manuscript opens with the first aria, beginning “Mio cor, povero cor,” which is perhaps the best name we can give to Vivaldi’s serenata.”

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I was indeed astonished by the variety of arias in the serenata. Everything from sweet triple-time pastorals to energetic calls-to-action with magnificently rasping horn playing to an embedded violin concerto was performed. It’s as if Vivaldi wanted to show off as many of the musical qualities that he was able to create. It’s sad that this fine Venetian composer, who influenced J. S. Bach so much in his concerti, should have died destitute in a Viennese slum. But then, as a friend who was also present at the concert explained to me, when one’s patron (in this case Emperor Charles VI) suddenly dies then one’s remuneration usually dies with him. 

The serenata is still very much with us. By Mozart’s time it had become a largely instrumental composition and was called a serenade. In the nineteenth century great composers like Dvorak, Tchaikovsky, Brahms and Elgar wrote delightful serenades and the term, used to describe music of a more laid-back nature, survives to the present times.

All players and singers performed quite magnificently. (It was the leader of the ‘Modo Antiquo’ orchestra, Frederico Guglielmo, who had to take over from the indisposed Sardelli for the work’s second presentation.) I especially liked the expressive way soprano Sonia Tedla sang her part as the nymph Eurilla.

It seems astonishing that less than forty years ago Italian H(istorically)  I(nformed) P(erformances) on authentic instruments were virtually non-existent. (There were fine Vivaldi performances by such groups as ‘I Musici’ but they didn’t use cat-gut strings for example). The shadow of the’ melodramma’ was still strong and I remember baroque arie being sung like nineteenth century bel canto. Today, of course, Italians have fully espoused H.I.Ps. After all, so much of the finest baroque music is Italian! That’s why it is so important to support institutions like Barga Opera in this especial year of need when so many cultural events appear tottering on the brink of annihilation. Let’s hope that before not too long we shall again see a fully staged Vivaldian opera gracing Barga’s Teatro dei Differenti.

The Way Home

I was introduced to Claudio Monteverdi at school when we went with our music teacher, Alan Morgan, to Sadler’s Wells theatre to see his opera “L’Orfeo” in a ‘realisation’ by Raymond Leppard.  Leppard’s early baroque productions are no longer considered  comme il faut since the authentic music revival has revolutionised the way this repertoire is now performed. In fairness, however, Leppard did bring these hitherto unknown works to the public’s attention and, even with modern instruments, his productions were rather effective.

‘L’Orfeo’ was written in 1607 for a court performance during the annual Mantua carnival and is one of the earliest operas. (Jacopo Peri’s ‘Dafne’ is regarded as the first opera, written in 1598 for the Florentine Camerata.)

Monteverdi returned to opera towards the end of his life when he was asked by the Venetian republic to write for the new theatres there. Sadly at least seven of the composer’s operas have been lost and only ‘l’Incoronazione di Poppea’ and ‘Il Ritorno di Ulisse in Patria’ have survived.

On the other hand Monteverdi’s madrigals and most of his church music have survived. Why this situation? It’s clear that books of madrigals were purchased for home music-making and church music had its choirs requiring copies. The theatre, however, is more ephemeral and first performances may often be the only performances. Even in more recent times, operas have still been lost; for example, Sullivan’s ‘Thespis’.

It’s therefore lucky that three complete Monteverdi operas have survived for us to enjoy.  I attended a performance of one of them ‘Il Ritorno di Ulisse in Patria’ – only rediscovered by accident at the end of the nineteenth century – at Florence’s Alla Pergola theatre last week. This charming theatre dates from 1656 and is Italy’s oldest extant opera house. It is also the first theatre with superimposed boxes arranged in a horseshoe fashion – something which became de rigeur in subsequent opera houses.

Incidentally, the name ‘pergola’ relates to the framework on the top floor from which a vine, now looking ever more luscious, droops down.

Many operatic premieres have taken place at the Teatro alla Pergola, most famously Verdi’s ‘Macbeth’ in 1847!

We think of Italian melodrama as being a succession of brilliant arias linked by recitatives. This is not quite the case with Monteverdi and early baroque opera. The ‘stile rappresentativo’ in which they are composed consists largely of an arioso style of singing half-way between recitativo and aria. This means that the text is paramount and that there are no examples of ‘da capo’ arias such as came later with Alessandro Scarlatti and his followers. There are few repetitions of words and the whole can be said to be’ through-composed’. In this respect Monteverdi is quite modern in outlook as operas since Wagner have tended to be composed with a similar aesthetic idea – they are in all senses, music dramas.

However, towards the end of his life Monteverdi did allow some arias to interrupt his ‘stile rappresentativo’ and also introduced more instrumental interludes to break up what might have become a tediously endless recitativo.

We are indeed in a period of great musical changes in the mid seventeenth century: late polyphony is turning into early baroque ‘stile rappresentativo’ and moving towards the fully-fledged high baroque operas of Handel and his ilk with their pyrotechnic arias and the rise of the opera diva.

‘Il Ritorno Di Ulisse in Patria’, written when Monteverdi was already 72 years old, was one of the first compositions intended for public theatres.  A few years earlier opera was an exclusive court entertainment but in 1637 the world’s first opera house was built in Venice and with it came the possibility for the public of seeing a show by just buying a ticket. Performances were no longer unique events but could be repeated – in short, theatre as we know it was born and in the following decade four more opera theatres were built in Venice.

I very much enjoyed the performance and its staging at the Teatro alla Pergola. Ottavio Dantone conducted the dazzling Accademia Bizantina with the most resonant cornette (an early baroque instrument and not to be confused with the modern brass cornet) I have heard.

The singers were equally excellent and included Charles Workman, Anicio Zorzi Giustiniani and Delphine Galou.

The stage scenery mirrored the theatre itself with the semicircle of boxes occupied by what presumably were the aristocracy of the times dressed in flaming red costumes. The main cast was dressed unobtrusively in more modern clothes.

I was so glad for the surtitles in both English and Italian for one couldn’t really miss a word in the unfolding drama of Ulysses’ return. Interestingly the libretto had no mention of Penelope’s weaving and unweaving of her cloth to keep the suitors at bay. They, unable to draw Ulysses’ bow-string, were eventually killed off by him when he handled the magic weapon. Penelope remained obstinate almost to the end, refusing to acknowledge Ulysses as her real husband. Even the old nurse’s recognition of a childhood scar (caused by a wild boar) on the returning hero’s back doesn’t convince her. It is when Ulysses accurately describes the pattern on their bed linen which Penelope has embroidered herself that she finally succumbs and realises that her beloved husband has returned from his long peregrinations around the Mediterranean.

Although my seat was ‘in the Gods’ I still obtained a very good view of the show as the Pergola is quite intimate in size and possesses heavenly acoustics!

The return of Ulysses to his homeland after years away has resonance in my own situation. Torn apart, not by any Trojan war but by a virus, we shall be spending our first wedding anniversary in forty-four years of marriage away from each other.

This is what I would have to do at present to reach the UK from Italy this summer (I’ve been double-vaxed).

Amber list passengers:

1. Be in receipt of a negative COVID-19 test, taken within 72 hours of arrival.

2. Book Covid tests for day 2 and 8 in the UK.

3. Complete a passenger locator form.

4. Self-quarantine in private accommodation for 10 full days after arrival (or full duration of stay if less than 10 days).

Last year we flew to Italy in the summer and back to the UK in the autumn and just required our standard passports and boarding passes in spite of the fact that both Italy and the UK were in the most desperate throes of the pandemic, far worse than now.

Shouldn’t these current precautions have been in place last year so that we could travel more easily (and safely) this year?

Anyway, there we are.

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Home-coming

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So near and yet so far in this strange year

like Ulysses will I see my birth’s isle

and sleep in the marriage bed with my dear

and sweetly dream forever and awhile?

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Could I remember that road high-sea sprung

towards the enchanted path that led home?

Could I live liberated and unstung,

enveloped in the waves’ perennial foam?

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I have left the lotus-eaters alone,

returned to be recognized by Argos

my faithful dog, by all the rest unknown

while the world hurls itself into chaos.

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So be it but just let me hold your hand

and walk together to that golden land!

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But Not Love

With Saint Valentine’s day just passed and with all the time in the world to listen to music (which hopefully we will be able to hear live once again) I have been delving into Italian song. No, not the operatic arias of the likes of Verdi or Vivaldi but popular song on which so much of these great composers’ music is based.

The archetypal Italian tenor from Caruso to Bocelli has never disdained these products of a less sophisticated milieu and, in particular, the Neapolitan song of which my favourite is that melting ballad ‘cor ‘ngrato’ as sung by the unforgettable Giuseppe di Stefano who I am old enough to remember singing with La Divina Callas (her voice was by then sadly rather less than divina) at a farewell concert at London’s Royal Festival Hall in 1974.

My Milanese-born mother, who was classically trained in piano at the conservatoire of her birthplace (among her graduation pieces was Bartok’s ‘Allegro Barbaro’), would occasionally sing a lovely tune to the words ‘Ma l’amore No.’ She said she remembered it from a wartime film.

I looked into this song recently; it’s interesting how lockdown can conjure up so many early recollections in the deprived social world we are forced to live in these days!

“Ma l’amore no” (But not love) is an Italian song, dating from 1942 and written by Giovanni D’Anzi and Michele Galdieri, which was sung for the first time by Alida Valli in the film directed by Mario Mattoli, “Stasera niente di nuovo”. (‘Nothing new tonight’).

A few months after the release of the film the song was recorded by Lina Termini. The version by Alberto Rabagliati is the one that is the best known but the song has been covered by many other artistes including Mina and Gigliola Cinquetti (my favourite cover version) and US singer Mike Patton (very upbeat and to my mind rather terrible). Several of these singers would come and perform at Bagni di Lucca during its fifties heyday. I wonder if those times will ever return…

Although there was an international trend in Italian songs during the war years largely due to the increasing presence of the Allied American army and there were numerous songs with exotic rhythms and strong jazz accents, this enchanting piece, with its classical tinge, soon became one of the Italian musical leitmotifs of the forties. Indeed, “ma l’amore no” has become a perennial favourite…a sort of Italian equivalent of ‘we’ll meet again’ and that most touching of Second World War songs and one which transcended enemy frontiers to be sung alike by both Allied and Axis powers: ‘Lili Marlene’, originally performed by Lale Andersen.

In spite of some quite convincing covers I have to go back to Alida Valli’s performance. It is simply unbeatable in spite of the fact that the great actress of aristocratic descent – who threw back in the face of the fascists any attempt to make her an icon of Mussolini’s propaganda films – never recorded the song outside its film setting and who, compared with LinaTermini, did not have a particularly projecting voice.

(Alida Valli)

There is another reason why I prefer Alida. She includes a very sweet introductory passage which all subsequent versions cut. Furthermore, in her singing of the chorus stanza Valli introduces a grace note a third interval above which makes all the difference.

Anyway, here is that delectable song interpreted by the wonderful Alida Valli who left us as recently as 2006 after an exceptional career with all the greatest that Italy has produced including Luchino Visconti.

And here is my translation of the Italian words.

”Looking at the roses that bloomed this morning
I think they will be withered by tomorrow
And all things are like roses
Which live a day, an hour and no more.
But love, no, my love cannot
Be dispersed in the wind with the roses.
It is so strong that it will not give up.
It will not fade;
I will watch over it, I will defend it
From all those poisonous snares
Which would like to snatch it from my heart.
Poor love
Maybe you will leave
And you will seek caresses from other loves.
Alas
And if you come back already withered
All sweetness you will find in me
But love no, my love cannot
Dissolve with the gold of your hair
As long as I live it will be alive in me
Only for you
Maybe you will leave
And you will seek caresses from other loves
Alas.
And if you come back already withered
All sweetness you will find in me.
But love no, my love cannot
Dissolve with the gold of your hair.
As long as I live it will be alive in me
Only for you.”

Great songs last for ever whether they have been written by Schubert or Bixio. They are also the best way to enter into the mentality of a nation and to brush up one’s language skills!

Caged in an Italian Quiz Show

On Italian TV prime time viewing is taken up by the quiz show. The current RAI 1 schedule, before the evening news at eight, presents the quiz show called “l’eredita”’ (the inheritance) presented by Flavio Insinna. This show concentrates on words and general knowledge and can be viewed in a truly educational light. For example, there’s a question dealing with vocabulary; unusual words are given a variety of meanings and the contestants have to guess the correct one. Then there are two words linked by a third whose letters remain hidden and are only gradually revealed, lessening the number of points scored of course. If anyone is learning Italian or just interested in the language l’eredita’, which has been running since 2002, is truly educational fun.

RAI has a long history of quiz shows starting with the iconic ‘Lascia o Raddoppia’ (leave or double your money) presented by Mike Bongiorno, based on the American ‘the 64,000 dollar question’ show and first broadcast in 1955, the year after TV transmission in Italy started.

I recently discovered a fascinating vignette about this show relating to the Avant Garde composer John Cage. In 1959 Cage was a participant answering questions on mycology (mushrooms) and winning 5 million lire (around 40,000 euros in today’s money). During the show he performed in a concert called “Water Walk”, under the astonished eyes of Mike Bongiorno and the Italian public, in which the “instruments” were, among others, a bathtub, a watering can, five radios, a piano, ice cubes, a steamer and a vase of flowers.

The dialogue that took place between Bongiorno and Cage when he took his leave was as follows:

MB: “Very good, good good good good. Good very good, good Cage. Well, Mr. Cage has undoubtedly shown us that he knew about mushrooms … so it wasn’t just a character who came to this stage to make some wacky performances of wacky music, so he’s really a prepared character. I knew that because I remember he told us he lived in the country near New York and every day went for walks and picked mushrooms. ”

J.C .: “Thanks to … mushrooms, and to RAI and to all the people of Italy”.

M.B .: “To all the people of Italy. Goodbye Mr. Cage, goodbye and have a good trip, will you go back to America or will you stay here?”.

J.C .: “My music remains here”.

M.B .: “Ah, so you go away and your music remains here, but the opposite would be preferable: that is if your music went away and you remain here”.

Of course Cage’s music must have sounded rather more unpalatable to a fifties Italian audience brought up on Claudio Villa and Verdi. Sadly no recording remains of the concert apart from a few photos.

Regarding my own participation in TV quiz shows: that’s another story and for another post…

Lucca’s Living Music

Music for me and for so many others is not just the Shakespearean food of love but the food of life itself. Music richly accompanies our memories, colours our passions, soothes our sorrows and heightens our joys. How sad it is then that the on-going pandemic is cruellest with this art. Writers and readers may pursue their activities in solitude and artists paint their canvases without spectators. Music, however, pines for shared interaction more than most arts: indeed, the playing of members in a symphony orchestra is one of the sublimest social collaborations known to mankind.

It was, therefore, with the greatest penchant that I attended a concert given as part of the ‘Settecento Musicale a Lucca’ (‘Eighteenth century at Lucca’) festival in the city’s superbly huge barn of a church, San Francesco, whose re-opening to the public after a three-year restoration we witnessed in 2014.

(See my posts on that momentous event at:

https://longoio.wordpress.com/2013/07/07/magisterial-monastery/

And at:

https://longoio.wordpress.com/2013/04/16/new-life-to-an-old-quarter/)

This was the programme:

Music yearns for an audience, even if socially-distanced on appropriately marked seats music, even if husband and wife are asked, as we were, to be seated with a couple of vacant places between us!

Music also requires just one player to entrance that audience whether it be on a piano or, in the case of the late afternoon’s opening item, a solo violin. Da Won Chang’s interpretation of J. S. Bach’s violin partita in D minor was beautifully played and its last movement, the famous chaconne, utterly riveting.

It also demonstrated how good so many musicians are coming out of specialist courses at Lucca’s ‘Boccherini’ conservatoire.

The ‘Animando’ chamber orchestra, conducted by Stefano Teani, followed with a group of four pieces by Mozart, Tartini, Vivaldi and Durante which displayed the astonishing variety of eighteenth century Italian music. The Neapolitan school was represented by Durante and Venice (naturally) by Vivaldi. Austrian Mozart spent two of his most formative youthful years in Italy where he assimilated the exceptional melodic qualities of that country’s music. His divertimento K136 remains one of my favourite pieces and it was very agreeably played by the orchestra. Vivaldi is best known for his concerti composed for a variety of solo instruments but those for orchestra are equally good. This one was played with particular verve and ‘authenticity’ despite its not being performed on period instruments and with no harpsicord continuo present. But then the new fashion is now steering towards a question of style rather than mere ‘authentic instruments’.

Throughout this performance Animando’s instrumental balance was excellent, defeating any confrontation with the somewhat cavernous interior in which it performed. For particular praise was the double-bass playing by Valentina Ciardelli, one of Lucca conservatoire’s most distinguished graduates and one who has laudably established herself as a player and teacher of that neglected emperor of instruments in our London borough of Greenwich.

The concert’s second half was played by the ‘Luigi Boccherini’ chamber orchestra under the multifaceted musician Luca Bacci who is also the director of Lucca cathedral’s Santa Cecilia choir.

To demonstrate how Johann Sebastian Bach’s development was strongly influenced by Italian music Vivaldi’s concerto for four violins RV580 was played: the prototype for Bach’s recreation in his own four harpsichord concerto. Of particular interest to me was a very dashing symphony by Puccini – not the ‘La Bohème’ fellow, of course, but his grandfather Antonio. Music does run in so many families: just think of Bach and Mozart, for instance.

The acoustics of San Francesco are surprisingly good as befits a mammoth shoebox of a church without any side aisles. Baroque music demands a moderate resonance and I felt the building was well suited to the eighteenth century repertoire.

It was wonderful to return to the ‘concert hall’ in this lovely building after such a long deprivation; I realised that this was the first concert I’d been to since February. It was also an especial frisson to realise that we were hearing the music of Boccherini in the same church where he lies buried.

Perhaps the concert might have added a work by another of Lucca’ great musical geniuses, Geminiani, who as this inscription states taught the brits how to play the violin properly!

(Incidentally the dedication was written by the noted violinist and quartet leader Adolfo Betti, grandfather of Massimo Betti, Bagni di Lucca’s well-known chemist.)

There are a few more concerts in this series which has been brought to fruition in perhaps one of the most difficult years for music ever since the bombings of Milan’s la Scala and Dresden’s Semper opera houses during the last war.

Indeed, I had a vague intimation that this was how Myra Hess’s famous concerts in London’s National Gallery must have felt like during the Second World War when instead of being bombarded by a virus the populace had to confront incendiaries and mortars.

(Saint Francis and the Wolf of Gubbio – a stained glass window in the concert’s church)

As in all cases prior booking is required since numbers are limited and masks must be worn at all times and temperatures must be taken, as is written on the admission ticket…

A Concert in the Sky

One of the greatest losses, not only for the Lucchesia but for the whole musical world, as a result of the horrible pandemic, which is showing no end and no mercy, is the death in March of Maestro Luigi Roni. Born in the Serchio Valley’s village of Vergemoli in 1942, Roni first studied the bassoon in Lucca before changing to singing. He made his debut aged 22 at the Spoleto festival playing the part of Mephistopheles in Gounod’s opera ‘Faust’.

Roni sang with such greats as Montserrat Caballé, Luciano Pavarotti, Plàcido Domingo and José Carreras at La Scala, Vienna State Opera, Paris Opera and New York’s Metropolitan. One of the bass singer’s last performances was in April, 2019 when he sang the part of Simone in Puccini’s ‘Gianni Schicchi’ at Genoa’s Carlo Felice theatre.

Equally sad is the fact that Roni’s wife died shortly before him – another victim of the deadly virus. But, having left each other for a short while they are together again. Love can be that strong sometimes.

Roni retained a special affection for the valley in which he was born and in 2002 founded the ‘Serchio delle Muse’ festival with the aim of bringing great musical performances to the remotest villages of his beloved ‘Valle del Serchio’.

We have always looked forwards with eagerness to this remarkable summer festival. The venues chosen for it are often remote and unknown to most people but not less beautiful for that. Town piazzas, forgotten churches and ancient palaces have all featured in the festival’s performances. One particular venue, however, literally tops it all for me. This is the concert regularly given at the Rifugio Rossi by the slopes of that mother of Apuan mountains, the Pania Della Croce.

To get to the venue is a couple of hour’s walk up footpath no 17 which leads to the extensive alpine-like meadows below the rocky Pania. The way is quite magical. The first part of it snakes through dense woodland before thinning into a birch forest and then freeing itself in the glorious uplands of the Pania massif.

DSCN3713

The singers and the instrumentalists all have to take the same path and clearly must be reasonably fit to tackle the rocky way. There is no helicopter service laid on except, perhaps, for the piano (though not for the pianist!).

Arriving at paradisiacal heights we spread ourselves out above the rifugio and waited for the performers to assemble.

In 2007 it was a soprano recital accompanied by a band of brass and introduced by the inimitable Debora Pioli.

Before us extended the vastest of landscapes. To the right rose the path which led to the summit of that most majestic of Apuan mountains, the Pania della Croce and to the right the lower, but no less magnificent summit of the Pania Secca (dry Pania not only because of its extremely rocky contours but because water in limestone country tends to hide itself undergound.) At our feet the valley of the Turrite found a way through the crags and the air was of the most wonderful purity.

Among the audience Maestro Luigi Roni can be recognized with his lordly grey beard and his considerable presence. It seems so unreal that he is no longer with us. Although aged sixty-five at the time of my photo Roni was as sprightly as ever and in excellent health. He had to be to get up to our heights!

The concert in such a heavenly setting was glorious. The young soprano had more than enough breath in her after climbing to the natural amphitheatre we lay in to make a fine show of the medley of operatic arias and traditional songs and her dulcet tones stood out brilliantly against the excellent accompaniment of the brass ensemble.

As the music faded out towards its close so the sunset enfolded the audience in its golden colours  and the mystery of an Apuan night descended upon us.

Everything must pass. This is life’s tough lesson which has to be re-learnt time and time again because we never quite believe it. For who knows where the time goes? That is the eternally unanswered question. All I know is that we have been privileged to be member of the audience at the concerts Maestro Roni has organised as part of his ‘Serchio delle Muse’ summer festival. Majestic cathedrals and the remotest of mountain chapels, town squares and village greens have all echoed to some of the most inspiring music thanks to his  efforts.

Together with his friends and admirers I take my hat off to this great man of our valley of the Serchio. Departed from this earthly life he lives on in our memory of the most exquisite music. We must be ever thankful that that we are fortunate enough to have enjoyed the generous patronage of true gentlemen like Maestro Luigi Roni.

Johann Gottfried Müthel

Music has been of great support to me in these rather difficult times. I used to listen a lot to news programmes and BBC’s Radio 4 but it started to become a little obsessive after a while – too much talk about the blasted pandemic! Changing over to a station that broadcasts mainly music can make a real difference to one’s psyche. For me BBC’s Radio 3 gives me solace and strength. No longer the snooty ‘thud’ programme of former days it broadcasts music of all sorts from Kapsperger to Klezmer, from Gamelan to Gounod and from Bach to Björk.

I have Radio 3 on most mornings and the sounds it broadcasts provide a pleasant background to several household activities. However, one morning I was particularly struck by a harpsichord concerto which I mistakenly attributed to J. S. Bach’s son Carl Philip Emmanuel.  Although it turned out to be by someone else I was not far wrong.

Johann Gottfried Müthel (1728-1788) was born in Molln in the Duchy of Lauenberg. His father was an organist and friend of Telemann who, in turn, was chummy with Johann Sebastian Bach. In 1750 Muthel became Johann Sebastian’s last student in Leipzig (Bach was to die the same year) and was present at the great composer’s death bed.

Müthel subsequently travelled a lot and met, among other composers, Bach’s son Carl Philip Emmanuel at Frederick the Great’s court at Potsdam. He then moved to Riga in present day Latvia and was organist at St Peter’s church there. Despite the fact that Riga was a little off the musical map (although Wagner’s tenure at the opera put it back in the nineteenth century) it provided a pleasant environment for Müthel.

Müthel is important for being one of the first to recognize the newly-invented piano (or fortepiano as the early instrument is called) in his compositions and for being an exponent of that turbulent proto-romantic period known as Sturm und Drang’, (Storm and emotional drive) which also affected Haydn’s middle-period symphonies.

A portrait of Müthel has come down to us. It shows a long-haired individual with a placidly intense appearance. In an age of powdered periwigs and stereotyped expressions the likeness is almost romantic in appearance. I can readily imagine him as the writer of storm and stress music.

Muethel2

Most of Muthel’s music has remained in manuscript but there are some fine recordings now being issued, especially of the keyboard concerti.

Here’s one of them for harpsichord and two bassoons (most prominent in the second movement). See what you think.

 

 

 

 

Our (Un)Virtual(ly) Social Life

So many of us are now living in a universe where the virtual world mingles freely with the real-time one. Even before the present situation we spent (too much) time on social media to keep in touch. Now, however, apps like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Flickr have become even more indispensable to our lives. Since the rule in this health crisis is to socially distance oneself and keep well away from others, not so much to avoid catching any virus from them but, more importantly, not to potentially infect them, social media is clearly the safest option.

The grim fact is that the pandemic emphasizes mankind’s common fate that ‘the paths of glory lead but to the grave’ together with all other living species. It truly concentrates the mind.

Luckily, however, with theatres, museums cinemas, and other places of entertainment closed for the duration we are offered a cornucopia of places which we can visit, not only with our memories but also with our laptops.

The following sites have given me particular enjoyment:

Sir John Soane Museum

http://explore.soane.org/#/

Tate Modern

https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/modigliani/modigliani-vr-ochre-atelier

Natural History Museum

https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2015/june/dive-back-in-time-with-david-attenborough-s-first-life.html

British Museum

https://blog.britishmuseum.org/new-virtual-reality-tour-with-oculus/

Louvre

https://arts.vive.com/us/articles/projects/art-photography/mona_lisa_beyond_the_glass/

There are plenty more to Google for one’s enjoyment. Clearly, museums are also using these methods to attract potential audiences once this unfortunate episode in human history is over.

However, more traditional methods of passing the time hold firm. There is nothing more satisfying than having a real book in your hands and reading its pages. If you are a musician then there are many opportunities to practice to your heart’s content in the privacy of your home. Some musicians have expanded this to include others and now whole orchestras and choirs are playing on-line creating a virtual venue where no real one can be currently used. Here is a moving example: part of Bach’s ‘Saint Matthew Passion’, so appropriate for this week, especially as today is Palm Sunday:

https://www.facebook.com/brightvibes/videos/213242649888508/UzpfSTEwMDAxNjY5NjU5NjgyNDo2NDU0MDI1MjI2OTI5NjI/?id=100016696596824

Palm-Sunday

PALMS

I was standing by the east gate

when I first saw him pass.

Could this man create so much hate

and yet unite all class?

 

Through the thick crowds I caught his face

and for one fleet instance

it seemed as if he could replace

death itself with his glance.

 

People had cut down palm boughs,

waving them before him

with hosannas and solemn vows

in one rapt festive whim.

 

Sat astride the colt of an ass,

prophecy-fulfilling,

he rode through the acclaiming mass

like a king returning.

 

How would this local triumph end?

No blood had yet been spilled.

Would it forevermore transcend

the man, the god they killed?

 

All we knew was that we seemed free –

our happy feast had come.

Yet wine and bread would never be

the same again for some.

 

And as the palm leaves’ cross-shaped folds

are given in this nave

will he say that our future holds

no terror in the grave?

 

FP

palm

Music is for me the balm that truly soothes the soul. In this respect I’ve been thinking about a particular favorite among the composers I love. Gerald Finzi (1901-1956) was born of an Italian father – (I’m reminded of De Sica’s ‘Garden of the Finzi-Contini’, a classic starring Lino Capolicchio, Dominique Sanda and Helmut Berger) and a German mother.

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(My wife Sandra with the actor Lino Capolicchio who starred in ‘The Garden of the Finzi Contini’)

Despite his ‘foreign’ parents Finzi became a quintessentially English composer with works displaying a beguiling mix of rhapsodic lyricism, humour and introspection. His songs are absolutely wonderful and his ‘Dies ‘Natalis’ is quite ecstatic. My own favorite among his works is the eclogue which would have become a part of an unfinished piano concerto:

It is such poignant music, enfolding your heart in its waves of golden emotion… so lovely and beautifully played by this Italian ensemble with a great pianist.

Gerald Finzi loved the English countryside and became an expert in apple-growing;indeed he managed to save from extinction several rare English apple varieties. Finzi is also an example of how careful we must be during these critical times. He went for a stroll with his fellow composer, mentor and friend Ralph Vaughan-Williams, and visited a family whose child had chickenpox. Finzi was already suffering from Hodgkin’s disease (the same disease my mother died from) so his immune system was at a low ebb. He developed shingles (an awful disease – I know, I’ve had it) which developed into a severe brain inflammation and died shortly afterwards at fifty-five years of age, the day after his cello concerto had been given its première on the (then) ‘Thud’ (alias) Third Programme.

The history of music is sadly full of composers who have died from not practicing social distancing in areas where plague and disease flourish. Let us hope that concentrating our friendships on-line will help prevent the ‘carogna’ (Italian for bloody or carrion) virus from further spreading itself.

If Music be the Food of Love…

Many of my posts are about music, either to publicize concerts or to describe those I have attended. Music for me is clearly a great love whether it’s so-called ‘classical’  (a misnomer if there ever was one as ‘classical’ correctly refers to a style immediately preceding the advent of romanticism) or whether it be ‘pop’ or whether it be ‘world’ music.

My critical distinction in music is between good and bad or between music and muzak. I have a pet hate about entering into any public establishment where there is piped muzak, often at an exceedingly loud volume, and where one’s request to turn down the noise down goes unheeded. In such cases I just walk out and they lose my custom.

Love of music is both inherited and cultivated. My mother was originally destined for a career as a pianist.

Graduating with the likes of Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli at Italy’s largest musical institution, the Milan conservatoire, founded in 1807 (another graduate was Giacomo Puccini) my mother did not fulfil her pianistic ambitions since the last war changed her course towards  nursing, medicine, social work and, eventually, psychoanalysis.

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During Maurizio Pollini’s UK concert tour of 1997 (where he played all of Beethoven’s sonatas) I was able to arrange a back-stage meeting between my mother and Pollini, another Milan conservatoire graduate.  It was interesting to hear the two discuss their student days; I was hoping that the subject of Michelangeli would crop up since Pollini had been one of his pupils and had been criticised for the increased coolness and restraint of his playing as a result of being influenced by someone my mother had described as a ‘cold fish.’ However, neither had anything negative to say about Michelangeli who I regard as one of the greatest of all keyboard players: his interpretation, for example, of the slow movement of Ravel’s G major piano concerto is utterly ravishing.

My mother’s career change, however, did not mean the end of her piano playing. Indeed, as a string player in the school orchestra I recollect playing with her an acceptable rendering of Mozart’s poignant E minor violin sonata. The black upright, with its sculpted laurel wreath on the front soundboard accompanied my mum from the time her father had purchased it at a knock-down price during a pre-war depression hit Italy to her migration to England and to Wales where a special room was built onto her cottage there. I do not know, however, where that piano is now.

My mother’s musical tastes were very clearly defined and firmly based in the nineteenth century with a few exceptions. The composers that spoke most directly  to her were Chopin and Brahms.

Chopin provided her with the deepest searchings of the heart: she particularly loved the preludes but the ballades, too, much affected her: in fact I still have the old shellac 78’s Alfred Cortot recordings. (A pianist, incidentally, she much admired and about which she stated ‘his unique interpretative powers makes one completely forget his several fluffs).

Frederic_Chopin_photo

Brahms, instead, released the rebellious side of my mum’s character. She took me, with her friend Doctor Montuschi (in whose memory the Montuschi ward at London’s Whittington Hospital – where my dad spent his last night – is dedicated) to the Royal Festival Hall to hear the two Brahms piano concerti played by that great Chilean Claudio Arrau and the gipsy-like finale of the Violin Concerto was her particular favourite.

One of the highlights of my teen visits to the concert hall was in June 1974 when my mum’s ‘wunderkind’ hero, Herbert Von Karajan, came to London to conduct  Brahms’ symphonies in two concerts.

kara

My mum’s concentration on the 19th century was clearly characteristic of her generation but she mentioned with pride that one of her graduation pieces was Bela Bartok’s uncompromising ‘Allegro Barbaro’ and she was a great fan of Stravinsky.

Did my mum have any pet musical hates? There were some genres she was less than happy to listen to. She remembered the tedium of having to sit through Ponchielli’s opera ‘La Gioconda’, for example. Oddly (for me) my mum was no great enthusiast for British classical music (no Elgarian…) although she admired the high standards of English light music as exemplified by Eric Coates. Mendelssohn she did not regard very highly either. However, my mum was open to much she heard on the wireless and suffered me to introduce her to the more abstruse stuff.

If my mum had been on the radio programme  ‘Desert island discs’ I feel certain that the following would be her favourite eight records:

J. S. Bach: D minor organ Toccata and Fugue.

Brahms: Violin Concerto, (Bruch’s concerto would have run a close second).

Chopin: Ballades.

Stravinsky: Petrushka.

Mussorgsky: (orch. Ravel). ‘Pictures at an Exhibition’.

Puccini. ‘Un bel di’ (Madama Butterfly)’.

Verdi. Dies Irae. Requiem.

Any Italian mountain song sung by the Coro Alpino.

 

…which reminds me .. The next concert in the enterprising series managed by artistic director and guitarist Giacomo Brunini  and promoted by the Salotti Civic Music School of Borgo a Mozzano will be held this Sunday November 24th at 5.15 pm at the San Giovanni Leonardi Library in Diecimo.

The performer will be the Lydian Guitar Trio – Nicola Fenzi, Dario Atzori and Giacomo Brunini – who will perform music by Filippo Gragnani, Astor Piazzolla, Paul Hindemith, and contemporary composers Antonio Gabriele Martinique and Luca Guidi.

Lydian-guitar-trio

Before the concert, at 4.15 pm, it will be possible to take part in a guided tour starting from the Pieve di Diecimo to the birthplace of San Giovanni Leonardi, the venue for the concert.

Thanks to the San Giovanni Leonardi Association, the Leonardini Fathers and the staff of “Borgo è bellezza” for their cooperation in organizing the events.

All concerts are free admission with free-will offering.

To receive more information about the concert and the guided tour, please contact the following:

borgoamozzanomusica@gmail.com – Cell. 3498496612

Or visit the website at

http://www.scuolacivicasalotti.it

 

 

 

 

Not a Cello!

Every good concert should not only be an exhilarating experience but also an educational one. This was absolutely the case with Francesco Tomei’s Viola da Gamba recital given in the delightfully venerable ambience of the San Francesco convent library at Borgo di Mozzano.

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Tomei pointed out that a viola da gamba is NOT the precursor of the violoncello, which belongs to a completely different family of stringed instruments including the violin and the viola. The viola da gamba (gamba is Italian for foot) belongs to a class of instruments which date back rather earlier and which includes the viola da braccio (braccio=arm) and which in the UK were particularly popular in the seventeenth century with such luminaries as William Lawes, praised in Milton’s sonnet.

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Francesco Tomei opened his recital with a suite of pieces by the mysterious Sieur de Saint-Colombe (ca. 1640–1700) whose opus was only recently  discovered through a  manuscript found in Tournus, a place I remember well from earlier times, when travelling by car with my parents to Italy, because of its jewel of a Romanesque church

Le Sieur de Saint Colombe – even his first name is unknown -published none of his large collection of pieces from Viola da Gamba and would only play in intimate surroundings. Among his achievements was to add a seventh lower string to the instruments, adding considerable gravitas to the gamba’s beautifully melancholic tone.

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The Sieur’s reclusive existence was dealt a resounding blow by Pascal Quignard in 1991 when he published his novel based on Colombe’s life: Tous les matins du monde (‘All the Mornings of the World’), subsequently made into a film directed by Alain Corneau and starring  Gérard Depardieu .

Other pieces played included a Telemann suite, again recently unearthed in the depths of a German Schloss.

The Scotsman Tobias Hume, in addition to being a musician, was a Scottish army captain with the Swedish and Russian armies. He was also a bit of a joker and this frontispiece to a collection of his works advertises a piece for one Viola da Gamba to be played by two persons, one a female sitting on the male player’s lap.

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Here it is, executed by an amorous couple on top of a snow-speckled mountain peak:

The highly enjoyable recital concluded with items from that doyen of the Viola da Gamba, Marin Marais (1656– 15 1728) le Sieur de Saint Colombe’s most distinguished student.

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I doubt that the Viola da Gamba has been heard in this part of the world since its heyday in the seventeenth century and it was a real privilege to hear its richly autumnal tones echo in the chambers of the convent of Saint Francis at Borgo a Mozzano.

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If you were unfortunate enough to miss out on this concert there will be others in the series, all under the enterprising artistic direction of guitarist Giacomo Brunini. They all take place in some of the most exquisite ambiences of our lovely valley including, on first December, at Fornoli:

Be sure to put these dates in your diary!

cocerti borgo