Guitar Concertos 2. Pepe Romero and Vicente Coves, Guitars Extremadura Symphony Orchestra Manuel Coves. Federico Moreno TORROBA

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Federico Moreno TORROBA Guitar Concertos 2 Homenaje a la seguidilla Tonada concertante Concierto de Castilla Pepe Romero and Vicente Coves, Guitars Extremadura Symphony Orchestra Manuel Coves

Federico Moreno Torroba (1891-1982) Homenaje a la seguidilla Tonada concertante Concierto de Castilla Torroba and the Guitar Concerto Federico Moreno Torroba is among the most salient figures in the modern repertoire for the classical guitar. Indeed, he may well have been the first prominent composer to write for the instrument who was not himself a guitarist. There is considerable irony in this fact, as Torroba was principally a man of the theatre. He got his start writing zarzuelas (operettas) in Madrid and would eventually compose about seventy such works over a period of four decades. He was among the most successful composers of zarzuelas in the genre s history, his biggest hit being Luisa Fernanda (1932), which has been performed over fifteen thousand times. However, that is but one of several of his works that have found a permanent place in the zarzuela repertoire. How Torroba came to compose for the guitar can be summed up in a single word: Segovia. Andrés Segovia was an early admirer of his music, and around 1920 he persuaded Torroba to write something for the guitar. From this collaboration came a long list of masterworks, including such classics as the Suite castellana, Piezas características, and Castillos de España. Indeed, he eventually composed about a hundred works for the guitar. Urged on by Segovia, Torroba made some early attempts at a concerto, but these efforts did not bear lasting fruit until the 1960s, the decade in which Torroba devoted increasing attention to writing for the guitar rather than zarzuelas, which were by then going out of style. And Torroba became nothing if not prolific in writing concertos for guitar(s) and orchestra, a fact that this recording makes very clear. By the end of his life, he had composed ten such works, more even than his friend Joaquín Rodrigo. His concertos are mostly for solo guitar, though Nocturnos is for two guitars, and the Concierto ibérico, for four. This latter concerto was inspired by Rodrigo s Concierto andaluz and, like that work, it was written for the celebrated Romero Guitar Quartet. In fact, during the period in which he wrote his concertos, Torroba was expanding the circle of guitarists for whom he wrote music, and in several cases these new collaborations provided the impetus for his creativity. These performers included not only the Romeros but also Narciso Yepes, Irma Costanzo and Michael Lorimer. Torroba s guitar works have two things in common with his zarzuelas. First, they are eminently lyrical and present us with a cornucopia of evocative and memorable melodies. Torroba described himself as a melodist, one whose operatic idol was Puccini. Second, they are grounded in the Spanish folklore that Torroba knew so well, including Andalusian flamenco. Homenaje a la seguidilla (1962) The seguidilla is a type of lively song and dance in triple metre that exists in regional varieties. It is especially characteristic of Castile but also found in Andalusia, as the playful sevillanas or very serious siguiriya. Torroba s Homenaje a la seguidilla is a loving homage to this characteristically Spanish type of music. Dedicated to Narciso Yepes, who gave the initial première in Paris in 1962, it is in three movements, marked Andantino, Andante, and Allegro sostenuto. However, Torroba was not content with his effort and continued to revise the work over a period of several years. Its formal première finally took place in 1975, at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, with the composer conducting and Irma Costanzo as soloist. Costanzo was a native of Buenos Aires who had studied with Yepes and Uruguayan virtuoso Abel Carlevaro. Yepes recorded the Homenaje in 1976 and, after further substantial revisions, it was recorded again in 1981, with the composer conducting the English Chamber Orchestra and Ángel Romero as soloist (this revision was dedicated to Ángel). As Federico Sopeña said of this work: [In the case of Moreno Torroba,] without subjecting himself to any fad, faithful to himself and secure within that faith, his Homenaje a la seguidilla is like an autobiographical anthology, which one listens to with pleasure. I believe that the hour has arrived in which our programming will open more and more to the works of our composers who, dispersed by the Civil War an entire generation die twice, because the first death was that of incurable nostalgia. Local critics in Buenos Aires also sang the praises of Costanzo and the new work, describing it as abounding in attractive and playful ideas, nobly conceived and realised, with a modernism that does not resort to absurdity and cacophony to establish itself as modern. The first movement recalls the opening of Falla s Noches en los jardines de España in its gauzy and mysterious evocation of the seguidilla, with its triple metre with intermittent hemiola, Andalusian scale, and use of castanets. The arrival of the solo part heralds increasing animation and drive, with the distinctive seguidilla rhythm of an eighth followed by two sixteenths repeated over and over. The guitar part features rasgueo (strumming) passages and lightning-fast picados (scales) evocative of flamenco. Occasional asides in free rhythm seem to suggest the interjections of a solo singer, in contrast to more dancelike sections. What one also detects here is the admixture of harmonies that evoke not only Andalusia but also American jazz. Torroba was a great lover of Broadway musicals and of Gershwin s music, so that his works of the 1970s in particular often exhibit a fragrant mélange of Spanish and North American elements. The second movement is a languid idyll, exhibiting Torroba s inveterate lyricism. The final movement is a technical tour de force, and some passages may again suggest Falla, especially El amor brujo, a work Torroba knew very well. Tonada concertante (1975-80) During the years 1975-80, Torroba laboured over a new concerto, which he fancifully entitled Tonada concertante, a tonada being a type of theatrical song of the eighteenth century. Ángel Romero premièred the Tonada concertante in 1982, though it was dedicated to his father, Celedonio. Torroba had every reason to be completely satisfied with these renditions, and the Romeros thus developed a very close and warm friendship with him. The concerto is in four movements. The opening Andante Allegro movement is notable for its playful good spirits, while the second movement, Andante, is especially introspective and foregrounds the composer s lyrical muse. A brief scherzo-like movement, marked Allegro moderato, connects the slow and final movements. The concluding Allegro is a cheerful, dancelike romp that makes colourful use of percussion and winds. Concierto de Castilla (1960) The year 1960 was pivotal in Torroba s turn towards the concerto. In December of that year he wrote to Segovia to say that he had finished his Concierto de Castilla, the first of his ten concertos. This was first recorded by Renata Tarragó and the Orquesta de Conciertos de Madrid in 1962 on the Hispavox and Columbia Masterworks labels. The work is in three movements, marked Adagio Allegretto moderato, Andante, and Andante Allegro moderato, with the outer fast movements both featuring slow introductions. The work highlights not only virtuosic guitar playing but also the composer s imaginative handling of the orchestra, especially the writing for winds. Torroba was always composing zarzuelas, even when he was writing a concerto. Thus, the work features a freespirited lyricism evocative of the folklore of Castile, a vast expanse in the middle of the Peninsula with which the composer strongly identified. Born in the heart of Madrid in 1891, he spent his entire life there. His Castilian Concerto is the logical and heartfelt expression of this identity. The three works on this recording are entirely representative of the great composer s style in both their lyricism and Spanish ambience, so it is something of a mystery why they have enjoyed relatively little currency on the concert stage and the recording studio. These performances, by artists who display a profound rapport with the composer s music, will do much to generate interest in and a long overdue revival of Torroba s guitar concertos. Walter Aaron Clark, University of California, Riverside William Craig Krause, Hollins University Authors of Federico Moreno Torroba: A Musical Life in Three Acts (Oxford, 2013)

Pepe Romero The guitarist Pepe Romero has been honoured by kings, heads of state, and major institutions, but his most important contribution has been to communicate the richness and beauty of the classical guitar to millions of people throughout the world. He has, indeed, become an ambassador of classical music, and, correspondingly, of the classical guitar. He is the second son of the great guitarist Celedonio Romero, and brother of the two guitarists Celin and Angel Romero. Born in Málaga in 1944, by the age of seven, he had appeared on the concert stage for the first time, at the Teatro Lope de Vega in Sevilla. More than fifty years later, he continues to mesmerise audiences throughout the world. During that time, he has given literally thousands of concerts worldwide, many with the remarkable Romero Quartet, and many as a solo instrumentalist. He has worked with almost every major conductor, and has to his credit more than sixty recordings, among which are twenty concerto recordings with the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, with both Neville Marriner and Iona Brown. Pepe Romero has given premières of works by some of the finest composers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and Joaquín Rodrigo, Federico Moreno Torroba, Lorenzo Palomo, Padre Francisco de Madina, Paul Chihara, Enrique Diemecke, Ernesto Cordero, and, most poignantly, Celedonio Romero, have written compositions for him. Always a champion of music by composers from earlier periods of music history, he has also delved into rare archives to re-explore lost pieces by Fernando Sor, Mauro Giuliani, Francesco Molino, Ferdinando Carulli, Johann Kaspar Mertz, Luigi Boccherini, and others. Amid many honours and distinctions Pepe Romero holds an honorary doctorate in music from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and the University of Victoria, British Columbia. In June 1996 he received the Premio Andalucía de la Música, the highest recognition given by his native country for his contribution to the arts. In addition His Majesty King Juan Carlos I of Spain knighted Pepe Romero and his brothers into the Order of Isabel la Católica. www.peperomero.com Photo: Jesuś Ruiz Vicente Coves Born in Jaén in 1982, the guitarist Vicente Coves lived in Photo: Jesuś Ruiz Linares until 1997, when he moved to Granada. Since 1997 he has been a disciple of the legendary Pepe Romero. His career has brought him international acclaim, with appearances in many countries since the age of eleven, as a soloist in the Orquesta Filarmónica de Buenos Aires, the Orquesta Sinfónica de RTVE (Spanish Radio & Television Symphony Orchestra), the Youth Symphony Orchestra of Russia, the Málaga Philharmonic Orchestra, the Orchestra della Toscana, the Cologne Chamber Orchestra, the Orquesta de la Comunidad de Madrid, the Orquesta Ciudad de Granada, the Extremadura Symphony Orchestra, the Orquesta de Córdoba, the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de Ecuador, the Orquesta Nacional de España, the Orquesta Sinfónica de Galicia and the Qatar Philharmonic, among others. He has collaborated with conductors such as Jean-Jacques Kantorow, Adrian Leaper, Isaac Karabtchevsky, Juanjo Mena, Miquel Ortega, Enrique Diemecke, Manuel Coves and John Neschling, and has played alongside such artists as Pepe Romero, María Bayo, Esperanza Fernández, Horacio Ferrer and Enrique Morente. Coves has appeared in prestigious concert halls such as the Teatro Colón (Buenos Aires), the Tchaikovsky Great Hall (Moscow), the Auditorio Nacional de España and the Köln Philharmonie, among others. In 2008 he was awarded the Rubinstein Medal by the Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory. Vicente Coves is the founder and president of the European Guitar Foundation. www.vicente-coves.com

Extremadura Symphony Orchestra Photo: Domingo Caćeres Since its creation by Extremadura Council in 2000, the Extremadura Symphony Orchestra has been an instrument for the dissemination of musical culture in the Autonomous Community of Extremadura. It presents a regular season of concerts largely in Badajoz, Cáceres, although it maintains regular activity elsewhere in Extremadura. The Extremadura Symphony Orchestra has collaborated with many distinguished conductors, and has performed in major concert halls including the Auditorio Nacional de Madrid, the Manuel de Falla Auditorium in Granada, the Kursaal in San Sebastián, the Euskalduna in Bilbao, the Prince Felipe Auditorium in Oviedo, and the Theatre Auditorium of San Lorenzo de El Escoria in Madrid. The orchestra has collaborated with the Fura dels Baus, the Royal Ballet of Covent Garden, London, English National Ballet and the National Ballet of Spain, among others. Its repertoire ranges from eighteenth-century to contemporary music, with a policy of encouraging new works. Jesús Amigo was its titular and artistic director from 2000-2012. Since September 2012, its principal conductor and artistic director has been Álvaro Albiach. The Fundación Orquesta de Extremadura, with Extremadura Council, the Diputación Provincial de Badajoz, the Diputación Provincial de Cáceres, and the University of Extremadura, support the orchestra s activities in the Autonomous Community of Extremadura. Manuel Coves A regular collaborator with the Teatros del Canal in Madrid, Manuel Coves has conducted Rigoletto, Don Carlo, Otello, Carmen, La Bohème, Candide, Pepita Jiménez, El Caballero de la Triste Figura, The Threepenny Opera, Luisa Fernanda and Entre Sevilla y Triana. He conducted the zarzuela anthology Viva Madrid, Guridi s El Caserío, the ballet Sorolla (Ballet Nacional de España), and a tribute to Antonio Ruiz Soler with the Ballet Nacional de España, as well as Messiah, Carmen and Don Quijote with Compañía Nacional de Danza. Among the concert halls in which he has conducted are the Teatros del Canal, Madrid, the Gran Teatre del Liceu, Barcelona, the Teatro de la Zarzuela, Madrid, the Palau de Les Arts, Valencia, the Teatro Arriaga, Bilbao, the Royal Opera House Muscat, Oman, the Campoamor, Oviedo, the Baluarte, Pamplona, the Principal de Palma and the Teatro Lirico, Cagliari. He has worked with orchestras such as the Madrid Symphony Orchestra, the Valencia Community Orchestra, the Orquesta of the Teatro Lírico of Cagliari, the Symphony Orchestra of the Gran Teatre del Liceu, the National Symphony Orchestra of Ecuador, the National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia, the Extremadura Symphony Orchestra, the Loja Symphony Orchestra, the Oviedo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Málaga Philharmonic Photo: Jesuś Ruiz Orchestra, the Bilbao Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestra of the Teatro Argentino de la Plata, the Balearic Symphony Orchestra, the Orquesta de la Comunidad de Madrid, the Brasilia National Orchestra and the Real Filharmonía de Galicia. Next season he will be conducting at the Teatro Real, Madrid, the Gran Teatre del Liceu, the Teatro Carlo Felice, Genoa, the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi, Trieste, the Tonkünstler Orchestra at the Festspielhaus St. Pölten and the Teatro de la Zarzuela, among others. Special thanks to Walter Clark. Guitars made by Pepe Romero Jr. (Pepe Romero, no. 90; Vicente Coves, no. 206)

Left to right: Manuel Coves, Pepe Romero, Vicente Coves Photo: Jesu s Ruiz

Federico Moreno Torroba composed about one hundred works for the guitar, thereby reinforcing his status as one of Spain s great twentieth-century composers. Homenaje a la seguidilla pays lively tribute to that characteristically Spanish song and dance, while the Tonada concertante is in turns playful and introspective. Concierto de Castilla features a free-spirited lyricism evocative of the folklore of Castile, a vast expanse in the middle of Spain with which the composer strongly identified. You would expect Pepe Romero to excel at the Concierto en Flamenco... The piece is gorgeous, the performance vibrant and passionate... The soloist in Diálogos is Romero s gifted pupil, Vicente Coves, who plays as well as his mentor, and whose brother leads the orchestra vividly and sympathetically. (ClassicsToday.com on Volume 1, 8.573255) Homenaje a la seguidilla (1962) 30:31 1 I. Andante Allegretto 13:02 2 II. Andante 9:59 3 III. Allegretto Andante Sostenuto 7:30 Tonada concertante (1975-80) 26:17 4 I. Andante Allegro 10:30 5 II. Andante 10:12 6 III. Allegro moderato 2:18 7 IV. Allegro 3:17 Federico Moreno TORROBA (1891-1982) Concierto de Castilla (1960) 22:52 8 I. Adagio Allegretto moderato 8:29 9 II. Andante 6:20 0 III. Andante Allegro moderato 8:03 Pepe Romero, Guitar 1-7 Vicente Coves, Guitar 8-0 Extremadura Symphony Orchestra Manuel Coves Recorded at the Palacio de Congresos, Badajoz, Spain, from 13th to 16th July, 2015 Producers: José Luis Sánchez (Cheluis Salmerón) and Thomas Bößl Engineer and editor: José Luis Sánchez Booklet notes: Walter Aaron Clark and William Craig Krause Publishers: Cantabrian Music (tracks 1-7); UME (Unión Musical Española) (tracks 8-10) Cover: Castilian windmill by David Acosta Allely (123RF.com)