Thursday, May 31, 2012

Luiz de Moura Castro from Radio MEC

You can listen to pianist Luiz de Moura Castro playing Brazilian music on the Radio MEC program Música e Músicos do Brasil. The podcast can be streamed here. [fixed the link!]
Sáb, 31/03 - 16h

Luiz de Moura Castro (parte 2)

Músico fez seu primeiro recital aos 9 anos
Luiz de Moura Castro
Luiz de Moura Castro
As participações em concursos e a estadia na Europa, onde completou seus estudos, estão entre os assuntos abordados na segunda parte da série dedicada a Luiz de Moura Castro.
No programa, ele interpreta:
Canto do Cisne Negro, de Villa-Lobos
Elegia, de Henrique Oswald
ambas com a participação do violoncelista Guerra Vicente
Bébé s’endort, de Henrique Oswald
Suíte Brasileira nº 1, de Lorenzo Fernandez
Villa-Lobos
Do Carnaval das Crianças Brasileiras
A gaita do precoce fantasiado
A manha da Pierrete
O ginete do Pierrozinho
Das Bachianas Brasileiras nº 4 –
Prelúdio
Com a cantora espanhola Maria José Montiel: Acalanto da Rosa, de Cláudio Santoro, e Melodia Sentimental e Nhapopê, de Villa-Lobos.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Rudepoema from Concertgebouw


Radio Netherlands Worldwide recently broadcast a concert from the Concertgebouw that featured Richard Rijnvos's orchestration of Rudepoema, and you can listen (until June 4) to the concert online. Though Villa-Lobos made his own orchestration of the famously complex and difficult piano piece, Rijnvos brings out some really interesting orchestral sounds. However, as Prof. Tarasti said:
When one compares the piano version of Rudepoema to the orchestral arrangement made by the composer himself, one can only be amazed at how 'orchestral' the piano work already is.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Villa-Lobos in New Orleans


I remember the Beethoven Bicentennial of 1970 very well - each month I waited by the mailbox for the next Time-Life Bicentennial set of 5 Deutsche Gramophon LPs to arrive. But I was too young to remember the 1956 Mozart celebrations; his 200th birthday was on January 27, 1956.

Mozart isn't a composer one thinks of in connection with Villa-Lobos, who was closer musically and in temperament to Bach, Beethoven & Wagner. But Villa did write his first Sinfonietta in 1916 "À memória de Mozart". Therefore it was a great piece to start off a concert Villa-Lobos was conducting in New Orleans on January 17, 1956, with the NO Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra.

The above excerpt from the program of that concert is from Lisa M. Peppercorn's book The World of Villa-Lobos in Pictures & Documents (p. 247). I was able to piece together the rest of that concert from mentions in the Museu Villa-Lobos's Villa-Lobos: Sua Obra (2009).  After the Danses Africanes (also written in 1916) and the Intermission came an early American performance of Choros #06, and what seems to be the first complete version of Bachianas Brasileiras #5 in the U.S. (the Aria had been performed in New York in 1939). That's a pretty big deal, considering how popular the work has become in the years since.

M.J. (Mary Jane) Euphemie Blanc was, I assume, the soprano who sang BB#5, though I haven't found anything on the web about her as a singer. All I could find about M.J. is that she wrote (with her husband Louis Alfred Blanc) a book called Make Music Yours (1949), and that she and Louis Alfred endowed Loyola University with a music scholarship. Can anyone from the Crescent City tell us more?

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Revisiting Mário de Andrade and Villa-Lobos


A major Villa-Lobos event takes place in Belém beginning today: "Revisitando Mário de Andrade e Villa-Lobos".  Villa-Lobos and the great modernist Andrade had a rather ambiguous relationship over the years, but in 1922, the year of the Semana de Arte Moderna, Andrade was presenting Villa-Lobos as the most important musical proponent of Modernism in Brazil (as he was). Indeed, Villa's music stood alone in the Semana.

The event celebrates the 125th anniversary of Villa-Lobos's birth, the 85th anniversary of Andrade's visit to Belém, and the 90th anniversary of the Semana de Arte Moderna. It includes concerts, films, exhibits and lectures, and runs until mid-June.

The portrait of Andrade above is by another great Brazilan modernist, Anita Malfatti, from about the time of the Semana.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Saturday, May 19, 2012

5th Festival Villa-Lobos in Caracas



Last month the 5th Festival Villa-Lobos took place in Caracas. Previous Festivals have featured some impressive concerts that are documented on YouTube, including important performances of Choros #06, Choros #09 and Momoprecoce. This year's Festival included an amazing Bachianas Brasileiras #4; Roberto Tibiriçá conducts the Orquesta Sinfónica Simón Bolívar.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

A Menina Das Nuvens from Belo Horizonte



The beginning of the 3rd Act of Villa-Lobos's "Fairy-Tale Opera", A Menina Das Nuvens (The Girl of the Clouds). This is from the September 2009 revival in Belo Horizonte. The Orquestra Sinfônica de Minas Gerais is conducted by Roberto Duarte. Gabriella Pace sings the title role.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Hearing Madona for the first time


This picture from the American Memory Project of the Library of Congress shows conductor Serge Koussevitzky with his Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1949. In 1945 the Koussevitzky Foundation commissioned an orchestral work from Villa-Lobos, which became the symphonic poem Madona. Villa dedicated the work to Koussevitzky's wife Natalie.

Madona is a work that I had never heard until today, when I visited the excellent Brazilian Concert Music blog. An ancient (I would guess 1950s vintage) off-the-air broadcast of the work from Belgium made its way to the collection of the Brazilian composer Harry Crowl, and then on to the blog. This sounds like a shortwave broadcast; it's complete with Morse code interference.


Perhaps it came from ORU, The International Goodwill Station, and was recorded in Brazil. The romance of Shortwave Listening in the olden days! The QSL above is from the Committee to Preserve Radio Verification at the Library of American Broadcasting.

In any case, I urge you to listen to this work, written in the same year as Bachianas Brasileiras #9 and the String Trio.  I'm hoping it's not too long before we hear about new performances of Madona (or even new recordings), since it's one of the scores included in the new Villa-Lobos Digital Project of the ABM.


Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Concertgebouw Concert on Dutch Radio 4


One of the most important recent concerts featuring the music of Villa-Lobos took place on October 21, 2011 in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. It includes an amazing Villa-Lobos choral work that has yet to be commercially recorded: Vidapuru, the "mass-oratorio" that Villa wrote in Rio in 1919.  Also included was the rarely performed Noneto, one of Villa's modernist works, and the now fairly popular Choros #10, which many people (including myself) consider his greatest work.

The Brazilian conductor Celso Antunes conducts the Radio Kamer Filharmonie and Groot Omroepkoor. Thanks to the Dutch broadcaster Radio 4, you can listen to this concert online. My Dutch is as poor as my Portuguese, so it took me a bit of time to figure things out, but you can start at this page, and click on "Luister Terug", which will start up the program Zondagochtend Concert from October 23rd in a new window. Vidapuru begins at about 33:00.

Included in the program are two interviews by Thea Derks: a 9 minute interview of soprano Anitra Jellema and a 23 minute interview of Celso Antunes.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Cuarteto Latinoamericano in the jungle

This won't be to everyone's taste, I know, but I think it's great. The Cuarteto Latinoamericano play the finale of Villa-Lobos's String Quartet no5, in this excerpt from a film by Sergio Yazbek, shot on location at Las Pozas, Xilitla, Mexico.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Museum Week in Rio


At the Museu Villa-Lobos during the 10th Museum Week in Rio this month, two presentations about Villa-Lobos's life and music. 

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Steve Howe plays Bachianas Brasileiras #5



I've always been a big fan of the progressive rock group Yes, and their guitarist Steve Howe. Howe's 2011 album Time includes this arrangement of the aria from Bachianas Brasileiras #5. And for Yes fans, after the break is one of their songs that features some mean guitar work by Howe.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Sonia Rubinsky and the Suite for Piano & Orchestra


Brazilian pianist Sonia Rubinsky has a new website in the works, but in the meantime, you should check out her Facebook Bandpage. It features an outstanding version of Rudepoema, and exciting news about two concerts this fall (spring in Brazil), featuring a piece that has only been heard a few times since its premiere in 1923. This is the 1913 Suite for Piano and Orchestra. I'm hoping that we end up with YouTube video from one of these concerts, or even a CD.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Carlé Costa's CD Alma de uma terra

The guitarist Carlé Costa was born in Uruguay in 1959, the year Villa-Lobos died. Growing up (in Argentina) as a classical guitarist, he must have learned Villa's music for guitar early. By today he has the Preludes and Etudes mastered, judging by this new disc, recorded in the Genezarethkirche in Berlin during two midnight sessions in August of 2011. We're extraordinarily blessed with great recordings of this music, and Costa adds to the riches with this CD. This isn't a routine run-through of a chunk of the CG canon, but something that comes across as deeply thought-out and organic.


Organic is the right word: Costa's CD is entitled "Alma de uma terra" - "Soul of the earth", and he adds a tagline "with hope for the day we respect the soul of the earth." The connection between Villa-Lobos's music and the natural world is one that the composer made himself, many times. The landscape of Brazil is obvious throughout Villa-Lobos's music: in early pieces like Amazonas, middle works like Bachianas Brasileiras #4, and late music such as Erosao. And while the guitar works don't have an explicit connection with nature - the Preludes are studies of Brazilian characters or "types", and the Etudes are technical exercises souped-up for concert presentation - this music feels like it flows from two basic sources: the music of JS Bach and the soil and flora & fauna of Brazil.

All this is evident in Costa's playing. Perhaps the German recording location brings him to a more classical way of playing this music, without as much rubato as many guitarists use in this music. But it's controlled rather than overly severe. There is often a bit of swing to his playing, which is evident, for example, in the 5th Prelude, a picture of teenage Cariocas.

Costa plays the original 1928 score of the Etudes rather than the 1953 version which was heavily edited by Segovia. A number of other guitarists have recorded this version, most notably David Leisner in 2000. The recent recording by Frédéric Zigante includes both versions of Etudes #10 & 11, which show the biggest differences. The importance of this is much more than purely technical, though Segovia & Villa-Lobos got into heated arguments about fingering. Villa was pushing the envelope as far as what the guitarists of the day could actually play.  In the mid- to late-1920s Villa-Lobos was at his absolute peak as a composer, and the music he wrote then (the Choros series especially, but also the magnificent Rudepoema) surely sounded wild and dissonant to Segovia. The later version of the Etudes have some of their sharp edges rounded off; they're a bit manicured. Costa's Etudes are as close to the rain forest as they are to Bach's Well Tempered Clavier or the piano music of Chopin.

Though it may not have as wide a distribution as some CDs in this repertoire,  I recommend this disc very highly. Carlé tells me that he'll soon have the disc on Amazon, but in the meantime, you can email him to find out about purchasing the CD.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Rehearsing Symphony #10



Here's the first video from the complete symphony series now under way in São Paulo: Isaac Karabtchevsky rehearses Symphony #10 with the São Paulo Symphony (OSESP) and Chorus. There's more information on the BIS recording project here.

The 10th Symphony, written in 1952 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the founding of São Paulo, is very well represented on CD. There are three excellent recordings, from Harmonia Mundi, Koch International, and cpo.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Sexteto Mistico from Porto

Here is a fine recording of the Sexteto Mistico, by faculty of the Conservatório de Música do Porto.



Recorded at the Casa da Música on 25/10/2007.

Olavo Barros - flauta
Elen Telles - oboé
Francisco Ferreira - saxofone
Paulo Peres - guitarra
Áurea Guerner - harpa
João Queirós - celesta

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

The Second Piano Concerto

I came across this story about Villa-Lobos's 2nd Piano Concerto in Seymour Bernstein's memoir Monsters and Angels. Bernstein is visiting with his teacher, Alexander Brailowsky and his wife Ela:
Rummaging through some scores, she produced the manuscript of Concerto No. 2 by Heitor Villa-Lobos, a work that the composer had written for, and dedicated to, Brailowsky. Villa-Lobos had once heard Brailowsky in Rio de Janeiro perform two concerti on the same program - the Tchaikovsky B flat minor and the Rachmaninoff C minor. He was so impressed by his playing that he decided to create another big romantic vehicle tailored to Brailowsky's virtuosic style. It was this score, then, that Ela handed me. With a sense of awe, I turned over the front cover and saw the following inscription:

Ministerio da Educacao e Saude Conservatorio Nacional de Canto Orfeonico
Rio, 12/25/49
Cher Brailowsky,
Voila le concerto que je vous avais promis. La partition et materiel d'orchestre vous pouvez trouver a la Maison Villa-Lobos Corp., 1585 Broadway, New York.
Heureux 1950.
Bien a vous,
Villa-Lobos

[Here is the Concerto that I promised you. You can find the score and orchestral parts at the Maison Villa-Lobos Corp. Happy 1950. My best to you.]
Ela explained, 'With all of the big warhorses in my husband's repertory, he never learned this concerto. Now, of course, he never will. Perhaps if it interests you, you might premiere it with some major orchestra. But whether you decide to study it or not, we would like you to have it.'
p. 128-129. Bernstein finally played what he termed the US premiere of the concerto with the Chicago Symphony, in 1969.

It's interesting that the latest version of Villa-Lobos: Sua Obra (v. 1.0, 2009, Museu Villa-Lobos) makes no reference to Brailowsky. According to the listing for the 2nd Piano Concerto, the work was dedicated to the Brazilian pianist João de Souza Lima. Also listed is the actual American premiere, with Gerson Yessin and the City Symphony Orchestra at the American Museum of Natural History on February 27, 1955.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Saxophone Fantasia



Jan Gričar is the saxophonist in Villa-Lobos's Fantasia for Saxophone & Strings. The Slovenian Philharmonic Orchestra is conducted by Simon Krečič.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Nahin Marum's new book on Villa's Vocal works


Nahin Marum's brand new book Revisão crítica das canções para voz e piano de Heitor Villa Lobos publicadas pela editora Max Eschig is available as a free eBook in Chapter's Kobo store. It includes a wealth of information about the manuscripts and published scores of Villa-Lobos's songs. The book is published by Editora UNESP - ISBN: 9788579831102.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Festivals Simfonics Ibero-Americans

In 1929 Villa-Lobos was living in a flat on Place St.Michel in Paris. He was having a great time, hanging out with people like Cocteau, Diaghilev and Varese. He returned to Rio in August, but was back to Europe in October for this Festival of Ibero-American music in Barcelona. This notice in Mirador: setmanari de literatura, art i política includes a notice about a concert on October 25, 1929, that includes two of his greatest works, Amazonas and Choros #10.


I found this thanks to the Spanish Biblioteca Virtual de Prensa Historica.