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Federico Rovini, Ruggero Marchesi - Ildebrando Pizzetti: Chamber Music with Violin (2020)

Federico Rovini, Ruggero Marchesi - Ildebrando Pizzetti: Chamber Music with Violin (2020)
  • Title: Ildebrando Pizzetti: Chamber Music with Violin
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Da Vinci Classics
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac lossless
  • Total Time: 00:49:21
  • Total Size: 197 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Violin Sonata in A Minor: I. Tempestoso
02. Violin Sonata in A Minor: II. Preghiera per gl'innocenti. Molto largo
03. Violin Sonata in A Minor: III. Vivo e fresco
04. Aria in D Major
05. Tre Canti: No. 1, Affettuoso
06. Tre Canti: No. 2, Quasi grave e commosso
07. Tre Canti: No. 3, Appassionato

Federico Rovini, Ruggero Marchesi - Ildebrando Pizzetti: Chamber Music with Violin (2020)


Fifty-two years ago. on 13th February 1968. 88-year-old Ildebrando Pizzetti died. He was one of the greatest European composers of the 20th century and the most important from his home city of Parma in the last century (without mentioning the “genius loci” Giuseppe Verdi). I had the honour of meeting the Master when he was awarded the honorary citizenship of Busseto. At this time I was working on the staff of the “Verdi” gazette at the Institute of Verdi Studies where Pizzetti was honorary president. Brando, his family nickname, paid us a visit in our two small rooms at the college. Mario Medici, the founder-director, introduced me to this small precise man. He seemed extremely fragile but still powerful. I told him that I possessed some of his signed musical and literary works which the Parma and Santa Cecilia Music College Violinist Mario Corti, my father Ermanno’s teacher, had left me with fatherly kindness. Corti who came from the same area was slightly younger than Pizzetti. He was a colleague at the Parma and Santa Cecilia music colleges and also his qualified performer. Unfortunately Pizzetti was tired, he had difficulty focusing through his thick glasses and did not seem to give much importance to my information. The next day at Busseto during an executive meeting in the boardroom of the institute the elderly Ildebrando was gay and lively. He spoke about Verdi, Parma, Busseto and the newly founded Verdi institute. He was wearing a classic velvet jacket and kept his right arm by his side. This reminded me of some photos of his great friend Gabriele D’Annunzio. Pizzetti attracted also the younger members with his frank and simple attitude. His kind and gay expression and his friendly nature underlined his morality; his music was straightforward without deviations, devote and with bright intelligence. Afterwards I sent him his signed “Poema Emiliano” unfinished which he no-longer possessed. This work of 1913 was for violin and orchestra, with description titles: Nel bosco di Nebbiara (In the Nebbiara woods), Sole di mezzogiorno (mid-day sun) Nel giardino delle gardenie (in the gardenia garden), Inno alla terra (hymn to Earth)….Un saluto alla regione-madre (greeting to the homeland), “and the sweet solemn plains of my native Emilia that have spoken to me many times and to anybody who is able to understand from the tops of her trees moving in the wind to her buttercup meadows.” He returned the work with a photo and a thank-you for preserving it in a jealous loving way. (his writing was shaky, this was 1967). Among his papers I also found a signed article in the form of a letter, Dear Carmine Music College published in “Giallo e Blu” a Parma strenna of 1950. The title had been slightly modified. “Carmine” was changed to “of Carmine”. Few people know that our music college is in an ex-carmelite monastery. A kind recognition from the elderly ex-student.I am not writing today to speak of myself as an ex-student of Parma music college. My father used to say Carmine School and I have always used and will continue to use its original name. I am writing to thank the music college where I studied for five years and to remember those teachers who are present in my heart and mind and who gave me most of my knowledge. And I mention the teachers appreciating “their humble but passionate love” of music, shared by musicians and fans alike. There is a particular mention of the Director Giovanni Tebaldini who tried to introduce gregorian chants and the Florentine singing-acting renaissance polyphony into the official syllabus. A diatonic harmony with archaic resonance using antique “modality”. Towards the end of October 1900 Tebaldini took the college on a visit to Sant’Agata. Thanks to his introduction the young Brando wrote an article for the Milan musical gazette: The master moved magnificently, with wonderful simple movements. I cannot say what I felt at that moment; I wanted to cry, to shout out a hymn of admiration with all my strength. I will never forget those few moments, even if I live to be one hundred.
He was there serene and solemn a few steps away. He was a biblical figure, magnificent, a dream. So Verdi appeared to Ildebrando from Parma (D’Annunzio named him so) as an icon. Pizzetti continued later with some variations in some places with increasing elaborations. But it is the first revelation that holds the magic which from the fame of his works presents Verdi the man, even to those who were not able to appreciate the complete value of the musician-dramatist. Suggestion of a myth which began about 50 years before when Pizzetti accepted to become honorary president of the Verdi Institute. He made a memorable confession: “I am not and I do not presume to be a historian or a critic. I am only an elderly musician who has always loved Verdi and his works”. A union of craft and fraternity visible in the two components of dramatic art that nourish true musicality: declamation (the word that gives its name) and the melody (which enhances the senses to sublimation). The composer does not always recognize them at the moment of composition, which requires maximum honesty. Pizzetti endeavoured to have them, he never considered that musical invention was pure entertainment and so he held the sound in maximum respect also in his research for structural and harmonious variations. His love for Verdi certainly led him to study the meaning that “numen” assigns to the declamation-chant melody. This is particularly noticeable in Otello. where memorable moments such as “Dio mi potevi scagliar” and “Ave Maria” are found : the lyrical song takes flight rising up the steps of the declamation sculptured by the genius on a barely perceptible instrumental backdrop, the Aria is modelled on the copy of the previous “parlato”. The 1919 Sonata in la is the fundamental chapter of Pezzetti’s production. The 1915-1918 First World War with its terrible mourning and devastation is brought to Italian memory in an ideal theatre. The scene is emotional and heart-throbbing.
The two instruments and the voices of the confrontation of the characters:the piano is almost arrogant in its peremptory insistence, sometimes rejecting sometimes encouraging the message of the violin which denounces its sufferance: an undeserved sentence which is alternatively contested by sweetness and resigned indignance.The musicians have accentuated the rhapsodical character of the sonata (an opinion shared by Quirino Principe), offering a realization which poetically convinces the listener, The first movement is inspired by the drama of the battle by the dark and tense colours, the central movement is dedicated to the memory of the victims (prayer for the innocent), where the initial theme, like a chorus, executed by the piano is followed by the violin with expressive momentum (well supported with intense fervor) which could entitle the complete work; the final movement liberates the joy for the end of the war: a succession of celebrations inspired by popular dances and songs. In “Tre Canti” of 1924 improvisations of flight are added to the Aria of 1906 dedicated to Mario Corti. Ideal samples of the elegance and good taste of a gracious and courteous master (where there are also sudden fiery craters). The long preparation which in the instrumental genre is not heavy for the listener but enters with freshness. The first part is amusing, it includes a couple of “hiccoughs” (the Ars Antiqua’s “hoquetus”) a breathtaking erudite device to explain that it is possible to jest even when we are not pretending. I feel as if I am in the classroom experimenting puzzles: counterpoints and free crossings generated by the majesty of the rules and tempered by the polymodal harmonies. The next passage shows that the time for serious fun is over and that we have to take up the responsibilities that follow being a student. Somebody will ask where this comes from, music does not provide explanatory manuals: it is self explanatory, also this time. The second part with its linear performance “almost grave and morbid” will lead to the passionate tension of the third part, recuperating largely from various sources from renaissance songs to old America, and storms and orations by troubled souls; on the whole I would have considered it as a dress rehearsal of the Sonata if it had not already been written. An apprenticeship for whoever begins the climb but does not know which illusions, delusions, victories and defeats await but has the courage to look towards the future. In the air there is the scent of lilies and incense and the harmonious Respighi-like sound of the organ.

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  •  wrote in 23:08
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gracias....