Enrique Granados
(1867-1916)
Piano Music Volume 4
Enrique Granados was born 27th July 1867 in Lérida, near Barcelona. Son
of an army captain, he began piano study in 1879 and the following year he
continued with Joan Baptista Pujol (1835-1898) at the Academia Pujol. Three
years later he performed Schumann's Sonata, Op. 22, in an
academy-sponsored competition, for which one of the jury members was the noted
composer Felipe Pedrell (1841-1922). The sixteen-year-old Granados won the
competition and obviously impressed Pedrell, who began giving Granados classes
in harmony and composition in 1884.
In 1887 Granados went to Paris, where he studied with Charles de Bériot
(1833-1914). He was highly influenced by Bériot's insistence on tone-production
and pedal technique. In addition, Bériot emphasized improvisation in his
teaching, reinforcing Granados' natural ability in the skill. After returning
to Barcelona in 1889, he published his Danzas espańolas, which brought
him international recognition.
In his lifetime Granados performed concerts in Spain, France and New
York, collaborating with musicians such as Isaac Albéniz and Pablo Casals,
violinists Eugčne Ysäye and Jacques Thibaud, pianists Mieczyslaw Horszowski and
Camille Saint-Saëns. In addition to his numerous piano works he composed
chamber music, vocal music, operas, and symphonic poems. Granados was also a
fine teacher and in 1901 he founded the Academia Granados, which produced such
noted musicians as Paquita Madrigueta, Conchita Badia, and Frank Marshall.
In 1912 Granados met American pianist Ernest Schelling, who was the
first pianist to perform Granados' music outside Spain. Schelling arranged for
Granados' works to be published in New York and encouraged him in his plans to
convert the piano suite Goyescas into an opera, later arranging for its
premičre at the Metropolitan Opera in New York.
Terrified of the ocean, Granados nevertheless sailed to New York for the
premiere of the opera on 28th January 1916. While in the United States he
performed numerous concerts, made piano-roll recordings, and also performed at
the White House in Washington. He and his wife set sail to Europe by way of
England but while crossing the English Channel on the British ship Sussex, their
boat was torpedoed by a German submarine and they both perished.
About 1912 Granados wrote: "My motto has always been to renounce an
easy success in order to achieve one that is true and lasting." Today,
Granados is universally recognised as one of Spain's most important composers.
His music is multi-faceted, although it is essentially Romantic with some
Nationalist characteristics. He has been variously described as "the
Spanish Chopin", "the last Romantic", and by his compatriots as
"our Schubert". No single characterisation adequately describes his
personality. He had a distinctive voice that is instantly recognisable and
entirely his own.
Granados was primarily influenced by mid-nineteenth century European
Romanticism, especially the music of Schumann and Chopin. The introverted
luxuriance of his luminous harmonies, his rich palette of pianistic colour,
loose formal structures and his vivid imagination, always tinged with
nostalgia, place him firmly within the Romantic School. It has frequently been
commented that large forms such as sonatas and concertos did not attract Granados. His artistic personality was better
suited to shorter, rhapsodic forms, especially those based on variations.
In a notation included
in the manuscript of Apariciones–Valses románticos Granados indicated
that he considered Apariciones to be a preliminary study for Valses
poéticos: "The first collection of the Valses poéticos was in
this form. Revise and Publish." Among the revisions that Granados made to Apariciones,
he selected seven of the original eighteen waltzes, revised them and
subsequently published them as part of Valses poéticos. The remainder of
Apariciones–Valses románticos, Introducción: Presto and the waltzes
which were not subsequently incorporated into Valses poéticos were not
published. Valses poéticos was written about 1893-94, consequently,
Granados must have been working on Apariciones previously, probably
between 1891 and 1893. This is the first recording of Apariciones–Valses
románticos.
It is impossible to
know the exact date of composition of A la cubana since the manuscript
is not dated. The work was published in 1914, however, by the style of writing
Granados must have composed A la cubana sometime earlier, possibly
before 1898, the year when Spain lost control of Cuba.
Granados was highly
influenced by the music of Robert Schumann. Granados and Schumann shared a
similarity of outlook which led each of them to seek the universal within the
particular. Both composers based much of their music on constant alteration of
emotions, brought to life through richly coloured harmonies. Schumann's Scenes
of Childhood, Op. 15, and Album for the Young, Op. 68, were the
inspiration for Granados' Cuentos de la juventud and Escenas
infantiles–Miniaturas. The latter collection, Escenas
infantiles–Miniaturas, recorded here for the first time, was not published
during the composer's lifetime. Probably neither collection was intended for
children to play but rather as recollections of childhood emotions and
experiences. The fifth piece of Cuentos de la juventud, Viniendo de la
fuente evokes the time when water was carried from the local fountain to
homes for domestic use. The use of these three asterisks as a title in *** Lento con ternura was borrowed directly from Schumann's Album
for the Young, Op. 68. Apparently representing a work so poetic and highly
charged in its emotion that it cannot be named, these asterisks were also used
by Granados as a title for several other pieces, most notably a movement of Escenas
románticos (Naxos 8.554628). The slightly awkward rhythm of Marcha reminds
us of a somewhat lame soldier. The final piece of Escenas
infantiles–Miniaturas, El nińo duerme recalls the conclusion of Schumann' s
Scenes of Childhood, Op. 15–The Poet Speaks.
Jota from Miel de la Alcarria is a piano solo
version, arranged by the composer, of a section of the incidental music which
Granados composed for the 1894 rural melodrama Miel de la Alcarria [Honey
from Alcarria] by Jose Feliu y Codina. Jota was probably composed circa
1894.
Valses poéticos is one of Granados' earliest masterpieces. The
sub-titles of the individual waltzes were included in the programme of his
first performance of Valses poéticos in 1895. The subtitles were not
included, however, in editions of the work published during his lifetime. He clearly
valued Valses poéticos as one of his finest works, recording the work
for the Welte-Mignon Reproducing Piano and frequently performing Valses
poéticos in concerts, including one of his final recitals, New York, 23rd
January, 1916.
In the earliest known
copy of Rapsodia aragonesa, a printer's proof dated 1901 corrected by
the composer, Granados crossed out the title and wrote: "no, no, no, no,
no and no–this title was given by the publisher". However, since the
composer did not suggest an alternate title, the publisher's title, Rapsodia
aragonesa has remained. The work is dedicated to Granados' colleague, the
British pianist Harold Bauer.
Aparición was composed for the "Cateura" pedal
piano, an instrument invented around Barcelona at the beginning of the
twentieth Century. No known examples of the "Cateura" are known to
have survived, however, through indications in the scores of the works which
Granados wrote for it, the pedals must have provided special colouristic
effects. Aparición is dedicated to "Miss Jennine Rutherford
Grawshaw". Her relationship to Granados is not known.
Douglas Riva