Douglas Riva Plays Granados
Robin Friedman | Washington, D.C. United States | 11/07/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have spent several days listening to the piano music of Enrique Granados ( 1867 -- 1916) courtesy of a friend who lent me the Spanish Dances and "Goyescas" , both on Naxos. I have seldom had a more enjoyable time, simply relaxing and learning music that is not my usual fare.
Douglas Riva is an American pianist and a scholar of Spanish music. He studied with with Alicia de Larrocha and worked with her in producing a complete edition of Granados' works. Ms. de Larrocha is a master of this music, and her CDs are available on more expensive record labels. But Mr. Riva plays beautifully, with virtuosic technique, and with sensitivity to this highly-charged romantic score. He also wrote brief but informative program notes for this CD. Mr. Riva's rendition of "Goyescas" will serve as a wonderful introduction to Granados. It will appeal to the budget-minded listener who wants to reach out. Mr. Riva has gone on to record Granados' complete piano works on eight Naxos CDs. He makes a compelling case for this composer.
Granados composed his Spanish Dances as a young man of 22 while the "Goyescas" is a 20th Century work, completed in 1914. Granados transformed his piano music into an opera, which received its premiere in New York City. When the composer was sailing home, the ship was struck by a torpedo and both he and his wife died.
"Goyescas" is a suite in seven movements, each of which is a musical depiction of Spain as seen through the paintings of Francisco Goya (1746 --1828). The piano writing is varied and virtuosic, and the music shimmers with Spain and Madrid. I was struck by much of the writing in the high register of the piano, with sharp chords and arpeggios and a great deal of filigree. The melodic line is frequently carried in the lower middle, treble section of the keyboard in a singing voice which reminds me of a tenor or of a cello. The music frequently is distinctively rhythmical and heavily accented, but there are many lyrical and reflective passages as well. Granados gives a romantic, appealing account of Spain and its people. In several movements, Granados makes use of Spanish folk-songs.
The first movement of the work, "flattery" opens with the plangent, shimmering passages in the right hand and the left hand singing melody that I find characteristic of the work. The second movement is a dialogue between two lovers at a window that builds to an intense, passionate climax. The third movement is a highly accented dance, a Fandango, with big, splashing high chords and a swirling theme. The fourth movement, "The Maja and the Nightingale" is based upon a folksong and features long lacy and frilly trills, the nightingale singing, at the end of the movement. The fifth movement, "Love and Death" is, perhaps, the heart of "Goyescas". It opens with an ominous theme low in the piano and is followed by music in a variety of moods and forms. It moves from reverie, to tragic passion, only to end quietly. The sixth movement is "The Ghost's Serenade", beginning in a stacatto voice but working to a singing theme in the tenor under lots of decoration in the high register of the piano. The finale "The Straw Man" is a joyful piece and a highly accented dance. The CD closes with a work that remained unpublished during Granados' lifetime and which was apparently a sketch for the music that became "Goyescas".
This was a CD that came to me by chance and was not on my mental list of music I needed to hear. But it proved to be what I neeeded at the time. "Goyescas" is an essential work of romantic, twentieth-century piano music.
Robin Friedman
"
Granados gets his due
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 02/22/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"There are marvelous recordings of this music; those of Alicia de Larrocha, Martin Jones, Artur Rubinstein come to mind. So why did Douglas Riva feel the need to record it again? Because he has something fresh to say about this lovable music, that's why. He is an American pianist/musicologist living in Spain, co-editor, with de Larrocha, of a new edition of Granados's piano music and he is continuing the work to bring out a new edition of ALL of Granados's music. He's a heckuva pianist, too. His take on the music is somewhat more analytical than some and that's to the music's benefit because it shows there is more meat on its bones; it's not all flash and languor. This is the first of a set in which he will record all of Granados's piano music for Naxos. Another evidence that Naxos intends to keep on enriching our lives with music that might not otherwise be recorded. This CD contains probably Granados's most popular piano music. Frankly I can't wait to get my hands on the whole set as it comes out."