Salgado - The 9 Symphonies
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 96256
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 3
Genre: Orchestral
Release Date: 12th March 2021
Contents
Works
Symphony no.1 'Andina'Symphony no.2 'Sintetica'
Symphony no.3 'In Rococo style'
Symphony no.4 'Ecuatoriana'
Symphony no.5 'Neoromantica'
Symphony no.6 for strings and timpani
Symphony no.7
Symphony no.8
Symphony no.9
Artists
Cuenca Symphony OrchestraConductor
Michael MeissnerWorks
Symphony no.1 'Andina'Symphony no.2 'Sintetica'
Symphony no.3 'In Rococo style'
Symphony no.4 'Ecuatoriana'
Symphony no.5 'Neoromantica'
Symphony no.6 for strings and timpani
Symphony no.7
Symphony no.8
Symphony no.9
Artists
Cuenca Symphony OrchestraConductor
Michael MeissnerAbout
Despite being the leading composer of his native Ecuador, the name and reputation of Luis Humberto Salgado (1903-1977) has hardly travelled beyond South America, and listeners may well wonder why after sampling the powerful and individual voice at work through the course of his nine symphonies. They stretch from 1949 to 1975: works of maturity, not outlandishly but colourfully orchestrated, originally structured (the Second and Ninth each in a single movement), nationalistically inflected, especially in several of the rackety finales, yet crafted with a fastidious ear, as one would expect from a pupil, then professor, then director of the leading conservatoire in his country, based in the capital of Quito.
The most overtly folkloristic of the symphonies is the First, in which each movement is based on a different indigenous style of music. The tendency to compression in Schoenberg’s First Chamber Symphony impressed Salgado deeply, and influenced the compact form of the Second, while more widely encouraging concision of thought and expression where many of his contemporaries incline to bombast and blather. However, Salgado never followed the likes of Messiaen and Boulez down the path of total serialism: dating from 1956, the Third Symphony bears a distinct key signature – D major – and intriguing subtitle: ‘written on a pentatonic scale in Rococo style’.
The Fourth is another vigorous assertion of Ecuadorean and Andean character within traditional symphonic form; Salgado wrote of the Fifth that ‘In my fifth symphony, titled Neo-Romantic (of course, still unpublished), I expose the first theme with twelve-tone prosody; the descriptive idea infused with a melodic climate, consistent with the hedonistic spirit that animates this score.’ The language of the Sixth (1968) is structured like a Concerto grosso and scored for strings and timpani, in the neoclassical vein of earlier European scores by Martinů and Martin.
Salgado styled the Seventh as a tribute to Beethoven on the bicentennial of his birth, but the symphony itself is strident and questing, reflecting the subject of devotion in spirit and temperament rather than pastiche. The Eighth Symphony of 1972 was composed to mark the sesquicentennial of the Battle of Pichincha, which wrested Quito and the independence of Ecuador away from their Spanish occupiers. Rather than relying on popular or even military tropes, however, Salgado continues with his mature personal style of fusing native melodic and rhythmic elements with dense, polytonal harmonies. Finally, the 12-minute Ninth makes an appropriately refined adieu, shaped around several 12-tone melodies, its exposition outlined in a mere 53 bars, and brought to a conclusion by a dense and chromatic fugato.
The project to record Salgado’s symphonies for the first time has been led by the German-Mexican maestro Michael Meissner, who also contributes authoritative and detailed booklet notes on each symphony. He draws disciplined and vividly recorded performances from the Orquesta Sinfonica de Cuenca in the historic city in the south of Ecuador.
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