Saturday, December 16, 2023

A Question of Repertoire

I'm a classical guitarist, though these days I often call myself a composer. I had an inkling of what this might mean when I went to my first final instrumental exam and one of the faculty jokingly said: "What are you going to play, guitar boogie shuffle?" One of the things that prevents music departments from sliding into the progressive morass of English departments is that there is usually a fair emphasis on performance. Nearly all music majors, even if they are not in the performance stream, have individual private lessons and since these are expensive to provide, they have to do final exams on their instruments showing that they can actually play something. Performance majors, at least towards the end of their program, have to give public recitals, also marked by a jury.

But the classical guitar has an uncomfortable niche in the classical music world as the electric and steel string guitars of popular music are better known. Here's that tune by the Ventures:

That's before my time as a guitarist, but it was right in the wheelhouse of the faculty examiner. It was repertoire he knew, but he had never heard of the big composers for guitar: Tárrega, Sor, Giuliani, Ponce, Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Throughout the history of the guitar there have been attempts for it to enter the musical mainstream (at least the classical one). In 16th century Spain, the primary domestic solo instrument was the vihuela, a double-strung guitar, basically. In the rest of Europe, the lute was very important, though alongside other instruments like the organ, harp and virginal. In the later 17th century the guitar very nearly broke into the mainstream in the form of the Baroque guitar with composers like Robert de Visée and Francesco Corbetta who were important composer/performers in the royal courts. The lute and theorbo also enjoyed some popularity in the person of people like Sylvius Leopold Weiss. But the trend failed to reach completion and the instrument(s) faded.

Another attempt was made in the late 18th century with Spanish guitarist composers like Fernando Sor and Italians like Mauro Giuliani. We could also count Wenzel Thomas Matiegka in this number. This attempt was even less successful as the harpsichord and piano completely triumphed over the plucked instruments in the person of the big three composers: Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. Yet another attempt to assail the ramparts of the classical mainstream was made in the mid-20th century by the great artist Andrés Segovia who really did take the Spanish guitar from the streets and put it on the concert hall stage worldwide. When he was alive he could tour everywhere and easily fill 2,000 seat concert halls. With the spread of his disciples like Oscar Ghiglia and pupils like John Williams and other virtuosos like Julian Bream, the future of the guitar seemed to be finally assured.

But the problem, as always, was repertoire. The sad truth is that there is no guitar repertoire that is absolutely essential. Think on that. The vihuela music of Luys Milan is less essential than the lute music of Francesco da Milano. The courtly guitar music of de Visée and Corbetta is far less significant than the harpsichord music of Couperin and Rameau and good god, the lute music of Weiss is vanishingly trivial compared to the harpsichord music of J. S. Bach. There is no possible way to equate the guitar music of Sor, Giuliani and Matiegka with the piano music of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. In the 20th century, there are the few and feeble pieces of Tárrega, Falla and the more substantial, but still few ones by Britten and Ponce that are minor compared to ones by Schoenberg, Berg, Stravinsky, Debussy--need I go on?

The situation with ensemble music is even more dire and this underlines the fact that the guitar has never, quite, managed to escape the ghetto it has been in since the 16th century. There is virtually no worthwhile ensemble music with guitar. I know this because I spent much of my career looking for it. There is a small repertoire of duets by Sor and others, largely trivial. There is a small repertoire of music for violin and guitar by Paganini and virtually no-one else. There are quite a few concertos, starting with several by Giuliani, greatly increasing in the 20th century with ones by Rodrigo, Villa-Lobos, Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Brouwer, but honestly, any orchestra would much prefer to program ones by Mozart, Prokofiev, and Rachmaninoff.

The one area in which the guitar stood a bit of a chance was in the repertoire for voice and guitar where we actually have a respectable repertoire, especially if we allow some transcriptions. We have a lot of interesting songs, ayres and chansons from the 16th century by, among others, John Dowland. We have the possibility of some lieder by Franz Schubert, who played and composed on the guitar (there is even a quartet by Schubert based on a trio by Matiegka) and in the 20th century we have song cycles by Lennox Berkeley, Benjamin Britten and others. There is even a chamber opera, El Cimmaron, by Hans Werner Henze for voice, flute, guitar, and percussion. But that's it and especially given the decline in voice recitals, it just isn't enough.

I'm going to be in Salzburg for the festival this year and I am going to see if I can sit down with some people at the Mozarteum and festival administration to talk about the history of the guitar at Salzburg. When I was a student there in the 80s, the guitar had some presence. Pepe Romero taught a month-long master class and he even gave a concert of the Falla Siete Canciones Españoles with, I believe, Teresa Berganza. Originally composed for piano, but workable on guitar. Now, there is no trace of the guitar either at the festival or at the summer courses at the Mozarteum. What happened?

I think it is a question of repertoire. The classical guitar, with the possible exception of the Concierto de Aranjuez of Rodrigo, the Songs from the Chinese of Britten and a couple of solo pieces, simply has no essential repertoire...


14 comments:

  1. Matanya Ophee presciently called the situation in "Repertoire Issues" decades ago, I think, when he said guitarists were so fixated on the solo recital and not on discovering and COMPOSING new chamber repertoire we've collectively shot ourselves in both feet.

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  2. just in case people here haven't already read it ... Ophee's estate has made it available again

    https://www.digitalguitararchive.com/2022/03/repertoire-issues/

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  3. Very smart guy, Matanya Ophee. Thanks for the link. As a composer, I have tried to improve the situation with some substantial pieces for violin and guitar and a song cycle for voice and guitar. But...

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  4. I agree with your overall point, but I would mention some more worthwhile (even 'essential') ensemble repertoire with guitar that gets forgotten. Three important serial works had guitar: Schoenberg's Serenade, Boulez's Le Marteau, and Webern's Drei Lieder. Also, Takemitsu wrote some wonderful pieces with guitar. In terms of opera, Thomas Ades's opera The Exterminating Angel and Alexander Goehr's Arianna comes to mind as having prominent guitar parts (the former may enter the repertoire; the latter is less likely to). Also Berlioz's Béatrice et Bénédict. I'm not greatly enthusiastic about guitar concerti, but the Arnold concerto is absolutely first-rate and carefully-written and ought to be performed much more often.

    There is also a question of whether the electric guitar may become a part of the classical repertoire. Classical guitarists are increasingly picking up the electric guitar and while I'm not convinced, composers do write for it. Sean Shibe is the one to watch for this -- whether any of his work with the electric guitar will outlive its novelty. And there is of course Electric Counterpoint. Oh, and there is one work for 3 voices and 3 electric guitar that I do like quite alot: Poèmes de la Mort by Frank Martin. But it's almost never performed.

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  5. Good luck in Salzburg! Thomas Dunford and Lea Desandre are going to be there, I believe you wrote the other week? They seem to be making the festival circuit (Verbier, too, or Aix-- I don't keep such things in mind) so perhaps you could interest them (I have no idea how, of course) in the guitar repertory quandary. Go through the roster of artists and the list of their spouses/partners, too: one or more of them are bound to have at least a non-professional interest in the guitar.

    Contacts, contacts; I wish I could offer them but alas the nearest I get to having such a useful relationship is an exchange of emails with a English conductor who was acknowledging a small donation for one of his projects, ha, so that doesn't count.

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  6. I have written about twenty chamber sonatas pairing the guitar up with woodwinds, plucked strings, bowed strings and brass. Of those works the piece that has sold a few copies (just a few, literally) is my duo for tuba and guitar. A sonata for tuba and guitar is as far off the beaten path as a composer can probably get. The thing is that a composer can write dozens of chamber works that may or may not be of good to great quality but the tricky part, I find, is finding musicians interested in tackling them.

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  7. I'm lucky to have commentators to fill in the bits that I missed. Yes, I knew of the Schoenberg, Webern and Boulez pieces, but the Boulez aside, I don't think that they helped the guitar get through the door to the mainstream. Takemitsu I forgot to mention. The other ones I didn't know about. There are a couple of guitar parts in operas, but they just add local color and don't help us out. I played a piece by a contemporary Canadian composer that had obbligato classical and electric guitars, doubling on both. But Boulez and Takemitsu aside, none of it is essential repertoire, meaning repertoire that just has to be programmed fairly regularly. Sadly, I think that includes the Arnold concerto.

    Marc, I already applied for a ticket to the Lea Desandre concert with Thomas Dunford. The problem is that we don't have repertoire that they simply can't ignore.

    Yes, Wenatchee, they aren't playing my chamber music either!

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  8. Frank Martin's Mass for Double Chorus probably gets more performance time than 4 Pieces, though I like Martin's work and it's to Alex Ross' credit that he made a point about blogging about Frank Martin recordings whenever they show up. But then I've got a tiny soft spot for Swiss Reformed stuff what with my Emil Brunner collection and reading about Heinrich Bullinger. ;)

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  9. I suspect, generally, there will comparably little 'essential' repertoire from the last approx. 50 years and the years to come (if the idea of canonic repertoire even survives with anything like its current cultural strength). Maybe one of the guitar's problems is that it reached its greatest prominence and technical brilliance in a lesser musical era.

    I just realised I forgot about Gubaidulina. Her chamber works with guitar have been performed anumber of times. I don't know if her music will become/is becoming essential, but I hope so.

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  10. I'm a big fan of Gubaidulina, but I forgot to mention her guitar chamber works as well. And her early Serenade is a lovely piece that I have played a couple of times.

    The thing is that there will always be great music and there has been great music written recently and there will be great music written in the future. The problem is that we don't have a "common practice" any more that helped composers connect with their audiences as everyone had a similar understanding of musical gestures.

    The problem for guitarists is that no great composers have sought out the instrument the way nearly everyone has done for the piano.

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  11. I read somewhere Gubaidulina mentioned wanting to try writing something for guitar entirely in harmonics. I hope she gets a chance to do that if it's the case.

    Jacques Ellul contended in The Empire of Non-Sense that the emergence of the critic as a social class and "broker" for the arts was a sign that a gap between patrons and artists had emerged that had not historically existed much in earlier centuries. Kings and cardinals didn't need music critics to mediate their opinions or tell them what they liked, they'd just tell the musicians "This is what we want for this occasion". The emergence of art criticism was a sign that the arts needed brokers. To Ellul this was a sign of a bad trajectory rather than a good one, though obviously for "Brokers" like Norman Lebrecht or maybe Ted Gioia the "broker" role is considered important.

    I do wonder whether or not music education and canonization focusing on recitals and symphonic concerts rather than, say, hausmusik may have something to do with the lack of "common practice". It's not like there aren't centuries of guitar clubs and so on, but Ophee's point was that that whole salon/master class/solo recital culture has proven a dead end because guitarists don't do chamber music enough.

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  12. The emergence of critics and cultural brokers is also associated with the emergence of the middle class as consumers and performers.

    The fact that guitarists don't do chamber music has eluded me, largely because I always did chamber music. As I moved from a rock and blues guitarist into classical, I just naturally kept playing with other people, often guitarists, but there was a French horn player early on that wanted to do that Laurindo Almeida arrangement of the Bach First Partita for French horn and guitar. And in my undergrad, an enlightened voice teacher assigned me to accompany a student in her graduating recital doing the Britten Songs from the Chinese. Since then I have done a huge amount of music for voice and guitar, flute and guitar, violin and guitar, two guitars, and even bassoon and guitar--not a happy combination. So it just never occurred to me that guitarists didn't do chamber music. But I guess most don't...

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  13. Per "Repertoire Issues" Angelo Gilardino's lament was among guitarists themselves too many of them kept gravitating toward playing the most rinky-dink trifles from the literature. If I have a chance to pick between Gilardino's sonatas and, to risk offending a sensibility of some potential reader somewhere, I take Gilardino over the tedious arpeggios of Andrew York every time. I admit my idea of fun is testing out double and triple counterpoint in B flat minor or F major on the guitar. That is actually fun for me but that's not what most guitarists conceive as even possible and they don't desire it.

    The lack of "common practice" is probably an ADVANTAGE to guitarists and I think Leonard Meyer was right to call our norm the polystylistic steady-state back in Music, The Arts and Ideas more than half a century ago (there's good reasons Taruskin liked Meyer so much). The lack of a dominant style isn't a problem in itself, Taruskin pointed out that in what we think of the Baroque era (or the era of figured bass) there were about a dozen styles of church music, dance music, court music and so on but since each style and genre had its own firmly established social function the sheer variety of styles and forms was not perceived as a "problem" the way 20th century music theorists and historians perceived it as a "problem" that there was no "common practice".

    Meanwhile, in pop music the corporate entity known as The Beatles played around with a wide variety of styles and genres and have become inescapable in pop music history. The lack of a common practice doesn't seem to be self-evidently bad. Demonstrating competency (if not "mastery") of a more or less full range of stylistic and formal options in an age isn't going to look like "common practice" at the time. J. S. Bach's English and French and Italian Suites may all just sound like "Bach" to us but his synthesis of old church music and then-contemporary dance and opera idioms in Mass in B minor literally requires a Daniel Melamed book to explain the musical topoi to us in the 21st century to appreciate Bach's juxtaposition of ancient/modern.

    I have suspected over the course of twenty years that the "common cause" element may hold guitarists back if we focus on it.

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  14. yeah, most guitarists don't do chamber music.

    There are exceptions that prove the rule. I have all of the flute and guitar albums that Atanas Ourkouzounov and Mie Ogura have recorded together. Ourkouzouonov has written a formidable body of chamber music for flute and guitar that uses extended techniques for both instruments. Annette Kruisbrink has written a somewhat small but robust set of works for doublebass and guitar that she wrote with her bassist brother in mind, if memory serves.

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