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Creole Faust Overture, for orchestra, Op. 9

 
Classical Work: Creole Faust Overture, for orchestra, Op. 9

Review

In 1866, Argentinian politician and writer Ernesto del Campo had a chance to see a performance of Charles Gounod's opera Faust in Buenos Aires. The experience inspired him to write a tale called El Fausto criollo (The Creole Faust), which featured a gaucho telling a friend about watching a performance of Faust in Buenos Aires. The gaucho in del Campo's tale is plainly both captivated and confused by the theater, the production and the music itself, and he describes the performance in humorous terms. Del Campo's work was immensely popular in Argentina, and became a classic of Argentinian gaucho literature. In 1943, Alberto Ginastera was in the middle of his nationalist period, having already written works like the Argentinian Dances and the Songs of Tucaman which celebrated the melodies and rhythms of Argentinian folk music. El Fausto criollo seemed a natural subject for Ginastera, and so he wrote Overture for The Creole Faust in which ponderous European music (based partially on a few themes from Gounod's opera) competes with boisterous Argentinian music, with delightful results. Imposing chords open the overture, followed by a low, foreboding string melody. This melody moves gradually into a higher register, and becomes faster and faster, until without warning the orchestra breaks out into a high-spirited Argentinian dance. For the rest of the overture, Ginastera contrasts the two styles of music. The European music is generally written for massed strings and heavy brass, while the Argentinian music emphasizes woodwinds and exotic percussion. Thus, when Ginastera brings the woodwinds into a fugato that had formerly been for strings alone, we can sense that the music will move into the Argentinian mode soon. The two musics continue to yield unexpectedly to each other until the work's end, when the big opening chords come back and give way one last time to a spirited dance that closes the work. Ginastera's Overture for The Creole Faust is a skillful work that stays close to the exuberant spirit of its original text. ~ All Music Guide

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
Caramelos Latinos 1995
Copland, Ginastera, Barber and others
Fiesta in Hi-Fi 1992
Ginastera: Estancia
Ginastera: Obertura,Op.9/Pampeana No.3/Danzas Del Ballet Estancia,Op.8/Glosas Sobre Temas De Pablo Casals,Op.48 1994
Ginastera: Pampeana 2003

Albums with Excerpt Performances of the Work

Title Date
Alberto Ginastera: Overture to the Creole 'Faust'; Ollantay; Pampeana No. 3; Dances from the Ballet 'Estancia' 2003
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