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Robert Gerhard

 
Music Encyclopedia: Roberto Gerhard

(b Valls, 25 Sept 1896; d Cambridge, 5 Jan 1970). Spanish composer, later naturalized British. He studied in Barcelona with Granados and Pedrell and in Vienna and Berlin with Schoenberg (1923-8), returning to Barcelona to take an active part in musical life. His compositions from this period are few: they include the Schoenbergian Wind Quintet (1928), the cantata L′alta naixença del rei en jaume (1932) and the ballet Ariel (1934). In 1939 he left Spain and eventually settled in England, where he became much more productive, in a distinctly Spanish style. There were three more ballets (Don Quixote, 1941; Alegrias, 1942; Pandora, 1944), an opera (The Duenna, 1947), the symphony Homenaje a Pedrell (1941) and songs, besides the Violin Concerto (1943), which looks back to the early atonal works and forward to the dynamic, boldly colourful, serial compositions of his last two decades.

This late development was rapid, from the Schoenbergian style of the First Quartet (1955) to the athematic, block-form, effect-filled Second (1962). It can be seen too in the cycle of four symphonies (1953, 1959, 1960, 1967) and the Concerto for Orchestra (1965), which move towards a Varèsian sound-drama (the Third Symphony has the sub-title ‘Collages’ and includes tape). Other late works include electronic pieces, much incidental music and pieces for ensemble (Concert for Eight, 1962; Hymnody, 1963; Libra, 1968; Leo, 1969).



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Artist: Roberto Gerhard
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Roberto Gerhard
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: Spain/England
  • Born: September 25, 1896 in Valls, Spain
  • Died: January 05, 1970 in Cambridge, England
  • Genres: Ballet, Chamber Music, Concerto, Miscellaneous Music, Opera, Orchestral Music, Symphony, Vocal Music

Biography

The first major Spanish musician to ally himself with Arnold Schoenberg and the Second Viennese School, Catalan composer Roberto Gerhard nevertheless developed a wholly individual musical language that drew equally from serial techniques, traditional tonal syntax, and the powerful Spanish tradition into which he was born. Born in 1896 to a family of Swiss origin, Gerhard showed evidence of musical skill at an early age. Although his parents were not supportive of his wish to make a serious study of music (and even sent him away to Switzerland to discourage him from this course), by age nineteen Gerhard was studying privately with two of the most prominent Spanish musicians of the early twentieth century: pianist Enrique Granados and composer Felipe Pedrell. Gerhard's work with Granados was cut short by the latter's tragic death aboard the H.M.S. Sussex (which was torpedoed by a German U-boat in 1916), but he continued to study with Pedrell until 1922, when, in an effort to broaden his musical horizons, he relocated to Vienna.

In Vienna, Gerhard found his way into Schoenberg's circle, of which he remained an active part (even moving to Berlin when Schoenberg was made a professor in that city) until his return to Barcelona in 1929. Gerhard was offered a position on the faculty of the Ecola Normal de la Generalitat in 1931, and from 1932 on was a member of the Advisory Council to the Catalan Minister of Fine Arts. Although performances of his music at ISCM festivals throughout the 1930s had begun to earn Gerhard a more international reputation as a composer, the outbreak of civil war in 1938 and subsequent defeat of the Republican forces (of which Gerhard was a supporter, having even served on the Central Music Council of the Spanish Republican Government in 1937) forced Gerhard to flee the country. He eventually found his way to Great Britain.

Gerhard remained virtually unknown to the musical public of his adopted country for the next 15 years, and even the majority of British composers were unaware of his presence at Cambridge (where Gerhard had been offered a research scholarship by Cambridge historian and musicologist Edward Dent). By the mid-'50s, however, further ISCM performances and the premiere of his Symphony No. 1 in Baden-Baden (1955) resulted in an increased awareness of Gerhard's merits as a composer; from 1960 until his death in 1970 he served as visiting professor and composer-in-residence at universities and festivals around the globe (including the Tanglewood Music Center and the University of Michigan). He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (C.B.E.) in 1967 and a Fellow of University College, Cambridge the following year.

Gerhard's earliest music, such as the Seven Haiku for voice and chamber group (on the strength of which he earned a place in Schoenberg's class) show a wide range of influences. By the end of Gerhard's time with Schoenberg he had begun to assimilate certain serial ideas; pieces like the Wind Quintet of 1928, however, show Gerhard's reluctance to use strict 12-tone techniques. It would not be until the 1950s that Gerhard fully synthesized his own very textural and atmospheric style with a more rigorous 12-tone underpinning. After his emigration to Great Britain in 1939, Gerhard made most of his income composing scores for various television, film, theater and radio productions; the composer's lighter side can be seen in a group of arrangements he made (under a pseudonym) of Spanish popular tunes in 1943. ~ Blair Johnston, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Robert Gerhard
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Robert Gerhard (born Robert Juan Rene Gerhard, 25 September 1896 in Valls, Spain; died 5 January 1970 in Cambridge, England), was a Spanish Catalan composer and musical scholar and writer, generally known outside Catalonia as Roberto Gerhard.

Contents

Life

Gerhard (who only consistently adopted the form ‘Roberto’ after he was exiled from Spain)[1] was the son of a German-Swiss father and an Alsatian mother. Born in Valls, near Tarragona, he was predisposed to an international, multilingual outlook, but by birth and culture he was a Catalan. He studied piano with Granados and composition with the great scholar-composer Felipe Pedrell, teacher of Albéniz, Granados and Falla. When Pedrell died in 1922, Gerhard tried unsuccessfully to become a pupil of Falla and considered studying with Charles Koechlin in Paris but then approached Arnold Schoenberg, who on the strength of a few early compositions accepted him as his only Spanish pupil. Gerhard spent several years with Schoenberg in Vienna and Berlin. Returning to Barcelona in 1928, he devoted his energies to new music through concerts and journalism, in conjunction with the flourishing literary and artistic avant-garde of Catalonia. He befriended Joan Miró and Pablo Casals, brought Schoenberg and Webern to Barcelona, and was the principal organizer of the 1936 ISCM Festival there. He also collected, edited and performed folksongs and old Spanish music from the Renaissance to the eighteenth century.

Identified with the Republican cause throughout the Spanish Civil War (as musical adviser to the Minister of Fine Arts in the Catalan Government and a member of the Republican Government’s Social Music Council), Gerhard was forced to flee to France in 1939 and later that year settled in Cambridge, England. Until the death of Francisco Franco, who made it his business to extirpate Catalan national aspirations, his music was virtually proscribed in Spain, to which he never returned except for holidays. Apart from copious work for the BBC and in the theatre, Gerhard’s compositions of the 1940s were explicitly related to aspects of Spanish and Catalan culture, beginning in 1940 with a Symphony in memory of Pedrell and the first version of the ballet Don Quixote. They culminated in a masterpiece as The Duenna (a Spanish opera on an English play, by Sheridan, which is set in Spain). The Covent Garden production of Don Quixote and the BBC broadcasts of The Duenna popularized Gerhard's reputation in the UK though not in Spain.[2] During the 1950s, the legacy of Schoenbergian serialism, a background presence in these overtly national works, engendered an increasingly radical approach to composition which, by the 1960s, placed Gerhard firmly in the ranks of the avant-garde. From the early 1950s Gerhard suffered from a heart condition which eventually ended his life. He died in Cambridge in 1970 and is buried at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge.

Works

Gerhard’s most significant works, apart from those already mentioned, include four symphonies (the Third, Collages, for orchestra and tape), the Concerto for Orchestra, concertos for violin, piano and harpsichord, the cantata The Plague (after Albert Camus), the ballets Pandora and Soirées de Barcelone and pieces for a wide variety of chamber ensembles, including Sardanas for the indigenous Catalan street band, the cobla. He was perhaps the first important composer of electronic music in Britain; his incidental music for the 1955 Stratford-on-Avon King Lear – one of many such commissions for the Royal Shakespeare Company - was the first electronic score for the British stage.

Stylistic Evolution

For twenty years – first in Barcelona and then in exile in England – Gerhard cultivated, and enormously enriched, a modern tonal idiom with a pronounced Spanish-folkloric orientation that descended on the one hand from Pedrell and Falla, and on the other from such contemporary masters as Bartók and Stravinsky. This was the idiom whose major achievements included the ‘Ballet Catalan’ Soirées de Barcelone, the ballet Don Quixote, the Violin Concerto and the opera The Duenna.

In the complex formation of Gerhard’s personal language the influence of his last and greatest master, Schoenberg, had seemed to remain subordinate, almost suppressed. Yet Schoenbergian precepts had always been observed in his profound level of craftsmanship; and certain highly chromatic, quasi-serial passages, emerging as it were surreptitiously in these and other works, confirmed the enduring background presence of Gerhard’s studies in Vienna and Berlin. In fact, Gerhard never ceased to venerate Schoenberg and remained in cordial contact with most of the leading figures of the Second Viennese School.[citation needed] He continued to study and meditate upon the implications of Schoenberg’s twelve-tone technique. After The Duenna he turned to it more decisively, as if he had finally absorbed it and made it his own. In a notable series of works, such as the First Symphony and First String Quartet, which began to win him real international recognition for the first time, it became his principal mode of discourse. And simultaneously he developed it in new and personal directions, combining pitch-series with duration-series and a boldly exploratory attitude to sound and texture.[citation needed]

In one sense, this was a move towards greater abstraction. Yet the ‘Spanish’, folkloric elements were not necessarily rejected. Rather they reappear in new perspectives, more symbolic, less anecdotal in effect—just as, in painting, they recur as motifs in the work of Gerhard’s compatriots Picasso and Miro. This transitional period eventually gave birth to the strikingly original music of Gerhard’s final decade, where serialism itself dissolves into a freely-associating continuum of colour and rhythm, and the Spanish turns of phrase may still surprise us with sudden nostalgia or dreamlike fantasy.[citation needed]

Gerhard often said that he stood by the sound of his music: 'in music the sense is in the sound'.[3] Yet dazzling as their scoring is, his last works are in no sense a mere succession of sonic events. Their forms are meticulously organized and several make use of his special development of serialism where a twelve-tone pitch series, governing intervallic relations, interacts with a twelve-fold time series governing the music’s duration and proportions.[4] Whereas in the Third and Fourth Symphonies, for instance, these techniques result in music of majesty and high drama, in the Concerto for Orchestra the element of play, of inordinate instrumental virtuosity enjoyed for its own sake, is paramount.[citation needed]

Selected List of Works

Symphonies

  • Symphony ‘Homenatge a Pedrell’ (1941)
  • Symphony No.1 (1952-53)
  • Symphony No.2 (1957-59); recomposition as Metamorphosis, unfinished (1967-68)
  • Symphony No.3 Collages (for orchestra and tape) (1960)
  • Symphony No.4 ‘New York’ (1967)
  • Symphony No.5 (fragment only) (1969)
  • (for Chamber Symphony ‘Leo’ see Chamber Music)

Stage Works

  • Ariel, Ballet (1934)
  • Soirées de Barcelone, ballet in three tableaux (1937-39; edited and orchestration completed by Malcolm MacDonald, 1996)
  • Don Quixote (original version 1940-41, rev. 1947-49)
  • Alegrias, Divertissement flamenco (1942)
  • Pandora (1943-44, orch. 1944-45)
  • The Duenna, opera after Sheridan (1947-49). The Bielefeld Opera and conductor Geoffrey Moull performed La Duenna in a new production in 1994. The Wiener Zeitung at the time remarked that the work is "a rediscoverd stroke of genius".[5]
  • El barbarillo de Lavapies, arrangement and orchestration of the zarzuela (1874) by Francisco Barbieri (1954)
  • Lamparilla, German-language Singspiel loosely based on El barbarillo de Lavapies with additional music and original overture by Gerhard (1955-56)

Concertos

  • Concertino for string orchestra (1929)
  • Violin Concerto (1942-43)
  • Concerto for Piano and String Orchestra (1951)
  • Concerto for Harpsichord, String Orchestra and Percussion (1955-56)
  • Concerto for Orchestra (1965)

Orchestral Works

  • Albada, Interludi i Dansa (1936)
  • Epithalamium (1966)
  • Various suites from Soirées de Barcelone, Don Quixote, Alegrias, Pandora

Chamber and Instrumental Music

  • Sonatine a Carlos, piano (1914)
  • Trio in B major for violin, cello and piano (1918)
  • Trio (‘no.2’) for violin, cello and piano (1918)
  • Dos Apunts, piano (1921-22)
  • 3 string quartets composed up to 1928 (all lost; 'No.3' (1928) was reworked as the Concertino for strings)
  • Sonata, clarinet and piano (1928; also version for bass clarinet and piano)
  • Wind Quintet (1928)
  • Andantino, clarinet, violin and piano (period 1928-9)
  • String Quartet No.1 (1950-55)
  • Sonata, viola and piano (1948; recomposed 1956 as sonata for cello and piano)
  • Capriccio, solo flute (1949)
  • 3 Impromptus, piano (1950)
  • Secret People (study for the film score) for clarinet, violin and piano (1951-52)
  • Nonet (1956-57)
  • Fantasia, guitar (1957)
  • String Quartet No.2 (1961-62)
  • Concert for 8 (1962)
  • Chaconne, violin solo (1959)
  • Hymnody for large wind ensemble, two pianos and percussion (1963)
  • Gemini, Duo for violin and piano (1966)
  • Libra, sextet (1968)
  • Leo, Chamber Symphony (1969)

Vocal Works

  • L’infantament meravellós de Shahrazada Song-cycle for voice and piano, op.1 (1916-18)
  • Verger de les galanies for voice and piano (1917-18)
  • 7 Haiku for voice and ensemble (1922 rev. 1958)
  • 14 Cançons populars catalanes for voice and piano (1928-29; six numbers orchestrated 1931 as 6 Cançons Populars Catalanes)
  • L’alta naixenca del Rei en Jaume, cantata for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra (1932)
  • Cancionero de Pedrell for voice and piano or chamber orchestra (1941)
  • 3 Canciones Toreras for voice and orchestra (c.1943) [composed under pseudonym ‘Juan Serralonga’]
  • 6 Chansons populaires françaises for voice and piano (1944)
  • The Akond of Swat for voice and percussion (1954)
  • Cantares for voice and guitar (1962; incorporates Fantasia for guitar)
  • The Plague, cantata for narrator, chorus and orchestra, after Camus (1963-64)

Electronic Music

  • Audiomobiles I-IV (1958-59)
  • Lament for the death of Bullfighter for speaker and tape (1959)
  • 10 Pieces for tape (c.1961)
  • Sculptures I-V (1963)
  • DNA in Reflection (1963)
  • Anger of Achilles (1964) with Delia Derbyshire[1]
  • also tape component in Symphony No.3 and in many film, radio and theatre scores

Fantasias on themes from Zarzuelas

(for light orchestra; composed c.1943 under the pseudonym ‘Juan Serralonga’)

  • Cadiz, after Chuca & Valverde (1943)
  • Gigantes y Cabezudos, after Caballero (c.1943)
  • La Viejecita, after Caballero (c.1943)

Sources

  • Gerhard, Roberto, and Meirion Bowen. 2000. Gerhard on Music: Selected Writings, edited by Meirion Bowen. Aldershot [Hants, UK] and Burlington [Vermont]: Ashgate. ISBN 0754600092
  • Homs, Joaquim. 1991. Robert Gerhard i la seva obra. Barcelona: Biblioteca de Catalunya. ISBN: 8478451099
  • London Sinfonietta. 1974. Programme book for The complete Instrumental and Chamber Music of Arnold Schoenberg and Roberto Gerhard. London: London Sinfonietta.

References

  1. ^ But NB that his Piano Trio was published in Paris in 1921 as by 'Roberto Gerhard'.
  2. ^ "Roberto Gerhard Biography". Boosey & Hawkes, Inc.. http://www.boosey.com/pages/cr/composer/composer_main.asp?composerid=2716&ttype=BIOGRAPHY&ttitle=Biography. Retrieved 2008-08-14. 
  3. ^ Composer's Note to the published score of Libra, Oxford University Press 1970; other programme notes have the same statement in varying words and word-orders
  4. ^ See Gerhard, 'Functions of the series in twelve-note composition', originally a talk given at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, reprinted in Gerhard and Bowen 2000,[citation needed].
  5. ^ Theater in Bielefeld 1975-1998, Kerber Verlag, Bielefeld, Redaktion Heidi Wiese, Heiner Bruns, Alexander Gruber, Fritz Stockmeier 1998, ISBN 3-933040-03-5

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