This disc forms part of our ongoing Spanish Music series, performed
by the BBC Philharmonic and its Chief Conductor, Juanjo Mena. Here the
focus is on the orchestral works of the composer Joaquín Turina, one of
the two leading Spanish composers of the twentieth century, the other
being Manuel de Falla.
Turina was a prolific composer, who in his sixty-seven years wrote
more than one hundred works, in which he explored a wide range of
classical genres, from symphonic music, solo piano pieces, and vocal
works to ballet scores and chamber music. Most of these show the
influences of traditional Andalusian music and folk tunes, often
conveying feelings of rapture and immense exaltation, while also owing a
debt to a range of French composers.
Turina lived in Paris from 1905 to 1914, and during this time, while
taking composition lessons from Vincent d’Indy and getting to know
Maurice Ravel and Claude Debussy, he absorbed certain aspects of the
French style. These influences are particularly evident in Danzas
fantásticas and Sinfonia sevillana. While both these works are heavily
inspired by the sights and sounds of Turina’s native Seville, they also
display hints of French impressionism, inevitably calling Debussy to
mind.
Turina was as thrilled by the sound and style of Andalusian folk
singers as he was by folksong itself, and in terms of his songs, Poema
en forma de canciones (Poem in the form of songs), originally for voice
and piano, is probably the best known work. Here, as in ‘Farruca’ from
Triptico, the orchestra and conductor are joined by the Spanish mezzo
soprano Clara Mouriz for truly idiomatic performances.
Ritmos (Rhythms) was written originally as a ballet, which never
reached the stage; nevertheless it proved brilliantly effective in the
concert hall. The score itself does not relate to any specific scenario,
but follows a progression, which Turina himself described as ‘a gradual
journey from darkness into light’.
The Saeta is the only work on this disc in which Turina completely
steps away from the influences of folk tune-inspired Andalusian dance
rhythms. This is a beautifully written devotional song ‘in the form of a
Salutation to the Virgin of Hope’.
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