Hay músicas que sugieren historias. El Concierto para percusión y orquesta de Friedrich Cerha nos deja sin aliento por la variedad, complejidad y dramatismo de sus tramas. Y nadie mejor que el espectacular percusionista Martin Grubinger para contárnoslas.
El propio Cerha nos introduce en la obra:
"While I was writing it I had not yet heard Grubinger play,
and I never tried to contact him while I was working; I did not want to be
influenced in any way – yet today I read that I had written the piece as if
tailor-made for him and – although he described it as the most difficult thing
he had ever played – he made it his own so brilliantly that the description
seemed to fit.
"Each of the piece’s three movements has its own array of
solo instruments, the percussionist changing positions in every one until, at
the end, he returns to his initial one. (Contrary to custom, exact pitches are
given for all the percussion instruments – even the tom-toms, temple blocks,
wood blocks and cowbells).
"The first and third sections of the first movement and the
end of the piece are marked by eruptive blocks of sound, the drums dominating.
The orchestral texture consists of three layers of short pitches of
sophisticated rhythmical organisation, based on a magic square in which
different sequences of figures total 34. Continuous motion is provided by the
soloist and a single horns and tuba line only. The overall effect is of an
insistent, drilling character.
"The second movement is more lyrical, dominated by resonating
instruments –vibraphone, bells, gongs, crotales and bowls. Together, they
create an impression of a calm, sonic carpet. Polymetric organisation provides
motion within that area; various instruments repeat pitches separated equally
but varying in length in the individual voices, yielding differing simultaneous
adjacent speeds. I was originally stimulated by observing the slow movements of
heavenly bodies and ways of catching up and overtaking which play a part in
many areas of life.
"I am especially fond of one very calm passage where
extremely short events in the percussion break through very quiet string and
wind chords. Experiences in the stillness of the nocturnal forest – a snap of a
twig, a rustling in the leaves, a tired, faint birdcall – may well have played
a role in my imagination.
"The third movement has a scherzo-like character, the high,
clear sounds of the xylophone, wood blocks and log drums dominating the motion
in a frenzied tempo. The classic sound of a solo instrument is often omitted in
recent concert literature – but I love the interaction of a solo instruments
and its compatriots in the orchestra in my instrumental concerti; in this
movement, there even develops a distinct, transient interchange between the
solo xylophone and the xylophone player in the orchestra, this
“counter-soloist” imitating or continuing the soloist’s phrases.
"The final section of the last movement returns – not
verbatim, of course – to the eruptive drum events of the first movement, before
it closes by repeating the beginning in mirrored form, i.e. cancrizans."
Friedrich Cerha
Web: https://www.universaledition.com/friedrich-cerha-130/works/konzert-13177
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