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		  Frederico de FREITAS (1902 – 1980) 
  The Silly Girl's Dance (1941) [22:18] 
  The Wall of Love (1940) [13:41] 
  Medieval Suite (1958) [25:49] 
            Ribatejo (1938) [8:27] 
          Royal Scottish National Orchestra/Álvaro Cassuto
 
		  rec. Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow, Scotland, 16 August 2012 (The Wall of Love, Ribatejo) and 17 August 2012 (The Silly Girl's Dance, Medieval Suite)
 
          NAXOS 8.573095   [70:15]  
		 
		 
		
		  Frederico de Freitas was a multi-faceted musician: composer, conductor 
            and founder of the Lisbon Choral Society and teacher at the Centre 
            for Gregorian Studies in Lisbon. He has a quite varied and sizeable 
            output to his credit although little of it is known today. Many years 
            ago a lot of his music was available mostly recorded in Eastern Europe 
            (Hungary) and released onto CD by Portugalsom. In this connection, 
            please refer to Rob Barnett's global 
            review of some of those CDs, published here a few years ago. 
              
            As far as I am concerned, de Freitas's music was completely unknown 
            to me until I received this disc for review ... and a nice surprise 
            it proved. This composer's music is straightforward, often folk-inflected, 
            colourful, tuneful and brilliantly scored. The four scores of his 
            recorded here are all attractive and immensely enjoyable. Music such 
            as this may not plumb any great depths but it is refreshingly free 
            from pretension and is happy to be itself. 
              
            Both The Silly Girl's Dance and The Wall of Love 
            are ballets composed in the early 1940s and they share a number of 
            characteristics. On closer examination the personality of each score 
            is nicely suited to the ballet's argument, fairly simple in both cases 
            and thus calling for easy-going, often folk-inflected music of great 
            charm. Both scores are full of nice instrumental touches. Take, for 
            example, the little tune played by the piccolo at the outset of The 
            Silly Girl's Dance. This eventually functions as a recurring 
            motif throughout. Both scores are also made up of contrasted episodes 
            so that the music moves on drawing on a seemingly inexhaustible melodic 
            and instrumental fund. The music is also clearly of its time and place 
            so that one may be forgiven for spotting some influences such as Stravinsky, 
            Milhaud - though with slightly less dissonance - and Spanish composers 
            as well as coincidental echoes of Chabrier in Ribatejo; none 
            the worse for that. 
              
            The substantial Medieval Suite is a somewhat different proposition 
            in that it was inspired by what the composer described as “the fragrance 
            of Medieval Portuguese poetry”. This was composed after the completion 
            of the composer's opera A Igreja do Mar (“The Church of the 
            Sea”) when the composer felt the need to write something simpler and 
            lighter. The suite, however, is not as simple and as light as one 
            might have expected. It also includes some real little gems such as 
            the fourth movement Cantar de Amigo which is both beautiful 
            and deeply moving. 
              
            Álvaro Cassuto has already recorded a good deal of Portuguese music 
            with his complete recording of Braga Santos' symphonies and miscellaneous 
            orchestral works and of de Freitas Branco's four symphonies and other 
            orchestral works as well while not forgetting a superb release entirely 
            devoted to orchestral works by Lopes-Graça. He now continues with 
            yet another composer whose attractive and highly enjoyable music clearly 
            deserves to be heard. As I mentioned earlier in this review, de Freitas' 
            music may not plumb any great depths but it is far too good to be 
            ignored. 
              
            Cassuto and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra are obviously on 
            the same wave-length and the orchestra clearly enjoys itself in these 
            colourful, unpretentious but entertaining scores. 
              
            I have already returned to this lovely disc of refreshingly enjoyable 
            music repeatedly, were it only as an antidote to the grey skies over 
            our heads and in our hearts. Do not hesitate: go for it and you will 
            feel much better.   
          Hubert Culot 
              
             
             
             
           
          
		 
	    
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