Musicologists of
a puritanical cast of mind will doubtless be unhappy about the
repertoire for vihuela being played on the modern guitar;
but others will surely delight in this lovely recital by one
of the great sixteenth-century masters of Spanish music.
Biographical details
of Luys de Narváez are few and far between. He was probably
born in Granada, near the end of the fifteenth century at the
very beginning of the sixteenth. He worked for Francisco de
los Cobos as a court musician in Valladolid; in the 1590s he
worked as music teacher to the children in the chapel of Prince
Philip (later Philip III) and apparently travelled in Italy
and Northern Europe. Almost all of his surviving music is to
be found in his book Les seys libros del delphin,
published in 1538. This is made up of music for solo vihuela
notated in a tablature like that used in contemporary Italian
lute books. The volume includes sets of variations, fantasias,
intabulations of songs and other vocal pieces, villancicos
and pieces in other genres.
Narváez has a considerable
reputation as an improviser on the vihuela; it isn’t
entirely paradoxical to say that one can hear the skills of
the improviser in some of these written pieces, in terms, for
example, of their often simple melodic and rhythmic modules,
repeated and varied insistently, and of his use of common rhythmic
figurations in several works.
The most impressive
works here are perhaps the sets of variations – and it is worth
noting that Narváez was a significant figure in the development
of variation form, both within the Spanish tradition and beyond
it. In the six variations (‘diferencias’) on the Spanish hymn
O Gloriosa Domina the hymn tune appears in each variation.
In the more numerous variations on Conde Claros the original
melodic phrase is effectively reduced to an ostinato pattern
upon which new constructions are built – including abrupt changes
of register, some striking scalar passages and much else. (Conde
Claros was a lengthy ballad (more than 400 lines long) which
probably dates from the 15th century. Various musical settings
exist).
The fantasias are
fine pieces too, their melodic lines spinning out expressively,
richly evocative of mood. The transcriptions of vocal works
by Josquin Desprez and Jean Richafort are fascinating too –
in truth, there is nothing here that isn’t.
The modern guitar
- Pablo Márquez plays a 1952 guitar made by Daniel Friedrich –
has a richer sound palette than the vihuela and an altogether
burlier sound. But played as sensitively as it is here by Márquez
(Argentinian born and currently Professor at the Musik-Akademie
of Basel) it proves to be a very effective medium for the interpretation
of Narváez’ music. Márquez’ interpretations are sensitive and
sympathetic and apt in scale. He is (as other CDs have already
shown) possessed of a considerable technique, but there is no
showing off of virtuosity here – his love and respect for the
music of Narváez is clearly too profound for that ever to be a
temptation. His performances benefit from a characteristically
beautiful ECM recorded sound.
Glyn Pursglove