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Matilde
SALVADOR (1918-2007) Cinc cançons de Bres (1982) [11:21] Voces de otra orilla (Homenaje a la poesía femenina
de América) (1946-51) [7:51] Tres nanas (1947) [4:04] Una enredadera (1956) [3:03] El cazador (1951) [1:51] Vida garfio (1951) [4:00] ¿En dónde tejemos la ronda? (1952) [1:20] Els asfòdels (1988) [19:24]
Isabel Monar (soprano), Mac
McClure (piano)
rec. Estudis Albert Moraleda, Llerona, 26-27 October 2007
Notes in Spanish and English. Song texts provided (no translations). COLUMNA MÚSICA 1CM0166 [52:49]
The music of Matilde Salvador
has attracted little attention in Britain … and the same
is true, I suspect, of most places beyond the borders of
Spain. Even within Spain she is a composer whose regional
affiliations are strong. Her best work – particularly for
the voice – is of a high order and deserves to be much
more widely known.
Salvador was born in Castelló de
la Plana, on the Costa del Alzahar, capital city of the
province of Castelló in the Comunidad Valenciana. Brought up in a cultured middle-class family, the
young Salvador was encouraged to develop her talents in
the arts, both musical and visual (some of her paintings
on glass can be seen in the Musée d’Art Naïf Max Fourny
in Paris and in the Museo Internacional de Arte Naif Manuel Moral at Jaén in Spain). As a
girl she studied piano and guitar, her teachers including
Joaquina Segarra (to whom she was related). She studied
composition with Vicente Asencio, who she later married.
Her output includes operas, such as La
filla del Rei Barbut (1943)
and Vinatea (1973), this last being
produced at the Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona in 1974,
becoming, I believe, the first
female-composed opera ever performed there. She also wrote
some fine ballet music, notably El segoviano
esquivo (1953) and El ruiseñor y
la rosa (1958). Much honoured and long regarded
as a major presence in Valencian music, Salvador died on
October 5, 2007.
At
the centre of Salvador’s oeuvre is a considerable body
of songs, which she began writing and publishing as early
as 1935. This necessarily small selection of Salvador’s
songs is especially welcome, performed with commitment
and sympathy, well recorded, and illustrative of something – at
least – of her range of her work in this genre. The constantly
fresh melodic invention, the deceptive simplicity of
accompaniment, the sheer naturalness of sound are all
a delight; anyone with a taste for modern Spanish song
will surely get a great deal of pleasure from this disc.
The best of these songs deserve a place alongside those
of, say, Turina, Mompou, Rodrigo, Montsalvatge and de
Falla.
Salvador’s
choice of texts is always interesting and part of the
key to her responsiveness to verbal meaning and her respect
for the words she sets. The first cycle here, Cinc
cançons de Bres, sets texts by Bernat Artola, a poet actually born (in 1904) in the
composer’s hometown of Castellón de la Plana, and a personal
friend of the composer;
several individual songs, and the cycle Tres nanas,
set words by the Uruguayan poet Juana di Ibarbourou (1892-1979),
with whose unstrident feminist concerns the composer
was clearly in sympathy. In Voces de otra otilla,
as its title and subtitle suggest, Salvador is also concerned
with texts written by Spanish speaking woman from South
America. Another poem by Ibarbourou is included here,
along with two by Gabriela Mistral (1889-1957), the Chilean
poet and feminist who was the first Latin American winner
of the Nobel Prize for Literature (in 1945) and one by
the Uruguayan / Argentinean poet Alfonsina Storni (1941-2008).
All her choices confirm the intelligence and the sense
of personal appropriateness which seems almost always
to have conditioned Salvador’s selection of texts for
setting. Of particular interest are the texts set in Els
Asfòdels, poems by Rafel Caria, one of that community of Catalan
speakers which still survives in Alghero (l’Aguer, to
give it its Catalan name) in north-western Sardinia.
It is a shame that all of these texts are printed only
in their originals.
But
there is little else with which one might quibble. The
limpid beauty of so much of Salvador’s writing is everywhere
delightful and frequently moving. Isabel Monar’s pleasant
and variously toned voice, full of attractive colours,
displays her understanding of Salvador’s musical idiom
throughout along with her own thoughtful understanding
of the texts she is singing. American-born pianist Mac
McClure has lived and worked in Spain since the 1980s
and is a consummate accompanist in material such as this.
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