Programme notes for Deal Gabriele Sutkuté

Jean-Philippe Rameau – Suite in D major (Pièces de Clavecin):

I. Les Tendres Plaintes (Rondeau)

V. La Follette (Rondeau)

VIII. Les Cyclopes (Rondeau)

8min.

Claude Debussy – Estampes (“Prints”), L.100 :

I. Pagodes (“Pagodas”)

II. La soirée dans Grenade (“Evening in Granada”) 

III. Jardins sous la pluie (“Gardens in the Rain”)

15min.

Ashkan Layegh – For Solo Piano (2023)

8min.

Florence Anna Maunders – Tuphānī Rakasa

3,5min

C. Debussy – “La plus que lente” (Valse), L. 121

5min.

M. Ravel– La valse, M. 72

The French Baroque composer Jean – Philippe Rameau wrote three books of Pièces de clavecin for the harpsichord .The first, Premier Livre de Pièces de Clavecin, was published in 1706 ; the second, Pièces de Clavessin, in 1724; and the third, Nouvelles Suites de Pièces de Clavecin, in 1726 or 1727. They were followed in 1741 by Pièces de clave in En concerts, in which the harpsichord can either be accompanied by violin (or flute) and viola da gamba or played alone. An isolated piece, “La Dauphine“, survives from 1747.

Jean-Philippe Rameau topped the summit of the Musical Establishment—named Compositeur du Cabinet du Roi in 1745—yet his pedigree was hardly auspicious. For a time a travelling violinist, he held numerous undistinguished posts as provincial organist (rarely serving out his contract and on one occasion deliberately playing sufficiently badly to ensure his dismissal) before finally settling in Paris at the age of forty.

Something of a theorist—his treatise On the Technique of the Fingers on the Harpsichord makes for essential reading—Rameau’s intellectualism combines in his music to produce passion and tenderness, in his own words ‘true music … the language of the heart’. Some sixty keyboard works are known, gathered by key into five suites

Jean-Philippe Rameau, by Joseph Aved, 1728

Those played tonight are from 1724 and are the first,fifth and eighth from his Suite in D : Les Tendres Plaintes -la Follette– Les Cyclopes

  1. Les Tendres Plaintes. Rondeau .An almost tongue-in-cheek character piece, with a title so hackneyed that Rameau was surely poking a bit of fun: Les tendres plaintes (‘The tender sighs ‘) It is nevertheless a ravishing pearl piece , and Rameau clearly thought enough of it to rework it as a ballet movement in Zoroastre (1749).
  2. Les Niais de Sologne – Premier Double des Niais – Deuxième Double des Niais
  3. Les Soupirs. Tendrement
  4. La Joyeuse. Rondeau
  5. La Follette. Rondeau (The Sprite) is a bright gigue like Rondeau
  6. L’Entretien des Muses
  7. Les Tourbillons. Rondeau
  8. Les Cyclopes. Rondeau. Is the jewel of the set with a musical description of the mythological smithies who forged Jupiter’s thunderbolts in the deep recesses of the Earth. Here Rameau uses his special technique of ‘batteries’ which he claimed to have invented. As he explains in the preface to the 1724 collection: ‘In one of the batteries the hands make between them the consecutive movement of two drumsticks; and in the other, the left hand passes over the right to play alternately the bass and treble.’ Incidentally, Les cyclopes is believed to be one of the pieces played by the Jesuit Amiot before the Chinese Emperor; sadly, it seems to have not made much of an impression.
  9. Le Lardon. Menuet
  10. La Boiteuse

Ashkan Layegh was born in Tehran, Iran in 1997. He started learning the piano at the age of 6 in Iran. He attained a high-school degree in Maths, which gained him a place to study Architecture at the University of Tehran in 2016.
He won First Prize at the International Barbad Piano Competition, Shiraz, in 2017. Shortly after the competition, the Chair of the Jury, Layla Ramezan, the Lausanne-based Iranian concert pianist, introduced Ashkan to the British conductor Mark Stephenson. Subsequently, Ashkan was invited to perform in a chamber music concert at the Iranian Embassy, Prince’s Gate, London, in April 2017, which was organized by Mark Stephenson (Artistic Director: The Internava Project).
In December 2017, with the encouragement and support of Mark Stephenson, Ashkan auditioned for both the Royal Academy of Music and Royal College of Music in London. He is the first young musician from Iran since the Revolution to be offered places at both institutions, and he won a full scholarship to study at the Royal Academy of Music.
In addition to his piano studies he is a keen jazz pianist and he also plays Electric/Acoustic Guitar and the Setar — traditional Persian Instrument. In December 2019, he formed his own ensemble, Ashkan Layegh Quartet — Phemo — to perform his own music.

Florence Anna Maunders started to compose music when she was a teenager, and her early tape-based pieces from this time reveal an early fascination with the unusual juxtapositions of sounds and collisions of styles which have been a hallmark of her music-making ever since. This is perhaps a reflection of the music which interested and excited her from a very young age – medieval dance music, prog-rock, electronic minimalism, bebop jazz, Eastern folk music, the music of Stravinsky & Messiaen, and the grand orchestral tradition of the European concert hall. Flori started out young, as a chorister, clarinetist and saxophone player, but following an undergraduate degree at the Royal Northern College of Music, where she studied with Anthony Gilbert, Adam Gorb, Simon Holt & Clark Rundell, she’s enjoyed a mixed and international career as a jazz pianist, orchestral percussionist, vocalist arranger, electronic music producer and teacher. Since 2018 she’s had a bit of a radical transformation of her self and her career, and returned to composition as a main artistic focus, and is currently working on a PhD as a doctoral fellow at Cardiff University.

Since returning to writing music, she’s enjoyed significant successes in the UK, the USA, Europe and across the rest of the world, leading to a string of high profile awards & prizes including the Royal Philharmonic Prize.

I work, compositionally, like a novelist. I know what the story arc’s gonna be, I know who my characters are; I know what direction [it’s] gonna go in, what’s gonna happen in each chapter. I know what the results of these conversations are gonna be between these two characters, but I haven’t written all the dialogue.”
Florence Anna Maunders
She is a multi-award-winning composer, percussionist, pianist, educator, and producer based in the UK. Florence’s work explores unusual juxtapositions of sounds and collisions of styles, influenced by her interests in music ranging from medieval dance, prog-rock, electronic minimalism, bebop jazz, Eastern folk music, Stravinsky, and Messiaen. Following a varied international career as a jazz pianist, orchestral percussionist, electronic music producer, teacher, and more, she returned to composition as her main artistic focus in 2018. Since then, she has received multiple accolades — in the past year alone being a Royal Philharmonic Society Composer 2022-23 and receiving prizes and commissions from Khemia Ensemble,Uitgast Festival Prize,BCMG’s Flourish!Commission ,Third Coast percussion,Currents Creative Partner, LCO New, Drake Music Ascendant Commisssion, and more.

1908
(AchilleClaude Debussy
22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918

La plus que lentL.121 was written for solo piano in 1910,shortly after his publication of the Préludes Book 1.It was first played at the New Carlton Hotel in Paris, where it was transcribed for strings and performed by the popular ‘gipsy’ violinist, Léoni, for whom Debussy wrote it (and who was given the manuscript by the composer).La plus que lente is, in Debussy’s wryly humorous way, the valse lente to outdo all others.”It is marked “Molto rubato con morbidezza” indicating Debussy’s encouragement of a flexible tempo.

During the same year of its composition, an orchestration of the work was conceived, but Debussy opposed the score’s heavy use of percussion and proposed a new one, writing to his publisher:

“Examining the brassy score of La plus que lente, it appears to me to be uselessly ornamented with trombones,kettle drums,triangles , etc., and thus it addresses itself to a sort of de luxe saloon that I am accustomed to ignore!—there are certain clumsinesses that one can easily avoid! So I permitted myself to try another kind of arrangement which seems more practical. And it is impossible to begin the same way in a saloon as in a salon. There absolutely must be a few preparatory measures. But let’s not limit ourselves to beer parlours. Let’s think of the numberless five-o’-clock teas where assemble the beautiful audiences I’ve dreamed of.” Claude Debussy, 25 August 1910 

Estampes (“Prints”), L.100 It was finished in 1903. The first performance of the work was given by Ricardo Vines at the Salle Erard of the Société Nazionale de Musique  in Paris on 9 January 1904.

This three-movement suite is one of a number of piano works by Debussy which are often described as impressionistic , a term borrowed from painting. This style of composition had been pioneered by Ravel  in Jeu d’eau written in 1901, and was soon adopted by Debussy (for example in the earlier numbers of Images,but Debussy did not himself identify as an impressionist.

Pagodes evokes Indonesian gamelan music, which Debussy first heard in the Paris World Conference Exhibition of 1889.Debussy marks in the text that “Pagodes” should be played “presque sans nuance“, or “almost without nuance.” This rigidity of rhythm helps to reduce the natural inclination of pianists to add rubato and excessive expression.

La soirée dans Grenade uses the Arabic scale  and mimics guitar strumming to evoke images of Granada ,Spain .Debussy’s only personal experience with the country was a few hours spent in San Sebastian de los Reyes near Madrid. Despite this, Manuel de Falla said of the movement: “There is not even one measure of this music borrowed from the Spanish folklore, and yet the entire composition in its most minute details, conveys admirably Spain.”

Jardins sous la pluie describes a garden in the Normandy  town of Orbec during an extremely violent rainstorm. Throughout the piece, there are sections that evoke the sounds of the wind blowing, a thunderstorm raging, and raindrops dropping. It makes use of two folk melodies, the lullaby Dodo,l’enfant do and Nous n’irons plus au bois parce qu’il fait un temps insupportable (We will no longer go to the woods because the weather is unbearable).


Joseph Maurice Ravel. 7 March 1875 – 28 December 1937. 

Photo of Ravel in the French Army in 1916. 
Ravel finally joined the Thirteenth Artillery Regiment as a lorry driver in March 1915, when he was forty.Stravinsky expressed admiration for his friend’s courage: “at his age and with his name he could have had an easier place, or done nothing”.Some of Ravel’s duties put him in mortal danger, driving munitions at night under heavy German bombardment.

The idea of La valse began first with the title “Vienne” as early as 1906, where Ravel intended to orchestrate a piece in tribute to the waltz form and to Johann Strauss.As he himself stated:’You know my intense attraction to these wonderful rhythms and that I value the joie de vivre expressed in the dance much more deeply than Franckist puritanism.Ravel completely reworked his idea of Wien into what became La valse, which was to have been written under commission from Diaghilev as a ballet. However, he never produced the ballet after hearing a two-piano reduction performed by Ravel and Marcelle Meyer saying it was a “masterpiece” but rejected Ravel’s work as “not a ballet. It’s a portrait of ballet”. Ravel, hurt by the comment, ended the relationship and when the two men met again during 1925, Ravel refused to shake Diaghilev’s hand. Diaghilev challenged Ravel to a duel, but friends persuaded Diaghilev to recant. The men never met again.Ravel described La valse with the following preface to the score:
‘Through whirling clouds, waltzing couples may be faintly distinguished. The clouds gradually scatter: one sees at letter A an immense hall peopled with a whirling crowd. The scene is gradually illuminated. The light of the chandeliers bursts forth at the fortissimo letter B. Set in an imperial court, about 1855.’

https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2024/03/20/christopher-axworthy-dip-ram-aram/

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