JESUS GURIDI (1886-1961)
	
	Basque composer. Born in Vitoria in Northern Spain. Studied with DIndy
	in Paris. Moved to Bilbao until a further move in 1939, this time to Madrid.
	Wrote operas, zarzuelas, orchestral works, chamber music, piano music, film
	and choral music. Died Madrid 1961.
	
	INTRODUCTION This is a beautifully presented CD. Generous selection at more
	than 70 minutes of music. Excellent recording and as far as one can tell
	with such rare works: authentic and faithful performances. Tuneful, imaginative
	music with a very strong and distinctive flavour. Nice open natural acoustic
	with plenty of detail in the recording. There is a 52 page booklet in five
	languages starting off with Basque.
	
	DIEZ MELODIAS VASCAS (1941) FOR ORCHESTRA Of this suite of
	ten Basque melodies, Grove V says: this is his most popular work which
	is full of varied tunes and rhythms profoundly Basque in tone and richly
	scored for modern orchestra. It comes as no surprise that Grove claims
	he was more successful in this music than in works of symphonic aspiration
	though I would like to be the judge of that especially in relation to his
	Sinfonia Pirenaica. None of the movements is longer than four minutes of
	this work and most are about 2 minutes. Just occasionally there is a hint
	of the rich orchestration of the Canteloube Chants de lAuvergne.
	
	Narrativa - A strongly rhythmic fast dance like a saltarello. The
	use of toughly punctuating brass and woodwind has some overtones of Grainger;
	Amorosa - A dreamy tender serenade for strings; Religiosa -
	A Warlockian pavane for full orchestra richly used complete with a closing
	harp flourish; Epitalámica - A calm tentative faltering song
	for woodwind and strings; De Ronda - Again the raucously disciplined
	celebratory Grainger element comes out but everything is somehow freer. Quite
	a brash dance. Brass and percussion are heavily in evidence; Amorosa has
	a long singing line. It is predominantly quiet and romantic for strings and
	harp. Oddly reminiscent of Richard Rodney Bennetts film music. The
	theme is given a full chance to expand. At almost 4 minutes this
	Amorosa is the longest piece in the suite. It ends in magical quiet.
	De Ronda - Here we return to what is for most listeners a Purcellian,
	slightly portentous, atmosphere. Danza - An antique dance in spirit
	of Walton of Henry V. Elegiaca - This is a serenade which opens with
	solo violin. Festiva - This begins in almost silence but soon glows
	high in celebration. Irresistibly projected on the strings then developed
	through chattering woodwind and finally in full orchestra. A grand effect.
	A wonderfully fantastic end to a colourfully varied suite.
	
	HOMENAJE A WALT DISNEY (1956) FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA There
	is nothing of Hollywood glitz or shallowness about this piece nor does it
	use Disney songs. The sadness is that the title may have held the work back.
	This is a substantial concert piece which opens in grey mists like the oceans
	of rolling fog I recall cloaking the valley from my campsite high above Barcelona
	in the early 1970s. The piano enters with a tune of Celtic inflection - calm
	and with some of the simple splendour of Moeran. Not long after this Bax
	is evoked in the filigree work for the piano and in the tune itself. After
	a long mysterious introduction at 4:20 the piano chaffs away in a Baxian
	figure. At 5.20 there is a more martial episode with barking horns. At 6:17
	the merest hint of a plantation song. At 8:00 we have a decisive fanfare
	dissolving into the shards of a that Baxian Celtic tune again. Clearly
	Disneys films touched off something deep in Guridi. At 9:45 there is
	humorous passage for piano, woodwind and percussion which, for the first
	time, leans into the world of Mickey Mouse or perhaps LApprenti
	Sorcier but everything here is beautifully balanced and delineated. At
	11:00 the mystery of the opening returns transforming into a slightly creepy
	interlude. At 12:00 a chiming dance. At 14:00 a warm-as-toast romantic tune
	enters dissolving into calm. Guridi is never afraid of using instruments
	to create points of light. There are many impressionistic touches. At 17:00
	Stravinskian woodwind emerge and the piano, never far away, enters with a
	complex slightly atonal figure. At 18:28 the orchestra is in glorious song
	and how beautifully propelled this is by every instrument. From 20:00 onwards
	Guridi resorts to a broad Rachmaninovian passage melting into a jazzy drumbeat
	driven rush. Things conclude with a return to that Celtic tune played out
	in sharply delineated steps and ending amid colourful splendour and complete
	with a trombone raspberry!
	
	UNA AVENTURA DE DON QUIJOTE (1916) Symphonic Poem. There is
	nothing of Richard Strauss here. While this was being written the Great War
	raged in France but there is little or no tragedy here. Its reference points
	for a British audience include Vaughan Williams Pastoral Symphony.
	The atmosphere and some of the passages are familiar from the Ten Basque
	Melodies. At 3:10 there is a charging string-driven passage worthy of
	Moeran. The brass contribute with a certain unihibited brashness (a mark
	of Guridi). Just occasionally I wondered if he was a counterpart to the lighter
	British figures like Coates but Guridi is his own man. His approach here
	is certainly light and brightly colourful. From 11:00 onwards there is a
	more serious air ending in an affirmative punch from the orchestra.
	
	EUZKO IRUDIAK (1922) for chorus and orchestra By the time you
	have heard the other pieces the first movement of these three Basque Images
	seems extremely familiar and welcome. The first scene has the
	boats pulling to sea with a wonderful fanfare topping off the movement at
	4:02. The choir enter unison - momentarily pianissimo. Guridi has clearly
	heard de Falla. Scene two depicts the violent sea with a much greater
	contribution from the choir with antiphonal effects. A quieter section features
	a hymn-like song and here a British listener is bound to think of Welsh choirs.
	It must be accepted that this is not terribly dark or sharp. The last movement
	has that carefree atmosphere of the Basque Melodies. A pipe and
	tabor dance enters and above it the unison voices of the women of Orfeon
	Donastaria sing joyously of the safe homecoming of the fishermen. Guridi:
	the unihibited, sincere, sentimentalist with a tear in his eye.
	
	WHAT NEXT
	
	From now on I will not think of Guridi as just a name I vaguely associate
	with Zarzuela. He has a definite profile and is a treasurable melodist and
	colourist in the Celtic vein which reaches from Sibelius to Klami to Bax,
	to Moeran, to Ropartz to Cras to Guridi. The Disney work would make a fine
	disc-mate for de Fallas Noches en las Jardines de Espana. There
	are four string quartets as well! I now want to hear his orchestral Sinfonia
	Pirenaica and the Estampas Vascas (Basque Sketches) for chorus
	and orchestra.
	
	RECOMMENDATION
	
	You will really like this disc if you enjoy tonal music with a distinctive
	nationalist flavour and with primary colours. I can imagine anyone who enjoys
	Uuno Klami, Malcolm Arnold, Ravel, Bax, Moeran or Coates taking very well
	to this music. Claves are to be thanked for embarking on recording this
	repertoire. I definitely want to hear more orchestral Guridi and Basque
	orchestral music generally. The next CD in the series will be of music by
	Jose Maria Usandizaga, born in Bilbao and who died of TB at the age of 28
	in 1915. In the case of Usandizaga there are three operas, some symphonic
	overtures and two string quartets; the latter would almost certainly make
	a fine coupling for some of the Guridi quartets. I cant wait.
	
	Congratulations then to the people of the Basque lands for this fine disc
	and for the music of a composer whose bright-eyed nationalism deserves as
	much exposure as possible. We would do well not to bracket this music as
	Spanish/Castilian. It is fiercely special and separate like the Basque language.
	In days when a deadening pan-nationalism has devastated the rich flavours
	of music across the world Guridis stands as an example of someone who
	drew something very distinctive from his homeland and offers it to the world.
	
	Reviewer
	
	Robert Barnett
	
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