






It's all about the classical music composers and their works from the last 400 years and much more about music. Hier erfahren Sie alles über die klassischen Komponisten und ihre Meisterwerke der letzten vierhundert Jahre und vieles mehr über Klassische Musik.
Ernesto Cortázar was a Mexican composer, arranger, and pianist, born in Mexico City and who died in Tampico, Tamaulipas. He was the son of composer, Ernesto Cortázar, founder and president of the Society of Authors and Composers of Mexico. At the age of 13, Ernesto Cortázar lost his parents in a car accident. Wikipedia
Born: May 2, 1940, Mexico City, Mexico
Died: August 2, 2004 (age 64 years), Tampico, Mexico
Parents: Ernesto Cortázar
Children: Ernesto Cortazar III, Edgar Cortazar
Nominations: Latin Grammy Award for Best Regional Mexican Song
by Maureen Buja
The choice of the two composers is interesting, mainly because of their separation in time, and the addition of the little works rounds out the composers’ repertoire.
Karol Szymanowski
Gabriel Fauré
The Polish composer Karol Szymanowski changed his style from the early one that followed the German Romantic school to later Impressionistic and then atonal styles. Folk music was another influence. He attended the State Conservatory in Warsaw from 1901 to 1905 and was its director from 1926 to his retirement in 1930. He didn’t serve in WWI due to his lameness and devoted his time to composition and study, working on Islamic culture, ancient Greek drama, and philosophy. He travelled extensively in Europe and North Africa and much of this came out in his opera Król Roger (King Roger); one critic raved about it: ‘we have a body of work representing a dazzling personal synthesis of cultural references, crossing the boundaries of nation, race and gender to form an affirmative belief in an international society of the future based on the artistic freedom granted by Eros’.
He died in 1937 of tuberculosis while under treatment in Switzerland. He’s buried at Skalka in Kraków, where the most distinguished Poles are interred.
It is not known if Szymanowski ever met Fauré, although we do know that Szymanowski met with Ravel. There is much to connect Fauré and Szymanowski, such as Szymanowski’s activities in the Société Musicale Indépendente, which promoted French music and was under the directorship of Fauré. They both studied early musical styles and counterpoint and, later, both forged individual styles that were linked to classical form and tonality, but which were unique to each composer. Both wrote songs early in their career, and this lyrical link carries through each composer’s music.
Szymanowski’s violin sonata was written when he was 22, and it is quite Romantic in style. Zavaro sees a link to the night theme of the recording through its second movement, which begins ‘with the calm of a starry sky’. Fauré’s more rarely played Second Sonata was written after he’d started to become deaf. It’s inward-looking and has a kind of ‘sonic opacity’, which she calls an ‘acoustic night’. Repeated hearings help you see through the darkness and end in a night-seeing clarity. Composer Charles Koechlin called Fauré’s sonata ‘a magnificent ascent to the summits of joy’ and Zavaro imagines the top of the mountain as a first step to flight.
Eva Zavaro (photo by Olivier Lalane)
Clément Lefebvre (photo by Jean-Baptiste Millot)
Other works on the album include Szymanowski’s La Berceuse d’Aïtacho Enia, Op.52 and Notturno e Tarantella, Op.28; Fauré’s other works include his Berceuse, Op.16 and Après un rêve, Op.7 n°1. By closing with Après un rêve, Zavaro chooses to close with an example of Fauré’s melodic genius. The work is one of his most popular, and she says, ‘ It possesses an expressive intensity unique to its composer, present from his earliest works, whose apparent lightness and deceptive simplicity conceal great depth’.
Fauré, Szymanovski: Notturno
Eva Zavaro violin, Clément Lefebvre, piano
La Dolce Volta LDV 127
Official Website
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by Maureeen Buja
The sun has come up, and the birds start to make their statements. The European Robin, the Hooded Crow, and doves all greet the new day.
Dawn at the Acropolis (photo by Maureen Buja)
Your friends are up and about on their bikes because you can hear their bicycle bells in the distance.
The local church sounds the hour with the Westminster Chime. It’s time to get out and go!
Now, where to go? If off to the countryside, then it’s the sounds of animals in the fields that you might hear.
Cows with bells
If you go to the seaside, then it’s the roar of the waves and the equally loud roar of all the beach people.
The Jersey shore
If you go down to the pond, then there will be different water sounds.
Pond
Out in the countryside, the little insects are active: grasshoppers and, as it gets hotter, the katydids come out.
Perhaps it’s time to just lie down and rest your eyes for a bit. Nope, nope, nope, that couldn’t possibly be you making that noise!
William Sydney Mount: Boys Caught Napping in a Field, 1848 (Brooklyn Museum)
In the evening, let’s go to a concert. Down at the park, there’s something fun going on, and the crowd is waiting for it to start!
New York Philharmonic, Concert in the Park
The orchestra tunes.
In our concert, Samuel Barber brings us back to his childhood in Knoxville, in the summer of 1915.
Afterwards, as you step out into the plaza, children are celebrating with some small firecrackers.
But, down in the park, the big fireworks show is on.
After the show, the local band starts with Sousa Marches.
Dekalb, IL Municipal Band, Kirk Lundbeck, dir. – Concert Shell with fireworks
And closes with one of Sousa’s most familiar works. Listen out for those piccolos at the end!
It’s late, and everyone is home, tired after a long day outdoors, and it’s only the owls who patrol to watch through the night.
Tawny Owl at Night
How does your summer day go?