Naxos 8.559738 (2013)
Roberto Sierra
www.robertosierra.com
www.robertosierra.com
Roberto
Sierra (b. 1953)
Sinfonía No 4, Fandangos and Carnaval
Naxos
8.559738 (2013)
On December 30, 2009 AfriClassical posted: “Roberto Sierra's 'Sinfonia No. 4' is First Work Composed for Sphinx Commissioning Consortium”
On December 30, 2009 AfriClassical posted: “Roberto Sierra's 'Sinfonia No. 4' is First Work Composed for Sphinx Commissioning Consortium”
Roberto
Sierra is a Puerto Rican composer who was born in 1953. He is a
Professor at Cornell University. The Sphinx Organization's
publication The Quarter Note,
Vol. 11, No. 1, Winter 2010, wrote:
“Much like the musicians on
classical music stages, there is little diversity among the composers
whose work is performed on those stages. Intent on building diversity
in this important aspect of classical music, Sphinx joined forces
with twelve orchestras to commission a new work from a Black or
Latino composer each year. Thus was born the Sphinx Commissioning
Consortium.
"From a pool of nominees, the consortium
awarded the commission to Roberto
Sierra. His new Sinfonia No. 4
is the
consortium's first completed piece. The Nashville Symphony Orchestra
premiered the piece in October with Giancarlo Guerrero conducting.
Performances by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra, both consortium member orchestras, followed.
After just a handful of performances, Sierra's piece is fulfilling
the mission of the Sphinx Commissioning Consortium. Performances are
already scheduled with orchestras around the country, including two
that are not members of the consortium.”
NashvilleSymphony.org
provides program notes by Thomas May:
“Puerto Rican-born composer Roberto Sierra has developed a unique style characterized by infusing classical forms and genres with Latin American idioms. The composer refers to the process of creating these vibrantly colorful hybrids as 'tropicalization.'”
“Puerto Rican-born composer Roberto Sierra has developed a unique style characterized by infusing classical forms and genres with Latin American idioms. The composer refers to the process of creating these vibrantly colorful hybrids as 'tropicalization.'”
The liner notes for
Naxos American Classics 8.559738 are by the composer, Roberto Sierra.
He writes that Fandangos (11:07)
dates from 2000. The historical origin of the fandango is claimed by
both the Iberian peninsula and the New World, we are told. Sierra
writes:
“A harpsichord
work attributed to Antonio Soler (1729–83) was my point of
departure. Soler’s Fandango seems fractured, almost like a
written improvisation, an important element that provided me the base
for writing this orchestral fantasy, where I also incorporated
elements from Luigi Boccherini’s (1743–1805) and Domenico
Scarlatti’s (1685–1757) respective fandangos, as well as
my own Baroque musings.”
Sinfonia No. 4
(23:12) is
from 2008-2009. The composer states: “This is the fourth
work in a series of compositions that demonstrate my relationship to
the great symphonic tradition, one that I change and transform from
within its own formal logic.” The movements are Moderadamente
rápido, Rápido, Tiempo de bolero and
Muy rápido y rítmico. Sierra
writes of the fourth movement:
“This is a clave
that permeates and cannibalizes the structure; my version of musical
anthropophagy, where a structure devours another structure creating a
form of expression that is loose but at the same time highly
concentrated. This method allows me to reshape external influences,
while freeing them from anything that might restrain its own
vitality. At the end the process becomes one not of transformation
but of transcreation; a term which describes the process of adapting
a message from one language to another, while maintaining its intent,
style, tone and content.”
Sierra
says of Carnaval (2007):
“The five movements of Carnaval draw their
inspiration from mythical creatures.” They are Gargoyles,
Sphinxes, Unicorns Dragons and
The Phoenix. The
composer writes: “This orchestral suite is linked to
Robert Schumann (1810–56) not only by the quotes in Sphinxes,
but also by the character piece nature of the movements.”
We
have enjoyed listening to this latest CD of Roberto Sierra many
times, and find the greatest
satisfaction in Sinfonia No. 4, with
its use of traditional symphonic form and its successful incorporation of
influences from composers of the 17th,
18th
and 19th
centuries.
Disclosure:
A review copy of this recording was provided by the record label.
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