The work of composer Manuel de Falla (1876-1946) ranges from late-romantic salon pieces to evocations of flamenco to stark neoclassicism. Yet his music has met with conflicting reactions, depending on the audience. In his native Spain, Falla is considered the most innovative composer of the first half of the twentieth century. Likewise, in the United States, Falla enjoyed a strong following in the concert hall. But many of his works, especially some of the "colorful" or "exotic" dances from The Three-Cornered Hat and El Amor Brujo, were taken up during the Latin music craze of the 1930s and 40s and appeared in everything from jazz and pop arrangements to MGM musicals. Similarly enigmatic are the details of Falla's life. He never sustained a lasting, intimate relationship with a woman, yet he created compelling female roles for the lyric stage. Although he became incensed when publishers altered his music, he more than once tinkered with Chopin and Debussy. Despite insisting that he was apolitical, Falla ultimately took sides in the Spanish Civil War, initially allying himself rather half-heartedly with Franco's Nationalists but later rejecting the honors they proffered. All his life, his rigorous brand of Roman Catholicism brought him both solace and agony in his quest for spiritual and artistic perfection.In Sacred Passions: The Life and Music of Manuel de Falla, Carol A. Hess explores these contradictions and offers a fresh understanding of this fascinating composer. Building on over a decade of research, Hess examines Falla's work in terms of musical style and explores the cultural milieus in which he worked. During a seven-year sojourn to Paris just pior to World War I, Falla associated with composers Dukas, Stravinsky, Ravel, and the rest of the group known as les Apaches. Later, back in Spain, he played a pivotal role in the remarkable cultural renaissance known as the "Silver Age," during which Lorca, Bu?uel, Dal?, Unamuno-and of course Falla himself-made some of their boldest artistic statements.Hess also explores a number of myths cultivated in earlier biographies, including Falla's supposed misogynistic tendencies and accusations of homosexuality, which have led some biographers to consider him a saint-like ascetic. She offers a balanced view of his behavior during the Spanish Civil War, a wrenching event for a Spaniard of his generation, and one that Falla biographers have left largely untouched. With superb analysis of his music and enlightening detail about its critical reception, Hess also examines Falla's status in some circles as little more than a high-class pop composer, given the mass appeal of much of his music. She incorporates recent research on Falla, draws upon untapped sources in the Falla archives, and reevaluates his work in terms of current issues in musicology.Ultimately, Hess places Falla's variegated ouevre, which straddles popular and serious idioms, securely among the best of his better-known European contemporaries. What emerges is a gracefully written, balanced portrait of a man whose lofty spiritual values inspired singular musical utterances but were often at odds with the decidedly imperfect world he inhabited.
Author(s): Carol A. Hess
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 368
Contents......Page 16
1. Confronting Falla......Page 22
A “Very Studious, Very Conscientious Young Man”......Page 28
“Self-Love” and the Ways of Art......Page 39
Farewell to Juvenalia: La Vida Breve......Page 52
3. In Paris on the Eve of the Great War......Page 62
“Without Paris, . . . Obscurity”......Page 63
A Career Is Launched......Page 72
4. In Neutral Spain......Page 90
Falla and the “Idealized Female Archetype”: El Amor Brujo......Page 91
Eclecticism and the “Progress of Society”......Page 108
5. International Acclaim: Modernist Folklore and a Farewell to the Primitive......Page 122
Falla and the Ballets Russes......Page 123
New Undertakings......Page 140
The Halcyon Years Begin: At Home in Granada......Page 146
6. The European Neoclassicist: Finding His Voice......Page 156
Defining Moments: El retablo de Maese Pedro and the Harpsichord Concerto......Page 157
The Allure of the Lost Continent......Page 186
Figurehead for Youth: Falla as Teacher......Page 192
Falla and the Republic......Page 204
“Spes Vitae” (Hope of Life)......Page 219
8. Falla and the Spanish Civil War......Page 232
“The Breath of God over Our Bayonets”......Page 233
Evasion, Acquiescence, Enigma: Falla’s Declaration......Page 247
Argentina and Self-Imposed Exile......Page 262
The Aftermath: Atlántida......Page 294
Falla and Spain......Page 304
The Other Falla......Page 310
Appendix 1 Works and First Performances......Page 322
Appendix 2 Overview of Spanish History, 1874–1981......Page 328
Bibliography......Page 330
A......Page 352
B......Page 353
C......Page 354
F......Page 355
G......Page 360
K......Page 361
M......Page 362
N......Page 363
R......Page 364
S......Page 365
W......Page 367
Z......Page 368