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Castelnuovo-tedesco Mario - Vocalise-etude - Voix Moyenne and Piano


This item is not available anymore with the seller Woodbrass

Instrumentation :

Medium voice, Piano



Publisher :

Leduc, Alphonse




Sellers, prices & stock
Musicroom : In Stock
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Vocalise-Étude: Medium Voice: Vocal Work
6.99 GBP - Shipped from England

LMI-Partitions (french language only) : 3-5 days
Vocalise - Etude (CASTELNUOVO-TEDESCO MARIO)
8.86 EUR - Shipped from France

Born into a family that had lived in Florence since the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895-1968) entertained only a distant relationship with the music he heard at synagogue. It was only when he discovered Schelemo, a rhapsody for cello and orchestra written in 1916 by Ernest Bloch, that he began to understand what Jewish music could be. In the mid-1920s, the young composer found a collection of prayers set to music among his maternal grandfather s papers. Something clicked, and from then on, Jewish tradition would become a source of inspiration for Castelnuovo-Tedesco. In 1928, two years after publishing the Dances of King David, he wrote this Vocalise-Étude for medium voice and piano at the request of vocal teacher Amédée-Landély Hettich, who wanted to include it in the Répertoire moderne de Vocalises-Études published by Leduc. The piece became so popular that several instrumental adaptations were soon created, published under the title Chant hébraïque (for violin and piano: AL17 713; for cello and piano: AL 17196). Divided into three sections, this wordless melody opens with a sad and impassioned chant that appears to grieve the tragic fate of the Jewish people. A folk dance follows, in which a lively and stubborn movement has great panache. The third section returns to the initial poignant theme before briefly reiterating the dance motif, allowing the piece to conclude on a hopeful note. The composer himself would adopt this proactive stance, refusing to yield to resignation when, fleeing Mussolini s anti-Semitic laws, he decided to emigrate in 1939 to the United States, a land of refuge to which he would remain faithful until his death some thirty years later.


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