Goya Granados
Goya Granados
Goya Granados
Enrique Granados
Francisco Goya (1746 1828) lead a life in and out of favour with the
Spanish king and his highly dramatic paintings and etchings,
particularly in relation to the various Spanish wars, were highly
influential. His pictures of woman, his maja pictures, were an
inspiration to Spanish composer Enrique Granados (1867-1916) and in
their honor, he wrote his set of piano pieces called Goyescas (In the
Manner of Goya).
What drew Granados to Goyas works was the contrast in colours. In a
1910 letter he explained I fell in love with the psychology of Goya
and his palette that rosy-whiteness of the cheeks contrasted with
lace and jet-black velvet, those jasmine-white hands, the colour of
mother-of-pearl have dazzled me
Granados was one of the most important Spanish composers of the
Romantic era, and in Goyescas, he created one of the great works of
Romantic piano music. Its harmonies have been described as jeweltoned and one critic said that the music gave performer and
audiences alike the voluptuous sense of passing the fingers
through masses of richly-coloured jewels.
Goyescas was written as two collections plus one additional piece but
now form a united seven of 6 pieces. Not all of Goyescas can be
directly linked with works by Goya by title, but some parallels can be
made.
No. 1. Los requiebros (Flattery), was inspired by Goyas Capricho, Tal
para cual, and is based on the dance form called the ajota. The work
is a set of variations based on an 18th-century piece by Bas de
Lasema, Tirana del Tripoli.
No. 1. Los requiebros (Alicia de Larrocha, piano)
Goya: El pelele