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Catalogo sistematico descriptivo de las obras musicales de Isaac Albeniz. (Book Reviews: Popular Musics).(Book Review)

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| December 01, 2002 | Clark, Walter A. | COPYRIGHT 2002 Music Library Association, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Catalogo sistematico descriptivo de las obras musicales de Isaac Albeniz. By Jacinto Torres. Preface by Robert M. Stevenson. Madrid: Instituto de Bibliografia Musical, 2001. [521 p. ISBN 84607-2854-4. [euro]57.] Music examples, illustrations, bibliography, indexes.

Eighty? One hundred and thirteen? One hundred and seventy? Two hundred? Six hundred? Nine hundred? Just how many works did the Spanish composer Isaac Albeniz (1360-1909) write, anyway? The answer has always been hard to come by and depended completely on which source one consulted. All of these numbers have been advanced as valid approximations by scholars over the years. It is all a matter of who is doing the counting, and how. For instance, toward the end of his life the composer himself told his nephew and future biographer Victor Ruiz Akbeniz that he had written a little over four hundred works ("quatrocientas y pico," p. 21). But he was prone to some very creative bookkeeping. For instance, his set of seven pieces for solo piano entitled Recuerdos de viaje comprised eight works by his reckoning: the seven individual pieces, and the entire collection itself l Moreover, he counted earlier works published under new titles as original compositions.

In his new and magisterial Catalogo, Jacinto Torres declines to supply a definite answer to this question, for the eminently logical reason that no one will ever really know precisely how many works flowed from Albeniz's pen. Many have been lost, or suffer obscured identity due to possible misattribution or survival under a different title. For instance, the first catalog of his works, which appeared in 1886 in a biographical sketch by the Madrid journalist Antonio Guerra y Alarcon, mentions a "Serenata" that almost certainly is the piece we now know as "Granada (Serenata)," from the first Suite espanola (Guerra y Alarcon, Antonio. Isaac Albeniz notas criticobiograficos de tan eminente pianista [Madrid: Escuela Tipografical del Hospicio, 1886], 41). Other works mentioned and no longer extant may have been figments of his imagination, while yet others mentioned in the contemporary periodical literature may have been improvisations never committed to paper (or later published under another title, as in the case of the nonextant Serenata napolitana, a piano piece mentioned in reviews of his 1882 concerts in Galicia, which may have reincarnated later as the third movement of his Escenas sinfonicas) In short, there is always a certain amount of educated guessing involved in such work. Despite such difficulties, Torres has given us the most thorough, scientific, and reliable catalog of Albeniz's music ever. Whether or not it is definitive (and given the problems involved, that is perhaps too much to expect of any catalog), it is as complete and accurate as possible and will unlikely ever be superseded.

Torres, one of the leading musicologists in Spain today and professor at both the Real Conservatorio and Universidad Complutense in Madrid, is no newcomer to Albeniz's studies. He has been at the forefront of this area for over a decade, and has brought to light, edited, and provided critical commentary for several of Albeniz's most important works, including Iberia and the Rapsodia espanola for piano and orchestra, for which he resurrected the original orchestration. He also assisted in the recovery and recording of the opera Merlin. Of special interest is his edition, with Anton Cardo, of the complete works by Albeniz for solo voice and piano: Integral de l'obra per a veu i piano (Barcelona: Trito, 1998). It contains many gems that will be of interest to singers who are unfamiliar with this dimension of his creative output.

The catalog at hand is a fine example of how to go about this kind of work. Although it is in Spanish, that will prove no real impediment to those unfamiliar with that language wishing to consult it. In the introduction, Torres establishes the parameters of his work and lays out his methodology. He surveys previous attempts to catalog ...

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