Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882 - 1973)
Sinfonie del silenzio e de la morte (1909-10)
Symphony No.1 "in quattro tempi, come le quattro
stagioni" (1933)
Symphony No.2 "elegiaca" (1936)
Though less widely known than his near-contemporary
Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936), Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882 -1973) has been
regarded by many of his countrymen as the most original Italian composer of his
generation. The quality of his enormous output is, admittedly, variable; yet
his best compositions reveal a hauntingly distinctive musical personality and a
stimulatingly non- conformist cast of mind, which have won him the reverence of
important musicians who came after him. His most notable younger Italian
admirers have included Luigi Dallapiccola (1904-75), who sometimes rated him
astonishingly highly; Bruno Maderna (1920-73), who was his pupil and conducted
his music often and with evident affection; and Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931),
who has devised some striking productions of Malipiero's sometimes very
extraordinary theatre works.
In addition to writing highly unconventional pieces
for the stage - among which Pantea (1917-19), Sette canzoni (1918-9) and
Torneo notturno (1929) are three of the most important -Malipiero was
also prolific in the field of instrumental music. His large orchestral output
includes no fewer than seventeen compositions with the word
"sinfonia" (or in one case "sinfonie") in the title,
although it remains a moot point whether that word should be translated, in
every case, as "symphony". Moreover only eleven of the works in
question have numbers, and even the very first numbered symphony did not appear
unti11933, by which time Malipiero was already over fifty .For more than twenty
years immediately prior to that -years during which he wrote several of his
most important orchestral pieces, from the first set of Impressioni dal vero
(1910-11) to the First Violin Concerto (1932) - he had rigorously
avoided the term "sinfonia" when naming his works. At bottom this
reflected the intransigently hostile attitude that he had adopted towards the
Austro-German symphonic tradition -just as the eccentricity of his theatre
compositions of the same period reflected an equally drastic rejection of
established operatic methods, Italian and otherwise.
Earlier still, however, during the little-known
formative phase that preceded the appearance of the first Impressiani dal vero
(which in later life he regarded as his earliest work of lasting importance),
Malipiero had written no fewer than three substantial orchestral pieces whose
titles do include the word "sinfonia", either in its singular or in
its plural form. The earliest of them, the Sinfonia degli eroi (1905), though
performed when it was new, was subsequently repudiated by the composer and he
claimed to have destroyed it, although the manuscript eventually turned up
after his death, hidden in a box in the cellar of his house in Asolo. The
evocative Sinfonia del mare (1906), although it too was never printed,
seems to have satisfied him more: he allowed it to be performed in 1928, and a
recording of it can be found on the first disc in the present series (Marco
Polo 8.223602). The largest and most ambitious of these early
"symphonies", however, is the Sinfonie [sic] del silenzia e
de la mal1e ("Symphonies of Silence and Death", 1909-10), whose
plural title reflects the fact that, alone among the three works, it is in more
than one distinct movement. It should be emphasized that the label
"symphony" should not be understood in the Beethovenian or Brahmsian
sense where any of these early works are concerned: they are, in fact,
symphonic poems, the Sinfonie being itself a suite of three such pieces.
At the time he wrote the Sinfonie del silenzia e
de la mal1e, Malipiero was absorbing a wide variety of experiences and
musical influences (some of them gathered during his various trips abroad,
which were more frequent and extensive in his early years than they were to
become in later life): as a result, the work is undeniably eclectic, and less
unfailingly individual than the first Impressiani dal vera, which were
to appear in the following year. Nevertheless the Sinfonie provides a
fascinating document of the forces that were then shaping Malipiero's creative
personality: even the work's three extra musical programmes - as summarized in
the score published (in three volumes) in Leipzig in 1911 - themselves contain
imagery that significantly foreshadows some of his forthcoming theatre
compositions.
The first movement bears the title Danza tragica, which
is supplemented in the score by an adapted quotation from Edgar Allan Poe (as
translated into French by Baudelaire), referring to "the Masque of the Red
Death [...] his vesture dabbled in blood". The second movement is entitled
Sinfonia [in the singular this time!] del silenzio, supplemented
by an unattributed quotation (possibly from D'Annunzio) stating that "the
silence conjured up an ancient dance, it conjured up the tumult of an ancient
tragedy". The title of the third movement, II molino della morte ("The
Mill of Death"), is likewise reinforced by an anonymous quotation:
"... under its dark millstone lives passed, were broken, were
recomposed... Lamentations were mingled with laughter, death-rattles with
whimperings". Clearly that sombre, death-obsessed side of Malipiero's
nature, which in due course achieved its most powerful expressions in Pantea
and Torneo notturno, was already coming to the surface - rooted,
perhaps, in traumatic experiences that befell him during his adolescence.
(Among other things, his grandmother is said to have died in highly dramatic
circumstances.)
The source of the quotation attached to the first
movement is one of Poe's most memorably macabre tales, at whose climax an
aristocratic ball is terrifyingly interrupted by the appearance among the
dancers of the Masque of the Red Death - a figure embodying, in fearsome yet
quasi-human form, a deadly plague that is raging in the community outside. The
sombre, rather Russian-sounding music with which Malipiero begins and ends his
first movement reflects this haunting tale's sinister atmosphere, and the movement's
central regions contain clear suggestions of formal aristocratic dancing. But
the most overtly "programmatic" moment occurs shortly before the end,
when a brief, wild gust of frenetically dissonant sounds (momentarily
superimposing keys of C major and E flat minor) seems abruptly to sweep the
aristocratic celebrations aside, ushering in a return of the sombre melody with
which the movement began.
The second movement begins and ends with slow, quiet
sections (evidently evoking "the silence") which repeatedly feature
whispering superimposed tremolos on muted violins. Half way through the
movement Malipiero introduces the "ancient dance", which turns out to
be an orchestral version of one of his own early piano pieces -the Gavotte from
the Tre danze antiche, published in 1910 but probably composed earlier.
However, before this self-quotation has run its course, it is contradicted
(albeit briefly) by stormier sounds -the "tumult of an ancient
tragedy", after which the initial "silence" music returns. In the
symphony's finale, the "Mill of Death" is graphically represented by
(among other things) obsessive, machine-like patterns on the xylophone, timpani
and other percussion, which begin and end the movement entirely on their own
and reassert themselves from time to time as the music unfolds. Whenever these
patterns appear, they undermine the more stable, traditional-sounding ideas
that have been presented in the meantime by the rest of the orchestra. The
enigmatic, wilfully inconclusive final bars are as disturbingly original as
anything that the young Malipiero had hitherto conceived.
By the time Malipiero resumed the practice of calling
his works symphonies in 1933, his situation had changed drastically. His most
turbulently original creative phase had come and gone, and was giving place to
a more stable yet still far from conformist style, in which one can discern the
mellowing processes of middle age. He had been living since 1923 in the
beautiful little hill town of Asolo (in the Veneto region of north-eastern
Italy), which was to remain his home for the rest of his long life; since 1926
he had been working on his well known complete edition of all Monteverdi's
known surviving works; and in 1932 academic respectability had come his way in
the form of a professorship at the Liceo Musicale (later renamed Conservatory)
in his native Venice.
Malipiero's decision to resume writing works with the
word "sinfonia" in their titles did not, however, reflect any
deliberate, academically-determined rapprochement with symphonic tradition. On
the contrary, the so-called First Symphony developed into an abstract
instrumental composition almost of its own accord: his first idea had been to
set to music certain fragments from the Venetian poet Anton Maria Lamberti's Lestagioni
("The Seasons"). In the end-product all specific references to
Lamberti have disappeared; but the idea of the annual cycle remains: Malipiero
explained the work's complete title (Prima sinfonia, in quattro tempi come
le quattro stagioni ["First Symphony, in Four Movements like the Four
Seasons"]) by pointing out that "the first movement [...] is spring-like.
The second [...] is strong and vehement like summer. The third [...] is
autumnal, and the fourth [...] has the exuberance of the winter carnival season
and the gaiety of the snow". It would seem, therefore, that even the
simple fact that the movements are four in number is only coincidentally
analogous to traditional symphonic practice.
The "spring-like" first movement is a
freely unfolding lyrical piece -moderate in tempo and predominantly pastoral
(though gently astringent) in character. Among its several recurrent motifs one
in particular is to return, transformed yet clearly recognizable, at the very
end of the symphony. The second movement's driving rhythmic impetus is enhanced
by some quite bold excursions into dissonant chromaticism - sometimes with
frankly "exotic" inflections which call to mind the quasi-oriental
architecture of St. Mark's Cathedral in Malipiero's native city .The most evocative
movement, however, is surely the autumnal third, which is rich in fresh,
radiantly melancholy sonorities and images: here his early enthusiasm for
Debussy and his life-long involvement with old Italian music have interacted to
produce a result that is uniquely his own. The playfully exuberant finale
culminates unexpectedly but imposingly in a brief, massively jubilant coda, in
which the above-mentioned motif from the first movement is proclaimed and
developed in surprisingly grandiose terms. The pomp and circumstance of this
conclusion may show Malipiero responding (for once in a way) to the flamboyant
pageantry of Italian fascism, which at that time was all around him. Yet in
purely musical terms the effect is undeniably exhilarating.
When he completed the First Symphony Malipiero seems
still to have had no idea that he would follow it up with other examples of the
genre: for a time (he has claimed) he even thought of calling the work
"First and Last Symphony". By 1936, however, he had changed his mind
sufficiently to produce a Second, although eight further years were to go by
before he suddenly wrote the next five symphonies all within the space of the
same number of years. (The Third, Fourth and Seventh numbered symphonies are
all recorded on other discs in the present series.) In none of these mature
symphonies is the resemblance to traditional symphonic procedures evermore than
superficial: Malipiero's movements seldom end in the keys in which they began,
and his musical ideas tend (as he himself once put it) "to follow one
another capriciously, obeying only those mysterious laws that instinct
recognizes".
Nevertheless the Second Symphony, too, is in four
movements (as are all the next five numbered symphonies), and the sequence of
tempi from movement to movement -fast; slow; scherzo-like; variable - more
closely resembles what one would expect to find in a classical symphony than
was the case in the First. Moreover, this time there is no precise extra musical
programme to explain the overall succession of moods: the Second Symphony's
subtitle "elegiaca" suggests only a general state of mind, and
more particularly the fact that the work ends in a mood of quiet, valedictory
meditation. Of the two wholly fast movements, the first is notable for its many
incidental chromatic twists and passing dissonant clashes, which generate a
subdued but pervasive restlessness; while the brief, scherzo-like third
movement is more light-heartedly exuberant in its mercurially unpredictable
rhythms. However, this symphony's expressive heart indeed resides especially in
its elegiac music: in addition to the exquisite closing pages, one should
mention the superb last eleven bars of the second movement, in which two motifs
that have previously been heard separately are superimposed (as melody and
bass) to create a quiet climax of affecting, plaintive beauty.
@ 1993 John C. G. Waterhouse