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The Chamber Music News
A Blog About Chamber Music
Welcome to our Blog, The Chamber Music News! Each month our blog presents interesting articles about the music we publish, in more detail than you will find on the individual page. We hope that you will enjoy it, let us know. And, if you would like to see an article about a particular subject (related to what we publish) send us an email at editionsilvertrust@gmail.com
August 2012 |
Why Was Arriaga Called The Spanish Mozart
A child prodigy, by age 10, he was playing 2nd violin in a professional string quartet and had written an Octet for String Quartet, Bass, Trumpet, Guitar and Piano. Like Mozart, Arriaga composed his first opera, Los Esclavos Felices (The Happy Slaves) at the age of 13. It was performed immediately and enjoyed considerable local success. Recognizing that their son was more than just talented, Arriaga’s parents decided to send him to Paris to further his musical education. There he studied violin with Baillot and composition with Fetis, the well-known music historian. Fetis later wrote that Arriaga mastered harmony in three months and counterpoint in under two years. By 1824, at the age of 18, Arriaga was appointed to teach harmony and counterpoint at the Conservatory. His three string quartets, which were composed during 1821-22 at the age of 15, were the only works published during his lifetime. These quartets are, in fact, first rate works, but only the first can be called Spanish-sounding. All three are available from Edition Silvertrust either individually or as a set and you can hear soundbites of all of them on our website.
Having died at 19, is it any wonder that Arriaga is not better known. Just think---if Mozart or Mendelssohn or Schubert, all of whom died before they were 40, had died before they were 20, would they have achieved the fame they did based only on what they had composed up until that time? In the case of Arriaga, one is left to wonder what he might have composed had he lived to 35 as Mozart did. |