A belated thank you for your support, Antonio.

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Mario Pilati - Preludio, aria e tarantella; Bagatelles (Adriano)


Information

Composer: Mario Pilati
  • (01) Preludio, aria e tarantella (Sopra vecchi motivi popolari napoletani)
  • (04) Quattro canzoni popolari italiane
  • (08) Bagatelles
  • (13) Divertimento

Moscow Symphony Orchestra
Adriano, conductor

Date: 2020
Label: Naxos
https://www.naxos.com/catalogue/item.asp?item_code=8.574168

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review

Mario Pilati’s accessible music has been largely ignored. His sudden death in 1938 and a generalised antipathy towards any music that might have been linked with the Italian fascist movement had condemned to oblivion so many composers like Pilati. His style spanned neo-classicism to neo-romanticism and the baroque to popular idioms including jazz and the cinema. No wonder the conductor/composer Adriano has been attracted to his music. There is elegance and wit and an engaging lightness of expression in Pilati’s music.

The Preludio, Aria e Tarantella, originally scored for violin and piano, is a gorgeous confection; its orchestration glitters. A real find this little work. The Preludio is introduced by violins dancing over bass strings before woodwinds enter imitative of birdsong en masse. It has a colourful Italianate folk-like theme and is based on popular Neapolitan songs. The lovely Aria begins in nostalgic vein and then sparkles as its rhythms turn from introspection to light-hearted dance. The concluding, hedonistic Tarantella begins menacingly recalling the quasi-demonic origins of the dance; then all is fleet-footed celebration, joyful and witty, culminating in a ‘finale with superimposing trillo, tremolo, terzine and glissando so creating the atmosphere of great feasting’.

Pilati’s Four Italian Folksongs were dedicated to his young daughters Anna Maria, Laura and Giovanna. They are serene and joyful and draw upon the folklore of Southern Italy with perhaps a dash of American folk music. There is an attractive simplicity here although the orchestrations are again beautifully contrived to heighten the bucolic atmosphere. The opening piece is marked Canzone a ballo and is a dreamy waltz; then follows the high-spirited Filastrocca con variazioni. The third episode is a beautiful meditation marked Ritorno dalla mietitura with birdsong and some remarkable tremolando string writing. The concluding L’addio is a delightful, strongly rhythmic country-dance with, one imagines, more than a little American influence.

The five Bagatelles for chamber orchestra commence with a delightful Marcia - in Pilati’s hands one cannot help but imagine that these are toy soldiers on the march. Ninna Nanna has a Dies irae tolling but it is a little teasingly playful rather than filled with Rachmaninov-like tragedy. A Duetto (Contrasto rusticano) follows - a tongue-in-cheek rustic burlesque. This piece, like so much else on this CD, brings the commedia dell’arte characters to mind. Then follows the Rondo-Valzer cocking a cheeky snook at Ravel’s La Valse. Finally comes the busy jazzy Fine as though the music is caught up in a raucous traffic jam. Great fun.

Finally there is the jazz-based Divertimento for Brass Ensemble. This swings and swaggers along in another Marcia, then sings a nicely harmonised blues for a Romanza, gleefully dances through a Mazurka and concludes with a stirring Fanfara.

Adriano conducts these little gems with unbridled enthusiasm.

A thoroughly delightful, light-hearted collection.

-- Ian LaceMusicWeb International
reviewing the original release INEDITA PI 2757 (2010)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mario Pilati (2 June 1903 – 10 December 1938) was an Italian composer. He was born in Naples and entered the Conservatorio di Musica San Pietro a Majella at the age of fifteen, studying under Antonio Savasta. Pilati worked as a teacher and music critic in Milan and Palermo, before returning to Naples in 1938, where he became ill and died just before the outbreak of World War II. His output is considerable given his few years of compositional maturity. It includes a Concerto for Orchestra (1932), premiered by Dmitri Mitropoulos, a Suite for Strings and Piano (1925) and several chamber works.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mario_Pilati

***

Adriano (born July 10, 1944) is a Swiss-born conductor-composer. Adriano established himself as a specialist on Ottorino Respighi in the late 1970s, and has conducted many other recordings of obscure or neglected symphonic repertoire. He also initiated and recorded a series of fifteen CDs mainly of European film music composers, and created and directed a series of classical music videos. All of his recording projects (49 in total) have found wide recognition and his commitment is known to be uncompromising. Adriano has also composed songs, orchestral, chamber and incidental pieces.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

4 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Is it possible to reup this? Thanks in advance!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    https://direct-link.net/610926/pilati-preludio
    or
    https://uii.io/wKx8yyJU
    or
    https://exe.io/dUu4IUBw

    ReplyDelete