Music by Nicolas Flagello

 

 

 

 

Nicolas Flagello

 

 

 

Declamation for Violin & Piano · Prelude, Ostinato, & Fugue for Piano

 

Nocturne for Violin & Piano · Suite for Harp & String Trio

 

Sonata for Violin & Piano · Sonata for Piano

 

 

 

Setsuko Nagata, violin · Peter Vinograde, piano

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nicolas Flagello was one of the 20th century's leading exponents of traditional late-Romantic musical values. Without ever repudiating this aesthetic outlook, he forged a personal musical language and a distinctive body of work shaped by his own temperament and embodying his own perspective on life.

 

 

 

Born in New York City in 1928, Flagello grew up in a musical family with deep roots in Old-World traditions. Something of a prodigy, young Nicolas was composing and performing publicly as a pianist before the age of ten. While still a child, he began a long and intensive apprenticeship with composer Vittorio Giannini, who further imbued him with the enduring values of the grand European tradition. His study continued at the Manhattan School of Music, where he earned both his Bachelor's (1949) and Master's (1950) Degrees, joining the faculty immediately upon graduation and remaining there until 1977. During the early 1950s, he won a Fulbright Fellowship to study in Rome, and earned the Diploma di Studi Superiori in 1956 from the Accademia di Santa Cecilia, under the tutelage of Ildebrando Pizzetti.

 

 

 

During the years that followed, Flagello composed at a prodigious rate, producing a body of work that includes six operas, two symphonies, eight concertos, and numerous orchestral, choral, chamber, and vocal works. In addition, he was active as a pianist and conductor, making dozens of recordings of a wide range of repertoire, from the Baroque period to the 20th century. In 1985 a deteriorating illness brought his musical career to an end prematurely. He died in 1994 at the age of 66.

 

 

 

As a composer, Flagello held with unswerving conviction to a view of music as a personal medium for emotional and spiritual expression. This unfashionable view, together with his vehement rejection of the academic formalism that dominated musical composition for several decades after World War II, prevented him from winning acceptance from the reigning arbiters of taste for many years. However, gradually Flagello's works have begun to win enthusiastic advocacy, as his music is recorded and performed with increasing frequency.

 

 

 

Flagello's early works approximately a third of his total output are unabashedly romantic. He made no attempt to conceal their obvious roots in the styles of Puccini, Strauss, Rachmaninoff, and others the music he loved. But even these early works display an intensity of conviction and a structural mastery that elevate them above the level of mere imitation.

 

 

 

In 1959 Flagello attained his mature compositional voice, ushering in the most productive period of his life. During the 1960s alone, he composed more than 30 works, maintaining a remarkable consistency of both vision and craftsmanship. The luxuriant romanticism of his youth now gave way to a sort of Italianate expressionism, with a tighter phraseology, greater density of texture, astringency of harmonic language, and asymmetry of rhythm. But most important, a deeper, more personal quality emerged dark, brooding, restless, and often agitated. There is a tremendous emotional intensity and concentration of effect, as every element is focused toward the fullest realization of the intended expression. It was during this decade that all the works on this recording were composed.

 

 

 

Flagello's intensity and concentration of effect may be clearly heard in the Declamation for violin and piano, which dates from 1967. Meticulous in construction, it packs a remarkable density of musical activity into a mere nine minutes. All the thematic material is derived from the declamatory cadenza with which the work opens (hence, the title) and the solemn incantation that follows. The body of the work is an agitated Allegro, which subjects the motivic material to extensive development. The Allegro culminates in another, more elaborate, cadenza, followed by a return of the incantation, bringing the work to a majestic conclusion.

 

 

 

Prelude, Ostinato, and Fugue, written in 1960, is the first purely instrumental work of Flagello's compositional maturity. While revealing the composer's profound reverence for traditional musical forms, it also displays a harsher, more angular, less symmetrical language than one finds in his earlier works. The Prelude begins with a restless, searching quality, before building quickly to a massive climax and then subsiding. Ostinato consists of a set of variations over an ascending minor scale, which functions as a basso ostinato, appearing in several different keys. Beginning with a melancholy lyricism, it too builds to a tempestuous climax. The Fugue is a propulsive piece that makes enormous demands on the virtuosity of the performer. A three-voice exposition is followed by several developmental episodes, culminating in a chordal augmentation of the subject, marked furiosamente, which leads to a hair-raising coda.

 

 

 

Flagello composed the Nocturne for violin and piano in 1969. It is an example of "night music" in the manner of Ernest Bloch a composer whom Flagello greatly admired, and who wrote many haunting pieces of this kind. Though beginning and ending unambiguously in B minor, the body of the piece maintains a rather tenuous hold on tonality, creating a somber mood of uneasy disquietude.

 

 

 

Suite for Harp and String Trio, dating from 1965, is unusual in being one of Flagello's few lighter, diverting works from this period. It is also something of a rare stylistic excursion into the realm of French neoclassicism along the lines of "Les Six". The Suite opens with a vigorous Petite Overture in simple sonatina form. This is followed by a gently wistful Valse, based on a piano piece originally composed in 1953. The work concludes with a lively Rondino alla Giga.

 

 

 

Sonata for Violin and Piano was composed in 1963. The first movement, an Andantino mosso in sonata-allegro form, is built around a theme first presented in a wistful, somewhat melancholy manner, but then transformed into an ardent, surging, declaration. This theme is developed, along with other material, through a course that is alternately agitated and intensely lyrical. The second movement opens with a somber recitative in the violin, punctuated by tolling bell effects in the piano. This soon leads to an aria, Movendo ma andante, suggesting a dark, brooding barcarolle a type of mood-piece of which Flagello was especially fond. The brief finale is marked Allegro giusto and is a modified sonatina with the character of a burlesque in perpetual motion, bringing the work to a whirlwind finish.

 

 

 

Flagello wrote his Sonata for Piano in 1962. Like the Violin Sonata, it is a thoroughly traditional work in three movements, wholeheartedly embracing the rhetoric and ethos of the romantic virtuoso legacy, but with a turbulent emotional intensity uniquely Flagello's own. Tightly constructed with an eye toward both expressive and motivic unity, all three movements are based on material that

 

emphasizes the interval of a half-step.

 

 

 

The first movement, Andante con moto e rubato, is a standard sonata-allegro form, except that instead of the usual two themes, one idea in F minor, built from two short motifs, serves to fill the roles of both, appearing at times restless and searching, at others, bold and defiant, and at still others, introspective and ruminative. The second movement begins with a soulful, recitative-like passage, which leads into a gloomy, nocturnal barcarolle. This soon builds to a tremendous climax, which then subsides in dark resignation. The final movement, Allegro vivace quanto possibile, is a whirlwind perpetual-motion toccata that happens to be a full sonata-allegro form, two themes and all.

 

 

 

Notes by Walter Simmons

 

 

 

 

 

Setsuko Nagata came to the United States from her native Tokyo on a scholarship to study at the Juilliard School, where her teachers were Dorothy DeLay and Ivan Galamian. Since that time she has been active as a soloist, as well as an orchestral and chamber musician.

 

 

 

She made her London debut at Wigmore Hall and a Carnegie Hall debut as soloist with the National Orchestral Association under the direction of John Barnett. Since then she has been soloist with the Municipal Arts Orchestra, the Jamaica Symphony Orchestra, and the Great Neck Symphony Orchestra.

 

 

 

As a chamber musician, Ms. Nagata has performed with the Aeolian Chamber Players, the Da Capo Chamber Players, the Tokyo String Quartet, the Music Project, and the North Country Chamber Players. She is a founding member of the Cremona Arts Trio, which made its New York debut in December, 1982, at the Metropolitan Museum.

 

 

 

Ms. Nagata was recipient of the Fritz Kreisler Award, the Naumberg Scholarship Award, a teaching fellowship from the Juilliard School, and has won prizes in the Hudson Valley Competition and the Tibor Varga International Competition.

 

 

 

She has appeared on television, radio, and in numerous recitals in the New York metropolitan area. She has been a faculty member of the Juilliard School, the Meadowmount School of Music, Wesleyan University, and Bowdoin College. She currently teaches at the Manhattan School of Music.

 

 

 

Peter Vinograde has concentrated on the music of J.S. Bach and on 20th-century music, developing a considerable reputation in both areas. A native of Ames, Iowa, he studied with Zenon Fishbein at the Manhattan School of Music before launching his career by winning first prize at the J.S. Bach International Competition. He subsequently made his New York debut with a recital presented by East-West Artists, while the National Endowment for the Arts sponsored an Alice Tully Hall recital featuring Bach's Goldberg Variations, along with a number of contemporary American works. His frequent appearances on National Public Radio have included an all-Bach program at the National Gallery, broadcast on Performance Today, and he was featured on CBC-TV's The Journal. As a chamber musician, Dr. Vinograde has appeared with the St. Luke's Chamber Players, the North Country Chamber Players, the Canadian Chamber Ensemble, and the Great Music West Festival.

 

 

 

Dr. Vinograde's recent activities have included annual tours throughout the United States, Canada, and Asia, featuring concerto performances, recitals, and master classes. The CBC recently sponsored his recording of music by Canadian composers Michael Matthews and Alfred Fisher, along with works by Rachmaninoff and Scriabin. Other recent recordings include Bach's seven keyboard toccatas and an all-Schumann CD. Since 1981, he has been a member of the piano faculty at the Manhattan School of Music.

 

 

 

New York Times critic Joseph Horowitz wrote that Peter Vinograde "instantly impressed as a pianist with a big technique, a lively mind, and a passionate commitment to the music," while Albert Goldberg of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "There was no question of technique, really; the fire and fury consumed everything in sight. For doing things in his own way, he has few peers."

 

 

 

Recorded at the Manhattan School of Music: June 10 and 13, 1996 · December 7, 1994 (Piano Sonata)

 

 

 

Producer: Walter Simmons · Recording Engineer: Bill Siegmund

 

 

 

Editing and Mastering: Bill Siegmund at Digital Island Studios, New York City

 

 

 

Publication Information: Maelos Music, Inc., P.O. Box 363, New Rochelle, NY 10801

 

 

 

Cover Art: Painting by Nicolas Flagello titled Roman Forum

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nicolas Flagello (1928-1994)

 

 

 

 

 

Declamation for Violin & Piano (9:15)

 

 

 

Prelude, Ostinato, & Fugue for Piano

 

Prelude (3:12)

 

Ostinato (3:41)

 

Fugue (2:18)

 

 

 

Nocturne for Violin & Piano (6:14)

 

 

 

Suite for Harp & String Trio

 

Petite Overture: Allegro comodo (3:25)

 

Valse: Andantino comodo (2:29)

 

Rondino alla giga: Allegro (2:46)

 

 

 

Sonata for Violin & Piano

 

Andantino mosso (5:11)

 

Calmo quasi recitativo; Movendo ma andante (6:25)

 

Allegro giusto (3:27)

 

 

 

Sonata for Piano

 

Andante con moto e rubato (7:31)

 

 

 

Rubato quasi recitativo;

 

Sempre rubato ma lento alla barcarola (5:58)

 

 

 

Allegro vivace quanto possibile (5:22)

 

 

 

 

 

Setsuko Nagata, violin · Peter Vinograde, piano

 

 

 

(with Alyssa Reit, harp · David Creswell, viola · Matthias Naegele, cello)

 

 

 

Total Time = 68:28