As the descendent of a family of professional musicians,
Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936) inherited a rich talent as part of
his birthright.
His earliest music lessons were with his father, but he progressed
so rapidly that he began his professional training in violin, piano and
composition at the age of just thirteen.
As a young man, Respighi was torn between ambitions to become a
concert violinist or a composer.
He got a job as a violist with the orchestra of the St. Petersburg
Opera, and took advantage of his time in Russia to study with Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov, whose brilliant orchestral technique was a lasting
influence.
He then moved to Berlin to study violin and composition with Max Bruch.
Respighi spent the years from 1903 to 1925 primarily in Italy, first
as a performer, then as professor of composition, and finally as head of
the Saint Cecilia Academy in Rome.
He left the Academy in 1925 to devote himself to composition and
touring, making four trips to the United States during the next seven years.
He died of a heart attack at the age of fifty-six.
Respighi had an abiding interest in the music of the late Renaissance
and Baroque eras, and he edited many works by such venerable composers as
Monteverdi, Frescobaldi, Tartini and Vitali for publication.
Speaking against serialism and mechanical/mathematical music that was
being played in some concert halls and chased away audiences, Respighi was
one of ten composers who issued a document espousing the hallowed
philosophy of music as communication:
"We are against art which cannot and does not have any human content
and desires to be merely a mechanical demonstration and a cerebral puzzle.
A logical chain binds the past and the future-the romanticism of
yesterday will again be the romanticism of tomorrow."
Given most current trends in composition, they were obviously correct.
Among the most charming of Respighi's works based on old models are
the three sets of Ancient Airs and Dances (1917, 1924, 1932),
arrangements of Italian and French lute and keyboard pieces of the sixteenth,
seventeenth, and early eighteenth centuries.
Respighi kept the old melodies and harmonies intact while enriching
their texture and providing them with brilliant orchestral color.
The Third Suite is scored for string orchestra.
The first movement, Italiana, is an anonymous song of the 16th
century with a beguiling lilt and a fetching simplicity.
The second movement, a miniature suite based on several songs by
Jean-Baptiste Besard, opens with a doleful lament
(It is sad to be in love with you),
which is followed by two brighter melodies
(Farewell forever, shepherdess and Lovely eyes that see clearly).
Three other brief sections
(The Skiff of Love, What divinity touches my soul, and
If it is for my innocence that you love me)
are heard before the return of the sorrowful opening strain.
A gently swaying Siciliana of unknown origin occupies the third
movement.
The finale is a Passacaglia by Lodovico Roncalli from 1692.