Notes and Editorial Reviews
Quirkily entertaining, here is Rota the clown on display with effervescent lampooning music.
Nino Rota’s quirky, eccentric
Concerto soirée
was written shortly after his film score for
La dolce vita. Unsurprisingly the music is reminiscent of Rota’s comedy film scores. In fact the music of the concluding
Can-can was used later in the film
8½. Gerald Larner, who contributes the notes to this album succinctly describes it as “a piano concerto written in the spirit of Rossini’s
Soirée musicales”. Clearly this is not a Late-Romantic Concerto played in the grand manner but an informal playful work constructed as if it were almost an extemporisation. The
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opening movement marked,
Valser-Fantasia is a waltz with Chopinesque figuration but lampooned by the orchestra. The central
Romanza meanders introspectively with some Arabian-style woodwinds before the piano turns skittish; it’s all as if some sad clown is wandering across the musical landscape. A slapstick
Quadrille follows and the music here reminds one of the insouciance of Poulenc. The
Can-can taken at the gallop concludes this entertaining romp. Rota presents his interpreters challenges of sudden changes of mood, harmonic twists and rhythms all of which are surmounted with enthusiastic dexterity by Barry Douglas and the orchestra.
The quirky mood of the
Concerto soirée is sustained, in the main, in Rota’s
Divertimento concertante for double-bass and orchestra. Rota makes full expressive use of the instrument’s wide range covering nearly four octaves with harmonics extending its upper range even further. The opening movement is capricious in character now solemn, now asinine. The clowning continues into a comedic march that is the second movement with the soloist pompously trying to impose some sort of dignity on the surrounding chaos. The more serious central
Andante has a calming influence with the double-bass in a more lyrical mood; the central section is reminiscent of a Tchaikovsky ballet. The concluding movement is back in sprightly, quirkiness again with a tussle between soloist and taunting woodwind.
Rota’s brief Third Symphony is less serious than its two predecessors (see
review). Its lighter character is set in a neo-classical style. The opening
Allegro is a brisk ‘open-air’ frolic. Written in the mid-1950s it is again reminiscent of film music although in this first movement one might detect a hint of Hitchcock in sardonic mood as well as broader hints of Italian film humour. The
Adagio is altogether more serious and treads a rather darker path in personal introspection - possibly alluding to a personal loss? There is stormy passion and a depth of feeling here we have not encountered so far in this sunlit album. The third movement scherzo is cast in neo-classical style and lilts happily along to a lovely poignant Trio melody. A
Vivace con spirito finale rounds off this symphony in comic style once more.
Quirkily entertaining, here is Rota the clown on display with effervescent lampooning music.
-- Ian Lace, MusicWeb International
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Works on This Recording
1.
Symphony no 3 in C major by Nino Rota
Conductor:
Gianandrea Noseda
Orchestra/Ensemble:
Filarmonica ’900 Del Teatro Regio Turin
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1956-1957; Italy
2.
Concerto Soirée for Piano by Nino Rota
Performer:
Barry Douglas (Piano)
Conductor:
Gianandrea Noseda
Orchestra/Ensemble:
Filarmonica ’900 Del Teatro Regio Turin
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1961; Italy
3.
Divertimento concertante by Nino Rota
Performer:
Davide Botto (Double Bass)
Conductor:
Gianandrea Noseda
Orchestra/Ensemble:
Filarmonica ’900 Del Teatro Regio Turin
Period: 20th Century
Written: Italy
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