
Choreography:
Nacho Duato
Music: Robin
Holloway (for two pianos, based
on Johann Sebastian Bach’s
BWV 988; performed by Jennifer
Micallef and Glen Inanga)
Sets
and Costumes: Nacho Duato
Light
Design: Brad Fields
Worldpremiere
by Compañía
Nacional de Danza at
Teatro de la Zarzuela,
Madrid, November 15th,
2006.
“Discovering
Robin Holloway’s
adaptation of the
Goldberg
Variations allowed
me to get past what
I had always considered
as the untouchable character
of Bach’s original.
I finally managed to
approach the written
music, to work with
it and thus create this
performance. In any
event, as I have made
clear in this piece
of work, adapting a
masterpiece such as
this might be taken
as a synonym of murder,
and yet it also could
represent its rebirth.
The work takes on a
new life, a whole new
dimension. What Holloway
does so well is to show
his courage by placing
creative freedom above
and beyond the burden
of history”.
Duato
uses Robin Holloway’s
furiously paced music
to create a creative,
imaginative discourse,
based on an astonishing
sense of musicality
and the elegant performance
of the
Compañía
Nacional de Danza’s dancers.
Robin
Holloway says of his
version of Johann
Sebastian Bach’s
Goldberg Variations: “It
seems both odd and
foolish to take one
of the acknowledged
pinnacles of western
music and recompose
it. My excuses are,
first, that Bach was
himself an eager transcriber
and transformer of
other men’s music
from wich he could
learn; and second,
that his own has been
so very adaptation-friendly
down the ages. There’s
scarcely a subsequent
composer who hasn’t
imitated, arranged,
orchestrated, parodied,
or paid homage in one
way or another. Mozart,
Beethoven, Mendelssohn,
Wagner, Bruckner, Schumann,
Liszt, Brahms, Shönberg,
Webern, Elgar, Respighi,
Stravinsky, Kurtag
and so on – the
list is endless.”
“My
own Goldberg adventure
actually began with
comparably modest
aims. Frustrated
as a single pianist
by inability to clarify
the close - weave
canons or manage the
more fiendish hand
- crossing numbers
so idiomatic on a two-manual
harpsichord. I began
to transcribe a few
for the domestic medium
of two pianos”.
For the following
five years this project
took upall his time,
until, by the time
he had finished,
he had come upwith
30 completely new
Goldberg Variations.
Born
in Leamington Spa,
on the 19th of October
1943, the British
composer Robin Holloway,
studied with Goehr
(from 1960) and
at Cambridge, where
in 1974 he was named
professor. His extensive
output covers a
wide range of genres
(including numerous
songs) and is characterised
by a remarkable
command of diverse
styles. Some of his
works seek to reinterpret
Romanticism (Scenes
from Schumann,
for orchestra, 1970),
whilst others are
decidedly modernist
in their approach
(The Rivers of
Hell for chamber
ensemble, 1977).
His first opera,
Clarissa, a
study of rape, was
performed by the
ENO in London in
1990.