Enric Casals
Enric Casals i Defilló | |
---|---|
Born | Barcelona, Spain | 26 July 1892
Died | 31 July 1986 Barcelona, Spain | (aged 94)
Occupation(s) | Violinist, composer, conductor |
Enric Casals i Defilló (Barcelona, July 26, 1892 - July 31, 1986), brother of Pablo Casals, was a Catalan violinist, composer and conductor.
Biography[]
He started to study music with his father, Carles Casals i Ribes.[1] Then, he became a disciple of . Afterwards, he went to Brussels in order to improve his violin and composition skills, with Mathieu Crickboom and Joseph Jongen; and in 1918 he moved to Prague, where he was a pupil of .[1][2] He established the String Quartet "Enric Casals" in 1921, with which he toured Europe, offering concerts in France, Belgium, England, Switzerland and Spain.[1] He played as the solo violinist of the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra (1910 - 1912), the in Saint Petersburg (1912 - 1914), the Pau Casals Orchester (1920 - 1936) and the one of the Gran Teatre del Liceu (1924 - 1935).[1] He was sub-conductor of the Pau Casals Orchester (1920 - 1936), conductor of the (1940 - 1942) and the , with which he conducted almost a hundred concerts. Besides he occasionally conducted other important orchestras around the world, such as the national orchestras of Portugal, Mexico, Hungary, Greece, and the Lamoureux Orchestra of Paris. He was founder and director of the and responsible of the famous Prades Festivals (especially between 1955 and 1983).[1]
Works[]
- Violin Concerto
- Concerto for cello and orchestra
- Suite in D minor: Tribute to Pau Casals (1973), for cello
Sardanes[]
- A en Juli Garreta (1924), with the melody of Els Segadors
- Angoixa (s/d), amb la melodia d'Els Segadors
- Barcelona (1976)
- Catalunya avant (1910), with popular melodies ()
- Cants de tardor
- Dramàtica, composed for orchestra
- Era una vegada (1935)
- Festa (1920)
- La font del Penedès (1954)
- Heroica (1919), dedicated to his brother Pablo
- Íntima (1920)
- Lleida a la Verge de Granyena (1976), for choir and cobla
- Lluny...! (1918), written in Montevideo
- La mainada de Sant Salvador (1928), with the melodies of Senyor Ramon and 'El General Bum-Bum
- Montserrat en primavera (1968), sardana upon request, with melodies of Montserrat
- Mònica
- La nena galana (1908)
- La platja de Sant Salvador, it's another title for the sardana La mainada de Sant Salvador
- Recordant , a different title for the sardana Íntima
- Sardana de carrer (1927)
- La sardana dels Tres Reis (1983), for choir and cobla
- Setembre (1924)
- Tarragona (1927)
- Tres amors (1949)
- Trista (1925)
- El Vendrell (1948)
Instrumentations of compositions[]
- Juny, of Juli Garreta, arranged for symphony orchestra
Instrumentations of compositions of Pablo Casals[]
- El cant dels ocells, popular Catalan song harmonized by Pablo Casals
- Himne de les Nacions Unides
- El Pessebre, oratorio
- Sant Martí del Canigó, sardana
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Arxiu Nacional de Catalunya (ed.). "Enric Casals i Defilló. Descripció del Fons" (in Catalan). Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- ^ Casares Rodicio, Emilio (1999–2002). "Enric Casals i Defilló". Diccionario de la Música Española e Hispanoamericana. (in Spanish). Madrid. 3. ISBN 978-84-8048-303-2.
Further reading[]
- Pau Casals: dades biogràfiques inèdites, cartes íntimes i records viscuts, Enric Casals, Pòrtic, Barcelona (1979)
- Gran Enciclopèdia de la Música. Vol. 2, Jesús Giralt Radigales, Fundació Enciclopèdia Catalana, Barcelona (1999), ISBN 9788441202344
- Diccionario de la Música Española e Hispanoamericana. Vol. 3, Emilio Casares Rodicio, (1999 - 2002), ISBN 9788480483032
External links[]
- Índex de les sardanes d'Enric Casals
- Estrena de El Pessebre Acapulco, desembre de 1960 Foto. D'esquerra a dreta: dempeus, Enric Casals; asseguts, Pau Casals i ; dempeus,
- Foto Enric Casals
- People from Barcelona
- Classical musicians from Catalonia
- Composers from Catalonia
- Spanish classical violinists
- Male classical violinists
- Spanish classical composers
- Spanish male classical composers
- 20th-century classical composers
- 1892 births
- 1986 deaths
- 20th-century classical violinists
- 20th-century Spanish musicians
- 20th-century Spanish male musicians