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1 Constantin SILVESTRI (1913-1969) Piano Suite Op. 3 No. 2 Children's Games Hide and seek. Sleeping Doll. Clown. Slumber. In Grandma's crinoline. Little Imp. The Bogeyman. Spinning Top. Romanian-born Constantin Silvestri - conductor, composer and pianist - is best remembered in Britain for elevating the Bournemouth Symphony into an orchestra of international repute when he was its principal conductor from 1961 until his death in London aged 55 in 1969. Born in Bucharest, he became a piano pupil of Professor Florica Musicescu in whose class was also the legendary pianist Dinu Lipatti. While still at the conservatoire Silvestri gained a reputation for his brilliant public improvisations. People flocked to his performances where they would hand him themes, sometimes on scraps torn from newspapers, and he would improvise in the style of famous classical and contemporary composers. George Enescu attended one of these sessions and is said to have remarked to the young performer: "And now, what about doing something in the style of Silvestri ?" In one day Silvestri is supposed to have then composed two sonatas. At 19 he is on record as stating: ‘My ultimate aim is the baton’ and at 27 he was conducting the Bucharest Philharmonic in his own work, Prelude and Fugue (Toccata). After becoming the philharmonic’s principal conductor in 1945 his reputation in Eastern Europe soared. In 1953, Silvestri became artistic director of the Romanian National Opera and of the National Radio Symphony Orchestra. His ‘discovery’ by a Scottish music critic on a visit to Bucharest led to his UK début in 1957 with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and to many concerts and recording engagements. Immediately afterwards, he left his homeland and for three years lived in Paris. Here he won the Charles Cross Academy first prize for his recording of Dvorak’s Symphony From the New World and the Grand Prix du Disque for Enescu’s Wind Dixtuor. He conducted and recorded with the world’s finest orchestras. The ongoing reissues of his superb recordings testify to his quality of sound and style which at that time were unique. In 1967 he became a British citizen. As a composer of some 40 works in pre-war Romania - before conducting absorbed all his time - Constantin Silvestri was considered avant garde. As a student, he wrote in 1931 two piano suites, Children’s Games, as early experiments in harmony and polytonalism. He dedicated them to the boy-Prince Michael who became King of Romania but was forced to abdicate after the war and because of the dedication the new regime prohibited their public performance. In spite of their easy-sounding titles the suites are not written for beginners; in fact, they present considerable difficulties of execution and interpretation and the pianist must possess an advanced technique. They are based on Romanian folk material and written in Bartokian style, with diatonic as well as intensely chromatic tunes and bi-tonal chords. Some of the themes sound as if they were spontaneous, almost accidental creations of his fingers on the keys while others are thoughtfully worked out. Charming miniatures and effectively descriptive, the pieces are evocative of Romanian children’s way of life; for example, their fascination with Grandma’s crinoline and secretly dressing-up in it: one can picture the dress moving right and left as it would in a gavotte, and the child looking at herself in the mirror, both thrilled and coquettishly delighted at her appearance. 2 In the fast pieces, virtuoso-sounding patterns and effects - reminiscent of the brilliance and vigorous rhythms of some Romanian folk dances - are achieved with simple ideas such as: the five most elementary notes Do-Re-Mi-Fa-Sol played with both hands in contrary motion (Hide and seek); staccatissimo bi-tonal chords and quick ornaments (Clown); finger-passages switching rapidly from white keys to black keys and ending in jumping chords (Little imp); parallel octaves and syncopations (Bogeyman);broken octaves, broken chords, arpeggios and glissandi (Spinning top). The two slow pieces are beautifully atmospheric. Silvestri uses pedal points and inverted pedal as well as indications of dolce, dolcissimo, tranquillo, calmo, molto piano and ben pp (pianissimo), arriving - at the end of the Sleeping doll at five ppppp! Whereas in Slumber the flow of the music meanders quietly, in Sleeping doll it advances by the obsessive repetition of an upper octave, simulating Maa-ma! Maa-ma! and depicting the unique sound heard at secluded Romanian monasteries at sunset, when nuns announce the service tapping a small wooden board in a specific secular rhythm. Doyen of Romanian music critics Alfred Hoffman wrote about Silvestri’s works in general: ‘What a passionate and fantastic musician he was, how skilfully he handled instrumental timbres and ingeniously interwove them!’ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Silvestri’s only biography in English:A Musician before his Time by John Gritten, with a foreward by Yehudi Menuhin, published by Kitzinger, ISBN 1-900496-12-7. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------