Cinco canciones populares argentinas
Cinco canciones populares argentinas are a set of five songs for voice and piano, comprising both entirely new compositions as well as new settings of existing melodies, written in 1943 by Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera as his opus 10. The five songs are as follows:
- 1. Chacarera
- 2. Triste
- 3. Zamba
- 4. Arrorró
- 5. :es:Gato |Gato
Historical background
Musical influences and style
In these songs, Ginastera draws from the Argentine cancionero popular, which catalogues the traditional songs and dances of each province and is used, in turn, to teach these to school children. While not all of the melodies of the opus 10 songs are of actual traditional folk origin, the tunes are, on the whole, more overtly Argentine than those of his other song sets composed during this period. The setting of such folk songs and folk poetry was not, of course, without precedent: Bach, Brahms, Mahler, de Falla, and Bartók are among the noteworthy examples of composers who had already drawn heavily on folk melodies and texts for their compositions for voice, and Copland was soon to follow. Like his forebears, Ginastera's settings accentuate the local color of the original folk elements, with "highly ingratiating combinations of melodic simplicity, Latin folk rhythms, and twentieth century harmonic practices". In these pieces, Ginastera places virtuosic demands on the pianist while allowing the singer to convey emotion in an understated vocal line.The five songs of Ginastera's opus 10
1. ChacareraThe chacarera is deeply rooted in the central pampas and the northern Argentine interior, with popular variations in Uruguay and Bolivia. It is a rapid dance in triple meter for one or two couples, which begins with the beating of the feet on the ground while the guitarist strums the introductory bars.
There may be a link between the chacarera and the chaconne, which is described in The New Oxford Companion to Music as follows: "A dance in triple meter which originated in Latin America and was taken up as a form and variations in Spain and Italy in the early seventeenth century, in France soon after. The Latin American chacona had both instrumental and vocal accompaniment. The refrain was constructed upon one of a series of typical harmonic schemes. Some composers used the same melody throughout the piece, repeating it in the manner of a ground bass." Many of these chaconne characteristics, such as a refrain in a "typical" harmonic scheme and an almost ostinato-like ground bass, are found in Ginastera's "Chacarera." It has been speculated that the chaconne and the chacarera had a common origin and parallel developments, now reunited appropriately in the neoclassicism of this composition.
This setting exhibits liberal use of hemiola, the result of alternation between and meters. The harmonization remains within the C major tonality of the repeating couplet, with dissonant embellishing and passing tones. Although Ginastera dedicated the five songs of opus 10 to the nationalistic Argentine composer Carlos Lopez Buchardo and his wife Brigida, the opening couplet of "Chacarera" suggests that Ginastera may also have had his new bride Mercedes de Toro in mind, perhaps composing these pieces as a wedding gift, following Schumann's precedent of composing his opus 25 song cycle, Myrthen, some scholars believe, as a gift to his bride, Clara Wieck.
2. Triste
While "triste" translated literally means "sad" or "sorrowful," the title of this song is not an adjective but rather, like the rest of the opus 10 songs, an indication of the song or dance type: In this case, it is a nostalgic song of unrequited love. Originating in the Andean yaraví of the Kechua Indians, this song type appears in various modalities and under various names in the lyrical tradition of several South American nations, including Chile, Bolivia, Uruguay, and Argentina. It was disseminated as the triste by the payadores in the pampa during the nineteenth century, and, though lacking a set form, is characterized by a slow guitar introduction, melodia-recitativo with sparse accompaniment, the use of lament sighs such as "Ah" or "Ay," and a half-tone descent in the final two notes of its motif.
In "Triste," Ginastera adds to these characteristics a sense of improvisational abandon, accentuating the hopelessness in this traditional text. The melody combines diatonic and pentatonic elements, characteristic of Incan pentatonic scales, with the reiterated tone G and its embellishing quartal grace notes in the introduction serving to establish "the pentatonic flavor of the succeeding melody". Some scholars suggest that the starkly minimal accompaniment reflects the bleakness of the text, shows the influence on the composer of Copland's "lean, bony, open-air quality", and serves as a musical "imitation of the vast open spaces of the pampas... creating an image of the gauchos strumming their guitars in the wilderness".
Accordingly, Ginastera uses his signature guitar chord twice in this piece, a tied thirty second note ascending arpeggiation of E-A-D-G-B-E, representing the open strings of the gaucho's guitar. This chord, with its intensely Argentine connotations, appears "like sherbet between courses, to cleanse the palate" throughout Ginastera's career, in nearly all of the genres in which he composed. Though a similar harmonic resonance is achieved by playing nearly any series of four perfect fourths and a major third, the ubiquitous chord is most frequently spelled as above in Ginastera's compositions, regardless of the tonal center of the piece in which the chord appears. Consequently, if "Triste" is to be performed in transposition, the performers must consider the specific sonority of the E-A-D-G-B-E chord and whether it too should be transposed or left as written.
3. Zamba
With no relation to the Brazilian samba, the Argentine zamba is a graceful eighteenth century scarf dance of Peruvian origin. The vocal part is based in a repeated four-bar theme, with guitar introduction and postlude. With romantic, often melancholic lyrics sung in a lilting meter, it remains "the obligatory dance at all rural fiestas". Ginastera's setting enhances the sway of the meter with a syncopated accompanying pattern, and while the vocal melody maintains an F major tonality, the accompaniment alternates between F major and D minor in a manner characteristic of bimodal Argentine folk music. In some passages "there is considerable use of extended tertian and polytonal arpeggiation underneath the melodic line".
4. Arrorró
The arrorró is "a traditional lullaby whose origin has been lost through the centuries". Of these five songs, "Arrorró" is the only instance where Ginastera has left the text, rhythm, and melody of the source unaltered, just as Brahms and Bartók had done in many of their settings and Copland would do in several of his Old American Songs, including the lullaby "The Little Horses." Ginastera sets this well-known Argentine lullaby in G major over a slow duple meter ostinato which, though centric to G as well, emphasizes dissonant auxiliary tones. Perhaps inspiration for the unobtrusive ostinato accompaniment came from de Falla's lullaby "Nana" in his Siete canciones populares españolas of 1914–15, drawn from the Andalusian tradition. Whereas Ginastera's lullaby is ABA with exact ostinati in the A sections, de Falla's is twenty measures of rhythmically identical ostinato with only slight chromatic shifting. In the arpeggios of the B section of "Arrorró," one sees the influence of Debussy’s piano music, comparable, for example, to the left hand of "Beau Soir."
5. Gato
The gato came to the early South American colonies as a descendant of the Spanish romanza, with several Iberian cousins such as the mis-mis and the perdíz. It was initially popular in Chile, Mexico, and Peru, but found its greatest prosperity in both the rural and urban areas of Argentina from the late eighteenth through the late nineteenth centuries. In the wake of the milonga, it fell out of favor in the zones near Buenos Aires, but found new vitality in the northern Argentine provinces and Bolivia. The form is based on the choreography of the six-part dance for one or two split couples:
1) guitar introduction
2) march with paso valseado, an exchange of triple-meter steps for each individual
3) zapateo, a textless section of four or eight musical phrases during which the man stomps his boots in place while the woman struts around him.
4) repetition of the march
5) repetition of the zapateo
6) the giro final, which is the couple's spirited promenade around the dance area
Ginastera's "Gato" is to a certain degree faithful to this traditional six-part form, offering a piano introduction followed by two sections of text, then an interlude followed by two sections of text, with vigorous zapateo interludes between each section.
Both the vocal melody and the accompaniment are in C major, but Ginastera "adds dissonance and dislocates tones horizontally to lend a polytonal aura to the background, in the instrumental interludes between vocal stanzas, there is a frank espousal of bitonality, similar to sections of the earlier Danzas Argentinas". As with "Chacarera," the words of "Gato," though not entirely nonsensical, are more significant for their rhythm than for their meaning.
With the vocal part and the right hand of the rudo accompaniment in and the left hand in a relentlessly driving, "Gato" acquires the virile machismo of the malambo’s thrusting hemiolas. This is most evident in the zapateo interludes, in which the raw rhythmic intensity echos "Les Augures Printaniers / Danses des Adolescentes" in Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps, which Ginastera cited as one of his earliest and most powerful musical influences. Ginastera recommends the use of a "non-legato touch, accenting lightly on the first beat of each measure" to best communicate the malambo’s motoric, energetic rhythm. In response to their premiere in Buenos Aires, "Gato" was hailed as "the highest achievement of the five songs...for its sheer dynamic impulse".