Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid


Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid, Opus 30 No. 6, is a quintettino for stringed instruments, by Luigi Boccherini, the Italian composer in service to the Spanish Court from 1761 to 1805.

Background

The Italian composer Luigi Boccherini was attached to the Court of the Spanish Infante, Luis Antonio, brother of King Charles III of Spain. For having married a common citizen, King Charles exiled the Infante from the Madrid Court to the Arenas de San Pedro palace in Ávila province. As a courtier of Luis Antonio, Boccherini joined the exile, and found himself with much time for composition, and there completed more than one hundred pieces.
Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid describes the bustling streets of night-time Madrid; about the composition, critic Jaume Tortella writes:
The composition was famous in Spain during Boccherini's life; the best-known versions are arrangements of the Ritirata movement incorporated to the piano quintet, and the guitar quintet. The Night Music of the Streets of Madrid was published years after Boccherini's death, because, he told his publisher: “The piece is absolutely useless, even ridiculous, outside Spain, because the audience cannot hope to understand its significance, nor the performers to play it as it should be played.”
Since the mid-twentieth-century revival of interest in the music of Luigi Boccherini, the Ritirata became well-known; Luciano Berio used it as the basis for a composition superimposing the four known settings of the Ritirata, all playing concurrently, ebbing and flowing synchronously and asynchronously. Despite its slightly jokey nature, like Berio's folk-song settings, his Ritirata interpretation is attractive and approachable, acknowledging and expanding upon Boccherini's composition.
In 1975, the Boccherini Quintet, on the Ensayo record label, recorded an exceptional interpretation of Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid, that in 1976 won the Grand Prix du Disque, by the Académie Charles Cros.

Instrumentation

Composed for two violins, a viola, and two cellos, the Night Music of the Streets of Madrid quintet is in the C major key, and is approximately 13 minutes in duration.

Movements

Musica notturna delle strade di Madrid comprises these movements:
  1. Le campane de l’Ave MariaThe Ave Maria Bell; the main church calls the faithful for the Ave Maria prayers.
  2. Il tamburo dei Soldati – The Soldiers’ drum.
  3. Minuetto dei Ciechi – The Minuet of the Blind Beggars; Boccherini directed the cellists to place their instruments upon their knees, and strum them, like guitars.
  4. Il Rosario The Rosary, a slow section not played in strict time.
  5. Passa Calle – The Passacaglia of the Street Singers, known as Los Manolos, lower-class loudmouths; not a true passacaglia, yet imitates their singing. In Spanish, pasacalle denotes “pass along the street”, singing as one seeks amusement.
  6. Il tamburo – The drum.
  7. Ritirata – The retreat of the Madrid military night watch; the Watch's patrol, announcing the curfew, and closing the streets for the night.

    Arrangements