Ricardo Viñes
Ricardo Viñes y Roda was a Spanish pianist. He gave the premieres of various works by Ravel, Debussy, Satie, Falla and Albéniz. He was the piano teacher of the composer Francis Poulenc and the pianists Marcelle Meyer, Joaquín Nin-Culmell and Léo-Pol Morin.
Life and career
Viñes was born in Lleida, Spain. He studied the piano at the Paris Conservatoire under Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot, and composition and harmony with Benjamin Godard and Albert Lavignac.In 1895 Viñes made his début at the Salle Pleyel, Paris. From 1900 he had an international career, touring in Russia and throughout Europe and South America. Between 1930 and 1936 he lived in Argentina, returning to Paris in 1936 where he continued to play until the final year of his life.
According to Charles Timbrell and Esperanza Berrocal in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Viñes's keyboard technique was magnificent and his repertoire extensive. In addition to the established classics he championed new works by the many composers of whom he was a close friend. They included Ravel, Debussy, Satie, Falla, Granados, Albéniz and Déodat de Séverac. He was also a proponent of Russian music, and introduced France to pieces by Mussorgsky, Balakirev and Prokofiev. Grove lists among the many works dedicated to him Ravel's Oiseaux tristes, Debussy's Poissons d’or and Falla's Noches en los jardines de España.
Viñes composed a small number of works, the best known of which are the two Hommages, for Séverac and Satie. He also wrote several articles, mostly on Spanish music, and his diaries are much quoted by biographers of his musical contemporaries. His piano students included Marcelle Meyer, Joaquín Nin-Culmell, Léo-Pol Morin and Francis Poulenc. Poulenc later said of his teacher:
An annual International piano competition "Ricard Viñes" has been held since 1995 in his birth town Lleida. The city council named one of the city's most popular squares the "Plaça Ricard Vinyes", and the main room of the Llotja de Lleida theatre and congress centre is also named after him.
Viñes died in Barcelona at the age of 68. He was unmarried.
Discography
Viñes reportedly had an intense dislike for the recording process, but nonetheless left 25 recordings dating from the 1930s. In Grove's view, the playing as recorded reveals "an unforced virtuosity, charming rhythmic pointing and shimmering pedal effects."All the recordings listed below were released by Marston Records in 2007 as "Ricardo Viñes: The Complete Recordings". Other releases are listed below the individual compositions.
- Isaac Albéniz
- * Granada, Op.47 No.1
- * Torre bermeja, Op.92 No.12
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Orientale, Op.232 No.2
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Seguidillas, Op.232 No.5
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Serenata española, Op.181
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Tango in A minor, Op.164 No.2
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Pedro Humberto Allende
- * Dos Tonadas Chilenas
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Manuel Blancafort
- * L'Orgue du Carroussel
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Polka de l'Equilibriste
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Alexander Borodin
- * Scherzo in Ab
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Claude Debussy
- * Soirée dans Grenade
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Poissons d'or
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- ** Naxos, "A-Z of Pianists - by Jonathan Summers", 4-CD set, 2007
- ** Ysaÿe Records, "Claude Debussy - Images Pour Piano", 2008
- * Hommage à Rameau
- ** Arbiter Records, "Masters of the French piano tradition", 2007
- * Etude No.10, "Pour les sonorités opposées"
- ** Arbiter Records, "Masters of the French piano tradition", 2007
- * Viñes speaks on Debussy
- Manuel de Falla
- * Dance of Terror
- * Récit du Pêcheur
- * Introduction and Ritual Fire Dance
- Gluck-Brahms
- * Gavotte in A
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Carlos López-Buchardo
- * Bailecito
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Domenico Scarlatti
- * Sonata in D, K.29
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Cayetano Troiani
- * Milonga
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- Joaquín Turina
- * Miramar
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994
- * Dans les Jardins de Murcia
- ** Opal, "Ricardo Viñes and Francis Planté", 1994