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Miguel Llobet

Miguel Llobet Solés (18 October 1878 – 22 February 1938) was a classical guitarist, born in Barcelona, Spain. Llobet was a renowned virtuoso who toured Europe and America extensively. He made well known arrangements of Catalan folk songs for the solo guitar, made famous arrangements for the guitar of the piano compositions of Isaac Albéniz, arrangements immortalized by Andrés Segovia, and was also the composer of original works.

Miguel Llobet
Portrait of classical guitarist/composer Miguel Llobet dated 1916
Background information
Born(1878-10-18)18 October 1878
Barcelona, Spain
Died22 February 1938(1938-02-22) (aged 59)
Barcelona, Spain
GenresClassical music
Instrument(s)Classical Guitar
LabelsChanterelle Verlag, Odeon-Parlophone, Decca

Biography edit

Some details of Llobet's biography are confused and contradictory. The son of a gilder, he was baptized in the month of his birth in the church of Sant Just i Pastor on the Carrer de la Palma de Sant Just, the street where he spent his boyhood, just a few streets from the Carrer Gignàs, which (from 1884 through 1885) was the residence of his eventual teacher Francisco Tárrega.[1] He was trained as an artist, revealing a talent for painting, and continued to paint throughout his life. His earliest musical training was on the violin and the piano. Later he received a guitar as a gift from an uncle. In December 1889, Llobet heard Antonio Jiménez Manjón (1866–1919) give a guitar recital at the Teatre Catalunya in Barcelona, and was inspired to seek instruction on the guitar from Magí Alegre.[2][3]

Llobet first met, and played for, the great guitar pedagogue Francisco Tárrega in October 1892. Two years later he began to study with him at the Municipal Conservatory of Music in Barcelona. By his own account, his studies with Tárrega do not seem to have been based on any particular method, rather Llobet would observe Tárrega play and then experiment with his techniques at home. "Così, più che impararla, io sperimentavo la mia tecnica sulla chitarra". ("In this way, more than by learning it, I experimented with my guitar technique.")[4]

He began giving private concerts for intimate gatherings in 1898. Around that time he met Concepción Gómez de Jacoby, Tárrega’s patron, who also became his own patron, helping him to launch an international career. Prat, 1934, p. 184-5, recounts that after meeting Llobet, Concepción took him to Málaga, and in 1900 to Paris, bringing him out of the Barcelona area for the first time and allowing him to begin an international concert career. His first public concert took place in 1901 at the Conservatory of València. During that same year, he also performed at conservatories in Seville and Málaga, where he was awarded the honorary title of Professor. He played at the Teatro de la Comedia in 1902 and before the Spanish royal family in Madrid in 1903.

In 1904 in Paris Llobet's first concert outside Spain was presented by Ricardo Viñes, the noted pianist. It was at this time that he first came into contact with the avant garde. Paris was apparently kind to Llobet, as he returned to live there in 1905, performing at such prestigious venues as the Schola Cantorum, La Trompette and the Société Nationale de Musique. According to Ronald Purcell,[5] he resided there until 1910. In the biographical sketch given by Bruno Tonazzi,[6] Llobet returned to Paris in 1910 but according to Purcell he probably temporarily relocated to Buenos Aires in that year. From there he performed throughout South and Central America and the Caribbean in a series of tours largely arranged by Domingo Prat, (author of the Diccionario de Guitarristas 1933), Juan Anido (father of María Luisa Anido) and Ruiz Romero of the publishing house Romero y Fernandez. In 1912, Llobet gave his first concerts in the United States, performing in Boston, Philadelphia and New York City. He then returned to Paris.

In the following years, he continued to perform throughout Europe, particularly in Belgium and the Netherlands. During 1913 and 1914 he performed throughout Germany. According to Purcell, "At the outbreak of World War I, Llobet returned to Buenos Aires," and continued to make trips throughout the Americas.[7] while Tonazzi states that at the outbreak of the First World War he returned to his native land.[8] Llobet's concert itinerary seems to have been dominated by performances in the Americas at that time, lending some support to Purcell's claims, however Purcell also implies that Llobet was in Spain about 1915, where he taught his most important pupil, Andrés Segovia.[9][10]

Segovia's autobiography, written at the height of his career, depicts himself as being self-taught - there are admissions of his seeking out Llobet's advice for a short time, but Segovia is quite clear about the lack of any real influence on his playing. At the age of 22, Segovia was still youthful enough to have received valuable instruction. Purcell states that "At the age of twenty-two (Segovia) pursued what he considered the only direct contact to Tárrega, Llobet, for refinement of his technique and especially for the music that both he and Tárrega had written and transcribed for the guitar..." and that "Segovia, whose performance style and technique reveals [sic] the principles of Tárrega, was basically influenced by Llobet....This stylistic influence can be heard when comparing Llobet's Parlophone Electric recordings (Chanterelle Historical Recordings CHR 001) with Segovia's Angel recordings, ZB 3896".[11]

In 1915, Llobet made one attempt at recording at the Victor studios in New York, but the two sides he recorded, Manuelito and Sueño, were rejected.[12] The prominent guitarist Vahdah Olcott-Bickford, who was living in New York at the time, writes that "he tried to make a recording at the Bell Lab in New Brunswick, New Jersey, but was dissatisfied with the sound."[13] It is also known that he toured the East Coast of the United States in 1912, 1914 and 1917.

In 1920-1921, Llobet played in Spain and toured throughout Germany, performing in Munich, Leipzig, Dresden, Cologne and Stuttgart. In 1922 he was in Vienna for the first time. When in Vienna, Llobet was frequently a guest in the house of parents.[14][15] In 1924, he again toured throughout Germany and Austria, and he concertized in the Americas in 1925. He returned again to the Americas in 1930 to perform for the Spanish Arts Festival, under the auspices of the Library of Congress. The violinist Antonio Bossa had recommended him, and he was contracted to play six solos, and to arrange and perform Manuel de Falla's Siete Canciones Españolas with soprano Nina Kochitz.

In 1923, he began to teach María Luisa Anido (1907–1997) in Buenos Aires. By 1925, the two were performing duets and, according to Purcell, about 1930 recorded some of Llobet's duet arrangements on the Odeon-Parlophone label distributed by Decca. These recordings followed a solo series recorded by Llobet on the Parlophon/Electric series out of Barcelona".[16] The solo recordings, among the first released of the classical guitar, are supposed to have been recorded around 1925, but are from two different sources: Argentina/Odeon recording sessions as well as the earlier Barcelona/Parlophon recording. In response to an inquiry, Purcell stated that "Llobet did not care for the acoustic recording results in 1915 and only recorded electronically.... His recordings were recorded in 1925 and later with Maria Anido".[17] It may be noted that electronic recording was developed by Bell Labs under its Western Electrical branch, and was leased to recording companies under the name of "Westrex Electrical Recording System" beginning in 1925.[18] Initially only Victor and Columbia records leased it, with an up-front payment of $50,000 each. Under the general management of Louis Sterling, Columbia acquired a number of European, Asian, and U.S. recording companies in 1925. Sterling soon after arranged for a holding company to combine Columbia and the Carl Lindstrom group, which included Parlphone and Odeon, the companies that seem to be the ones under which Llobet's recordings were released.[19]

Llobet toured Europe again in 1930-1931, performing in London, Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, Vienna, Budapest and Bologna among others. On hearing him in Berlin Paul Hindemith declared an intent to compose for the guitar, but did not follow this through - Hindemith's only work for guitar, the Rondo for Three Guitars, had been written in 1925.[20]

From 1932 to 1934, Llobet taught the young Cuban virtuoso José Rey de la Torre at his home in Barcelona. He does not appear to have performed much at this time, but maintained his artistic contacts. Rey writes: "At the time I arrived in Barcelona in 1932, he had almost retired from the concert stage. During the three years that I spent there he left town only once for a month's tour of Scandinavia."[21]

Llobet seems to have enjoyed a somewhat reclusive retirement from the concert stage, Rey de la Torre who, as Llobet's pupil, may well have been his most frequent visitor, writes that "Llobet did not have many visitors..."[22] He did seem to go out to concerts frequently, walking with his wife, to the Palau close to his home, and met a few influential artists at his large apartment at Via Layetana No. 46 in Barcelona: Emilio Pujol was a frequent guest and Manuel de Falla is known to have visited whenever in that city.[23]

The statement by Philip J. Bone in The Guitar and Mandolin that Llobet "was killed in 1937, in an air raid in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War" (Bone 1954) has been tacitly contradicted by all reliable sources.[24][25] However, the emotional devastation over the siege of Barcelona may have begun his downward spiral of health. On 22 February 1938, Llobet died of pleurisy in Barcelona.[26]

His complete works, edited by Professor Ron Purcell, were published by Chanterelle Verlag. Chanterelle, now under the ownership of Musicverlag Zimmermann, is in the process of publishing new Urtext editions of the complete catalog under the editorship of Stefano Grondona. These new and more definitive editions are based on autograph manuscripts found in the Miguel Llobet Collection of the Museu de la Música in Barcelona.

Llobet's guitars edit

 
Guitar made by Antonio de Torres, MDMB 626, played by Miguel Llobet and now in Museu de la Música de Barcelona

Among the guitars used by Llobet, one finds: Antonio de Torres, 1859, Llobet's favorite guitar; he refused to have a split in the back repaired for fear that it would affect the exquisite tone. See LA CHITARRA di LIUTERIA, Grondona and Waldner, 2001. Llobet is known to have toured with Torres guitars FE 09 and FE 13.[27]

References edit

  1. ^ Phillips 2008, 23
  2. ^ Phillips 2002, 10
  3. ^ Delcamp, 2009
  4. ^ Tonazzi 1996, 13-14
  5. ^ R. Purcell, Llobet 1989,1: iii
  6. ^ Tonazzi 1966, 12
  7. ^ Llobet 1989, 1: iv
  8. ^ Tonazzi 1966, 12
  9. ^ Phillips 2002, 12
  10. ^ Phillips 2002, 84-87
  11. ^ R Purcell, Llobet 1989, 1: ii
  12. ^ "Llobet, Miguel - Discography of American Historical Recordings".
  13. ^ Purcell 1993, 5
  14. ^ "Miguel Llobet". Hauser guitars.
  15. ^ Luise Walker. . 1989 Musikverlag Zimmermann, Frankfurt am Mains. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011.
  16. ^ Llobet 1989, 1: iv
  17. ^ Purcell 2001
  18. ^ Bell Laboratories and the Development of Electrical Recording
  19. ^ Licensing the Western Electric Electrical Recording System to Victor and Columbia.
  20. ^ Phillips 2002, 14
  21. ^ Rey 1985, 24
  22. ^ Rey 1985, 24
  23. ^ Rey 1985, 24
  24. ^ Rey 1985, 31
  25. ^ Mangado 2004, 159
  26. ^ Llobet 1989, 1: iii
  27. ^ Hauser 2004
  28. ^ Brune, R.E. (October 2017). "Guitars with Guts: 1880 Julian Llorente". Vintage Guitar Magazine: 74–78.

List of works edit

Original compositions edit

  • Romanza
  • Estudio en mi mayor
  • Estudio Capricho en re mayor
  • Mazurka
  • Variaciones sobre un Tema de Sor
  • Scherzo-Vals
  • Prélude Original
  • Preludio en re mayor
  • Respuesta-Impromptu
  • Preludio en la mayor
  • Preludio en mi mayor
  • Estilo

Arrangements of folksongs edit

These pieces are often referred to as Llobet's "Canciones populares Catalanas". Probably the two most famous of them are 'El testament d'Amèlia' and 'El Noi de la Mare'.

  • Plany (Lament)
  • La filla del marxant (The Merchant's Daughter)
  • El testament d'Amèlia (Amèlia's Will)
  • Cançó del lladre (Song of the Thief)
  • Lo rossinyol (The Nightingale)
  • Lo fill del rei (The King's Son)
  • L'hereu Riera (Heir Riera)
  • El mestre (The Teacher)
  • La filadora (The Spinner Woman)
  • La presó de Lleida (Lleida Prison)
  • La Nit de Nadal (Christmas Eve)
  • La pastoreta (The Little Shepherd Girl)
  • El noi de la Mare (The Mother's Child (Our Lady's Child))
  • Leonesa (From Leon)
  • Estilos populares Argentinos nos. 1 & 2.

Guitar solos edit

Guitar duets edit

Pieces composed for Miguel Llobet edit

  • Manuel de Falla: Homenaje pour le tombeau de Claude Debussy
  • Eduardo López-Chávarri: Sonata I.

Discography edit

  • Miguel Llobet - Historical Recordings 1925-1929 ()
Track Listing
  • Julián Aguirre: Huella*
  • Isaac Albéniz: Evocación*
  • Johann Sebastian Bach: Sarabande [2 takes].
  • Napoléon Coste: Etude op.38 no.23 [2 takes].
  • Miguel Llobet: El Testament d'Amelia, La Filla del Marxant, Plany, El Mestre.
  • Felix Mendelssohn: May Breezes*.
  • Manuel M. Ponce: 2 Canciones Mejicanas.
  • Pedro M. Quijano;: Estilo Popular Criollo.
  • Fernando Sor : Andantino op.2 no.3, Estudio op.35 no.2, Minueto op.11, no.12.
  • Rogelio del Villar: Canción Popular Leonesa [Canción del Ladrón]
(* Duetts with María Luisa Anido).

Sources edit

  • Appleby, Wilfrid M.: "Guitar Music. The Artistry of Miguel Llobet (1878–1938)", Guitar News 67 (September – October 1962), p. 14-15.
  • "Bell Laboratories and the Development of Electrical Recording", http://www.stokowski.org/Development_of_Electrical_Recording.htm
  • Bone, Philip James: The Guitar and Mandolin. Biographies of Celebrated Players and Composers (London: Schott & Co., 1914; 2nd edition 1954; reprint 1972).
  • Delcamp, Jean-François (ed.): Miguel Lllobet Solés (1878–1938), Biography and Work for Guitar. www.delcamp.net (2009)
  • "Francisco Tárrega Segun …", in: Guitarra (Havana) 2, no. 3 (December 1941), p. 16-17.
  • García, Héctor: Letter from Miami to Robert Phillips, Lakeland, 9 February 2002
  • "La Musica per Chitarra nel Secolo XX. IX: I Chitarristi-Compositori.", in: Il Fronimo no. 46 (January 1984), p. 28-33.
  • "La Rinascita della Chitarra", in: Il Fronimo, no. 1 (October 1972), p. 10-12.
  • Hermann Hauser Official Website: "Miguel Llobet 1878-1938", http://www.hauserguitars.de/english/docs/geschichte/geschichte_llobet.htm, 2004.
  • Herrera, F.: "Du nouveau du côte de jeux interdits: Quelques documents qui parlent d'eux-mêmes”, in: Guitarre, no. 38 (1991), p. 20.
  • Jones, Allen Clive: "The Judgement of Paris: Part 5 – Pujol's Article in Lavignac's Encyclopedia", in: Classical Guitar 17, no. 4 (December 1998), p. 24, 26-28.
  • "Licensing the Western Electric Electrical Recording System to Victor and Columbia", http://www.stokowski.org/Licensing_Westrex_System_to_Victor_Columbia.htm
  • Llobet, Miguel: "Francisco Tárrega", in: Revista Musical Catalana 7, no. 73 (1910), p. 9-10.
  • Llobet, Miguel. Guitar Works, vol. 1: 11 Original Compositions, edited by Ronald Purcell (Heidelberg: Chanterelle Verlag, 1989).
  • Llobet, Miguel. Guitar Works, vol. 2: 16 Folksong Settings, edited by Ronald Purcell (Heidelberg: Chanterelle Verlag, 1989).
  • Llobet, Miguel. Guitar Works, vol. 3: 10 Famous Transcriptions, edited by Ronald Purcell (Heidelberg: Chanterelle Verlag, 1989).
  • 'Llobet, Miguel. Guitar Works, vol. 4: 12 Famous Guitar Duos, edited by Ronald Purcell (Heidelberg: Chanterelle Verlag, 1989).
  • Mangado Artigas, Josep Maria: La Guitarra en Cataluña, 1769-1939 (Edición del Autor, 2004) (in Spanish).
  • Marsh, William Sewall: "Some Spanish and Spanish-American Guitarists", in: Crescendo 24, no. 6 (February 1932), p. 3-4.
  • "Miguel Soles Llobet", in: Guitarra 1, no. 2 (May–June 1963), p. 13-15.
  • Ophee, Matanya: "The Promotion of Francisco Tárrega – a Case History", in: Soundboard 8, no. 3 (August 1981), p. 152-158.
  • "The Promotion of Francisco Tárrega – a Case History", in: Soundboard 8, no. 4 (November 1981), p. 256-261.
  • Pahissa, Jaime: Vida y obra de Manuel de Falla (Buenos Aires: Ricordi Americana, 1947).
  • Phillips, Robert: "Barcelona, Cradle of the Modern Classical Guitar: The Llobet Archive Rediscovered", in: Soundboard 28, no. 4 (Spring 2002), p. 39-41.
  • Phillips, Robert: "Barcelona Redux", in: Soundboard 34, no. 1 (2008), p. 23-24.
  • Phillips, Robert: The Influence of Miguel Llobet on the Pedagogy, Repertoire and Stature of the Guitar in the Twentieth Century (doctoral dissertation, 2002), OCLC 51796355.
  • Picciano, Stefano: Miguel Llobet. La biografia (Bologna: Ut Orpheus, 2015) (in Italian); ISBN 978-88-8109-493-6.
  • Prat, Domingo: Diccionario biográfico–bibliográfico—histórico: crítico de guitarras (instrumentos afines), guitarristas (profesores–compositores–concertistas–lahudistas–amateurs), guitarreros (luthiers). Danzas y cantos—terminología (Buenos Aires: Romero y Fernández [1934].
  • Pujol, Emilio: Tárrega: Ensayo Biográfico (Valencia: Artes Graf, Soler, 1978).
  • Purcell, Ronald: liner notes for Miguel Llobet, the Guitar Recordings 1925-1929 (Chanterelle Historical Recordings CHR 001, 1993).
  • Riera, Juan: "Miguel Llobet, Composer and Guitarist (1878-1938) (translated by Mrs. A. Korwin-Rodziszewski), in: Guitar News, 27 (October–November 1955), p. 7-8.
  • Rey de la Torre, José: "Miguel Llobet, El Mestre", in: Guitar Review, no. 60 (Winter 1985), p. 22-32.
  • Roberts, John: "Miguel Llobet", in: Guitar 1, no. 5 (December 1972).
  • "Some Spanish and Spanish-American Guitarists", in: Crescendo 24 (September 1932), p. 3-4.
  • Spalding, Walter: "Falla's 'Homenaje pour le Tombeau de Claude Debussy'. A Master Lesson with Rey de la Torre, Taped in the Form of a Conversation with Walter Spalding, September '76", in: Chelys 1, no. 5 (1977)p. 37-41.
  • Spalding, Walter: "Reminiscences of Llobet. A Conversational Fragment with Rey de la Torre", in: Chelys 1, no. 5 (1977), p. 44.
  • Summerfield, Maurice J.: The Classical Guitar. Its Evolution and Players Since 1800 (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Ashley Mark, 1996).
  • Tocatimbal, vol. 4 (Barcelona: Eufònic, 1986).
  • Tonazzi, Bruno: Miguel Llobet, Chitarrista dell’Impressionismo (Ancona: Edizioni Bèrben, 1966) (in Italian), OCLC 12560728.
  • Trasi, Rino: "La chitarra di Llobet", in: Seicorde no. 44 (March–April 1994), p. 20-27.
  • Turnbull, Harvey: The Guitar from the Renaissance to the Present Day (London: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1991).
  • Vechten, Carl van: "A Critic's View of Llobet, in: Chelys 1, no. 5 (1977), p. 42 (reprinted from [Chase, Gilbert] The Music of Spain (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1918), p. 39-41.
  • Weller, Anthony: "Jose Rey de la Torre", in: Guitar Review (Autumn 1994), p. 1-7.

External links edit

miguel, llobet, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, llobet, second, maternal, family, name, solés, solés, october, 1878, february, 1938, classical, guitarist, born, barcelona, spain, llobet, renowned, virtuoso, toured, europe, america, extensively, . In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Llobet and the second or maternal family name is Soles Miguel Llobet Soles 18 October 1878 22 February 1938 was a classical guitarist born in Barcelona Spain Llobet was a renowned virtuoso who toured Europe and America extensively He made well known arrangements of Catalan folk songs for the solo guitar made famous arrangements for the guitar of the piano compositions of Isaac Albeniz arrangements immortalized by Andres Segovia and was also the composer of original works Miguel LlobetPortrait of classical guitarist composer Miguel Llobet dated 1916Background informationBorn 1878 10 18 18 October 1878Barcelona SpainDied22 February 1938 1938 02 22 aged 59 Barcelona SpainGenresClassical musicInstrument s Classical GuitarLabelsChanterelle Verlag Odeon Parlophone Decca Contents 1 Biography 2 Llobet s guitars 3 References 4 List of works 4 1 Original compositions 4 2 Arrangements of folksongs 4 2 1 Guitar solos 4 2 2 Guitar duets 4 3 Pieces composed for Miguel Llobet 5 Discography 6 Sources 7 External linksBiography editSome details of Llobet s biography are confused and contradictory The son of a gilder he was baptized in the month of his birth in the church of Sant Just i Pastor on the Carrer de la Palma de Sant Just the street where he spent his boyhood just a few streets from the Carrer Gignas which from 1884 through 1885 was the residence of his eventual teacher Francisco Tarrega 1 He was trained as an artist revealing a talent for painting and continued to paint throughout his life His earliest musical training was on the violin and the piano Later he received a guitar as a gift from an uncle In December 1889 Llobet heard Antonio Jimenez Manjon 1866 1919 give a guitar recital at the Teatre Catalunya in Barcelona and was inspired to seek instruction on the guitar from Magi Alegre 2 3 Llobet first met and played for the great guitar pedagogue Francisco Tarrega in October 1892 Two years later he began to study with him at the Municipal Conservatory of Music in Barcelona By his own account his studies with Tarrega do not seem to have been based on any particular method rather Llobet would observe Tarrega play and then experiment with his techniques at home Cosi piu che impararla io sperimentavo la mia tecnica sulla chitarra In this way more than by learning it I experimented with my guitar technique 4 He began giving private concerts for intimate gatherings in 1898 Around that time he met Concepcion Gomez de Jacoby Tarrega s patron who also became his own patron helping him to launch an international career Prat 1934 p 184 5 recounts that after meeting Llobet Concepcion took him to Malaga and in 1900 to Paris bringing him out of the Barcelona area for the first time and allowing him to begin an international concert career His first public concert took place in 1901 at the Conservatory of Valencia During that same year he also performed at conservatories in Seville and Malaga where he was awarded the honorary title of Professor He played at the Teatro de la Comedia in 1902 and before the Spanish royal family in Madrid in 1903 In 1904 in Paris Llobet s first concert outside Spain was presented by Ricardo Vines the noted pianist It was at this time that he first came into contact with the avant garde Paris was apparently kind to Llobet as he returned to live there in 1905 performing at such prestigious venues as the Schola Cantorum La Trompette and the Societe Nationale de Musique According to Ronald Purcell 5 he resided there until 1910 In the biographical sketch given by Bruno Tonazzi 6 Llobet returned to Paris in 1910 but according to Purcell he probably temporarily relocated to Buenos Aires in that year From there he performed throughout South and Central America and the Caribbean in a series of tours largely arranged by Domingo Prat author of the Diccionario de Guitarristas 1933 Juan Anido father of Maria Luisa Anido and Ruiz Romero of the publishing house Romero y Fernandez In 1912 Llobet gave his first concerts in the United States performing in Boston Philadelphia and New York City He then returned to Paris In the following years he continued to perform throughout Europe particularly in Belgium and the Netherlands During 1913 and 1914 he performed throughout Germany According to Purcell At the outbreak of World War I Llobet returned to Buenos Aires and continued to make trips throughout the Americas 7 while Tonazzi states that at the outbreak of the First World War he returned to his native land 8 Llobet s concert itinerary seems to have been dominated by performances in the Americas at that time lending some support to Purcell s claims however Purcell also implies that Llobet was in Spain about 1915 where he taught his most important pupil Andres Segovia 9 10 Segovia s autobiography written at the height of his career depicts himself as being self taught there are admissions of his seeking out Llobet s advice for a short time but Segovia is quite clear about the lack of any real influence on his playing At the age of 22 Segovia was still youthful enough to have received valuable instruction Purcell states that At the age of twenty two Segovia pursued what he considered the only direct contact to Tarrega Llobet for refinement of his technique and especially for the music that both he and Tarrega had written and transcribed for the guitar and that Segovia whose performance style and technique reveals sic the principles of Tarrega was basically influenced by Llobet This stylistic influence can be heard when comparing Llobet s Parlophone Electric recordings Chanterelle Historical Recordings CHR 001 with Segovia s Angel recordings ZB 3896 11 In 1915 Llobet made one attempt at recording at the Victor studios in New York but the two sides he recorded Manuelito and Sueno were rejected 12 The prominent guitarist Vahdah Olcott Bickford who was living in New York at the time writes that he tried to make a recording at the Bell Lab in New Brunswick New Jersey but was dissatisfied with the sound 13 It is also known that he toured the East Coast of the United States in 1912 1914 and 1917 In 1920 1921 Llobet played in Spain and toured throughout Germany performing in Munich Leipzig Dresden Cologne and Stuttgart In 1922 he was in Vienna for the first time When in Vienna Llobet was frequently a guest in the house of Luise Walker s parents 14 15 In 1924 he again toured throughout Germany and Austria and he concertized in the Americas in 1925 He returned again to the Americas in 1930 to perform for the Spanish Arts Festival under the auspices of the Library of Congress The violinist Antonio Bossa had recommended him and he was contracted to play six solos and to arrange and perform Manuel de Falla s Siete Canciones Espanolas with soprano Nina Kochitz In 1923 he began to teach Maria Luisa Anido 1907 1997 in Buenos Aires By 1925 the two were performing duets and according to Purcell about 1930 recorded some of Llobet s duet arrangements on the Odeon Parlophone label distributed by Decca These recordings followed a solo series recorded by Llobet on the Parlophon Electric series out of Barcelona 16 The solo recordings among the first released of the classical guitar are supposed to have been recorded around 1925 but are from two different sources Argentina Odeon recording sessions as well as the earlier Barcelona Parlophon recording In response to an inquiry Purcell stated that Llobet did not care for the acoustic recording results in 1915 and only recorded electronically His recordings were recorded in 1925 and later with Maria Anido 17 It may be noted that electronic recording was developed by Bell Labs under its Western Electrical branch and was leased to recording companies under the name of Westrex Electrical Recording System beginning in 1925 18 Initially only Victor and Columbia records leased it with an up front payment of 50 000 each Under the general management of Louis Sterling Columbia acquired a number of European Asian and U S recording companies in 1925 Sterling soon after arranged for a holding company to combine Columbia and the Carl Lindstrom group which included Parlphone and Odeon the companies that seem to be the ones under which Llobet s recordings were released 19 Llobet toured Europe again in 1930 1931 performing in London Berlin Hamburg Munich Vienna Budapest and Bologna among others On hearing him in Berlin Paul Hindemith declared an intent to compose for the guitar but did not follow this through Hindemith s only work for guitar the Rondo for Three Guitars had been written in 1925 20 From 1932 to 1934 Llobet taught the young Cuban virtuoso Jose Rey de la Torre at his home in Barcelona He does not appear to have performed much at this time but maintained his artistic contacts Rey writes At the time I arrived in Barcelona in 1932 he had almost retired from the concert stage During the three years that I spent there he left town only once for a month s tour of Scandinavia 21 Llobet seems to have enjoyed a somewhat reclusive retirement from the concert stage Rey de la Torre who as Llobet s pupil may well have been his most frequent visitor writes that Llobet did not have many visitors 22 He did seem to go out to concerts frequently walking with his wife to the Palau close to his home and met a few influential artists at his large apartment at Via Layetana No 46 in Barcelona Emilio Pujol was a frequent guest and Manuel de Falla is known to have visited whenever in that city 23 The statement by Philip J Bone in The Guitar and Mandolin that Llobet was killed in 1937 in an air raid in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War Bone 1954 has been tacitly contradicted by all reliable sources 24 25 However the emotional devastation over the siege of Barcelona may have begun his downward spiral of health On 22 February 1938 Llobet died of pleurisy in Barcelona 26 His complete works edited by Professor Ron Purcell were published by Chanterelle Verlag Chanterelle now under the ownership of Musicverlag Zimmermann is in the process of publishing new Urtext editions of the complete catalog under the editorship of Stefano Grondona These new and more definitive editions are based on autograph manuscripts found in the Miguel Llobet Collection of the Museu de la Musica in Barcelona Llobet s guitars edit nbsp Guitar made by Antonio de Torres MDMB 626 played by Miguel Llobet and now in Museu de la Musica de BarcelonaAmong the guitars used by Llobet one finds Antonio de Torres 1859 Llobet s favorite guitar he refused to have a split in the back repaired for fear that it would affect the exquisite tone See LA CHITARRA di LIUTERIA Grondona and Waldner 2001 Llobet is known to have toured with Torres guitars FE 09 and FE 13 27 Guitars from the Miquel Llobet Collection at the Museu de la Musica de Barcelona Online catalog Search for Llobet Hermann Hauser I 1913 image 1880 Julian Llorente repaired by Manuel Ramirez 28 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2011 References edit Phillips 2008 23 Phillips 2002 10 Delcamp 2009 Tonazzi 1996 13 14 R Purcell Llobet 1989 1 iii Tonazzi 1966 12 Llobet 1989 1 iv Tonazzi 1966 12 Phillips 2002 12 Phillips 2002 84 87 R Purcell Llobet 1989 1 ii Llobet Miguel Discography of American Historical Recordings Purcell 1993 5 Miguel Llobet Hauser guitars Luise Walker Ein Leben mit der Gitarre 1989 Musikverlag Zimmermann Frankfurt am Mains Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Llobet 1989 1 iv Purcell 2001 Bell Laboratories and the Development of Electrical Recording Licensing the Western Electric Electrical Recording System to Victor and Columbia Phillips 2002 14 Rey 1985 24 Rey 1985 24 Rey 1985 24 Rey 1985 31 Mangado 2004 159 Llobet 1989 1 iii Hauser 2004 Brune R E October 2017 Guitars with Guts 1880 Julian Llorente Vintage Guitar Magazine 74 78 List of works editOriginal compositions edit Romanza Estudio en mi mayor Estudio Capricho en re mayor Mazurka Variaciones sobre un Tema de Sor Scherzo Vals Prelude Original Preludio en re mayor Respuesta Impromptu Preludio en la mayor Preludio en mi mayor EstiloArrangements of folksongs edit These pieces are often referred to as Llobet s Canciones populares Catalanas Probably the two most famous of them are El testament d Amelia and El Noi de la Mare Plany Lament La filla del marxant The Merchant s Daughter El testament d Amelia Amelia s Will Canco del lladre Song of the Thief Lo rossinyol The Nightingale Lo fill del rei The King s Son L hereu Riera Heir Riera El mestre The Teacher La filadora The Spinner Woman La preso de Lleida Lleida Prison La Nit de Nadal Christmas Eve La pastoreta The Little Shepherd Girl El noi de la Mare The Mother s Child Our Lady s Child Leonesa From Leon Estilos populares Argentinos nos 1 amp 2 Guitar solos edit Isaac Albeniz Cadiz Oriental Sevilla Torre Bermeja y Cordoba 1929 Enrique Granados Danzas Espanolas Nos 5 7 amp 10 Dedicatoria La Maja de Goya Joaquin Quinito Valverde Clavelitos Guitar duets edit Isaac Albeniz Rumores de la Caleta Castilla Bajo la Palmera Evocacion Louis Claude Daquin Le Cou Cou Enrique Granados Danzas Espanolas Nos 6 amp 11 Eduardo Lopez Chavarri Leyenda del Castillo Moro Felix Mendelssohn Songs Without Words Nos 20 amp 25 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Synphony No 39 Minuet Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Humoresque Op 10 No 2Pieces composed for Miguel Llobet edit Manuel de Falla Homenaje pour le tombeau de Claude Debussy Eduardo Lopez Chavarri Sonata I Discography editMiguel Llobet Historical Recordings 1925 1929 Chanterelle Verlag CHR001 Track Listing Julian Aguirre Huella Isaac Albeniz Evocacion Johann Sebastian Bach Sarabande 2 takes Napoleon Coste Etude op 38 no 23 2 takes Miguel Llobet El Testament d Amelia La Filla del Marxant Plany El Mestre Felix Mendelssohn May Breezes Manuel M Ponce 2 Canciones Mejicanas Pedro M Quijano Estilo Popular Criollo Fernando Sor Andantino op 2 no 3 Estudio op 35 no 2 Minueto op 11 no 12 Rogelio del Villar Cancion Popular Leonesa Cancion del Ladron Duetts with Maria Luisa Anido Sources editAppleby Wilfrid M Guitar Music The Artistry of Miguel Llobet 1878 1938 Guitar News 67 September October 1962 p 14 15 Bell Laboratories and the Development of Electrical Recording http www stokowski org Development of Electrical Recording htm Bone Philip James The Guitar and Mandolin Biographies of Celebrated Players and Composers London Schott amp Co 1914 2nd edition 1954 reprint 1972 Delcamp Jean Francois ed Miguel Lllobet Soles 1878 1938 Biography and Work for Guitar www delcamp net 2009 Francisco Tarrega Segun in Guitarra Havana 2 no 3 December 1941 p 16 17 Garcia Hector Letter from Miami to Robert Phillips Lakeland 9 February 2002 La Musica per Chitarra nel Secolo XX IX I Chitarristi Compositori in Il Fronimo no 46 January 1984 p 28 33 La Rinascita della Chitarra in Il Fronimo no 1 October 1972 p 10 12 Hermann Hauser Official Website Miguel Llobet 1878 1938 http www hauserguitars de english docs geschichte geschichte llobet htm 2004 Herrera F Du nouveau du cote de jeux interdits Quelques documents qui parlent d eux memes in Guitarre no 38 1991 p 20 Jones Allen Clive The Judgement of Paris Part 5 Pujol s Article in Lavignac s Encyclopedia in Classical Guitar 17 no 4 December 1998 p 24 26 28 Licensing the Western Electric Electrical Recording System to Victor and Columbia http www stokowski org Licensing Westrex System to Victor Columbia htm Llobet Miguel Francisco Tarrega in Revista Musical Catalana 7 no 73 1910 p 9 10 Llobet Miguel Guitar Works vol 1 11 Original Compositions edited by Ronald Purcell Heidelberg Chanterelle Verlag 1989 Llobet Miguel Guitar Works vol 2 16 Folksong Settings edited by Ronald Purcell Heidelberg Chanterelle Verlag 1989 Llobet Miguel Guitar Works vol 3 10 Famous Transcriptions edited by Ronald Purcell Heidelberg Chanterelle Verlag 1989 Llobet Miguel Guitar Works vol 4 12 Famous Guitar Duos edited by Ronald Purcell Heidelberg Chanterelle Verlag 1989 Mangado Artigas Josep Maria La Guitarra en Cataluna 1769 1939 Edicion del Autor 2004 in Spanish Marsh William Sewall Some Spanish and Spanish American Guitarists in Crescendo 24 no 6 February 1932 p 3 4 Miguel Soles Llobet in Guitarra 1 no 2 May June 1963 p 13 15 Ophee Matanya The Promotion of Francisco Tarrega a Case History in Soundboard 8 no 3 August 1981 p 152 158 The Promotion of Francisco Tarrega a Case History in Soundboard 8 no 4 November 1981 p 256 261 Pahissa Jaime Vida y obra de Manuel de Falla Buenos Aires Ricordi Americana 1947 Phillips Robert Barcelona Cradle of the Modern Classical Guitar The Llobet Archive Rediscovered in Soundboard 28 no 4 Spring 2002 p 39 41 Phillips Robert Barcelona Redux in Soundboard 34 no 1 2008 p 23 24 Phillips Robert The Influence of Miguel Llobet on the Pedagogy Repertoire and Stature of the Guitar in the Twentieth Century doctoral dissertation 2002 OCLC 51796355 Picciano Stefano Miguel Llobet La biografia Bologna Ut Orpheus 2015 in Italian ISBN 978 88 8109 493 6 Prat Domingo Diccionario biografico bibliografico historico critico de guitarras instrumentos afines guitarristas profesores compositores concertistas lahudistas amateurs guitarreros luthiers Danzas y cantos terminologia Buenos Aires Romero y Fernandez 1934 Pujol Emilio Tarrega Ensayo Biografico Valencia Artes Graf Soler 1978 Purcell Ronald liner notes for Miguel Llobet the Guitar Recordings 1925 1929 Chanterelle Historical Recordings CHR 001 1993 Riera Juan Miguel Llobet Composer and Guitarist 1878 1938 translated by Mrs A Korwin Rodziszewski in Guitar News 27 October November 1955 p 7 8 Rey de la Torre Jose Miguel Llobet El Mestre in Guitar Review no 60 Winter 1985 p 22 32 Roberts John Miguel Llobet in Guitar 1 no 5 December 1972 Some Spanish and Spanish American Guitarists in Crescendo 24 September 1932 p 3 4 Spalding Walter Falla s Homenaje pour le Tombeau de Claude Debussy A Master Lesson with Rey de la Torre Taped in the Form of a Conversation with Walter Spalding September 76 in Chelys 1 no 5 1977 p 37 41 Spalding Walter Reminiscences of Llobet A Conversational Fragment with Rey de la Torre in Chelys 1 no 5 1977 p 44 Summerfield Maurice J The Classical Guitar Its Evolution and Players Since 1800 Newcastle upon Tyne Ashley Mark 1996 Tocatimbal vol 4 Barcelona Eufonic 1986 Tonazzi Bruno Miguel Llobet Chitarrista dell Impressionismo Ancona Edizioni Berben 1966 in Italian OCLC 12560728 Trasi Rino La chitarra di Llobet in Seicorde no 44 March April 1994 p 20 27 Turnbull Harvey The Guitar from the Renaissance to the Present Day London Charles Scribner s Sons 1991 Vechten Carl van A Critic s View of Llobet in Chelys 1 no 5 1977 p 42 reprinted from Chase Gilbert The Music of Spain New York Alfred A Knopf 1918 p 39 41 Weller Anthony Jose Rey de la Torre in Guitar Review Autumn 1994 p 1 7 External links editFree scores by Miguel Llobet at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miguel Llobet amp oldid 1167086499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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