REVIEWS
American Music Teacher Magazine Review, Feb-March, 2004,
Martha Rearick, Tampa, Florida.
Sonata No. 1 pour Flute et Piano by Elisenda Fˆ°bregas
Publisher: Alphonse Leduc & Cie. (Editions Musicales, 175 rue Saint-Honore, 75040 Paris Cedex 01), 2001. 43pp. $42.95.
"A stunning new work for flute and piano, this sonata is an exciting addition to the contemporary repertoire. Although published in France and first
performed in China, the work was composed in the United States. Tallon Perkes, principal flutist of the San Antonio (Texas) Symphony,
commissioned the sonata and performed it at the 1996 convention of the National Flute Association. The composer, Spanish-born Elisenda Fabregas,
is a member of the piano faculty at the University of Texas in San Antonio and is MTNA's Distinguished Composer of the Year, 2000.
This is a major work of four movements and fifteen minutes' duration, requiring careful study and precise coordination between flute and piano. The
first movement, Allegro, features rapid, energetic tonguing on the flute, punctuated by slightly acidic harmonies from the piano. A haunting, rather
mournful melody, characterized by descending minor second intervals, glides through the second movement (Largo). The playful Scherzo, the third
movement, is like a rhythmic game of tag dancing between piano and flute. And the finale, Allegro molto con brio, is an athletic "tour de force" for
both flutist and pianist. Rapid triplets permeate the movement, ending the work with a flourish.
Although difficult, the music is written idiomatically for both instruments--the flute part is "flutistic" and the piano part "pianistic." Dissonant
harmonies prevail, but no extended techniques are required. The composer has a marvelous sense of progression and development, providing each of
the four movements with a pleasing architectural structure and shape."
COPYRIGHT 2004 Music Teachers National Association, Inc. in association with The Gale Group and LookSmart.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group
Meininger-Trio in the Berufsgenossenschaftliche Accademy
"The powerful voices of the night" Review of Voces de mi tierra (2003)
"The cellist didn't stroke, but caress her cello. With her first chords Francoise Groben created a dance-like settling into the composition VOCES DE MI TIERRA, Christiane Meininger's flute flow into and Rainer Gepp on the piano very tenderly underlined the image of cheerfulness, which later on should be mingled with the urgent and powerful voices of the night and end in a brilliant Gigue, in which the flute corresponded with the cello into Rainer Gepp's 'breakneck' speed. Exclusively for the Meininger-Trio Spanish composer Elisenda Fˆ°bregas had written her piece in four movements." Rhein-Sieg-Rundschau, March 3, 2004
Concert proves composer's skill By
Diane Windeler
Special to the Express-News
San Antonio Express-News: Lifestyle & Features
February 11, 2001
"It must have been karma. That explains why, after
everything was in place for Sunday's concert of music by Elisenda Fábregas
at Our Lady of the Lake University, word came that she had achieved national
recognition.
Last week, the Spanish-born pianist/composer was notified
that she will receive the Music Teachers National Association's 2000 Shepherd
Distinguished Composer Award. Her winning composition, "Portraits I"
for solo piano, will be performed next month at the organization's national
convention in Washington, D.C. "Proof of her skill and versatility
was evident in Sunday's concert, a potpourri of old and new Fábregas
works that explore a wide vocabulary of expression and style. At its center
was the premiere of''Evocation and Dance' for shakuhachi (Japanese flute)
and guitar...Much of the shakuhachi material in this charming score employs
traditional playing techniques, but the tonality and essences are Western.
In the first movement, languid flute melodies tinged with unique ornamentation
float above delicate, contrapuntal writing passagework. The delightful second
movement involves shifting rhythms and flavors, or phrases that are pingponged
or mirrored between the musicians"...."Her well-crafted, impassioned
scoring (and piano accompaniment) [Five Songs of Garcia Lorca for Soprano
and Piano] perfectly reflects the wrenching text by Federico Garcia Lorca."
..."The 'piece de resistance' was a polished, eloquent repeat performance
of a favorite Fábregas score: "Portraits II (2000) by SOLI Chamber
Ensemble."
San Antonio Express-News (Our Lady of the Lake University,
San Antonio, TX, February 11, 2001).
"
Its tonal harmony, traditional forms and romantic
sensibility mark 'Portraits II' as conservative, but the composer's individuality
shows through in yearning dissonances, quirky juxtapositions of thematic
material and a pervasive sensuality not unlike that of her native Barcelona."
San Antonio Express-News (SOLI Chamber Ensemble, premiere performance at
Ruth Taylor Hall, Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, January 18, 2000)."Its
tonal harmony, traditional forms and romantic sensibility mark 'Portraits
II' as conservative, but the composer's individuality shows through
in yearning dissonances, quirky juxtapositions of thematic material and
a pervasive sensuality not unlike that of her native Barcelona."
San Antonio Express-News (SOLI Chamber Ensemble, premiere performance at
Ruth Taylor Hall, Trinity University, San Antonio, TX, January 18, 2000).
"...[Mirage] makes equal demands on
a pianist's pyrotechnics, lyricism and sense of form. The style is rooted
in the highly decorated tonal atmospherics of Scriabin, Ravel and, especially,
Liszt..."
Mike Greenberg, San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio
International Piano Competition, premiere performance at Ruth Taylor Hall,
Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, October 25, 1997).
"Fabregas's idiom here [Five Songs of Garcia Lorca for Soprano
and Piano ] is a sinuous and erotic free tonality, influenced a bit
by Ravel and a bit by Schoenberg, but altogether fetching."
Mike Greenberg,San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio Choral Society concert,
Texas, October 20, 1996).
"[Fábregas' flute sonata] was notable in its sturdy and arresting
generative themes."
Mike Greenberg, San Antonio Express-News
(UTSA New Music Festival, San Antonio, Texas, March 10, 1996).
"The best piece here [in the program] was the last, Elisenda Fábregas'
very moving, elegiac Sonata No. 1 for violin and piano (1994)...the second
movement is especially moving."
M.H. The Music Connoisseur
(Kosciuszko Foundation, New York, March 26, 1995)
" Her brand-newViolin and Piano Sonata has motoric, muscular,
exciting fast movements flanking an intensely lyrical, neo-romantic Elegy.
...Fábregas likes to make a whole movement grow from a single motivic
seed."
Mike Greenberg, San Antonio Express-News (McNay
Art Museum' s Brown Gallery, San Antonio, Texas, May 29, 1994)
"(Ms. Fábregas) writes with an imaginatively colored tonal idiom."
James R. Oestreich, The New York Times (Greenwich House Music School,
New York City, October 8, 1992) (reference to Five Poems of García
Lorca ).
"[Variaciones para Orquesta has a] rhythmic and dramatic profile..."
"...Fábregas possesses a distinct musical voice".
Robert
Haskins, The Columbia Flyer (Columbia Orchestra, Howard Community
College in Maryland, June 15, 1991) (reference to Variaciones para Orquesta)
"This (Variaciones para Orquesta ) is music of significance
- melodious, tuneful and well-orchestrated, with an emotionally compelling
aura about it."
Craig Smith, The New Mexican (Lensic Theater,
Santa Fe, New Mexico, May 18, 1990).
"... complex and haunting."
Pamela Sommers, The Washington
Post (Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington D.C., March
of 1986) (reference to Reflexiones ).
Piano Performance Reviews
"Ms. Fábregas has a fluid technique and a poet's command of
musical shading. She opened her program with brightly bouncing performances
of two Soler sonatas ... Three selections from Albeniz's Iberia were exemplary:
sultry but never indolent. And Miss Fábregas brought an insistent
vitality to four sharp, sinuous compositions by Manuel de Falla."
Tim Page, The New York Times (Carnegie Recital Hall, New York City, May 31,
1983).
"(Ms. Fábregas) played with winning vividness."
Allan Kozim, The New York Times (Merkin Hall, New York City, September 30,
1988).
"...throughout the Spanish portions of her program,
which also included two sonatas by Padre Antonio Soler and works by Enrique
Granados, Fábregas displayed an instinctual feeling for the distinct
rhythmic atmosphere of Spanish music, along with firm punctuation and ample
agility".
Mike Greenberg, San Antonio Express News (UTSA Recital Hall, San Antonio,
October 3, 1994).
"In Federico Mompou's lovely, delicate, impressionistic
"Scenes of Infants," Fábregas had a wonderful way of playing
freely with the line and tempo while maintaining the vitality".
Mike Greenberg, San Antonio Express News (UTSA Recital Hall, San Antonio, June 27, 1994).
"... it was in the last and most difficult of Beethoven's
sonatas, the Op. 111, that Ms. Fábregas showed her great musicianship...
In this sonata, Ms. Fábregas proved that she is a great performer."
Florencio García Cisneros, Noticias de Arte (New York City, May 1984).