Spanish guitarist Pablo Sáinz Villegas, winner of the gold medal at the inaugural Christopher Parkening International Guitar Competition, gave an exhilarating San Francisco debut recital Saturday at the Veterans Building's Green Room. He stirred an enthusiastic audience with passionate Romantic interpretations, bravura technique, and an unusually wide dynamic range at the first concert of the Omni Foundation's Dynamite Guitars series. His program consisted of Bach; Spanish classics by Albéniz, Turina, and Rodrigo; and music from outside the European tradition, by Heitor Villa-Lobos and Carlo Domeniconi.
Spanish composer Joaquin Turina studied in Paris and as a young man wrote music in the style of the French impressionist composers. After Isaac Albéniz recommended that he devote his attention to Spanish folk music and flamenco, Turina created a body of work that captures the color and vitality of Andalusia. Fantasia sevillana, written in 1923 for Andrés Segovia, is a musical portrait of celebrations performed each year in Seville during the Holy Week before Easter. Villegas used rhythmically crisp rasgueado (strummed chords), brilliant arpeggios, and expressive echoes of flamenco to create a passionate reflection of a Spanish holiday.
Villegas next gave an undeniably compelling performance of a turgid arrangement of Johann Sebastian Bach's Chaconne, with unnecessarily filled-in harmonies and added bass notes. I had doubts from the first measures, but Villegas used beautifully graduated dynamics and color as well as a finely honed rhythmic freedom to clarify the structure of the music and explore the entire range of human experience, from anguished sorrow to exuberant joy.
Isaac Albéniz' Asturias, an evocation of a legendary eighth-century battle, and one of the most popular pieces in the guitar repertoire, was performed with a strikingly dramatic frame and an introspective middle section. The dynamics on Albéniz' score, frequently ignored by guitarists, were meticulously observed and created a mesmerizing effect. The improvisatory middle section, evocative of Spain's Moorish conquerors, was played with expressive rubato and demanded rapt attention.
The composer Heitor Villa-Lobos was also a guitarist who wrote with both knowledge and love of the instrument. His Chôros no. 1, with its popular rhythms and exuberant zest, reflects a young life spent playing the guitar in street bands at weddings and carnivals, in cafes and theaters. Villegas played the Brazilian street rhythms with verve and snap, the lovely middle section with tenderness, and the periodic fermatas with a droll wit.