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O rd e r N u m b e r 9434737
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Temple University, 1994
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The Role of Andres Segovia in
Peter E. Segal
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Read and Approved by:
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Date: y - /r- m
Dean of Graduate School
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THE ROLE OF ANDRES SEGOVIA IN
A Monograph
Submitted to
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the Temple University Graduate Board
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in Partial Fulfillment
by
Peter E. Segal
May, 1994
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©
by
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Peter E. Segal
1994
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ABSTRACT
by Peter E. Segal
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Early in his career, Andres Segovia (1893-1987), a Spaniard who would
nized a need to enrich the repertoire of his instrum ent far beyond its state
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guitar. Partly as a result of his initiatives, the twentieth century marks the
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first time in its history that works were being routinely composed for the
well as the almost constant presence of his music on Segovia’s recitals and
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recordings, particular attention is devoted to the symbiotic relationship
immense appetite for new repertoire, this process was repeated countless
change.
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unchallenged. His role in the development of the literature for the instru
of aligning his and the guitar’s fortunes with Stravinsky, Milhaud, Ginaste-
energy and venerable concert career, his legacy on behalf of the classical
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Oscar Ghiglia as my major professor. Maestro Ghiglia is not only one of the
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graph, he provided a unique perspective on the subject of this study.
Segovia’s intimate companion from the mid 1940s to the mid 1950s, spoke
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candidly of their life together during that period. Rose Augustine, publisher
Segovia as the sister he never had. She, too, reflected on Segovia’s career
during the 1940s and 1950s when he lived in New York, keeping a room in
her home. American luthier Richard Schneider, who was in frequent contact
me.
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I also wish to acknowledge the invaluable assistance given by Matanya
stages, offering suggestions along the way. I am indebted to Mr. Ophee and
Editions Orphee for their permission to quote liberally from The Segovia-
Ponce Letters.
Helen Kwalwasser, Paul Epstein, and Richard Brodhead, who have been
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th at Professor Mildred Parker agreed to serve as chair for my doctoral
committee. She has been generous with both her wisdom and her time. One
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could not have hoped for a more ideal mentor for this project.
has made a rich counterpoint to the solitary hours spent writing this mono
graph.
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To my parents,
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ABSTRACT..................................................................................................... iv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS................................................................................. vi
INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................xi
CHAPTER
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Guitar H istories............................................................................... 1
The Segovia-Ponce Letters ............................................................. 3
Concert Reviews, Articles, Dedicated Journals,
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and Other Documents ................................................................. 4
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6. BEYOND PONCE 71
APPENDIXES................................................................................................. 94
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INTRODUCTION
The year 1993 marks the centenary of Andres Segovia’s birth. His name
has been identified with the guitar throughout most of our century. It is a
name that has been as close to the guitar as Pablo Casals’ is to the cello,
These performers are recognized not just for having excelled as interpreters,
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tion methods for building their instruments. Surely Segovia’s achievement
opment of the guitar’s repertoire. And although his concert career lasted
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During his lifetime, Segovia was most admired for his performances,
which introduced the guitar to more audiences than ever before. This was
out Europe and the Americas. In Germany and Austria, as well as the
United States, there were guitar societies and journals, which attested to
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the popularity of the classical instrument. But with the introduction of an
and appreciation of the classical guitar. To this end he made his influence
felt along several fronts, though none was as important to the future of the
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his death, Segovia’s reputation will inevitably begin to be re-evaluated.
Since he devoted so much energy toward raising the level of guitar litera
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ture, it seems appropriate that a serious study be undertaken to examine
ful works after I’m gone. The guitar will not sink among the forgot
ten novelties [of our age] and my work will not be lost.1
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CHAPTER 1
Guitar H istories
the guitar did not begin appearing until the 1960s and 70s.3 Like many
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completed his study, The Birth o f the Classic Guitar and its Cultivation in
published The Guitar from the Renaissance to the Present Day (New York,
1974), which soon established itself as a standard text on the history of the
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classical guitar. And while it could have profited from a thorough revision,
2 Some of the better known are: Philip J. Bone, The Guitar and Mando
lin: Biographies o f Celebrated Players and Composers (London, 1914); Josef
Zuth, Handbuch der Laute und Gitarre (Vienna, 1926); Emilio Pujol, La
Guitare in Encyclopedie de la Musique et Dictionnaire du Conservatoire
(Paris, 1926); Domingo Prat, Diccionario biogrdfico, bibliogrdfico, histdrico,
critico de guitarras, guitarristas, guitarreros (Buenos Aires, 1934).
3 e.g., Frederic V. Grunfeld, The Art and Times o f the Guitar (London,
1969) and Alexander Bellow, The Illustrated History of the Guitar (New
York, 1970).
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it instead fell out of print for approximately fifteen years until 1993, leaving
past.4
early years of this century merit recognition. David Franklin Marriott, J r.’s
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composers with no close affiliation with guitarists of the so-called Spanish
1960) develops a portrait of th at guitarist and the guitar at the turn of the
the music and career of Paraguayan guitarist Agustin Barrios, Six Silver
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3
The Segovia-Ponce Letters
the attention he may gam er in the future. In one sense, however, time is
running out because many of those who knew him well during the earlier
decades of his career Eire themselves elderly. This study benefits from
cerning this period came to light. It is in the form of 129 letters written by
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Segovia to Manuel M. Ponce covering the years 1923 to 1948. The Segovia-
Ponce Letters (ed. Miguel Alcazar and trans. Peter E. Segal) have been pub
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lished in a bi-lingual edition (Spanish/English) by Editions Orphee (Colum
bus, 1989). They begin somewh ,.t formally but soon become more relaxed,
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published about him before — or since. The final letter, written on May 18,
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they shared when the composer died on April 24. Prior to this edition, these
letters had never been published in full, though small portions were ex
cerpted in Corazon Otero’s Manuel M. Ponce and the Guitar (English ed.,
Great Britain, 1983). Although no letters from Ponce to Segovia have been
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Segovia was a prolific letter writer not only to Ponce, but to other
tains twenty letters (or portions thereof) from the guitarist to th at compos
er. Like those to Ponce, Segovia’s letters convey a sense of timeless friend
ship while offering suggestions for themes, forms, and motifs on which to
ments
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Contemporaneous with the years which serve as the locus of this study
While appealing to the amateur musician, they help document who the
notable guitarists of the period were as well as what and where they
performed. The present study has found Die Gitarre (Germany, 1919-1933)
and early editions of The Guitar Review (New York, Oct. 1946-present) and
Of great interest, too, are the concert reviews, discography, and publishing
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anecdotal Andr6s Segovia: an autobiography of the years 1893-1920 (New
York, 1976).5
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CHAPTER 2
The guitar in the early twentieth century held great appeal throughout
Europe and the Americas. There were active guitar societies in most
Spain was not the only country to produce performers, it did boast a collec
tion of virtuosos such as Tarrega, Llobet, Pujol, Areas, and Manjon who
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gained international recognition for their recitals. This only reinforced
composers.
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repertoire. The year of Segovia’s baptism into concert life (1909) poignantly
marks the death of Francisco Tarrega (b. 1852). This important guitar
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Llobet (1878-1937) and Emilio Pujol (1886-1980).6 Tarrega’s extensive list of
generally not lasting longer than three to four minutes. Examples of his
an example of one of his programs). Any concern Tarrega may have had for
any apparent curiosity for the music of his contemporaries in the guitar
world.
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Miguel Llobet, a performer of considerable reputation who toured
The past held little interest for most of the Spanish guitarists during
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