Recognized as among the most important Mexican composers of our time, Arturo Márquez was born in 1950, in the town of Álamos located in the Northwest Mexican state of Sonora. Both his father and paternal grandfather were mariachi musicians who introduced Márquez to a variety of musical styles during his childhood. Educated at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City, he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study at the California Institute of the Arts, where he was awarded a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1990. His Danzón No. 2 for orchestra skyrocketed him to international fame when it was featured on a 2007 tour by the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, led by conductor Gustavo Dudamel. The popularity of Danzón No. 2 has led it to be dubbed Mexico’s “second national anthem” and has sparked international interest in Márquez’s wider catalog of compositions.
Commissioned by violinist Anne Akiko Meyers, Fandango for violin and orchestra was premiered at the Hollywood Bowl on August 24, 2021 by Akiko Meyers and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, led by Gustavo Dudamel. The composer has provided the following program notes on the piece:
“The fandango is known worldwide as a popular Spanish dance and specifically, as one of the fundamental parts (palos) of flamenco. Since its appearance around the 18th century, various composers such as S. de Murcia, D. Scarlatti, L. Boccherini, Padre Soler, W. A. Mozart, among others, have included fandango in concert music. What little is known in the world is that immediately upon its appearance in Spain, the fandango moves to the Americas, where it acquires a personality according to the land that adopts and cultivates it. Today, we can still find it in countries such as Ecuador, Colombia, and Mexico, in the latter and specifically in the state of Veracruz and in the Huasteca area, part of seven states in eastern Mexico, the fandango acquires a tinge different from the Spanish genre; for centuries, it has been a special festival for musicians, singers, poets and dancers. Everyone gathers around a wooden platform to stamp their feet, sing, and improvise tenth-line stanza of the occasion. It should be noted that fandango and huapango have similar meanings in our country.
“In 2018 I received an email from violinist Anne Akiko Meyers, a wonderful musician, where she proposed to me the possibility of writing a work for violin and orchestra that had to do with Mexican music. The proposal interested and fascinated me from that very moment, not only because of Maestra Meyers’ emotional aesthetic proposal, but also because of my admiration for her musicality, virtuosity, and, above all, for her courage in proposing a concerto so out of the ordinary. I had already tried, unsuccessfully, to compose a violin concerto some 20 years earlier with ideas that were based on the Mexican fandango. I had known this music since I was a child, listening to it in the cinema, on the radio, and listening to my father, a mariachi violinist (Arturo Márquez Sr.), interpret huastecos and mariachi music. Also, since the ‘90s I have been present admiring the fandango in various parts of Mexico. I would like to mention that the violin was my first instrument when I was 14 years old (1965). Curiously, I studied it in La Puente, California, in Los Angeles County, where fortunately this work will be premiered with the wonderful Los Angeles Philharmonic under the direction of my admired Gustavo Dudamel. Beautiful coincidence as I have no doubt that fandango was danced in California in the 18th and 19th centuries.
“Fandango for violin and orchestra is formally a concerto in three movements:
“The first movement, Folia Tropical, has the form of the sonata or traditional classical concerto: introduction, exposition with its two themes, bridge, development, and recapitulation. The introduction and the two themes share the same motif in a totally different way. Emotionally, the introduction is a call to the remote history of the fandango; the first theme and the bridge, this one totally rhythmic, are based on the Caribbean clave and the second is eminently expressive, almost like a romantic bolero. Folias are ancient dances that come from Portugal and Spain. However, also the root and meaning of this word takes us to the French word folie: madness.
“The second movement, Plegaria, pays tribute to the huapango mariachi together with the Spanish fandango, both in its rhythmic and emotional parts. It should be noted that one of the palos del flamenco andaluz is precisely a malagueña, and Mexico also has a huapango honoring Malaga. I do not use traditional themes, but there is a healthy attempt to unite both worlds; that is why this movement is the fruit of an imaginary marriage between the Huapango-Mariachi and Pablo Sarasate, Manuel de Falla, and Issac Albéniz, three of my beloved and admired Spanish composers. It is also a freely treated chaconne. Perhaps few people know that the chaconne, as well as the zarabanda, were two dances forbidden by the Spanish Inquisition in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, long before they became part of European Baroque music. Moreover, the first writings on these dances place them in colonial Mexico of these centuries.
“The third movement, Fandanguito, is a tribute to the famous fandanguito huasteco. The music of this region is composed of violin, jarana huasteca (small rhythm guitar) and huapanguera (low guitar with five orders of strings) and of course accompanies the singing of their sones and the improvisation sung or recited. The Huasteco violin is one of the instruments with the most virtuosity in all of America. It has certain features similar to Baroque music but with great rhythmic vitality and a rich original variety in bow strokes. Every Huasteco violinist must have a personal version of this son, if he wants to have and maintain prestige. This third movement is a totally free elaboration of the Huasteco fandanguito, but it maintains many of its rhythmic characteristics. It demands a great virtuosity from the soloist, and it is the music that I have kept in my heart for decades.
“I think that for every composer it is a real challenge to compose new works from old forms, especially when this repertoire is part of the fundamental structure of classical music. On the other hand, composing in this 2020 pandemic was not easy due to the huge human suffering. Undoubtedly my experience with this work during this period has been intense and highly emotional, but I have to mention that I have preserved my seven capital principles: tonality, modality, melody, rhythm, imaginary folk tradition, harmony, and orchestral color.”