Art and About
An Italian in Spain: Mercury Baroque examines Boccherini's music in "A Night inMadrid" (with video)
Luigi is a name one associates more commonly with Italy than the splendors of Madrid, especially when talking about the creatives that lived in the sensitive period when the dramatic baroque segued into the refinement of classicism.
But travel was common to and from the European empires, especially as it related to cultural enlightenment. Born in Lucca, Rodolfo Luigi Boccherini studied in Rome and worked in Vienna and Paris before he settled in Madrid in 1768 and remained there until his death. He was one of the few composers who achieved notoriety during his lifetime, as he was often called "the wife of" his rival Franz Joseph Haydn in a derogatory manner, but was largely ignored after his death in 1805. Only until recently, when films like The Ladykillers andMaster and Commanderpopularized his music, have his compositions enjoyed a revival.
In "A Night in Madrid," Mercury Baroque celebrates the composer's prolific output and focuses on music that hints at the lifestyle in the capital city, including his once lost Cello Concerto No. 7 in B Flat Major.
Houston-native Erika Johnson, often heard with the Houston Grand Opera, Houston Ballet and the River Oaks Chamber Orchestra, appears center stage to give her fresh rendition of the piece, working with a cello fitted with gut strings (in lieu of modern steel) and a bow that's in between the baroque and modern versions. The set up gives her the freedom to achieve the galante style that made Boccherini's compositions delightfully descriptive.
This inspired an "Art and About" adventure.
Mercury Baroque's "A Night in Madrid" is 8 p.m. Saturday at the Wortham Theater Center. Tickets start at $20.