Abstract
Studies of virtuosity in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have tended to focus on the
piano and the violin. These instruments were obviously virtuosic and lent themselves to
visual and aural displays of power, most notably in the case of Liszt and Paganini. These
virtuosi crafted spectacles that were often described with metaphors of power and violence.
These spectacles came to characterise the virtuosity of the early nineteenth century.
However, the guitar has been largely neglected in scholarship dealing with virtuosity from
the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This is due, in large part, to the status of
the guitar within that period. Though popular as an accompanying instrument and in the
home, the guitar struggled to find a secure position as a legitimate solo instrument in the
public arena. While guitarists such as Dionisio Aguado and Mauro Giuliani were described as
‘virtuosi’, their instrument, unlike the piano and the violin, did not give itself to a spectacle
that conveyed notions of power and violence. Rather, the guitar is an intimate instrument,
quieter than the piano or the violin, and utilising small movements in the hands. These
aspects of the instrument, so often perceived as ‘limitations’ led many writers to dismiss it
as an inappropriate instrument for performance in the public spheres occupied by the piano
and the violin.
Guitarist-composers sought to play to the guitar’s strengths in ways that contrasted with the
conventional metaphors of power and violence. Some of these attempts rhetorically aligned
the guitar with genres and instruments that carried greater cultural capital. Composers used
orchestral metaphors and emphasised the guitar’s ability to imitate other instruments.
Other guitarist-composers sought to create a greater spectacle both in and beyond the
music itself by emphasising physical movements within the music and writing extra-musical
gestures into the music. The rhetoric of transformation was used either by or about the
guitarist-composers Fernando Sor, Dionisio Aguado, Johann Kaspar Mertz, and Giulio
Regondi, all of whom this exegesis focuses on, demonstrating a desire to legitimise the
guitar at a time when it struggled not only to find traction as a ‘serious’ classical instrument,
but also a place amongst more obviously virtuosic instruments.
Date
2014
Rights
The Author
Publisher
Massey University
Description
MP4 file of performance recital available with hard copy in the library