Passa Passa Gaviao

by Heitor Villa-Lobos

Composed 1926
Published 1928

Instrumentation

Piano

Collections

Musical Terms (2)

  • Bachianas Brasileiras pt
    A series of nine works by Heitor Villa-Lobos (1930-1945) that attempt to fuse the contrapuntal and structural language of J.S. Bach with the folk, popular, and Amerindian musical traditions of Brazil. Each work in the series carries a double title: one Bachian term (Prelude, Fugue, Aria, Tocata, Coral) and one Brazilian term (Embolada, Desafio, Modinha, Ponteio, Cantiga). No. 4 is the only work in the series originally conceived for solo piano. No. 5, for soprano and eight cellos, is the most famous. Villa-Lobos described the series as his attempt to see Bach as a 'universal source' rather than a specifically European heritage.
    In the Bachianas, the Bachian elements (counterpoint, fugue, chorale texture) must be as carefully voiced as in Bach himself: they are not mere suggestion. The Brazilian elements — the flexible, improvised-feeling melody of the arias, the dance rhythms of the finales — should feel rooted and natural, not exotic. The double titles invite the performer to hold both traditions simultaneously.
  • Villa-Lobos and Brazilian nationalism pt
    Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959) is the central figure of Brazilian musical nationalism: a vast output of over 2,000 works in which European formal traditions are fused with the folk, popular, Afro-Brazilian, and Amerindian musical heritage of Brazil. Villa-Lobos grew up in Rio de Janeiro absorbing street music — choro, modinha, lundum — alongside classical training, and his mature style reflects this dual formation. His international career, centred on Paris from 1923, brought his music to European attention; his later career in Brazil was dominated by educational projects and the promotion of Brazilian musical identity at a national level.
    Villa-Lobos's piano music demands familiarity with Brazilian folk and popular idioms — the rhythmic patterns of choro and samba, the modal melodic world of northeastern folk music, the percussive treatment of the piano as a kind of 'batucada' instrument in the more violent passages. Without this context, the music can seem exotic or merely colourful; with it, it reveals itself as a coherent musical world of great depth.

Practice Passa Passa Gaviao

Add this work to your Key Passage library. Track your progress, set practice goals, and master every passage.

Add to Library