Anton Torello

Anton Torello

Anton Torello
Background information
Born (1884-06-30)June 30, 1884
Sant Sadurní d'Anoia, Spain
Died June 1960 (aged 7576)
Los Angeles, California
Genres Classical music
Occupation(s) Double-bassist
Instruments Double bass
Years active 1909–1960

Anton Torello (Spanish: Antoni Torelló i Ros, 30 June 1884, Sant Sadurní d'Anoia – 1960, Los Angeles) was a Catalan double bass player. He was Principal Bass of the Philadelphia Orchestra from 1914 until 1948, and was the first bass professor at Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music. He taught what became the Philadelphia school of double bass playing, strongly influencing American bass playing.

Studies and early career

Torello began studying double bass with his father and his older brother Peter. Warren Benfield recalls this anecdote about Torello's early schooling in talking about experimental fingerings:

The late Anton Torello... once said that when he was a student in Barcelona (his whole family were bass players) he wasn't given anything to eat until he knew his lesson. Sometimes he got very hungry. What he would do to learn etudes was to develop his fingerings. He would work out as many ways as possible to play a passage and learn them all. Then he would put his music away for a day or two, and when he tried all the fingerings again, one was usually clearly better than the others.[1]

Torello’s professional orchestral career began in 1897. His first solo concert followed the next year. By 22 he was already professor at Conservatori Superior de Música del Liceu and principal in the orchestra in Liceu.

Move to America, Philadelphia

In 1909, Torello moved to the United States of America. He found work first in New York and later as Principal Bass in an opera orchestra in Boston before being hired by Leopold Stokowski as Principal Bass of the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1914.

Torello had two sons, Carl and William, both double bassists who played in the Philadelphia Orchestra.[2]

Torello remained as Principal Bass in Philadelphia until 1948. After retirement he moved to Los Angeles where he continued to play with the resident orchestra of Paramount Pictures.

Curtis, notable students

Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music was established in 1924. Torello joined the faculty as its first double bass professor in 1926. Part of his legacy was in introducing the over-handed style of bowing (French bow) to America. A number of Torello's students at Curtis went on to become important figures in double bass in America.[3]

Notable students include:

Performances

Torello performed solo recials, chamber works and also appeared as a soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra (27–28 February 1920, performing Lorenziti's concerto for viola d'amore and double bass with Thaddeus Rich).

In October 1920, Torello shared a recital with Metropolitan Opera bass José Mardones that received mention in The New York Times:

Mr. Torello is an accomplished virtuoso on his instrument. He uses a small-sized double bass with three strings, whose tone on the highest one approximates that of the ‘cello. ... Mr. (Torello) played a Fantasy of his own, and pieces by Ghere, Kussewitzky, Valls, Franchi and Bottesini (arranged by himself)[4]

In addition to this repertoire, Torello also performed with Mardones in Mozart's aria "Per questa bella mano".

Torello's use of his three stringed solo instrument was at a time when performance on three stringed instruments had mostly disappeared,[5] most of these instruments having been converted into four string instruments.

References

  1. Benfield, Warren, and James Seay Dean. The Art of Double Bass Playing. Alfred Publishing, 1995. p. 24
  2. Kupferberg, Herbert. Those Fabulous Philadelphians: the life and times of a great orchestra. London: W. H. Allen, 1970.
  3. Brun, Paul. A New History of the Double Bass. Villeneuve d'Ascq France: Paul Brun Productions, 2000. p. 208
  4. Aldrich, Richard. "Music". The New York Times, 29 October 1920. accessed online
  5. Brun, Paul. A New History of the Double Bass. Villeneuve d'Ascq France: Paul Brun Productions, 2000. p. 124
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