Goya’s Genius and Spanish Art and Music in the 19th Century

May 11th, 2012

Enrique Granados : Goyescas Book I

Miguel Llobet : Romanza

Francisco Tárrega : Capricho Arabe

Felipe Pedrell : Courante

Isaac Albéniz : Piano Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 78, “Concierto fantastico”


Spain, at the time of Goya’s birth in 1746, wrote one of his contemporaries, was “a body composed of many different parts, separated, and in opposition to one another, which oppress and despise each other and are in a continuous state of war”. Just 46 years before Goya’s birth, the last of the Spanish Habsburg monarchs, Charles II (“The Mad”), had finally died and with him any remaining fantasy of the “Golden Age”. A French Bourbon Prince, Philip, ultimately became his successor. “God be praised”, a Spaniard was heard to exclaim, “the Pyrenees have disappeared. Now we are all one!” But of course, this was not to be…. Spain again became a bloody battlefield for many more years.
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The Golden Age of Spain in Music, Arts and Literature

April 10th, 2012

Tomas Luis de Victoria

O magnum mysterium (1572)

Domine ad adjuvandum me festina

Cristóbal de Morales

Puer natus est nobis (1543)

Missa Benedicta es caelorum regina (excerpts) (1544)

Antonio de Cabezon (Click here for our related “In love” article)

Pavana con su glosa

Fabordones del octavo tono



Extraordinary artistic achievements in music, art and literature created a “Golden Age” in Spain in the 16th and 17th centuries, paralleling the rise and decline of the Spanish Habsburgs’ political power and influence in Europe. Many of Spain’s most famous artists were in the employ of the Royal court, the Spanish aristocracy and the church – their fame not only reaching beyond the borders of their own country in their own time, but becoming important for European artists in the 19th and 20th centuries.
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Music and Arts in Medieval Spain

March 9th, 2012

Sephardic Romances: Traditional Jewish Music from Spain – Avrix mi galanica (Let Me in, My Love)

Ya viene el cativo (Now Comes the Prisoner)


With the invasion of the Moors in the 8th century, medieval Spain saw a blossoming of music, architecture and the arts, not only unparalleled in the rest of Europe at that time, but carrying well across the centuries into our own time.

Over the course of the next few months, we will be examining this close relationship, starting in the Middle Ages with the interplay and influence of Moorish, Christian and Jewish cultures in Al-Andalus, moving on to Spain’s ‘Golden Age’ in the 16th and the 17th centuries with the works of El Greco, Velazquez, Zurbaran, Cervantes and the music at the Court of Philip IV, and finally to the 19th and 20th centuries with Goya, Fernando Sor, Manuel de Falla, García Lorca, Gaudí and Picasso, amongst others.
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The Royal Instrument from the Classical Age to Present

February 13th, 2012

Liszt : Prélude and Fugue on the Name of B.A.C.H

Schumann : Six Fugues B-A-C-H, op. 60


During the Classical period of the 18th century, organ music was seldom written, since most composers started to write for the newly invented piano forte. We know though that the young Mozart performed on existing organs to great acclaim; early in his life he worked on church music compositions which show great interest in polyphonic structures, a practice he would take up again towards the end of his life playing organs in Dresden, Leipzig and Prague (Mozart’s works from this period include the Adagio in C-Flat KV 546 and the Leipzig Gigue in G-Sharp KV 574). The few classical organs built at that time replicated the classical architecture of the period with symmetry, balance and fewer decorations. In his classical period, the young Beethoven had been taught organ playing by teachers such as the Court musician Van den Eeden, who were still steeped in the traditional Baroque tradition. From them he became familiar with J.S. Bach’s musical concepts, and in particular with the Wohltemperierte Klavier.

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The Baroque Era – The Golden Age of the Organ

January 13th, 2012

Bach : Passacaglia and Fugue in C-Minor

Bach : Die Kunst der Fuge


The Reformation and Counterreformation of the 16th and 17th centuries had a decisive impact not only on the architecture of the time, moving from the harmony and balance of the Renaissance to the painted heavens, extreme ornamentation and disturbance captured in the concave and convex form of the Baroque, but was also replicated in the musical forms of the opera and the art of the castrati singers of the period. In church building, the basilica form was resurrected, not only bringing public and priests into a shared space, but changing the church service to a more participatory experience, in which music, and particularly the organ, played a significant part.

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The Royal Instrument through the Ages – from Antiquity to the Renaissance Era

December 14th, 2011

On my recent European lecture tour, I was fortunate to hear several concerts in magnificent Baroque churches on Baroque organs, including one in the church of the former Cistercian monastery of St. Urban, Switzerland and one in the St. Francis Church in Prague. Not only was this a musical experience to treasure, hearing the works of the greatest organ music composers of their time, (Frescobaldi, Pachelbel, Muffat and Johann Sebastian Bach) played on original instruments, but experiencing it in an architectural space specific to the period.
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Jeux d’Eau – Musical, Literary and Artistic Remembrances

November 11th, 2011

Liszt : Les Jeux d’eau a la Villa d’Este (1882)

Ravel : Jeux d’Eau (1901)

Tan Dun : Memories in Watercolor (2003)

Debussy : Preludes (1910-1913) – Des pas sur la neige

Debussy : Preludes (1910-1913) – Brouillards

Debussy : Preludes (1910-1913) – Ondine

Liszt : Etudes d’execution transcendante (1851)


I recently attended a concert held at the Musikfest Stuttgart, which incorporated ‘Water’ as its central thematic element.

In this particular performance, entitled Jeux d’Eau – Wasserspiele – Water Games’, Igor Levit, the young and extraordinarily talented German/Russian pianist, played compositions by Liszt, Debussy, Ravel and Tan Dun.

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The Arts and Music in the Early 20th Century

October 14th, 2011

Eric Satie
Parade (1917)

Gymnopédies (1893)

Paul Cézanne - The Black Clock

In their respective fields, Paul Cézanne and Claude Debussy influenced the artists of the early 20th century, which found their counterparts in intellectual circles formed around writers and poets such as Stéphane Mallarmé, Guillaume Apollinaire, Jean Cocteau, Marcel Proust and André Breton. Jean Cocteau, in particular, with his interests in the Ballets Russes, Stravinsky and the compositions of Eric Satie, brought many of these artists and their ideas together.

In painting, Cézanne, in his still-life ‘The Black Clock’ and ‘Still-life with a Peppermint Bottle’, pointed the way. Contrary to what we have seen in Baroque era still-lives, which always would refer to the fleeting nature of objects and the viewer to consider his salvation in eternity, in Cézanne’s paintings, objects are present only to be painted. There is no story, no interpretation possible: the ‘Black Clock’ does not tell time; the relationship between it, the cup and the conch shell is distorted and the table cloth rises up to underline the flatness of the canvas, creating pyramid, cube and circles which are at the basis of Cézanne’s concept of painting.

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Impressionism to Modernism in Music and the Arts

September 7th, 2011

Debussy
La Mer (1905)
Estampes (1903)
Prélude à l’après midi d’un faune (1894)

Claude Monet - Impression, Sunrise

The works of the great Romantic musicians, painters and writers contributed not only to Impressionism, one of the most important artistic and cultural evolutions in the mid- 19th century, but presaged the advent of Modernism in the century following.

In 1874 a group of painters, including Monet, Pissarro, and Degas, displayed their works in the photography studio of Nadar, and entitled the exhibit as the “Salon of the Refused Painters”. At the time, paintings and sculpture were shown in the ‘official’ salon, so they could be judged, prizes awarded and, of course, sold. When seeing Claude Monet’s painting “Impression, Sunrise”, one of the critics coined the term “Impressionism”, which was then uniformly applied to the works of these painters, many of whom disapproved of the label.
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The Romantic Age in Music and the Arts

August 15th, 2011

Beethoven
Minuet in G
Beethoven
“Moonlight” Piano Sonata no.14, C sharp Minor
Carl Maria von Weber
Der Freischutz, J277
Schubert
Winterreise, Op. 89, D. 911

Delacroix – Liberty leading the People

The events during and following the French Revolution in 1789 represented not only a complete change in the political system, but also a profound upheaval in the arts in France and, subsequently throughout Europe. All of the rules established and accepted until that time were rewritten, revolutionized. The European 19th century, in fact, would become a century of revolutions, both political and aesthetic.
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