Suite goivos by Francisco Lacerda (1869–1934) stands out not only as one of the first examples of symbolist literature for guitar but also as the first work written for guitar by a Portuguese non-guitarist composer. So far, however, it has remained in relative obscurity. In this article, I first explore the suite’s context and history: its origin in meetings and correspondence between Lacerda and the work’s dedicatee, Andrés Segovia; its place among new works commissioned by Segovia from non-guitarist composers; and available manuscript sources for the work. I then argue for the work’s importance as music, highlighting its innovative features, from Lacerda’s use of the guitar to his incorporation of musical symbolist elements. This analysis...
This article addresses the considerations and decisions that underlie a new critical edition of Sor’...
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A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie
Suite goivos by Francisco Lacerda (1869–1934) stands out not only as one of the first examples of sy...
Suite goivos by Francisco Lacerda (1869–1934) stands out not only as one of the first examples of sy...
"Graham Wade, in his article on Andrés Segovia for the Grove music Online, describes his impact on t...
Since the early 19th century, instrumentalists have made use of the musical genre known as the Étude...
This article discusses a page of music manuscript, shelf no. MD-C-90 (4), preserved in a royal monas...
A review of four new biographical studies of Fernando Sor: Brian Jeffery, Fernando Sor: Composer a...
For over sixty years, guitarists of my generation have been familiar with the so-called Segovia Scal...
This thesis argues that the context within which prominent Spanish composer Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-19...
Though Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-99) is renowned for his guitar works, especially the Concierto de Aranj...
The guitarist Charles de Marescot is a figure often cited when referring to the guitar mania that ar...
The thesis investigates wide-ranging issues central to the Cuban artist, Leo Brouwer (b. 1939). Alth...
Studies of virtuosity in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have tended to focus on the piano a...
This article addresses the considerations and decisions that underlie a new critical edition of Sor’...
In 1858, Francisco Frontera de Valldemosa published a peculiar music theory treatise in Madrid under...
A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie
Suite goivos by Francisco Lacerda (1869–1934) stands out not only as one of the first examples of sy...
Suite goivos by Francisco Lacerda (1869–1934) stands out not only as one of the first examples of sy...
"Graham Wade, in his article on Andrés Segovia for the Grove music Online, describes his impact on t...
Since the early 19th century, instrumentalists have made use of the musical genre known as the Étude...
This article discusses a page of music manuscript, shelf no. MD-C-90 (4), preserved in a royal monas...
A review of four new biographical studies of Fernando Sor: Brian Jeffery, Fernando Sor: Composer a...
For over sixty years, guitarists of my generation have been familiar with the so-called Segovia Scal...
This thesis argues that the context within which prominent Spanish composer Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-19...
Though Joaquín Rodrigo (1901-99) is renowned for his guitar works, especially the Concierto de Aranj...
The guitarist Charles de Marescot is a figure often cited when referring to the guitar mania that ar...
The thesis investigates wide-ranging issues central to the Cuban artist, Leo Brouwer (b. 1939). Alth...
Studies of virtuosity in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have tended to focus on the piano a...
This article addresses the considerations and decisions that underlie a new critical edition of Sor’...
In 1858, Francisco Frontera de Valldemosa published a peculiar music theory treatise in Madrid under...
A review of Nineteenth-Century Guitar Songs: An Idiosyncratic Survey, by Ian Gammie