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José de Nebra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

José Melchor Baltasar Gaspar Nebra Blasco (January 6, 1702 – July 11, 1768) was a Spanish composer. His work combines Spanish traditions with the Italian style of his day.

Biography

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José de Nebra was born in Calatayud[1] and was taught by his father, José Antonio Nebra Mezquita (1672–1748), organist and master of choirboys at the Cathedral of Cuenca from 1711 until 1729. Two brothers were also musicians: Francisco Javier Nebra Blasco (1705–1741), organist of La Seo in Zaragoza until he moved to Cuenca in 1729, then succeeded by his brother Joaquín Ignacio Nebra Blasco (1709–1782) till his death.[2] José was locked up for many years in house arrest because he appeared in the letters seized from the Marquis Jaime José Ignacio Velaz de Medrano y Barros who conspired to place Ferdinand VI on the throne instead of his father Philip V. He died in Madrid.

More than 170 works by Nebra survive: masses, psalms, litanies, a Stabat Mater, a Salve Regina, cantatas, villancicos, and around thirty keyboard works. But his significance is as the leading late-Baroque composer of Spanish opera and zarzuela.[3]

Works

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Sacred works

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  • Aromática rosa Americana
  • Miserere
  • Para un triunfo que el orbe
  • Requiem for Queen Barbara of Braganza
  • Rompan los vagos espacios
  • Salve regina
  • Cantata: Entre candidos bellos

Operas

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  • Amor aumenta el valor (collective work, 1st act only), Lisbon 1728
  • Venus y Adonis, 1729
  • Más gloria es triunfar de sí. Adriano in Syria, 1737
  • No todo indicio es verdad. Alexander in Asia, 1744
  • Antes que zelos y amor, la piedad llama al valor. Achilles in Troy 1747

Zarzuelas

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Notable performances

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The composer's 250th anniversary in 2018 saw the programming of some of his works, for example at Musica Antigua Aranjuez, the early music festival at Aranjuez. A performance of the opera Venus y Adonis has been scheduled for 2019 by the Centro Nacional de Difusión Musical.[4]

Selected recordings

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  • 1996 - Viento es la dicha de amor (zarzuela). Ensemble Baroque de Limoges, dir. Christophe Coin. Naïve
  • 2001 – Miserere. Al Ayre Español. Deutsche Harmonia Mundi
  • Sonata, op. 1 no. 4 for harpsichord, performed by Janine Johnson
  • 2005 – La Cantada Española en América. Al Ayre Español. Harmonia Mundi
  • 2006 - Vispera de Confesores. La Grande Chapelle, dir. Àngel Recasens. Lauda Musica
  • 2006 - Arias de Zarzuelas. María Bayo, Al Ayre Español, dir. Eduardo López Banzo. Harmonia Mundi
  • 2010 – Amor aumenta el valor (opera). Los Músicos de Su Alteza. Alpha
  • 2011 - Cantatas. Esta Dulzura Amable. Al Ayre Español, dir. Eduardo López Banzo. Challenge Classics
  • 2011 - Principio des Maitines de Navidad; Responsorium I, Nocturno 1, Nativitatis Domini. "Madrid 1752, Madrid Barroco, dir. Grover Wilkins. Dorian
  • 2011 - Iphigenia en Tracia (zarzuela). El concierto español, dir. Emilio Moreno. Glossa
  • 2019 - Requiem. La Madrileña - Coro Victoria - Schola Antiqua, dir. José Antonio Montaño. Pan Classics
  • 2020 - Vendado es Amor, no es ciego (zarzuela). Los Elementos, dir.Alberto Miguélez Rouco. Glossa
  • 2021 - Cantadas Francisco Corselli & José de Nebra. Los Elementos, dir.Alberto Miguélez Rouco. PanClassics
  • 2022 - Donde hay violencia, no hay culpa (zarzuela). Los Elementos, dir.Alberto Miguélez Rouco. Glossa

References

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  1. ^ Antonio Ezquerro Esteban (2002). "Nuevas datos para el estudio de los musicos Nebra en Aragon". Anuario Musical (in Spanish). 57: 113.
  2. ^ (in Spanish) José Nebra, Obras inéditas para tecla (unpublished works for keyboard) edited by Maria-Salud Alvarez, Tecla Aragonesa III, (Institución Fernando el Católico, Zaragoza, 1995)[page needed]
  3. ^ Salter, Lionel. "José de Nebra Viento des la Dicha de Amor". Gramophone. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Venus y Adonis". Instituto Nacional de las Artes Escénicas y de la Música. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
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