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Francisco Tárrega

Francisco de Asís Tárrega Eixea (21 November 1852 – 15 December 1909) was a Spanish composer and classical guitarist of the late Romantic period.[1] He is known for such pieces as Capricho Árabe and Recuerdos de la Alhambra. He is often called "the father of classical guitar" and is considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time.

Francisco Tárrega
Background information
Birth nameFrancisco de Asís Tárrega y Eixea
Born(1852-11-21)21 November 1852
Villarreal, Spain
Died15 December 1909(1909-12-15) (aged 57)
Barcelona, Spain
GenresClassical music
OccupationsMusician, teacher
InstrumentsClassical guitar
Years active1874–1909

Biography

Tárrega was born on 21 November 1852, in Villarreal, Province of Castellón, Spain. It is said that Francisco's father played flamenco and several other music styles on his guitar; when his father was away working as a watchman at the Convent of San Pascual, Francisco would take his father's guitar and attempt to make the beautiful sounds he had heard. Francisco's nickname as a child was "Quiquet".

As a child, he ran away from his nanny and fell into an irrigation channel and injured his eyes. Fearing that his son might lose his sight completely, his father moved the family to Castellón de la Plana to attend music classes because as a musician he would be able to earn a living, even if blind. Both his first music teachers, Eugeni Ruiz and Manuel González, were blind.

In 1862, concert guitarist Julián Arcas, on tour in Castellón, heard the young Tárrega play and advised Tárrega's father to allow Francisco to come to Barcelona to study with him. Tárrega's father agreed, but insisted that his son take piano lessons as well. The guitar was viewed as an instrument to accompany singers, while the piano was quite popular throughout Europe. However, Tárrega had to stop his lessons shortly after, when Arcas left for a concert tour abroad. Although Tárrega was only ten years old, he ran away and tried to start a musical career on his own by playing in coffee houses and restaurants in Barcelona. He was soon found and brought back to his father, who had to make great sacrifices to advance his son's musical education.

Three years later, in 1865, he ran away again, this time to Valencia where he joined a family of gypsies. His father looked for him and brought him back home once more, but he ran away a third time, again to Valencia. By his early teens, Tárrega was proficient on both the piano and the guitar. For a time, he played with other musicians at local engagements to earn money, but eventually he returned home to help his family.

Tárrega entered the Madrid Royal Conservatory in 1874, under the sponsorship of a wealthy merchant named Antonio Canesa. He had brought along with him a recently purchased guitar, made in Seville by Antonio de Torres. Its superior sonic qualities inspired him both in his playing and in his view of the instrument's compositional potential. At the conservatory, Tárrega studied composition under Emilio Arrieta who convinced him to focus on guitar and abandon the idea of a career with the piano.

By the end of the 1870s, Tárrega was teaching the guitar (Emilio Pujol, Miguel Llobet, and Daniel Fortea were pupils of his) and giving regular concerts. Tárrega received much acclaim for his playing and began traveling to other areas of Spain to perform. By this time he was composing his first works for guitar, which he played in addition to works of other composers.

During the winter of 1880, Tárrega replaced his friend Luis de Soria, in a concert in Novelda, Alicante, where, after the concert, an important man in town asked the artist to listen to his daughter, María José Rizo, who was learning to play guitar. Soon they were engaged.

In 1881, Tárrega played in the Opera Theatre in Lyon and then the Paris Odeon, in the bicentenary of the death of Pedro Calderón de la Barca. He also played in London, but he liked neither the language nor the weather. There is a story about his visit to England. After a concert, some people saw that the musician was in low spirits. "What is the matter, maestro?" they asked him. "Do you miss home? Your family, perhaps?" They advised him to capture that moment of sadness in his music. Thus he conceived the theme of one of his most memorable works, Lágrima (literally meaning teardrop). After playing in London he returned to Novelda for his wedding. At Christmas 1882, Tárrega married María José Rizo.

 
Tárrega pictured c. 1900

To enlarge his guitar repertory and to make use of his considerable knowledge of keyboard music, he soon began transcribing piano works of Beethoven, Chopin, Mendelssohn and others. Tárrega and his wife moved to Madrid, gaining their living by teaching privately and playing concerts, but after the death of an infant daughter during the winter, Maria Josefa de los Angeles Tárrega Rizo, they settled permanently in Barcelona in 1885. Among his friends in Barcelona were Isaac Albéniz, Enrique Granados, Joaquín Turina and Pau Casals.

 
 
(Left): Portrait by Vicente Castell (1904); (right): Monument to Tarrega in Castellón, Spain

Francisco Tárrega and María José (María Josefa) Rizo had three more children: Paquito (Francisco), Maria Rosatia (María Rosalia) (best known as Marieta) and Concepción. On a concert tour in Valencia shortly afterward, Tárrega met the wealthy Concepción Gómez de Jacoby, who became a valuable patron to him. She allowed him and his family use of part of her house outside Barcelona. Later she took him to Granada, which later inspired the guitarist to write Recuerdos de la Alhambra, which he first dedicated to Concepción in 1899 with the title "A Granada." He later dedicated a revised published version of this piece to Alfred Cottin, the French guitarist he had met in Paris while participating in a concert on a visit accompanied and almost certainly sponsored by Gómez de Jacoby.

From the later 1880s up to 1903, Tárrega continued composing and traveling, but limited his concerts to Spain. In 1900, Tárrega visited Algiers, where he was said to have heard a repetitive rhythm played on an Arabian drum and the following morning composed Danza Mora based on that rhythm. In about 1902, he cut his fingernails and created a sound that would become typical of those guitarists later associated with his school. The following year he went on tour to Italy, performing in Rome, Naples, and Milan.

In January 1906, he was afflicted with paralysis on his right side, and though he would eventually return to performing, he never completely recovered. He finished his last work, Oremus, on 2 December 1909. He died in Barcelona thirteen days later, on 15 December, at the age of 57.

Musical style

Tárrega composed music in the romantic style of 19th-century European masters. His conservatory training and familiarity with contemporary classical genres and techniques are apparent in his compositions and transcriptions; these are more sophisticated than those of Spanish guitarist-composers of the previous generation and his contemporaries, e.g., Magín Alegre, Tomás Damas, Julián Arcas, José Viñas, and José Ferrer.

A virtuoso on his instrument, he was known as the "Sarasate of the guitar," although Tárrega preferred small intimate performances over the concert stage.

Tárrega is considered to have laid the foundations for 20th-century classical guitar and for increasing interest in the guitar as a recital instrument.

Compositions

 
Sheet music of Tárrega compositions

Although only 19 original compositions were published in his lifetime, Francisco Tárrega composed approximately 80 original pieces and 120 transcriptions – mostly for his own use and that of his students. The exact number has yet to be determined. Most of his later published works were edited by others, and often altered. His favored genres were character pieces (several with Spanish, 'Moorish' and "Arabic" allusions) including preludes, etudes, caprices, serenatas, exotic dances, mazurkas, waltzes, and 'ancient dances' also favored by his contemporaries Isaac Albéniz and Enrique Granados (e.g., gavota, minuetto, and pavana).

He transcribed many works from the piano (he was a capable keyboard player), violin and especially the operatic repertory. As with several of his Spanish contemporaries, such as his friend Isaac Albéniz, he had an interest in combining the prevailing romantic style in classical music with Spanish folk elements, and transcribed several of Albéniz's piano pieces. The contemporary guitarist and composer Angelo Gilardino has written that Tárrega's 9 Preludios are "... the deepest musical thought of Tárrega in the most concentrated form."

He is also the composer of Gran Vals, an excerpt of which was used in the Nokia tune, the default ringtone of Nokia phones. It appears on these phones in a variety of different styles and instrumentations; for example, phones from 2002 to 2007 include piano-based renditions, while phones released during 2008 to 2010 feature a folk-inspired guitar rendition.

Guitars

The guitars used by Tárrega include:

 
Tárrega's guitar, made by "Ribot y Alcañiz"
  • Enrique Garcia, n°74 (1906) - This instrument was gifted by Tárrega to his friend Alfred Cottin, to whom he dedicated the composition Recuerdos de la Alhambra. It then became the official guitar of 'Les Amis de la Guitare', a circle of Parisian guitarists, where it was played by Django Reinhardt, among others. In 2019 Kyuhee Park recorded a video of Recuerdos de la Alhambra on this guitar. (See External Link)[2]
  • Torres, FE 17 (1869) – This is the guitar that was given to 17 year old Francisco Tárrega by Torres personally after hearing him play.
  • Torres, SE 49 (1883)
  • Torres, SE 114 (1888); in the collection of Sheldon Urlik[3][4]

Notes

  1. ^ "FRANCISCO DE ASIS TARREGA EIXEA 1852-1909". bibliotecavirtualsenior.es. Universitat Jaume I. 10 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Kyuhee Park | Recuerdos de la Alhambra (F. Tárrega)". YouTube.
  3. ^ Photo of a Torres guitar used by Tárrega
  4. ^ Photo 26 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine: "Jeff Elliott (left) restored these important guitars by Gonzalez and Torres. They are owned by Shel Urlik (centre) and were played by Kenton Youngstrom (right.)" (source 15 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine)

References

  • Diccionario biográfico–bibliográfico—histórico: crítico de guitarras (instrumentos afines), guitarristas (profesores–compositores–concertistas–lahudistas–amateurs), guitarreros (luthiers). Danzas y cantos—terminología by Domingo Prat (Buenos Aires: Romero y Fernández [1934]
  • Tárrega. Ensayo biográfico by Emilio Pujol (Lisboa: Talleres Gráficos de Ramos, Afonso & Moita, L.D.A., 1960/ Valencia: Artes Gráficas Soler. S.A., 1978).
  • Francisco Tárrega Biografía Oficial by Adrián Rius Espinós, published by Ayuntamiento de Vila-Real, ISBN 84-88331-82-7
  • Concepción Gómez de Jacoby: Tárrega’s Enigmatic Patron and Recuerdos de la Alhambra by David J. Buch (http://michaelorenz.blogspot.com/2020/11/concepcion-gomez-de-jacoby-tarregas.html)
  • Francisco Tárrega – Selección de Obras by Adrián Rius Espinós (includes CD with historical recordings by Josefina Robledo; "Capricho árabe", published by Excmo. Ayuntamiento de Vila-Real and Instituto Valenciano de la Música
  • Francisco Tárrega, Werden und Wirkung by Wolf Moser, published by Edition Saint-Georges. ISBN 3-00-012750-X.
  • Francisco Tárrega, Complete Guitar Works by Michel Beauchamp, edited by Productions d'Oz. ISBN 978-2-89655-079-1
  • Francisco Tárrega y la guitarra en Espana entre 1830 y 1960 by Wolf Moser, published by Piles Editorial de Música S.A. ISBN 978-84-96814-34-9
  • Francisco Tárrega, Collected Guitar Works, reprints of early editions, by Rafael Andia, Chanterelle 1001 and 1002. ISBN 3-89044-125-4

External links

  • Free scores by Francisco Tárrega at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • The Mutopia Project has compositions by Francisco Tárrega
  • Francisco Tárrega at IMDb
  • Free Scores and biography
  • Complete work and biography (with MIDI music files, that are not at all reflective of Tárrega's performance style, but instead of sheetmusic)
  • Tárrega / Walter Leckie Manuscripts, www.theguitarmuseum.com
  • and by Carmen Copovi Llop (in Spanish)
  • from Francisco Tárrega's room in the Vila-real City Museum
  • Monument in Vila-Real
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived October 27, 2009) by Salvador Carracedo Benet (in Spanish)
  • "Kyuhee Park | Recuerdos de la Alhambra (F. Tárrega)"

francisco, tárrega, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, december, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, messa. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Francisco de Asis Tarrega Eixea 21 November 1852 15 December 1909 was a Spanish composer and classical guitarist of the late Romantic period 1 He is known for such pieces as Capricho Arabe and Recuerdos de la Alhambra He is often called the father of classical guitar and is considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time Francisco TarregaBackground informationBirth nameFrancisco de Asis Tarrega y EixeaBorn 1852 11 21 21 November 1852Villarreal SpainDied15 December 1909 1909 12 15 aged 57 Barcelona SpainGenresClassical musicOccupationsMusician teacherInstrumentsClassical guitarYears active1874 1909 Contents 1 Biography 2 Musical style 3 Compositions 4 Guitars 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditTarrega was born on 21 November 1852 in Villarreal Province of Castellon Spain It is said that Francisco s father played flamenco and several other music styles on his guitar when his father was away working as a watchman at the Convent of San Pascual Francisco would take his father s guitar and attempt to make the beautiful sounds he had heard Francisco s nickname as a child was Quiquet As a child he ran away from his nanny and fell into an irrigation channel and injured his eyes Fearing that his son might lose his sight completely his father moved the family to Castellon de la Plana to attend music classes because as a musician he would be able to earn a living even if blind Both his first music teachers Eugeni Ruiz and Manuel Gonzalez were blind In 1862 concert guitarist Julian Arcas on tour in Castellon heard the young Tarrega play and advised Tarrega s father to allow Francisco to come to Barcelona to study with him Tarrega s father agreed but insisted that his son take piano lessons as well The guitar was viewed as an instrument to accompany singers while the piano was quite popular throughout Europe However Tarrega had to stop his lessons shortly after when Arcas left for a concert tour abroad Although Tarrega was only ten years old he ran away and tried to start a musical career on his own by playing in coffee houses and restaurants in Barcelona He was soon found and brought back to his father who had to make great sacrifices to advance his son s musical education Three years later in 1865 he ran away again this time to Valencia where he joined a family of gypsies His father looked for him and brought him back home once more but he ran away a third time again to Valencia By his early teens Tarrega was proficient on both the piano and the guitar For a time he played with other musicians at local engagements to earn money but eventually he returned home to help his family Tarrega entered the Madrid Royal Conservatory in 1874 under the sponsorship of a wealthy merchant named Antonio Canesa He had brought along with him a recently purchased guitar made in Seville by Antonio de Torres Its superior sonic qualities inspired him both in his playing and in his view of the instrument s compositional potential At the conservatory Tarrega studied composition under Emilio Arrieta who convinced him to focus on guitar and abandon the idea of a career with the piano By the end of the 1870s Tarrega was teaching the guitar Emilio Pujol Miguel Llobet and Daniel Fortea were pupils of his and giving regular concerts Tarrega received much acclaim for his playing and began traveling to other areas of Spain to perform By this time he was composing his first works for guitar which he played in addition to works of other composers During the winter of 1880 Tarrega replaced his friend Luis de Soria in a concert in Novelda Alicante where after the concert an important man in town asked the artist to listen to his daughter Maria Jose Rizo who was learning to play guitar Soon they were engaged In 1881 Tarrega played in the Opera Theatre in Lyon and then the Paris Odeon in the bicentenary of the death of Pedro Calderon de la Barca He also played in London but he liked neither the language nor the weather There is a story about his visit to England After a concert some people saw that the musician was in low spirits What is the matter maestro they asked him Do you miss home Your family perhaps They advised him to capture that moment of sadness in his music Thus he conceived the theme of one of his most memorable works Lagrima literally meaning teardrop After playing in London he returned to Novelda for his wedding At Christmas 1882 Tarrega married Maria Jose Rizo Tarrega pictured c 1900 To enlarge his guitar repertory and to make use of his considerable knowledge of keyboard music he soon began transcribing piano works of Beethoven Chopin Mendelssohn and others Tarrega and his wife moved to Madrid gaining their living by teaching privately and playing concerts but after the death of an infant daughter during the winter Maria Josefa de los Angeles Tarrega Rizo they settled permanently in Barcelona in 1885 Among his friends in Barcelona were Isaac Albeniz Enrique Granados Joaquin Turina and Pau Casals Left Portrait by Vicente Castell 1904 right Monument to Tarrega in Castellon Spain Francisco Tarrega and Maria Jose Maria Josefa Rizo had three more children Paquito Francisco Maria Rosatia Maria Rosalia best known as Marieta and Concepcion On a concert tour in Valencia shortly afterward Tarrega met the wealthy Concepcion Gomez de Jacoby who became a valuable patron to him She allowed him and his family use of part of her house outside Barcelona Later she took him to Granada which later inspired the guitarist to write Recuerdos de la Alhambra which he first dedicated to Concepcion in 1899 with the title A Granada He later dedicated a revised published version of this piece to Alfred Cottin the French guitarist he had met in Paris while participating in a concert on a visit accompanied and almost certainly sponsored by Gomez de Jacoby From the later 1880s up to 1903 Tarrega continued composing and traveling but limited his concerts to Spain In 1900 Tarrega visited Algiers where he was said to have heard a repetitive rhythm played on an Arabian drum and the following morning composed Danza Mora based on that rhythm In about 1902 he cut his fingernails and created a sound that would become typical of those guitarists later associated with his school The following year he went on tour to Italy performing in Rome Naples and Milan In January 1906 he was afflicted with paralysis on his right side and though he would eventually return to performing he never completely recovered He finished his last work Oremus on 2 December 1909 He died in Barcelona thirteen days later on 15 December at the age of 57 Musical style Edit Recuerdos de la Alhambra source source Performed by Carlo Alberto Boni Problems playing this file See media help Tarrega composed music in the romantic style of 19th century European masters His conservatory training and familiarity with contemporary classical genres and techniques are apparent in his compositions and transcriptions these are more sophisticated than those of Spanish guitarist composers of the previous generation and his contemporaries e g Magin Alegre Tomas Damas Julian Arcas Jose Vinas and Jose Ferrer A virtuoso on his instrument he was known as the Sarasate of the guitar although Tarrega preferred small intimate performances over the concert stage Tarrega is considered to have laid the foundations for 20th century classical guitar and for increasing interest in the guitar as a recital instrument Compositions EditSee also List of compositions by Francisco Tarrega Sheet music of Tarrega compositions Although only 19 original compositions were published in his lifetime Francisco Tarrega composed approximately 80 original pieces and 120 transcriptions mostly for his own use and that of his students The exact number has yet to be determined Most of his later published works were edited by others and often altered His favored genres were character pieces several with Spanish Moorish and Arabic allusions including preludes etudes caprices serenatas exotic dances mazurkas waltzes and ancient dances also favored by his contemporaries Isaac Albeniz and Enrique Granados e g gavota minuetto and pavana He transcribed many works from the piano he was a capable keyboard player violin and especially the operatic repertory As with several of his Spanish contemporaries such as his friend Isaac Albeniz he had an interest in combining the prevailing romantic style in classical music with Spanish folk elements and transcribed several of Albeniz s piano pieces The contemporary guitarist and composer Angelo Gilardino has written that Tarrega s 9 Preludios are the deepest musical thought of Tarrega in the most concentrated form He is also the composer of Gran Vals an excerpt of which was used in the Nokia tune the default ringtone of Nokia phones It appears on these phones in a variety of different styles and instrumentations for example phones from 2002 to 2007 include piano based renditions while phones released during 2008 to 2010 feature a folk inspired guitar rendition Guitars EditThe guitars used by Tarrega include This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2011 Tarrega s guitar made by Ribot y Alcaniz Enrique Garcia n 74 1906 This instrument was gifted by Tarrega to his friend Alfred Cottin to whom he dedicated the composition Recuerdos de la Alhambra It then became the official guitar of Les Amis de la Guitare a circle of Parisian guitarists where it was played by Django Reinhardt among others In 2019 Kyuhee Park recorded a video of Recuerdos de la Alhambra on this guitar See External Link 2 Torres FE 17 1869 This is the guitar that was given to 17 year old Francisco Tarrega by Torres personally after hearing him play Torres SE 49 1883 Torres SE 114 1888 in the collection of Sheldon Urlik 3 4 Notes Edit FRANCISCO DE ASIS TARREGA EIXEA 1852 1909 bibliotecavirtualsenior es Universitat Jaume I 10 May 2018 Kyuhee Park Recuerdos de la Alhambra F Tarrega YouTube Photo of a Torres guitar used by Tarrega Photo Archived 26 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Jeff Elliott left restored these important guitars by Gonzalez and Torres They are owned by Shel Urlik centre and were played by Kenton Youngstrom right source Archived 15 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine References EditDiccionario biografico bibliografico historico critico de guitarras instrumentos afines guitarristas profesores compositores concertistas lahudistas amateurs guitarreros luthiers Danzas y cantos terminologia by Domingo Prat Buenos Aires Romero y Fernandez 1934 Tarrega Ensayo biografico by Emilio Pujol Lisboa Talleres Graficos de Ramos Afonso amp Moita L D A 1960 Valencia Artes Graficas Soler S A 1978 Francisco Tarrega Biografia Oficial by Adrian Rius Espinos published by Ayuntamiento de Vila Real ISBN 84 88331 82 7 Concepcion Gomez de Jacoby Tarrega s Enigmatic Patron and Recuerdos de la Alhambra by David J Buch http michaelorenz blogspot com 2020 11 concepcion gomez de jacoby tarregas html Francisco Tarrega Seleccion de Obras by Adrian Rius Espinos includes CD with historical recordings by Josefina Robledo example Capricho arabe published by Excmo Ayuntamiento de Vila Real and Instituto Valenciano de la Musica Francisco Tarrega Werden und Wirkung by Wolf Moser published by Edition Saint Georges ISBN 3 00 012750 X Francisco Tarrega Complete Guitar Works by Michel Beauchamp edited by Productions d Oz ISBN 978 2 89655 079 1 Francisco Tarrega y la guitarra en Espana entre 1830 y 1960 by Wolf Moser published by Piles Editorial de Musica S A ISBN 978 84 96814 34 9 Francisco Tarrega Collected Guitar Works reprints of early editions by Rafael Andia Chanterelle 1001 and 1002 ISBN 3 89044 125 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francisco Tarrega Free scores by Francisco Tarrega at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP The Mutopia Project has compositions by Francisco Tarrega Francisco Tarrega at IMDb Free Scores and biography Complete work and biography with MIDI music files that are not at all reflective of Tarrega s performance style but instead of sheetmusic Tarrega Walter Leckie Manuscripts www theguitarmuseum com Francisco Tarrega and Musica by Carmen Copovi Llop in Spanish Photos from Francisco Tarrega s room in the Vila real City Museum Monument in Vila Real Estudio Tematico Filatelico sobre Francisco Tarrega at the Wayback Machine archived October 27 2009 by Salvador Carracedo Benet in Spanish Kyuhee Park Recuerdos de la Alhambra F Tarrega Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francisco Tarrega amp oldid 1134394140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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