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Juan Bautista Cabanilles

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Name
  
Juan Cabanilles


Role
  
Composer

Juan Bautista Cabanilles httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99

Died
  
April 29, 1712, Valencia, Spain

Books
  
Complete Organ Works, Volume I: Organ - Method or Collection

Similar People
  
Francisco Correa de Arauxo, Antonio de Cabezon, Johann Kaspar Kerll, Jordi Savall, Hesperion XXI

Juan bautista cabanilles xacara rosemary thomas


Juan Bautista José Cabanilles (also Juan Bautista Josep, Valencian: Joan) (6 September 1644 in Algemesí near Valencia – 29 April 1712 in Valencia) was a Spanish organist and composer at Valencia Cathedral. He is considered by many to have been the greatest Spanish Baroque composer, and has been called the Spanish Bach.

Contents

Biography

He probably began his musical career as a singer in a choir of a local church. Later he studied to become a priest in the cathedral at Valencia, which included lessons in music. On 15 May 1665, at 20 years of age, he was named the assistant organist of the cathedral. A year later, upon the death of his predecessor, he became the principal organist. On 22 September 1668 he was ordained as a priest. He kept his position as principal organist for 45 years, but from 1703 on his health often necessitated that a substitute be found. From 1675 to 1677 he also took charge of teaching the children in the cathedral choir. No portrait or likeness of Cabanilles is known to exist; the portrait accompanying certain Facebook pages and other internet articles is of the botanist Antonio José Cavanilles (1745-1804).

Works

Many of Cabanilles's compositions are virtuosic and advanced for their time, but generally, he is in the Spanish tradition of keyboard music following 16th century patterns. The majority of his manuscripts are kept in the Biblioteca de Catalunya in Barcelona. Numerous compositions for organ (tientos, toccatas, passacaglias, and other works) have survived, as well as a number of works for choirs of up to 13 parts.

Selected Scores editions

1 A- Musici Organici Iohannis Cabanilles, 4 vols., ed. Hyginii Anglés, Barcelona: Biblioteca de Catalunya, 1927-1956.

Cabanilles Opera Omnia (1927-2008).

Volume 1 (1927): Tientos in various modes.

Volume 2 (1933): Passacalles, Paseos, several Tocatas, Xácara, misc. Pieces.

Volume 3 (1936): Various genres.

Volume 4 (1956): Various genres.

1 B- The following additional 5 volumes were edited by José Clíment, Barcelona: Biblioteca de Catalunya.

Volume 5 (1986): Tientos 71-90; Versos for Magnificat, Pange lingua.

Volume 6 (1989): Tientos 91-110 and miscellaneous Versos.

Volume 7 (1992): Tientos 111-130; Versos for the Mass, for Marian festivals and for miscellaneous occasions.

Volume 8 (2006): Tientos: 131-150; Duo de 1º Tom, Sacris Solemniis.

Volume 9 (2008): Tientos: 151-168; Versos.

2- Música de Tecla Valenciana. J. Bta. Cabanilles, 4 vols., ed. Julián Sagasta Galdós, Valencia: Edicions Alfons el Magnánim, 1986-1994.

3- CEKM, vol. 48-1: Keyboard Music from the Felanitx Manuscripts, I, ed. Nelson Lee, 1999. Nearly all of the 162 pieces are by Cabanilles.

Selected recordings

  • [1] Joan Bautista Cabanilles : Batalles, Tientos & Passacalles - Jordi Savall, Hesperion XX - CD Alia Vox 9801
  • [2] La Gloria Musical del Barroco Valenciano, 2 CDs. Fundación La Luz de las Imágenes (2010).
  • Jan Willem Jansen, Los Músicos de Su Alteza: Tientos y Passacalles: Juan Cabanilles (Éditions Hortus, HORT013, ASIN: B00004VHOX).
  • Juan Bautista José Cabanilles, Obras de Organo. John Butt at the Greg Harold Spanish-style organ, University of California, Berkeley. CD Harmonia Mundi France HMU 907047.
  • References

    Juan Bautista Cabanilles Wikipedia