music.wikisort.org - CompositorJuan de Lienas (fl.1617- 1654)[1] fue un compositor musical, probablemente mexicano, cuyas composiciones - varias misas polifónicas y motetes en el estilo antiguo de Guerrero - se encuentran en el Codex del Convento del Carmen, en la antigua Escuela del Convento en San Ángel, Ciudad de México,[2] y en los libros de coro que pertenecieron al Convento de la Encarnación, de monjas concepcionistas, también en la Ciudad de México. Ha sido "identificado de manera tentativa" con Juan Hernández maestro de capilla de la Catedral de México hasta 1620.[3] Si tal es el caso, entonces es una situación rara entre los maestro de capilla de catedral de la época ya que es de origen indígena mexicano y está casado.[4][5][6][7]
No se debe tener en cuenta una fuente que lo identifica como un compositor cubano y maestro de capilla en la Catedral de la Habana.[8]
Discografía selecta
- Juan de Lienas, Missa. Les Chemins du Baroque 8: Messe de l'Assomption de la Vierge. Compañía Musical de las Américas dir. Josep Cabré, K617
- Nicolas Gombert, Ferdinand de Lassus, Juan De Lienas; Messe de la Bataille en Nouvelle Espagne - Mexique Cristina García Banegas K617
Referencias
- «Juan de Lienas - Composer - music.wikisort.org». music.wikisort.org. Consultado el 29 de julio de 2022.
- Robert Murrell Stevenson - Spanish Cathedral Music in the Golden Age 1961 - Page 70 "Juan de Lienas, un compositor muy destacado cuyas obras se guardan en el Convento del Carmen Codex (México), ..."
- George J. Buelow A history of baroque music - Page 397 2004 "He has been tentatively identified with the otherwise unknown Juan de Lienas, the author of several polyphonic masses and motets in the so-called Carmen Codex, copied in the final years of the previous century. If so, Hernandez can be"
- mention in Britannica
- Leslie Bethell The Cambridge History of Latin America - 1984- Page 779 "One rare exception to the rule that the cathedrals attracted the most talented was 'don' Juan de Lienas in Mexico City during the years before 1650. Like Tomas Pascual in San Juan Ixcoi (Huehuetenango), Juan Matfas at Oaxaca cathedral, ..."
- Peter Standish A companion to Mexican studies 2006 - Page 39 "Some other major composers of colonial church music are Hernando Franco, Juan de Lienas, Antonio de Salazar and the aptly named Francisco Lopez y Capilla."
- Dennis Shrock Choral Repertoire Page 346 2009 "The New World composers — Gaspar Fernandes, Juan de Lienas, Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla, Francisco López Capillas, Juan de Araujo, Antonio de Salazar, Manuel de Zumaya, and Ignacio Jerusalem — mostly served in cathedrals in Puebla ..."
- Suzanne Spicer Tiemstra The Choral Music of Latin America 1992 -- Page 4 "The cultural leader in the Caribbean islands was Cuba, whose most significant early composer was Juan de Lienas (fl.ca. 1640), chapelmaster at the Havana cathedral."
На других языках
[en] Juan de Lienas
Juan de Lienas (fl. 1617-1654[1] ) was a composer active in Latin America during the early to mid-17th century. He also served as a chapel master and conductor in the Catholic Church. Much of his life is still a mystery, but what is known comes from accounts in the only two manuscripts that include his compositions: El Codice del Convento del Carmen[2] and the Newberry Choirbooks.[3] Some of these comments are unflattering to the composer, insulting his appearance and personality.[4] He is identified as a cacique (a native of noble birth), an Indian, and a married man, all of which may have kept him from higher standing within the church.[5] One scholar indicates that he may have been born in Spain.[6] Most scholars place him in Mexico in the employ of the convent connected to the cathedral of Mexico City, but one asserts that he also worked in Havana.[7]
His music is indicative of the early Renaissance, following the Polyphonic styles of composers such as Francisco Guerrero and Cristóbal de Morales.[8] He is often associated with Juan Hernandez, Fernando Franco, and Francisco López. The latter two also had compositions in the Carmen Codex.[9] His known compositions include: two masses (one of which is a Requiem), eleven motets, three magnificats, and two sets of lamentations.[10]
The two manuscripts which include his music may have at one point been connected.[11] Both include his Salve Regina for 4 voices, Lamentation for 4 voices, and Magnificat for 5 voices. His compositions were first brought to the states by means of the Newbery Choirbooks, which are still performed today.
- [es] Juan de Lienas
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