Murcia Survey Baroque Guitar
Murcia Survey Baroque Guitar
Murcia Survey Baroque Guitar
Orlando Fraga
November 1997
Spain in context
To the south and east, trade routes have enriched Spain over the
centuries with many cultural influences which contributed to the continuous
flow of art and politics. Despite that, Spain suffered external isolation, and
had to struggle with internal political separatism due, in large part, to its
demographics. Spain is divided in four main structural geographic areas not
2
very well accessed from one to another because of a steep relief. In few
places in Spain can one travel more than fifty miles without having to climb a
mountain. Furthermore, the rivers could barely be used as a means of trade
and transportation. Thus, serious consequences were unavoidable on both
agricultural and commercial development.
1 Vives, Jaime V., Na Economic History of Spain Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969
2 Anonymous novel Lazarillo de Tormes Vives, Jaime op. cit.
3
Exercising a big rule in the court was the Inquisition. Felipe V tried to
control the state but he was defeat by the Italian faction in court. The situation
remained unresolved until the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1767. Perhaps the
most important activity of the Inquisition, relative to this study, was the control
over the Spanish Index. The Index was a list of prohibited or expurgated
books indexed by them. It was originally used as a tool to prevent heretical
(mainly Protestant) ideas. Generally, the censorship in the 1700s, was
applied first by the more outstanding intellects of the time, and then by the
“ignorant and small-minded clergy”.4 In a second stage, the Inquisition
started to ban entire books, not only the offending passages, as it was
previously. Finally, they chased and suppressed any concept of equality,
freedom, and tolerance.
In 1703, Felipe V’s first wife, the Italian María Louisa, brought the first
Italian opera company to Madrid. After that, it took over the musical scene in
Madrid, as it did with much of Europe in the first half of the century. Italian
musicians also controlled many of the important positions and received royal
support and protection. Of course, not without raising protests from Spanish
artists. Undoubtedly, the most famous Italian musician to settle in Madrid
during the reign of Felipe V was the castrati Carlo Broschi, the Farinelli.5
However, one of the earliest indication of the Italian influence in Spain is
found in the Resumen de Acompañar la Parte con la Guitarra (1714), by
Santiago de Murcia. In this book, Murcia not only includes pieces with Italian
titles, such as Tarantelas, Los Paysanos, and La Saltarelle, but also makes
reference to the estilo antiguo from estilo de Iitalia.6 We know from the
dedication of Resumen . . . that María Louisa, who died in February of 1714,
3 Ibid, 233
4 Herr, Richard. The Eighteenth-Century Revolution in Spain. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1958.
5 Cotarelo y Mori, Emilio. Orígenes y establecimiento de la ópera en España hasta 1800.
(Madrid, 1917).
4
was already sick when the Resumen . . . was published later that year. Felipe
V married another Italian, Elizabeta Farnese, in September of the same year.
Thus, it is possible that Murcia have been attempted to demonstrate an
affection to Italian music in the hope of securing a place as a guitar teacher to
the new queen.
In spite of all that, it is true that Murcia was continuing a tradition begun
by guitarists such as Nicolas Doizi de Velasco (1640), Gaspar Sanz (1674),
Ruiz de Ribayz (1677) and Francisco Guerau (1694). The Resumen . . . is
anything more than a synthesis of Italian, French, and Spanish style in the
early baroque period.
Vihuela: The musical and secular instrument of six courses . . . Up until the present,
this instrument has been most esteemed, and there have been excellent musicians on
it; but after guitar was invented, there are but a few who dedicate themselves to the
study of the vihuela. It has been a great loss because every kind of plucked music
was intabulated on it; and now the guitar is no more than a cowbell, so easy to play,
especially in the strummed style, that there is no stable boy who is not a musician on
the guitar.
Guitar: An instrument well known, and practiced much to the detriment of music;
previously, the vihuela was played, an instrument of six, and occasionally more,
courses. The guitar is a small vihuela in size and in the number of strings because it
has no more than five courses, and some are of only four courses. 7
There are many, my Lady, who ridiculate the guitar and its sound. But, if they would
consider it well, they would find the guitar the most tactical instrument for our times
that was ever seen. Because, if you are looking these days to save both the money in
your pocket and yourself from worry, the guitar is a true theater for this saving.
It is tonic for tranquility, for throwing off your cares and worries, a pastime for sad
people, a consolation for those who are alone . . .
Many things could be said in her [the guitar] favor, but I will leave them for only one
consideration; that is, two thousand people entertain themselves and pass their
thoughts and bad times with her. And, to further justify the merit of my guitar, I ask you
whether or not Kings, Princes and Gentlemen abandon the guitar for the lute as they
abandon the lute for the guitar. In addition to this, I do not find that those who attempt
to speak badly of the guitar are correct, because they not only offend me (which is a
small thing), but they offend the greater part of France.8
The guitar, however, moved once more one stage up, from amateurs
domain to that of professional. The next extant Spanish source after Amat’s
and Briçeños’, was the Nuevo modo de cifrar para tañer la guitarra, by
Nicholas Doizi Velasco (Naples, 1640) who speaks in a real musical
language. Velasco refused in his book the claim that the guitar is an imperfect
or inferior instrument, and do so by quoting authorities, among them Zarlino,
and refers to the guitar as an instrument as perfect as the organ, harp, lute, or
8 Briçeño, Luiz de Metodo mui facilimo para aprender a tañer la guitarra a lo español, Paris
1626. Geneva: Minkoff Reprints, 1972.
6
theorbe. He points out that 1) the guitar can play in any key; 2) it can play in
each of the two modes: harmonic and polyphonic; and 3) it can play music for
three, four, or five voices. [sic.].9 Nevertheless, when Velasco specifies that
the lower octaves on the fourth and fifth courses is best for playing figures, it
strongly suggests a contrapuntal style, although the strummed one still in
vogue.
During the first half of the eighteenth-century, the guitar had already
achieved a place of general acceptance. The circumstances that lead to this
are at least interesting to examine, since they are connected, in large degree,
to the court. When Felipe V, grandson of Louis XIV of France, took over the
Spanish throne in 1700, he brought along the atmosphere of Louis’ court, the
king himself being a guitarist:
I believe it is proof of the greatness of His Majesty that they say he equaled, after 18
months, his guitar master whom Cardinal Mazarin had brought from Italy expressly to
teach him to play this instrument, much in vogue at the time.11
9 P. 15f.
10 From “Prólogo al deseoso de tañer”.
11 Pennington, op. cit.
12 Ibid.
7
13 In the late sixteenth century, it was universally assumed that joyous flirtation and the
exhibition through dance of delightful feminine charms and lusty male prowess were vital to
social intercourse. All occasions of state, great or small, were celebrated in the ballroom; thus
personal adornment and elegance were seen as important artistic contributions to the
theatrical ambiance of a ball, the social and political aggrandizement of the host, and the
matchmaking that was so essential to the perception of the social structure. Dancing skills
were cultivated in daily practice by the nobility and their emulators among the middle class,
with the assistance of ubiquitous dancing masters like Fabritio Caroso da Sermoneta. In
Sutton, Julia. Courtly Dance of the Renaissance - A New Translation and Edition of the Nobità
di Dance (1600). New York: Dover Publication, Inc., 1995.
8
Passacallas y obras . . .
Murcia’s first intentions in this book was to provide a passacalle in each
of the keys he refers at the beginning in the alfabeto. The alfabeto is certainly
14Russell, Craig. Santiago de Murcia: the French connection in Baroque Spain. Journal of the
Lute Society. Vol. XV, 1982.
9
a tonal reference rather modal. Thus, from the twenty-four keys in the
alfabeto, the following are omitted:
A-flat major
A-flat minor
B major
B-flat minor
D-flat major
D-flat minor
E-flat major
E-flat minor
F minor
F-sharp minor
G-flat major
The Borrowings
“De Murcia, who was employed as guitar teacher to the Queen, would undoubtedly
have performed for the Royal couple and their intimate circle (De Murcia speaks in the
Resumen . . . of practicing for his presumably Royal performance), and a request for
some pieces by well-known French guitarists as De Visée and Corbetta would have
been quite natural. Since it is logical to assume that some of the many French
members of Felipe’s court (who, it must be remembered, was the grandson of Louis
XIV and had just come from France in 1700) would have been familiar with these
pieces, they needed no identification. Additionally, since the Passacallas y obras is a
manuscript, De Murcia probably never considered that it would leave his personal
possession.”16
From this observation, we may assume that Murcia was not trying to
plagiarize it, but rather incorporate the music as a demonstrations of his
knowledge of foreign music. The court was cosmopolite and, to survive in this
environment, the musician had to follow the rules.
The first two tunings were used in Spain by Ruiz de Ribayaz and
Gueráu; the third was common in France and later Italy; the fourth was
prevalent in Italy and was used by Sanz; and the fifth was also adopted in
Italy. Tuning 1 is good for plucked technique, i.e., it emphasizes contrapuntal
passages (and occasionally Tuning 2, as well). Re-entrant tuning 3, 4, and 5
were effective in strummed style. In the mixture style, as in Murcia’s music,
sometimes the lower courses function as a bass. At other times, the treble is
intended. The bass and treble strings of a baroque guitar are reversed from
that of a lute:
Thumb movement
Since the tablature used for baroque guitar music lacks a precise
indication of pitch but only the place where the note is to be pressed on, the
double interpretation of high and low for one course can be rather ambiguous,
mainly when dealing with passages in campanelas. For the sake of the
argument, let us consider the same passage in both regular and re-entrant
tuning:
12
the contrapuntal logic; second, Murcia himself left evidences that he was
aware of the 6-course guitar, already in use by that time. Furthermore, in his
Resumen de acompañar la parte con la guitarra (1714), from page 9 on, in
the section Declaracion, Murcia shows how to realize figure-bass on the 5-
course guitar. In many instances, the bass move to a region where the guitar
cannot reach:
Bibliography
Briçeño, Luiz de. Metodo mui facilimo para aprender a tañer la guitarra a lo
español, Paris 1626. Geneva: Minkoff Reprints, 1972.
Murcia, Santiago de. Passacalles y Obras de Guitarra por todos los Tonos naturales
y acidentales (1732). Monaco: Editions Chanterelle S.A., 1979.
Sutton, Julia. Courtly Dance of the Renaissance - A New Translation and Edition of
the Nobità di Dance (1600). New York: Dover Publication, Inc., 1995.
Appendix I
Appendix II
18
Appendix III
I. Biographical Information
- Unknown dates
- His father, Gabriel de Murcia, was a instrument maker and worked for the court
- Personal guitarist and tutor to María Luisa Gabriela of Savoy, Queen of Spain
- Probably studied under the Mallorcan Francisco Gueráu
II. Output
- Passacalles y obras de guitarra por todos los tonos naturales y acidentales (1732)
I - Set of passacalles based on the alfabeto
II - Set of 11 suites (borrowing: Corelli, de Visée, Corbetta, Campion, le Cocq)