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Juan Arañés

Arañes: Tonos & Villancicos

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Dairea Ediciones  |  SKU: DAI0025
  • Composer: Juan Arañés (1580-1649)
  • Editor: Sebastián León
  • Format: Full Score
  • Work Language: Spanish

Description

This publication brings together for the first time all of Arañés's known musical settings of secular Castilian poems, integrating both musical and philological criteria. Using this interdisciplinary methodology, all the poems are published alongside detailed critical apparatus—noting variants and textual evidence—and explanatory notes to aid in their reading and understanding. The musical edition incorporates and records all emendations to the poetic texts and presents the pieces alongside the poems in their entirety, thus highlighting their importance in performance practice. The introductory study provides an overview of the historical and cultural circumstances surrounding the embassy in Rome of Ruy Gómez de Silva, the 3rd Duke of Pastrana, during which Arañés's second book was published . It also delves into the poetic style, its literary context, and its relationship to musical transmission—with the guitar as the paradigmatic instrument of Spanish music of the time. topics relevant not only to musicians, musicologists and music lovers, but also from a philological and literary perspective.

This publication is an opportunity for a diverse audience to delve deeper into the work of the composer Juan Arañés, still scarcely known thanks to his famous —and not entirely understood— piece "Un sarao de la chacona", as well as the circumstances of his environment and the undeniable poetic quality of his works.

The secular works of the Aragonese composer Juan Arañés are primarily contained in the Second Book of Songs and Carols , printed in Rome by Giovanni Robletti in 1624. Five other pieces by this composer are notated in the manuscript known as the Cancionero de la Casanatense , likely copied in Spain around the same time and preserved in Rome, confirming the presence of this repertoire with Castilian texts in the papal city. These two collections exemplify the poetic and musical production of the first decades of the 17th century, as well as its source of inspiration and dissemination. in them, as in the poetic anthologies of the period, a wide variety of texts are grouped together, exemplifying the lyrical creation of that era. The presence of these pieces in Italy, especially those that were printed, demonstrates the influence of the so-called Spanish music in this territory, and even gives us an idea of ​​the music that, due to various circumstances, was not recorded in Spain, as well as the cultural exchanges between the two regions.