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José Joaquim dos Santos

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Stabat Mater by José Joaquim dos Santos, cover page. Published by the Real Fábrica da Musica, Lisbon, 1792. Collection of the Library of the Ajuda National Palace, Lisbon.
Stabat Mater by José Joaquim dos Santos, first page. Published by the Real Fábrica da Musica, Lisbon, 1792. Collection of the Library of the Ajuda National Palace, Lisbon.

José Joaquim dos Santos (? 1747–1801)[1] was a Portuguese music teacher and late Baroque-period composer who specialised in writing sacred music. He was listed by two authors[2] as being among Portugal's "most outstanding eighteenth-century composers."

He was born in Senhor da Pedra near Óbidos to Manuel Gonçalves dos Santos and Vitória Luísa and entered Lisbon's Royal Patriarchal Music Seminary (Real Seminário de Música da Patriarcal de Lisboa)[3][4] on 24 June 1754.

After graduating on 1 January 1763, Santos accepted an offer to remain on staff to teach solfège and was later appointed as professor (mestre) of harmony, counterpoint and composition. He continued teaching there for the remainder of his life. From 1768, parallel to his work within the seminary, he was also engaged as a singer, organist, composer and conductor at the Royal Chapel (Capela Real).[5]

Of his teaching skills, one of his students, André da Silva Gomes described Santos as "wise and experienced" then adding that his command of fugue writing was "outstanding … and singular",[6] while Nancy Lee Harper in her survey of Portuguese keyboard music said he was "noted for his Figured Bass rules of accompaniment."[7]

According to musicologist Robert Stevenson, Santos' own composition style was strongly influenced by Neapolitan opera composer Davide Perez who taught him at the seminary,[8] and commenting about Santos' overall approach, Enrico Ruggieri says in his thesis, "He was renowned as master of the stile antico, however he composed music in concertato style as well."[9] Looking specifically at Santos' 1792 setting of the Stabat Mater, Ruggieri noted that "the composition is built around the formal structure of a cantata sacra da camera that belongs to the style of the Neapolitan tradition of composers such as Alessandro Scarlatti or Giovanni Battista Pergolesi."[10] What has been described by musicologist Ricardo Bernardes as "the well-known process of Italianization of musical practices begun in the reign of King João V" is clearly demonstrated here.[11]

Apart from two secular eclogues which were performed respectively in 1786 and 1787 at the Lisbon Academy of Sciences (Academia das Ciências de Lisboa) for its celebrations of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, the remainder of Santos' known works were written for liturgical use and performed in Portugal and Brazil. These include 5 settings of the Mass, 2 of the Te Deum, a Credo, a complete Vespers, 25 individual Psalms, 21 Anthems, Motets and Antiphons, 4 of the Miserere, 1 of Holy Week Matins and 1 of the Holy Week Responsories. The vocal forces vary from 4 to 8 voices plus soloists in some works, and always with accompaniment by organ, orchestra, organ and orchestra, or various smaller combinations of solo instruments.[12]

The exact date and cause of Santos' death and the place of his burial are unknown.

References

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  1. ^ Some sources give his date of birth as 14 September. For example, see Cardoso, André. "Introdução: José Joaquim dos Santos (1747–1801) e o Hino para as Laudes do Nascimento de Nosso Senhor Jesus Cristo". Revista brasileira de musica Escola de Música, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Vol. 23/2, 2010. p. 304.[1] Accessed 28 July 2018.
  2. ^ Cymbron, Luísa and Manuel Carlos Brito. História da Música Portuguesa (History of Portuguese Music). Universidade Aberta, 1992. p. 105. ISBN 978-972-674-086-5.
  3. ^ The seminary was established in Lisbon in 1713 by King João V and located in a building next to the Ribeira Palace and Royal Chapel. This reflected in part his desire to advance music expression in Portugal along with his interest in the development of music within the context of liturgy in his Royal Chapel and beyond. He had a particular admiration for Italian music of the period, along with other aspects of its art and architecture, an explanation of why he paid for Portuguese composers and musicians to study there and imported Italians such as Domenico Scarlatti, Giovanni Giorgi and Davide Perez to Lisbon. (See Stein, Louise K. "The Iberian Peninsula." The Late Baroque Era: Vol 4. From The 1680s To 1740, edited by George J Buelow. Macmillan Press, 1993. p. 428. ISBN 978-1-349-11305-7). The seminary continued as Portugal's principal music educator until the establishment of the National Conservatoire of Lisbon (Conservatório Nacional de Lisboa) in 1836.
  4. ^ King João V's inclination towards things Italian was more complex than just an interest in its arts. Well summarised in his phrase "To make of Lisbon a new Rome", his Catholic Church adherence led him to import Roman liturgy and ritual and to send Portuguese clergy to Rome to be trained in their use. (See d'Alvarenga, João Pedro. “‘To make of Lisbon a new Rome’: The Repertory of the Patriarchal Church in the 1720s and 1730s.” Eighteenth Century Music, Vol. 8/2, 2011. pp. 179–214., [2] Accessed 5 August 2018.
  5. ^ Cardoso, p. 304.
  6. ^ Cardoso, p. 304.
  7. ^ Harper, Nancy Lee. Portuguese Piano Music: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography. Scarecrow Press, 2013. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-8108-8299-7.
  8. ^ Stevenson, Robert. "Santos, José Joaquim dos." The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley Sadie. Macmillan Publishing, 1980. Vol. 16, p. 485. ISBN 0-333-23111-2.
  9. ^ Ruggieri, Enrico. The Lamentações para a Semana Santa by José Joaquim dos Santos and Luciano Xavier dos Santos and the music for two violas, voices concertate and low instruments. Master Research Projects, 2017. KC Research Portal. p. 19.[3] Accessed 30 July 2018.
  10. ^ Ruggieri, p. 8.
  11. ^ Bernardes, Ricardo. José Joaquim dos Santos (1747-1801) e a música policoral na Capela Patriarcal de Lisboa na segunda metade do séc. XVIII. 2016. Abstract from Colóquio “Novas grandezas que já pareciam impossíveis à imaginação”, Lisboa, Portugal.[4] Accessed 28 July 2018.
  12. ^ Stevenson, p. 485.

Bibliography

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  • Alvarenga, João Pedro (1997), "Música Sacra no tempo de D. Maria I: Obras de João de Sousa Carvalho e José Joaquim dos Santos". XVIII Jornadas Gulbenkian de Música Antiga, pp. 50–56, Lisboa, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian.
  • Filipe, Pedro dos Santos (2003), Nocturnos: Responsoria In Sabbato Sancto de José Joaquim dos Santos, Câmara Municipal de Óbidos.
  • Cardoso, André. Introdução: José Joaquim dos Santos (1747–1801) e o Hino para as Laudes do Nascimento de Nosso Senhor Jesus Cristo.[5] Accessed 28 July 2018.
  • Ruggieri, Enrico. The Lamentações para a Semana Santa by José Joaquim dos Santos and Luciano Xavier dos Santos and the music for two violas, voices concertate and low instruments. Master Research Projects, 2017. KC Research Portal.[6] Accessed 30 July 2018.
  • Stevenson, Robert. "Santos, José Joaquim dos." The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley Sadie. Macmillan Publishing, 1980. Vol. 16, p. 485. ISBN 0-333-23111-2.
  • Vasconcelos, Joaquim (1870), "Santos, José Joaquim dos". Os Músicos Portuguezes: Biographia, Bibliographia, Vol. 2, pp. 158–159, Porto, Imprensa Portugueza.
  • Vieira, Ernesto (1900), "Santos (José Joaquim dos)", Diccionario Biographico de Músicos Portuguezes, Vol. II, pp. 274–276, Lisboa, Typographia Mattos Moreira & Pinho. Santos (José Joaquim dos). Accessed 12 November 2018. (A list of his works held in archives is included in this entry.)

Selective discography

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  • Brasilessentia Grupo Vocal; Orquestra de Câmara da UNESP; Vítor Gabriel, conductor – Música na Catedral de São Paulo. Paulus – CD 004383. Released: 1999.
  • Ensemble Joanna Musica – Music for Saint Joana, Princess of Aveiro. Numérica – NUM 1183. Released: 2009.
  • Segréis de Lisboa – Stabat Mater Miserere: Tributo a José Joaquim dos Santos. Movieplay – MOV 3-11051. Released: 1997.