Juan de Araujo: Difference between revisions

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==Life==
==Life==
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'''Died:''' 1712
'''Died:''' 1712


<b>Biography</b>
'''Biography'''
 
Born in Extremadura, Spain, he crossed the ocean at an early age with his father, a civil servant, and completed his education at the University of San Marcos in Lima (capital of present-day Peru), studying composition with Tomas de Torrejón y Velasco.
 
Banished for some years from Lima by the then Viceroy, he went to Panamá (where some of his works survive), was ordained to the priesthood, and returned to Lima in 1672, now as maestro of the Cathedral.
 
In 1676 he moved, apparently to Cuzco Cathedral (Peru), where others of his works survive. Four years later he moved again, to the Cathedral of La Plata (present-day Sucre, Bolivia) there to serve until his death in 1712. His output of sacred music in Latin is relatively small; where his genius overflowed in abundance was in the production of villancicos of all sorts and combinations of voices and instruments from two to at least thirteen parts.


Araujo composed prolifically, and while he followed the traditional form of the villancico, he also searched for innovative and unusual effects, employing systemic syncopation in 6/8 time to provide unexpected rhythmic drive. Serving during a prolonged economic boom, he enjoyed resources permitting him an orchestra that few cathedrals could boast, even in Europe. (Source: Goldberg Magazine)
{{WikipediaLink}}
{{WikipediaLink}}
==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
{{Legend}}
*[[Las  coflades de la estleya&nbsp;(Araujo, Juan de)|<i>
Las  coflades de la estleya</i>]]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/sheet/arau-cof.pdf http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/images/8/84/Icon_pdf.gif]&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/sound/arau-cof.mid http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/images/8/81/Icon_snd.gif]&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/source/arau-cof.mus Finale-2000]&nbsp;)
*[[Las  coflades de la estleya&nbsp;(Araujo, Juan de)|<i>
Las  coflades de la estleya</i>]]&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/sheet/arau-co2.pdf http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/images/8/84/Icon_pdf.gif]&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/sound/arau-co2.mid http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/images/8/81/Icon_snd.gif]&nbsp;[http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/source/arau-co2.mus Finale-2000]&nbsp;)
[http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Special:Whatlinkshere/Juan_de_Araujo Click here to search for composer on ChoralWiki]


{{#SortWorks:}}
{{CheckMissing}}
{{Whatlinkshere}}
==Publications==
==Publications==


==External links==
==External links==


<i>add web links here</i>
''add web links here''




[[Category:1646 births|Araujo, Juan de]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Araujo, Juan de}}
[[Category:1712 deaths|Araujo, Juan de]]
[[Category:1646 births]]
[[Category:Composers|Araujo, Juan de]]
[[Category:1712 deaths]]
[[Category:Baroque composers|Araujo, Juan de]]
[[Category:Composers]]
[[Category:Spanish composers|Araujo, Juan de]]
[[Category:Baroque composers]]
[[Category:Spanish composers]]
[[Category:Bolivian composers]]

Revision as of 18:41, 8 March 2020

Life

Born: 1646

Died: 1712

Biography

Born in Extremadura, Spain, he crossed the ocean at an early age with his father, a civil servant, and completed his education at the University of San Marcos in Lima (capital of present-day Peru), studying composition with Tomas de Torrejón y Velasco.

Banished for some years from Lima by the then Viceroy, he went to Panamá (where some of his works survive), was ordained to the priesthood, and returned to Lima in 1672, now as maestro of the Cathedral.

In 1676 he moved, apparently to Cuzco Cathedral (Peru), where others of his works survive. Four years later he moved again, to the Cathedral of La Plata (present-day Sucre, Bolivia) there to serve until his death in 1712. His output of sacred music in Latin is relatively small; where his genius overflowed in abundance was in the production of villancicos of all sorts and combinations of voices and instruments from two to at least thirteen parts.

Araujo composed prolifically, and while he followed the traditional form of the villancico, he also searched for innovative and unusual effects, employing systemic syncopation in 6/8 time to provide unexpected rhythmic drive. Serving during a prolonged economic boom, he enjoyed resources permitting him an orchestra that few cathedrals could boast, even in Europe. (Source: Goldberg Magazine)

View the Wikipedia article on Juan de Araujo.

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

External links

add web links here