Music_of_Catalonia Music_of_Catalonia

Music of Catalonia - Definition

Catalonia (in Spain and France) has one of the oldest documented musical traditions in Europe, and has had a rich musical culture continuously for at least two thousand years.

Music of Spain
Andalusia Aragon
Balearic Islands Basque
Canary Islands Castile, Madrid and Leon
Catalonia Extremadura
Galicia, Cantabria and Asturias Murcia
Navarre and La Rioja Valencia
Classical and Opera - Folk and Flamenco - Pop and Rock - Classic guitar and Hip hop
Timeline and Samples
Awards Amigo Awards
Charts Asociacion Fonografica Y Videografica Espanola.
Festivals Festival De La Canción De Benidorm
Media Fans, Mundo Joven
National anthem "Marcha Real"

History

Records from Roman times indicate that the city of Barcelona had an active musical life. Dances, masquerades and other musical performances were popular: apparently too much so, for they were specifically condemned by the Christian saint Paciano in the 4th century.

In the middle ages, Barcelona and the surrounding area was relatively prosperous, and music and art both were cultivated actively. Catalonia and adjacent areas were the home of the troubadors, the itinerant composer-musicians whose influence and aesthetic was decisive on the formation of late medieval secular music, and who traveled into Italy and northern France after the destruction of their culture by the Albigensian Crusade in the early 13th century.

Renaissance polyphony flourished in Catalonia, though the composers there never attained the fame of either the Spanish composers to the south and west or the French composers to the north. Juan Pujol wrote four books of polyphonic masses and motets for the patron saint of Barcelona, St. George.

Performances of opera, mostly imported from Italy, began in the 18th century, but some native operas were written as well, including three by Isaac Albinéz and seven by Enrique Granados. The Barcelona opera house, Gran Teatro del Liceo, which opened in 1847, remains one of the most important in Spain; in addition, in the mid-19th century the first Barcelona Philharmonic Society was founded for the performance of orchestral music. Several symphony orchestras exist in Catalonia today, including the Barcelona Orchestra.

Around the beginning of the 20th century, two Catalan composers--Enrique Granados and Isaac Albinez--became the most famous composers in all of Spain. Their music remains in the standard classical repertory today. Federico Mompou (1893–1987) is known for his delicate piano works, which often have a Catalan nationalist flavor. He spent most of his life in Paris, returning to his native Barcelona only during and after World War II.

Folk and popular music

Sardanes are popular dances, being especially widespread. There are two main types, the original sardana curta (short sardana) style and more modern sardana llarga (large sardana), which is more popular. Sardanas are danced in a circle dance. Other more strange sardanes are sardana de lluïment and sardana revessa.

The sarnada's music (música de cobla, in Catalan) that include the genuine instruments flabiol, and tamborí, tenora, tible and other used in more in more regions, is frequently played orchestrally without the dance.

Other popular music are the ball the bastons, galops, ball de gitanes and the music of gralla and tamborí used in cercaviles or by colles diableres.

In areas around the river Ebro, the jota is a popular dance.

Habaneres are very popular at parties since the end of the 19th century when Catalan people returned from the War of the Cuban Independence. For this reason, habaneres are popularly related to sailors.

In the last half century is known the rumba catalana genre has spread in Catalonia, played mostly by Gypsies, including popular performers like Peret and Gato Perez.

During the end of Franquism there was a group of Catalonian singer-songwriters (setze jutges) that include Lluís Llach and Joan Manuel Serrat, for example; they sang in Catalan (which was then illegal), denouncing the official oppresion. This music movement was known as nova cançó.

In the last 20 years rock and roll has become popular, and a Catalan scene called rock català has appeared. Some very popular groups are Lax'n'Busto, Sau, Els Pets or Sopa de cabra.

External links

Example Usage of Catalonia

malibuphoenix: @gbaksta Catalan is what they speak in Catalonia which is in Spain
karenbryan: Walking Girona’s city walls in Catalonia, Spain: http://su.pr/1cYXb5
epponuman: RT @WSPAUSA: Spain's Catalonia backs debate on bullfighting ban http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8421339.stm
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