Joaquín Martínez de la Roca

Joaquín Jara (Zaragoza, c. 1676 - Toledo, 1747 or 1756) was a Spanish composer.

In 1715, when he was organist of Valencia Cathedral, Martínez initiated the five-year-long pamphlet war against Francisco Valls for the unconventional dissonances in the Miserere of Valls' Missa Scala Arentina.[1]

Works

  • Los Desgravios de Troya (1712), composed for the birth of the crown prince, Don Philip, Infante of Spain, born at Madrid, June 7, 1712. The 1712 publication of the score was the first example of the publication of Spanish theatre music.

Discography

  • selections from Los Desgravios de Troya (1712) on Canciones de amor y de guerra, Maria Luz Alvarez, Clarincanto, Pneuma 390, 2002.
gollark: Where you go buy shiny better headphones, it is amazing and wondrous for a while, and then you get used to it and now can't bear worse stuff.
gollark: I wonder if better audio equipment is one of those "hedonistic treadmill" situations.
gollark: Which is weird, since I never actually listen to things *loudly*.
gollark: I listen to all things on £12 headphones using my laptop's builtin audio and I seem to have mild tinnitus going on.
gollark: But yes, I just have awful audio gear so meh.

References

  1. Sutcliffe W. Dean, The keyboard sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti and eighteenth-century musical style 2003 - Page 247
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.