 Fernando Sor Fernando Sor (baptized Joseph Fernando Macari Sors or José Fernando Macarurio Sors February 14, 1778 – July 10, 1839) was a Spanish guitarist and composer, born in Barcelona. He is known sometimes as the 'Beethoven of the Guitar' in Spain.
Biography
Born to a fairly well-off family,
Sor was descended from a long line of career soldiers, and intended to
continue that legacy, but was distracted from this when his father
introduced him to Italian opera. He fell in love with music and
abandoned a military career. Along with opera, Sor's father also
introduced him to the guitar, which, at the time, was little more than
an instrument played in taverns, thought to be inferior to orchestral
instruments.
Sor studied music at a monastery on the slopes Montserrat,
a mountain near Barcelona, until his father died. His mother couldn't
afford to finance continued studies and withdrew him. It was at this
monastery that he began to write his first pieces of music for the
guitar.
In 1808, when Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Spain, he
began to write nationalistic music for the guitar, often accompanied by
patriotic lyrics.
After the defeat of the Spanish army, Sor accepted an administrative
post in the occupying government. After the Spanish repelled the French
in 1813, Sor and many other artists and aristocrats who had befriended
the French left Spain for fear of retribution. He went to Paris, and
never returned to his home country again.
He began to gain renown in the Parisian art community for his skills
of composition and for his ability at playing the guitar, and
eventually began to tour1827, due partly to his advancing age, he
settled down and decided to live out the rest of his life in Paris. It
was during this retirement that he composed many of his better works.
across Europe, gaining considerable fame. In
His last work was a mass in honour of his
daughter, who died in 1837. Her death sent the already sickly Sor into
serious depression, and he died a miserable man in 1839. He died of
tongue and throat cancer.(Cecilia Ruiz de Ríos, Nicaraguan historian).
Works
How history has viewed Sor's style can be summed
up in a quote from William Newman: "The creative worth of Sor's guitar
sonatas is high. The ideas, which grow out of the instrument yet stand
up well enough apart from it, are fresh and distinctive. The harmony is
skilful and surprisingly varied, with bold key changes and with rich
modulations in the development sections. The texture is naturally of
interest too, with the melody shifted from top to bottom, to middle,
and frequent contrapuntal bits added. Among the extended forms, the
first Allegro movements
still show considerable flexibility in the application of 'sonata
form', especially in the larger number of ideas introduced and
recalled. For that matter, the style still goes back to that of Haydn
and Boccherini, especially in the first movement of Op. 22, which has
all the neatness of syntax and accompaniment to be found in a classic
symphony, and its third and fourth movements, which could nicely pass
as a Minuet and Rondo by Haydn."
- Method for the Spanish Guitar
First published in French under the name Méthode
pour la Guitare (1830) and then translated in English under the name
“Method for the Spanish Guitar” in 1832.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fernando Sor". |