
Puerto
Rico: sociedad y cultura antes de la invasión
de las tropas estadounidenses: 1898
|
|
Música Para 1870 ya está definida una nueva modalidad de la danza puertorriqueña que tiene por centro la ciudad de Ponce y por originador al pianista y compositor sanjuanero Manuel G. Tavárez quien acababa de retornar de sus estudios de piano en el Conservatorio Imperial de Paris. Tavárez estiliza y depura la danza puertorriqueña vistiéndola de galas románticas e impartiéndole un ademán gracil, propio de la obra de salón francesa. La danza ponceña, quejumbrosa y apasionada, de gran audacia y vuelo sentimental, tiene mucho de la cantilena, y revela la influencia de la ópera italiana. Su espontaneidad contrasta con el corte académico de la danza sanjuanera, que conserva muchos rasgos de la contradanza española, aunque logra una notable evolución en manos de Julián Andino (1845-1926), Casimiro Duchesne (1852-1906), Genaro Aranzamendi (1831-1889), los hermanos Mauricio (n.1842) y Hermógenes Alvarez (+1914), y los hermanos Heraclio (1837-1891) y Federico (1857-1927) Ramos. Más adelante Juan Morel Campos, discípulo de Tavárez y el más prolífico compositor de danzas, desarrolló el género al nivel que hoy conocemos. Esta nueva danza evolucionada estaba mayormente inspirada en el amor y la mujer, lo cual se refleja en sus títulos: Margarita, Idilio, De tu lado al paraíso, Mis Penas, Laura y Georgina (una de las más exquisitas y populares, dedicada por Morel a las bellas hermanas Capó de Ponce), La Sensitiva, así como tantas otras. Music The Puerto Rican Danza grew out of Nineteenth-Century European, American, and Spanish-Carribbean music styles and dance forms. Chief among these were the Waltz, Mazurka, March, and the Puerto Rican "Seis." The March Band was a favorite vehicle for concerts, parades, parties, street fairs, and dance music. Every town had a March Band, usually made up of players from the Spanish Military Brigades or the local Fire Department. The most popular of these March bands came from Ponce; and the most prolific composer of Puerto Rican Danzas was Juan Morel Campos. Juan Morel Campos was born in Ponce, on May 16, 1857. His first teacher was none other than the illustrious pianist-composer Manuel G. Tavarez (a Parisian trained composer and former pupil of M. Alphonse Laurent and M. Daniel Auber), who also wrote some of the most beloved Danza repertory for the piano. Although Juan Morel Campos achieved great heights as a concert-pianist, his best scores are for the Concert Band, as he was also a flautist and an accomplished player of the Bass Trombone or "Bombardino" (an instrument which he richly featured in many of his Danzas). The obliggato part of the bass trombone in most of his scores has become inextricably identified with the Danza style as a genre. In piano scores, it is difficult to realize, as the bass obliggato moves back and forth between the left hand clef and the right hand clef. The example provided here, played on a keyboard, represents the composer's lyrical style. You can hear the part of the bombardino or bass trombone part in the accompanying left hand figure. |
|
|
Para
explorar los diversos renglones de la sociedad Puertorriqueña del
1898 favor de pulsar To explore different components of the Puerto Rican society in 1898 please click on the following links. |