sábado, 17 de octubre de 2009

Joaquín Zamacois; Tratado de Armonía (libro nº 1)





Joaquín Zamacois (Santiago de Chile, 14 de diciembre de 1894 - Barcelona, 8 de septiembre de 1976), compositor chileno.
De ascendencia española, de padre vasco y madre catalana, se trasladó a España con sus padres, estableciéndose en Barcelona. Comenzó su carrera musical de la mano de su padre, para posteriormente estudiar en el Conservatorio musical del Liceo de Barcelona y en la Escuela Municipal de Música, de la misma ciudad. Posteriormente se dedicó a la enseñanza y a la composición.
En 1914 fue nombrado profesor del Conservatorio del Liceo, y en 1940 de la Escuela Municipal de Música, donde llegó a director en 1945, convirtiéndola en Conservatorio.
Zamacois también es conocido por haber publicado un completo tratado de Armonía y muchos textos docentes, principalmente para el Conservatorio del Liceo de Barcelona pero que se usan como textos de referencia para la enseñanza de la música en Europa y Latinoamérica.

Tratado de Armonía; Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov







Birth:
Mar. 18, 1844
Death:
Jun. 21, 1908
Composer. He is best known for his operas and orchestral works. Both parents, cultured members of the nobility, were amateur musicians. Nikolai started to play the piano at the age of six and soon tried composing. In 1856 he entered the Imperial Naval Academy and in 1861 he joined the group of amateur composers taught by Balakirev. Together with Balakirev, Borodin, Cui and Mussorgsky make a group called "Mighty five". In 1871 he resigned his commission and accepted a teaching post at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory. Already a recognized composer, he had to teach himself the traditional musical disciplines and techniques before he could teach his students. His students also included Arensky, Nikolai Tcherepnin, Glazunov, Grechaninov, Ippolitov-Ivanov, Liadov, Miaskovsky, and Prokofiev. He directed the Free Music School and conducted its concerts (1874-81), assisted at the Imperial Chapel Choir (1883-94), conducted Beliaev's "Russian Symphony Concerts" (1886-1900), and undertook the controversial task of editing the works of his deceased friends Mussorgsky and Borodin. Eleven of Rimsky's 15 operas appeared between 1895 and 1907, beginning with Christmas Eve (1895) and ending with The Golden Cockerel (1907).



http://www.mediafire.com/?joh4am0wjet