diumenge, 5 de juny del 2022

DE JERUSALEM, Ignacio (1707-1769) - Cantata 'Al Combate' (1760)

Johann Baptist Homann (1663-1724) - Regni Mexicani Novae Hispaniae Ludoviciana, N. Angliae. (1720)


Ignacio de Jerusalem (1707-1769) - Cantata 'Al Combate' (1760)
Performers: Elda Peralta (mezzo-soprano); Eleanor Ranney-Mendoza (soprano); Sandro Naglia (tenor); Alexander Edgemon (counter-tenor); Vince Wallace (bass); Choir and Orchestra Chicago Arts; Javier José Mendoza (conductor)

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Mexican composer and violinist of Italian birth. His father, Matteo Martino Gerusalemme, was a violinist at the Jesuit church in Lecce. In 1742, while active as a theatre musician in Cádiz, Ignazio was persuaded to leave for Mexico City by Josef Cárdenas, the administrator of the Real Hospital de Naturales. Jerusalem and his companions, who included singers, dancers and instrumentalists, began arriving at Mexico City at the end of 1743. Jerusalem became director of the Coliseo, where he established a reputation as a gifted composer. In June 1746 he entered the service of Mexico City Cathedral, composing villancicos and teaching at the Colegio de Infantes. Jerusalem found himself at loggerheads with Domingo Dutra, an indifferent musician who had been the cathedral’s interim maestro de capilla since 1739, when Zumaya left. Dutra had proved inept as both composer and choir director, and in 1749 the chapter moved to force him into retirement. In April 1750 Jerusalem applied for the post and after a rigorous examination was appointed maestro de capilla on 3 November 1750. The capilla flourished under his guidance. According to Juan de Viera, writing in 1777, Jerusalem directed the orchestra and choir in musical performances nearly every day, and ‘the Music Chapel [was] the most select, skilful and knowledgeable of the chapels in America’. Viera overheard a group of Europeans saying that ‘such magnificence is not to be found in Toledo or Seville’, and that ‘they seemed to be more like a choir of angels than of humans’. Soon after Jerusalem’s appointment as maestro de capilla his health failed, and he also had to confront a threat to his economic security in the early 1750s, when he complained that musicians from other parishes and churches were usurping fees that previously he had received for funerals, processions and other special occasions.

Jerusalem’s Matins service for Maundy Thursday 1753 scored a success that was still remembered decades later, but during the next couple of years he faced three major crises. The first was at the Coliseo. As he ascended in the cathedral hierarchy Jerusalem shed his obligations to the Coliseo, until he finally resigned altogether. Simultaneously he was brought before the cathedral chapter on yet another charge. His wife Antonia had gone to live with her brother and was asking that the chapter pay him some of her husband’s wages. Jerusalem defended himself, saying that much of the debt owed to the Coliseo had been incurred by his wife; he pleaded with the chapter not to withhold his wages and entreated them to help with professional expenses, observing that he personally had been paying the poet and copyist for his major compositions. The third scandal of this period concerned Tollis de la Roca’s appointment at the cathedral, to which Jerusalem strongly objected. Jerusalem went to great lengths to ensure the establishment of Tollis’s second-class status in the cathedral hierarchy. In spite of a life marked by turmoil and questionable decisions, Jerusalem made a series of clear-headed musical reforms that influenced Mexican music for the rest of the century. He advocated the sole use of modern notation and the abandonment of white notation still employed in New World cathedrals. He insisted on a measure of literary reform, expressing particular displeasure in 1753 with the obtuse poetry of Francisco de Selma, who had been supplying texts in the New World for 33 years after leaving his native Segovia. The last ten years of Jerusalem’s life were extremely productive and tranquil. On his death the cathedral chapter acknowledged Jerusalem’s faithful service and compiled an inventory of the music he had composed. His works continued to be used in Mexico City for many years.

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