

As the molten evening sun settles over Seville’s Plaza de España, the melancholic melody of a guitar completes the rapture.
Your head swims with delight to Sueno en la Floresta (Dreams in the Magic Garden). As T. S. Eliot observed: ‘Music heard so deeply / That it is not heard at all, but you are the music / While the music lasts.’
Quivering quavers! Spaniards should stop reading right here, for their shameful secret is out. Get ready to compose yourself.
Their national soul music plucks heartstrings as it does guitar strings. But alarmingly, it inspires non-Spaniards to get their plectrums out and do even better. Well, they do say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.
This incomparable, beautiful evocation of Iberian charm was composed by the Paraguayan, Agustin Barrios Mangore. John Williams described the composer as the greatest guitarist of all time.

Others might say it is equaled by contemporary English composer Richard Harvey, whose Antico for Guitar frequently tops the most requested Spanish dream music.
Little conjures up the vibrancy of the Spanish spirit more than does Espana, composed by Frenchman Emanuel Chabrier after his return from a visit to Spain.
The French love affair with their Spanish neighbor gave us Bolero. Its evocative heat-building rhythm caught the world’s imagination when skaters Torvill and Dean used it to underscore their Olympian ice-drama in 1984.
This soft to frenzied musical drama with its heart-stopping finale was composed by Frenchman Maurice Ravel.
The World’s Most Popular Opera

It was another Frenchman, Georges Bizet, who created Carmen. It is said to be the world’s most loved opera
Carmen is a passionate musical that reflects the anguish of Andalusian romance, pathos and murder.
His compatriot Jules Massenet’s Meditation captivates us all, but almost as well known is his opera El Cid, based on Spain’s revered military hero.
The España Waltz by French composer Emile Waldteufel is certain to get you up on the table to dance like no one is watching.
Just as the German-Austrians commandeer our sun beds, they are also adept at grabbing the best tunes.

Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro was set in Seville; his Don Giovanni was based on the exploits of Spain’s own Casanova, Don Juan.
At any Spanish music extravaganza, Johann Strauss Jnr gets them off their seats and into the foot-tapping aisles with his Spanischer Marsch.
Passionate love and revenge fuel the drama of most opera. Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi was inspired by a Spanish play when he created The Force of Destiny.
Rossini, another Italian, put northern competitors in their place with his Barber of Seville.
Playing Second Fiddle

The Russians won’t play second fiddle to anyone either. Who can leave the castanets in the drawer when the first chords of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Capriccio Espagnol lift the casa rafters?
Then there’s fellow Russian Peter Tchaikovsky with his mesmerising heel-tapping hand-clapping Spanish Dance in the ballet The Nutcracker.
The father of Russian classical music, Mikhael Glinka, composed the embodiment of the Spanish musical spirit with his Summer Night in Madrid.
Could it be that without any Spanish intervention, there will always be Spanish music to enjoy? Everyone wants to be Spanish; it is the way it has always been. Let us hear your comments.

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Categories: Music Notes
















