Joan Aulí Explained

Joan Aulí
Birth Date:19 December 1796
Birth Place:Felanitx, Majorca
Death Date:10 January 1869
Nationality:Spanish
Occupation:Organist, Composer

Joan Auli (19 December 1796  - 10 January 1869) was a Spanish organist and composer.

Auli was born in Felanitx, Majorca. He had a precocious musical talent and was already an organist when he entered the Dominican Order in 1814. On the dissolution of the Spanish monasteries in 1823 he wandered over Spain for several months, but in November of the same year he was allowed to return to Majorca. In 1825 he went back to Madrid to complete his theological education, playing the organ for a time at the Church of Our Lady of Atocha and being introduced to King Ferdinand VII. In 1828 he returned to Majorca living a very active musical life at the convent of Santo Domingo. The Mendizábal law of 1835 forced him to abandon his orders and to leave his native Majorca. Shortly after he became an organist at Gibraltar. Back to the Balearic Isles in 1836, he settled in Felanitx and spent the rest of his life composing, serving occasionally as an organist, and producing his own operas at the local theaters. His Misa de coro, with organ accompaniment by Antonio Noguera is severe in style and frankly monastic in feeling. From his operas Norma and La doncella de Misolongi only a few fragments survive.

Work list

Bibliography

El músic Joan Aulí (Felanitx: Centre Cultural, 1996)

“Aulí, Juan”, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, (London, 2000)