José Herrando Explained

José Herrando (Valencia, c. 1720/1721-Madrid, 1763) was a Spanish violinist and composer.

Career

Herrando was a friend of the writer and mathematician Diego de Torres Villarroel and a fixed musician for some theater companies in Madrid, for which he composed several pieces, such as for the comedy Manos blancas no ofenden (White hands do not offend) by Pedro Calderón de la Barca. He spent some time in the service of the Duke of Arcos theater, to which he dedicated his Arte y puntual explicación del modo de tocar el violín con perfección y facilidad (Art and timely explanation of how to play the violin with perfection and ease) published in Paris in 1756. This was the first published attempt by a Spaniard at teaching this instrument. Its front featured an engraving by Carmona with his portrait.

Herrando was first violinist for the Royal Chapel of the Incarnation when, in 1754 he wrote Seis sonatinas para violín de cinco cuerdas y bajo armónico, no cifrado (Six sonatinas for five-string violin and bass) dedicated to the castrati singer Carlo Broschi, Farinelli, a musician who was with the Spanish court during the reign of Felipe V, whose soprano voice was the only one capable of taking the monarch out of his deep depression. His style follows the Italian fashion but it has vigor and freshness of melodic invention, and the quality of an Albero or a Soler.

In 1760 he published, in London, the collection Diecisiete nuevos minuetos españoles para dos violines (Seventeen new Spanish minuets for two violins), which contains some of his works. Like his contemporary composer Luis Misón, Herrando played with his violin in the evenings in Madrid's Palace of the Dukes of Alba. From him, in the Palace of Liria, Jose Subirá cataloged twelve sonatas for violin and bass, twelve violin gigs, twelve trios for two violins and bass, dedicated to the Duke of Huéscar in 1751 and some duets for two violins as well as a Libro de Diferentes Lecciones para la Viola (Book of Different Lessons for Viola) containing 42 years of interesting work. Most of these works were lost during the Civil War, but some of the sonatas have survived thanks to the first volume of Clásicos españoles del violín (Spanish Violin Classics) published in Paris in 1937 released by Joaquín Nin.

Works

Written

Music works

References

Jasinski, Mark H. "A Translation and Commentary on Jose Herrando's Arte y Puntual Explicacion del Modo de Tocar el Violin (1756)." A thesis presented to the Department of Music, Brigham Young University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts. August 1974.