Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography
Transcription
Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography
Pilar Ramos Lopez University de la Rioja, Spain Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography Introduction “Spain is constituted by a people who, throughout their history, have been characterised as people of saints, artists, and warriors: essential characteristics that have remained through its History and that could not have been reformed, in spite of the Encyclopaedia’s doctrines” (Extract from Franco’s speech in the Pavilion of Craftsmanship at Valence, 11 May 1947). “…like the mystical writers and painters of Spanish humanism, he [Tomás Luis de Victo ria] was able to harmonize artistic severity with loving emotion. The secret of this aesthetic achievement lies in the dramatic mysticism with which he infused his works” (Angles in The New Oxford History of Music, IV 1968: 400). These words have a long history behind them. In fact, “mystic” has been a category usually employed to describe Spanish music from the 16th and 17th centuries as diffe rent from the one written by contemporary Netherland, French or Italian composers. This paper aims to outline the history of the concept of musical mysticism in the Spa nish Golden Age. Firstly, I will generally examine the expressions of mysticism in 16th and 17th century Spain and consider their connections with the musical practice of the time. Then, I will study the ideological context of historians who have insisted on the idea of a Spanish musical mysticism. And finally, the repercussions of this key concept for the construction of the National musical canon will be examined. Francisco Franco Bahamonte, Textos de doctrina política. Palabras y escritos de 1945 a 1950. Madrid, Publicaciones espańolas, 1951, p. 439. Quoted by Llorente (1995: 57). Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory I. Expressions of Mysticism in 16th and 17th Century Spain “Mysticism” comes from the Greek word μυω, meaning “to conceal. ” From its origi nal meaning, linked to “secret” religious rituals, the term came to signify knowledge in medieval times. Thus, Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) in his short definition of mysti cism as cognitio Dei experimentalis (knowledge of God through experience), drew on the Book of Psalms (34: 8) “Taste and see that the Lord is good”. Spiritual as they are, these are the desires of the truth mystic: tasting and seeing (Scholem 2000: 24). In a more extensive definition of mysticism, The Stanford Enciclopedia of Philosophy says “a constellation of distinctive practices, discourses, texts, institutions, traditions, and experiences aimed at human transformation, variously defined in different tradi tions”. Just before, in the same first paragraph of the long entry on “Mysticism”, we find Teresa of Avila as the only non-academic source quoted. Nobody would suspect a hidden Spanish nationalist and Catholic agenda in The Stanford Enciclopedia. Neither do I. On the contrary, I would like to stress that Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross (Juan de la Cruz) and Ignatius of Loyola are central authors of mystical literature; their style and forms of communicating the ineffable had been studied for centuries. One of the main points of my paper is that none of the Spanish Renaissance mys tics emphasized the role of music in their experience. For instance, among the many vi sions of Teresa of Avila, only one refers to a musical context: the saint was listening to the Salve when she saw the Virgin Mary come out from a painting. Far removed from Teresa and other mystics who took images or readings as starting points for mystical experiences, John of the Cross stated: “In this life, everything that can be imagined by imagination and grasped and understood by understanding is not and can not be a close medium for the union of God. ” From these words we can conclude that he did not consider music as a way to mysticism. In contrast, Ignatius of Loyola did speak specifically about music. He con fessed that he would not want people to think of the Jesuits as “ociosos” (idle men), so he scolded some Jesuits because they “seemed to sing like monks”. The claims of spiritual and internalized religion plus the necessity to work as teachers and priests “La víspera de san Sebastián, el primer ańo que vine a ser priora en la Encarnación, comenzando la salve, vi en silla prioral, adonde está puesta nuestra Seńora, bajar con gran multitud de ángeles la Madre de Dios y ponerse allí. A mi parecer, no vi la imagen entonces, sino esta Seńora que digo. Pareció me se parecía algo a la imagen que me dio la Condesa, aunque fue de presto al poderla determinar, por suspenderme luego mucho. Parecíanme, encima de las camas, de las sillas y sobre los antepechos, án geles, aunque no con forma corporal, que era visión intelectual. Estuvo ansí toda la salve, díjome: “Bien acertaste en ponerme aquí; yo estaré presente a las alabanzas que hicieren a mi Hijo y se las presentaré” (Teresa de Ávila 1940 [1569]: XXV, 218) “[…] todo lo que la imaginación puede imaginar y el entendimiento recibir y entender en esta vida no es ni puede ser medio próximo para la unión de Dios” [San Juan de la Cruz, Subida del Monte Carmelo, 8, 4] (quoted by Stoichita 1995: 5) Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography continually prompted the Jesuits to reject the singing of the divine office in choir, and excluded choirs and organs from the houses of the new order in their first foundational document. Every study of Jesuit musical activity acknowledges as a paradox this sur prising beginning of an institution with such an important musical impact in the 17th and 18th centuries, in Europe as well as in America. However, the specific context of the statements about music in the first project of St. Ignatius de Loyola is usually ignored. In 16th century Spain, particularly among moral and converse (i.e. Christians from Jewish origin) social circles, there was a strong rejection of music as a practical activity because of its association with otiositas (idleness) (Ramos forthcoming). As far as I know, there is only one mystic, the nun Sor Maria de Santo Domingo (Surtz 1992), who did give a central role to music in at least one of her visions. Perhaps it is worthwhile noting that in Renaissance Spain most ecstatic raptures were expe rienced by women, particularly by nuns (Certeau 1982, Haliczer 2002). But Spanish books on moral and behaviour addressed to women refused or even banished practi cal music (Ramos 2005). Representing mystical experiences were a challenge not only for writers but also for painters. Saints’ visions and experiences—that were not always visual—are repre sented in many paintings, creating a new code and style. Victor Stoichita (1995) has studied the rhetoric of the unrepresentable, the conflict between representations of visions and realities, and the problems resulting from the clash between perspective rules and visionary landscapes. Music appears in some painted visions, most times there are angels singing or playing instruments, as in the ones of Saint Francis of As sisi, or in some representations of the Virgin Mary. Were mystic experiences a challenge for music? In all truth, I do not see why repre senting mystic experiences in music should be more difficult than musically represent ing a boy or a book. Anyway, this is a semiotic problem that is beyond the objectives of this paper. To my knowledge, there is not a study of the musical ways of expressing mystical experiences in 16th-century polyphonic music like the ones by Victor Stoi chita (1995) or Michel de Certeau (1982) dealing with Spanish paintings and mystical literature, respectively. Maybe the closest musicological study is Edward Lowinsky’s Secret Chromatic Art (1946). However, Lowinsky was more interested in expressions of heterodox or heretical beliefs than in mystical experiences. Although it is true that heterodoxy and mysticism were neighbours terms from the Inquisitorial point of view. Unfortunately, Lowinsky’s seminal work did not consider Spanish music. When in 1539 the Jesuits presented their draft to the Pope in order for it to be approved as a new Congregation, a cardinal requested the suppression of certain passages. The reason was that these pas sages were considered to favor the Lutheran thesis against monasticism. The first passage excluded organ and the “musical ritual sung either in the mass or in the other offices”. See Ramos (forthcoming) In the many biographies from 16th and 17th centuries of Spanish women writers, music is only mentioned by a few of them (Ramos 2005: 114–115) Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory For this paper the question is: were musicians in 16th and 17th century Spain in terested in representing mysticism? My answer is no. Firstly, Spanish musicians were not interested in composing music to mystical texts, apart from liturgical texts like the Canticum Canticorum. Sometimes sacred songs in Spanish were secular songs that after certain words were changed were transformed into sacred songs, following the medieval tradition of contrafacta, like some well-known examples in the Canciones y villanescas espirituales by Francisco Guerrero (Venice, 1589). Contrafacta or not, these sacred songs often have a popular mood in lyrics and music that does not seem to fit mystical expressions. Secondly, only few personal data allow us to relate Spanish musicians of the time with mysticism: 1. The closest musician to mysticism was Fernando de Las Infantas (1534–1610), whose theological book Tractatus de praedestinatione (Paris 1601) was placed on the In quisition’s Index in 1603, that is to say, it was forbidden. However, all his composi tions were written and published in Venice 20 years before, even before his ordination (1584): three books entitled Sacrae varii styli cantiones (1578–1579), and Plura modulationum genera (1579). Significantly, Infantas, the Spanish composer who was most con cerned about theology, has been considered not mystic enough and consequently not Spanish enough by Henri Collet (1913), the leading scholar in the theory of Spanish musical mysticism. According to Collet, mysticism was a racial essence opposite to Netherlander’s “science subtil mais sèche” (sophisticated but dry science) (1913: 3). With such an extremely intricate counterpoint, Infantas could not be considered either genuinely Spanish or a mystic. 2. In contrast, according to many historians mysticism and Hispanism were unit ed and embodied in Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548–1611). However, as is known, the Spanishness of Victoria is a recent phenomenon. In his time he was considered with Palestrina and Anerio as belonging to the Roman School. The main reasons for his mysticism have been attributed to the following: a) Musical reasons: his music sounds “mystic” and he never wrote secular music. b) Biographical reasons: his place of birth, his relationship with Filipo Neri and his writings. a) We have no document of his lifetime that speaks of a special mystic, deep or spir itual particular quality of his music. Significantly, the music of Morales, Victoria and Palestrina was not performed at the Escorial until 17th century, when King Philip II was dead (Noone 1998: 188). Thus, polyphony was forbidden in the most important Spanish Monastery and the most favoured by Royal promotion in Victoria’s time, so that only Gregorian chant and very simple polyphony was performed there and lis Anerio was also a composer resident at The Oratory. However, as he was Italian, he was not sus pected of mysticism by Spanish historians. Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography tened to by the Royal family in their frequent visits to its Church. This fact cannot be overlooked, given the central role of the Escorial as the main political and orthodox Catholic symbol of Spain. An often-quoted sign of “mysticism” is that no secular music by Victoria is extant. However, I do not believe this is evidence of mysticism. Despite being an organist, we have no music for organ by Victoria, although nobody has deduced from that he despised organ. b) The fact that Victoria was born in Avila, the same town as Saint Teresa, is re membered in every recording of his music. Even the beginning of the first paragraph on Victoria in Renaissance Music by Allan W. Atlas refers to the same commonplace: “Born in St. Teresa’s hometown of Avila in 1548, Victoria…. ” (1998: 613). However, I do not have anything more to add on this point. The place of birth matters only if you think, as Franco and many National-Catholic historians did, that the Hispanic race is essentially mystical, and that race is a metonymic contagion transmitted through place of birth. Curiously enough, scholars who hold this theory today mention nothing about the fact that both mystic saints born in Avila—Teresa and John of the Cross—were of Jewish origin. However, should we therefore deduce that Victoria, and every Spanish polyphonic master, was also a mystic for this reason? Victoria lived for seven years in Rome in the Congregation of the Oratory, founded by Filipo Neri, who was living there at the time. Filipo Neri (1515–1595) had several mystical experiences, but there is no evidence that Victoria had such an experience. In any case, Victoria left the Oratorians of his own free will. The only known reason for his leaving is the one expressed in the dedicatee of his Missarum libri duo (1583) to King Philip II of Spain: his yearning for a quieter life in Spain. Two years later Victoria joined the Monastery de las Descalzas de Santa Clara in Madrid as chaplain to the Dowager Empress María,—sister of King Philip II, daughter of Charles V, wife of Maximilian II and mother of two other emperors. Just Latin prefaces and dedicatees in his books on sacred music are the main writ ings we have by Victoria. Both prefaces and dedicatees have been read as signs of a special religious attitude or even sanctity of Victoria. However, these are writings that follow the common places and typical rhetoric of these types of texts, shaped to the Catholic Orthodoxy and Musical theory of his time. John of the Cross, who denied the possibility of reaching God by sensual means, as we have seen, was born only a few kilometres from the town of Avila. Some bureaucratic documents are also extant but of course they make no mention of mysti cism. For example—I am quoting Robert Stevenson’s translation into English (1961: 372–373) of David Pujol’s list of phrases by Victoria (1940): — Music is an art to which he was “instinctively” drawn (ad quae naturali quodam feror instictu [1]) — Mastery resulted from long years of hard work (multos iam annos… versor, et elaboro [1]) Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory 3. Another text that has been read as a sign of mysticism is the book Journey to Jerusalem (Viage de Jerusalem, Valencia: Juan Navarro, 1590) written by Francisco Guerrero after his travels. Even Paul Henry Lang in his Music in Western Civilization (1941 [1979: 209]) quoted the well-known phrases by the master of Seville Cathedral that expressed his strong desire to visit the Holy Land. However, as Robert Stevenson pointed out, once in Venice on his way to Jerusalem, Guerrero confessed: “My first business… was to arrange for the printing of two music books [Canciones y villanescas espirituales and Mottecta …. Liber secundus] While the printer told me that he would need more than five months I asked a friend: can I make a trip to Jerusalem in that length of time?” (quoted by Stevenson 1976: 175). A record from his time is the biographical summary written by another wellknown artist living in Seville, Francisco Pacheco. In his book we can read: “He [Guerrero] was the most outstanding musician of the time. [….]. His music has an ex cellent sound and an agreeably construction. He composed many Masses, Magnificats, and Psalms –among the last ones an In exitu Israel de Aegypto which those who are expert state that when composing it he was in contemplative rapture. ” (Pacheco 1985 [1599]: 339).10 I would like to emphasize that these words speak of rapture in the Plato tradition, in other words, as a way of referring to a particular mastery of poetry bestowed by the gods, a talent that would later be referred to as “genius”. In fact the book by Pa checo—the painter, theorist of painting and father-in-law of Velázquez—is written in the context of claims by painters for a higher status for painting in Spain. It cannot be regarded as evidence of mysticism. To summarize, there is no evidence of a particular interest of Spanish mystics in music, nor of Spanish musicians in mysticism. Furthermore, we cannot find any — Recognizing his talent as divinely bestowed, he felt the greater obligation to develop it, to bear fruit, and to return interest of his talent (Id vero munus ac beneficium cum diuinum agnoscerem, dedi operam, ne penitus in eum, a quo bona cuncta proficiscuntur, ingrates essem, si inerti ac turpi otio languescerem, et creditum mi hi talentum humi defodiens, iuxto expectatoque fructu dominum defraudarem [1]) — Music, because instinct with rhythm and harmony, describes the very being of God (Cui enim rei potius seuire Musicam decet, quam sacris aludibus immortalis Dei a quo numerus et mensura manauit? [4]) — Creation itself testifies to the divine harmony (cuius opera universa ita sunt admirabiliter suauiterque disposita ut in credibilem quondam harmoniam, concentumque preseferant et ostendant? [4]) — Music is not man’s invention, but his heritage from the blessed spirits (ante quam homines essent, in beatis illis mentibus esse inceperit [2] — Music of the right stamp serves not only to enhance the splendour of the cult but also to excite the faithful (fidelisque Populi deuotionem Hymnis et canticis Spiritualibus dulcius exitandam [3]) 1. Hymni totius anni (Rome, 1581) 2. Cantica B. Virginis vulgo Magnificat quatuor vocibus…conciuntur (Rome, 1581) 3. Motecta (Rome, 1583) 4. Missarum Libri Duo (Rome 1583). 10 “Fue el más único de su tiempo en el arte de la música [..] Su música es de excelente sonido i agradable travazón. Compuso muchas missas, magnificas i psalmos; i entre ellos, In exitu Israel de Aegypto, de quien los que mejor sienten juzgan que estava entonces arrebatado en alta contemplación” (Pacheco 1985 [1599]: 339). Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography documents from 16th and 17th centuries that mention a mystical listening of music by Morales, Guerrero or Victoria. Consequently, the musical mysticism of the Spanish Golden Age can be rightly considered as a historiographical myth; historiographical myths in the sense of hardly falsifiable ideas (in the Karl Popper sense) that had been taken as explanations of seminal questions of our history. In a paper that appeared in the previous edition of this Conference Early Music and Ideas I, I tried to show that the Golden Age itself was a historiographical myth designed to respond to different ideo logical and musical claims. II. Musical mysticism as a historiographical myth The few Spanish writers who wrote about music by Morales, Guerrero or Victoria in late 17th, 18th or early 19th centuries were not concerned about mysticism. They only referred to the correctness of counterpoint.11 Indeed, no references to mysticism or the profound nature of polyphonic Renaissance music can be found in the rough po lemics of 18th century on the use of Italian operatic style in sacred music. Even Louis Viardot,—first husband of Pauline Viardot and thus brother-in-law of Maria Malibran –, perhaps the first foreigner to admire Spanish Renaissance polyphony and certainly the first to write about it, highlighted its “simple” quality, but made not mention of mysticism or religious deepness (Vairdot 1841: 271). Ten years later, in his report on the state of music in Spain (1852), Gevaert spoke of “a stronger expression of words” (une expression plus forte des paroles) and a simpler style (in contrast to the one by Netherland and Italian composers).12 Unlike Viardot, Gevaert was able to examine certain musical manuscripts, noting mediocrity in musical compositions (Mitajana 1993 [1920]: 468). The two earliest references to mysticism in Spanish Renaissance music come from Catholic scholars. August Wilhelm Ambros (1816–1876) mentioned it in a paragraph in which he states that there was no such thing as a Spanish school different to the Netherlander school: “In dem benachbarten Spanien, für dessen Königliche Capelle immerfort die besten Meister aus der Niederlanden herbeigeholt wurden und das immerfort mit dem beherrschten niedër ländischen Provinzen in Verbindung stand, waltete, wie unter solchen Umständen selbstver ständlich ist, der richtigste Niederländerstyl; doch mag man wohl, den Spaniern zu Liebe, etwas Stolzes, Feuriges, selbst auch Herbes, Vornehmes und hinwiederum etwas Mystisches Musical examples by Victoria, Alonso Lobo or references to the perfection of their music can be found in the musical treatises by Andrés Lorente (El por qué de la música …Alcalá de Henares, 1672, p. 560), Antonio de la Cruz Brocarte (Médula de la música teórica…. Salamanca, 1707, p. 190) and in the poem by Tomás de Iriarte (La Música, Madrid, 1805, pp. 216–217) (quoted in León Tello 1974). Spanish names are often mixed with Palestrina, Philippe Rogier, Orlandus di Lassus and other foreign masters. In Castellanos de Losada’s Discurso, Victoria is presented as an Iberian who wrote Italian music (1854–2: 788). 12 Quoted by Mitjana (1916: 70). 11 Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory herausfühlen—aber eine eigene “spanische Schule” deswegen zu statuiren geht doch wohl nicht an. ” Geschichte der Musik (Wroclau [Breslau] 1862–68, III: 345). In contrast to Ambros, Karl Proske (1794–1861) had highlighted only Victoria’s mysticism, “…an earnest, sublime mysticism marks his chants, springing from his pure, innate piety, breathing reverent devotion, untainted by worldliness, and making hm incapable of compos ing any but sacred music” (quoted by Weinmann 1910: 121). One of the few Spanish readers of both, Ambros and Proske, was Felipe Pedrell (1841–1922),13 the first editor of Tomas Luis de Victoria, and one of the Spanish com posers whose influence has been determinant for Spanish musical historiography and the nationalist musical school. Isaac Albéniz, Enrique Granados, Manuel de Falla and Henri Collet were among his disciples. Although Pedrell mentioned the mysticism of Spanish polyphonists in 1888, there is a great difference between Pedrell’s vague para graphs and Henri Collet’s doctoral dissertation. In Spain, Collet did not only study with Pedrell but also with Federico de Olmeda, a prominent folklorist and priest, and with Menéndez Pelayo, the most influent Spanish historian of the time and one of the champions of National-catholic (ultramontan) ideology. The major postulates of National-Catholicism are that Spanish identity emerged from the consubstantiality of Catholic and national elements, and a peculiar vision of the History of Spain, the State and society. The highest point of National history was the imperial phase (the Golden Age), later history is the history of decadence (Botti 1992: 18). Although the origin of this thought is controversial, its strongest phase is usually charted at between 1875 and 1975 (the year of Franco’s death). Significantly, Menéndez Pelayo’s speech when he was inducted into the Real Academia Espańola was Mystical Poetry in Spain (1880 [1956]). Since the late 19th century, Spanish intellectuals had been highlighting mysticism as one of the main traits of na tional or racial identity. Liberal writers like Francisco Giner de los Ríos or Gregorio Marańón, or even Miguel de Unamuno, as well as National-Catholic writers at the op posite right end of the political spectrum like Angel Ganivet, Azorín, and Menéndez Pelayo, agreed on the statement of an essential Spanish mysticism.14 In this context, the acceptance of Henri Collet thesis Le mysticisme musical espagnol, (1913) could not be better. Collet (1885–1951) translated this pictorial and literary mysticism, with so many national heroes—such as Zurbarán, Murillo, Teresa de Ávila, John of the Cross, Ignatius de Loyola etc.—into a musical mysticism. The new musical heroes would be Morales, Guerrero and Victoria. For Collet, mysticism was a matter of race, and not an individual trait of particular composers—a position supported by Charles Lalo who Pedrell quoted Proske (Pedrell 1899: 149–150) and Ambros (Pedrell 1894-I: X). On Francisco Giner de los Ríos, Azorín, Unamuno y Angel Ganivet, see Fox (1997: 49, 120, 125, and 135). 13 14 Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography had opposed Victoria’s mysticism to Roland de Lassus’s sensualism (Lalo 1908: 315, quoted by Collet 1913: 2). According to Collet, Catalans and Valencians were not Span ish enough so that they were not mystic enough to achieve the musical perfection of Morales, Guerrero, Victoria and other musicians born in the Kingdom of Castille. Like many European people, Collet was in love with Spanish authenticity and primitivism. His orientalist and exotic vision of Spain ravished Spanish historians of music who could now have their own musical heroes. Furthermore, according to Collet and al most every Spanish historian of music after him, Spanish polyphonists surpassed the Nederlanders and Italians in spiritualism and expressiveness. One of the few musical passages referred to by Collet was the final cadence of the motet Emendemus in melius by Cristóbal de Morales. According to Collet: “Listening to these sweet chords made even more expressive by the suspension of the third, the definition given by John of the Cross of the ecstatic union—“the soft shelter where the soul feels God’s breath”—unavoidably comes. ” (Collet 1913: 266)15 However, as we can see, this is a very common cadence16 “Et l’on songe invinciblement, en écoutant ces suaves accords rendus plus expressifs encore par le retard de la tierce, à la définition que Jean de la Croix donne de l’union extatique: ‘le doux abri où l’âme sent la respiration de Dieu’” 16 The edition is the one by H. Anglès, (1971) reprinted in Palisca (1988–1: 149–150) 15 10 Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory III Mysticism and National musical canon In a previous essay, I studied the way such a myth of the Golden Age was supported by radical right-wing ideologies, notably National-Catholicism and Francoism, which were dominant among Spanish musicologists between 1940 and 1980 (Ramos, forth coming). Now, I would like to explain how the myth of musical mysticism became fundamental in the construction of the national musical canon. Consequently, the idea of musical mysticism affected not only our image of Spanish Golden Age, but also the History of Spanish Music through and through. The first historians of Spanish music were composers of zarzuelas, a national genre of musical theatre very popular in the second half of 19th century. When writing about the music of the past, they were searching the noble ancestry of their own music; as a result, Soriano Fuertes (1817–1880), Francisco Barbieri (1823–1894), and Felip Pedrell were interested in the history of Spanish musical theatre, without overlooking the his tory of sacred music. After Henri Collet, who transformed the vague idea of mysti cism as deep religious expression or dramatism into the historiographical myth whose repercussions we are considering, the gap between the liberal historians and the na tional-Catholic ones would be evident. Both liberal and National-Catholic historians adopted Collet’s thesis. However, liberal historians like Rafael Mitjana (1869–1921) and José Subirá (1882–1980) were interested in both secular and sacred musical history. In contrast, National-Catholics overlooked secular music, focusing only on sacred music and identifying mystical values as national ones. For many intellectuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, mysticism was an irrational force opposite to capitalism, so that extreme right and left wings could share their hate of materialism. However, after the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), mysticism and Neoplatonism became the of ficial aesthetics of the new fascist regime, imposing the rejection of vanguard artis tic trends, which were regarded as corrupt and foreign (Llorente 1995: 35 and ff.). Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography 11 A concept cherished by church scholars (the only ones to have major posts in Spanish musicology between 1940 and 1980) was that of art as a divine revelation and, conse quently, as a means for moral regeneration. This Neo-Scholastic tradition had been already enthusiastically defended before the Spanish Civil War, and it was actually the driving idea behind the Motu Propio by Pius X (1903).17 While liberal or leftist musical historians were exiled, dead or silenced,18 the official historians led by Higini Anglés (1888- 1969)—a scholar of international prestige—constructed the predominant musi cal canon that prevailed until the 1980s. Throughout Franco’s dictatorship (1939–75), musicological research was controlled by the Instituto Espańol de Musicología. The Insti tute belonged to the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, a centre established and controlled directly by Franco’s regime in 1943. The musical editions published by the Instituto Espańol de Musicologia focused on Spanish sacred and secular music from the 16th and early 17th centuries. Thus, none of the 31 volumes of the Monumenta (Monumentos de la Música espańola) published between 1941 and 1969 (the year of the death of its first director, Higini Anglès) was dedicated to the music of the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries. Only one of the volumes was dedicated to 17th-century secular music. If 16th-century sacred music by Morales and Victoria became the masterpieces of the national canon as mystical, original, deep, male, pure and simple music, its nec essary counterpart was 18th-century Spanish music: Italianizing, operatic, superficial, mundane, effeminate music. From the national-catholic perspective it is not surprising to find that the most common expression referring to musical Italianism in Spanish historiography is even today “the Italian Invasion”. In 1921 John Trend was astonished because “The patriotic and nationalist instincts of some Catalan writers have been of fended by the domination of Italian music and Italian opera (during the 18th century)” (Trend 1921: 125). Paradoxically, while European writers and musicians usually saw Spain as belonging to the Orient or East, Spanish historians considered Italian Music as Oriental from Edward Said’s perspective. Twenty years later, Anglès wrote an essay whose title and content exhibited his enthusiasm for the new Francoist regime, The Glorious Contribution of Spain to the History of Universal Music (1948). The final paragraphs on music dealt with 16th-century treatises. No mention is made of music since the late 16th century, although two pages were reserved to praise Franco and the institutions of the new Regime. The obsession with mysticism not only resulted in an overlooking of music from the 18th century, a century hardly fond of mysticism even in Spain. Another reper On the historiographical repercussions of the condemnation of modernism as heresy by Pope Pius X see Cantor (1991: 191 and ff.). 18 Antonio José, composer and folklorist, was executed by Franco’s army. Exiled musicologist and composers: Jesús Bal y Gay, Robert Gerhard, Eduardo Martínez Torner, Adolfo Salazar, Jaume Pahissa, Rodolfo Halffter. Fernando Remacha, José Subirá and Eduard López Chavarri, who remained in Spain, were put aside from any relevant musicological post. 17 12 Round Table I — Historical Theory and the Role of Cultural Memory cussion was the reluctance to study the economic, social or ideological aspects of the history of music. For example, in his 1916 study on Fernando de las Infantas, Rafael Mitjana considered the economic, political and social tensions present in discussions about Gregorian editions in the Council of Trent. When considering the same subject 70 years later, Samuel Rubio only took into account aesthetic and moral factors in his book on Spanish Renaissance Music (Rubio 1983: 172). In fact the concept of musical mysticism became a key concept because it had been sup ported by Anglès, the most prestigious Spanish musicologist and the person chosen by Francoism to direct the institutionalisation of Musicology in Spain. As a Catholic, Nationalist and Golden Age myth, the concept of musical mysticism was embraced by the Francoist Regime, which considered itself to be a Rebirth of the Spanish Impe rial Age. Today, musical mysticism is a persistent commonplace, even if it has been questioned by learned scholars like Robert Stevenson (1976) and Eugen Cramer (2002: 162) or recent recordings, such as the one by Juan Carlos Mena and Juan Carlos Ribera (who sing sacred pieces by Victoria in tabulations from the time for voice and vihuela or lute). Of course, the traditional image of the Golden Age as a Mystical Age has also been questioned by historians of the Inquisition like Francisco Márquez or by histori ans more interested in gender such as Stephen Haliczer.19 However, in recent CDs or papers published so far such as in Venezuela, many commonplaces on mysticism can be found, sometimes packaged as New Age products.20 Evidently, it cannot be denied that music—by Victoria, Madonna, Elton John or whoever—can offer a base or start ing point for mysticism. However, as historians we cannot hold that such a thing as Spanish musical mysticism existed, and we cannot ignore that this concept is not an innocent or naive one. On the contrary, Spanish musical mysticism is a construction with a sad history behind it. Bibliography Ambros, A. W. (1862–1868, 1882): Geschichte der Musik, 5 vols., Wroclaw [Breslau] und Leipzig. Anglés, H. (1969): «Latin Church Music on the Continent. 3 Spain and Portugal». G. Abraham (ed), The New Oxford History of Music, Vol. IV. London, Oxford University Press. Anglés, H. (1948): Gloriosa contribución de Espańa a la Historia de la Música Universal, Madrid, C.S.I.C. Haliczer concludes that mysticism offered women a way to transcend, though not to disrupt, the control of the male-dominated Church (2002: 292). According to Márquez, mystics were absolutely repudiated by Spanish society (503) 20 A recent CD (2001) entitled Avila mística: joyas de la música y la poesía espańola del Siglo de Oro includes music by Victoria and poems by Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross. The inclusion of Jew ish songs and poems is, in the Spanish context, a typical New Age trend. Full of all the commonplaces commented in this paper are the essays by Rodrigo (1998) and López Calo (1987). 19 Pilar Ramos Lopez — Mysticism as a Key Concept of Spanish Early Music Historiography 13 (2001) Ávila mística: joyas de la música y la poesía espańola del Siglo de oro: Teresa de Jesús, Juan de la Cruz, Moshé Ben Semtov / dirección musical, Maria Laffitte y Oni Wytars. Ávila, Villamonte Editores. Atlas, A. W. (1998): Renaissance Music. The Norton Introduction to Music History, New York, London, Nor ton. Botti, A. (1992): Cielo y dinero. El nacionalcatolicismo en Espańa (1881–1975), Madrid, Alianza Universi dad. Cantor, N. F. (1991) Inventing the Middle Ages. The lives, Works and Ideas of the great medievalists of the twentieth century. New York, Quill William Morrow. Castellanos de Losada, B. S. 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