| | Eduardo Paniagua Alarifes Mudejares CD - Import Eduardo Paniagua Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Eduardo Paniagua Alarifes Mudejares Songs | 1. | Constructive Sequence.Pillars, Arches, Vaults |
| 2. | Boat.No Man's Land |
| 3. | Fountain.Ephemeral Art-Eternal Art |
| 4. | Carpet.Collective Art and Collective Space |
| 5. | Candles.Suddenly It Filled Up |
| 6. | Muezzin |
| 7. | Plasterwork |
| 8. | Baths and Cisterns |
| 9. | Feast of Holy Mary |
| 10. | In Theatrium |
| 11. | Mudejar Bricklayer |
| 12. | Chapel of Tiles |
| 13. | Midday Prayer |
| Alarifes Mudejares Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   A gorgeous journey back through time... While living in northern Spain (Burgos, Castilla y León), I travelled to Cuéllar. Part of my trip involved visiting the castle and Mudéjar church of St. Martín de Cuéllar (built in the 12th century). Inside the church, we participated in a multimedia journey through the church's construction by Jewish, Christian and Moorish craftsmen during the Convivencia, the period of time when the three religions coexisted peacefully in Spain. This CD is the soundtrack to the multimedia exhibit, and stands alone well, recorded between 1995-1999. The composer, Eduardo Paniagua, is also a talented multi-instrumentalist, playing psaltery, flutes, cymbals, drums and effects.
A brief note: as the majority of Spain was under Moorish control from 711-1492 AD, Islamic poetry, artwork and music greatly influenced Spanish culture. The word "mudéjar" refers to Muslims who lived and worked in northern Spain's Christian society. An alarife was an architect. Mudéjar architecture is characterized by ornate plasterwork in geometric designs, repeating arches, and the extensive use of brick.
Each track covers a specific theme regarding the construction, including pillars, arches, and vaults, plasterwork, the atrium, bricklaying, tile laying, etc. Arabic instruments (derbuka, oud, dulcimer, nay, a muezzin chanting) are interspersed with nature sounds (frogs, crickets, fountains, water). On the haunting "La Alfombra," sacred chants from the three traditions (Gregorian chant, Judaic ceremonial chant, and Islamic chant) are fused. There is even an appearance from the Cantiga of Alfonso X El Sabio (Fiesta de Santa María). I will never forget "Las Velas: De pronto se llenó"--at that point in the exhibit, we each took a candle and lit a grid of candles in the floor one by one, accompanied by the waltzing, Celtic rhythms of flute, tinkling bells, and dulcimer as the candle flames danced.
The CD case and liner notes are gorgeous and well-documented, including bilingual (Spanish/English) history for each track, a brief history of Mudéjar art and medieval Spanish history, the religious background of La Convivencia, and more. The artwork is reproduced from miniatures from Alfonso X's "Cantigas de Santa María", photos of San Martín, Mudéjar tapestries and plasterwork, and conceptual sketches of the church's interpretation centre.
Not strictly a historical recording of Mudéjar music (of which there are many, both in Spain and abroad, although fewer in number), but a fascinating interpretation of an important moment in Spanish history, as well as a beautiful collaboration of Islamic, Jewish and Christian medieval sacred music.
Submitted by Cyan (Michigan) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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