List of Portuguese composers

This is a chronological list of notable classical Portuguese composers.

Middle Ages

  • King Dinis I (1261–1325), King of Portugal, composer and troubadour. He composed more than 200 cantigas.

Renaissance

  • Pedro de Escobar (c. 1465 – after 1535), composer and flutist
  • Cosme Delgado (c. 1530–1596), composer of polyphony, kapellmeister in Évora and pedagogue
  • Vicente Lusitano (d. after 1561), composer and music theorist
  • Bartolomeo Trosylho (1500–1567), composer and kapellmeister in the Lisbon Cathedral
  • Damião de Góis (1502–1574), humanist philosopher, composer, student of Erasmus, secretary at a trading post in Antwerp
  • António Carreira (1520–1597), composer and organist
  • Diogo Dias Melgás (1538–1600), composer of polyphony
  • Pedro de Cristo (1545–1618), composer of polyphony
  • Manuel Mendes (1547–1605), composer and maestro
  • Heliodoro de Paiva (fl. 1552), composer, philosopher and theologian
  • Manuel Rodrigues Coelho (1555–1635), composer and organist of the late Renaissance and early Baroque
  • Duarte Lobo (1565–1646), composer, choirmaster and musical director
  • Manuel Cardoso (1566–1650), composer and organist
  • Gaspar Fernandes (1566–1629), composer and organist
  • Estêvão de Brito (1570–1641), composer of polyphony of the late Renaissance and early Baroque
  • Filipe de Magalhães (1571–1652), composer of sacred polyphony and teacher of Estêvão Lopes Morago, Estêvão de Brito and Manuel Correia
  • Manuel Machado (1590–1646), composer and harpist

Baroque

  • Manuel Correia (1600–1653), composer and kapellmeister at the La Seo Cathedral
  • King John IV (1603–1656), King of Portugal and early musicologist, with an essay on Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
  • João Lourenço Rebelo(1610–1665), composer close to John IV
  • Filipe da Madre de Deus (1633–1688), composer and kapellmeister of the royal music chamber
  • King Peter II (1648–1706), King of Portugal and composer (only ten organ pieces)
  • João Rodrigues Esteves, (1700–1751) composer of religious music
  • Carlos Seixas (1704–1742), composer and organist
  • António Teixeira (1707 – after 1769), composer and chief of the choir of Lisbon Cathedral
  • Frei Jacinto do Sacramento (1712–1780?), harpsichordist, organist and composer in Lisbon
  • Alberto Joseph Gomes da Silva (v.1713–1795), composer and organist
  • Francisco António de Almeida (before 1722 – c.1755), composer and organist
  • João de Sousa Carvalho (1745–1798), composer and harpsichordist
  • José Joaquim dos Santos (? 1747–1801), graduate of Royal Patriarchal Music Seminary, teacher, composer, singer, organist and conductor (famous for his religious music: Stabat Mater for three voices, 2 sopranos, bass, with 2 violins and violoncello and the 5 Misereres).

Classical period

  • Pedro António Avondano (1714–1782), composer and organist (the first Portuguese composer of the Classical period)
  • João Pedro de Almeida Mota (1744–1817), Portuguese composer, worked in Spain for many years, where he died. His works are scattered by these two countries.
  • João José Baldi (1770–1816), composer (famous for his operas) and pianist
  • João Domingos Bomtempo (1775–1842), pianist, composer and pedagogue
  • Marcos Portugal (1762–1830), composer (famous for his operas) and maestro at Teatro S. Carlos in Lisbon
  • Peter IV of Portugal (1798–1836), King of Portugal and Emperor of Brazil who was also a composer (pupil of Marcos Portugal and Nunes Garcia, as well as Sigismund Von Neucomm, a pupil of Haydn).

Romanticism – early 20th century

Contemporary

References

  1. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Pedro Macedo Camacho - Requiem Inês de Castro - V. Agnus Dei (Coimbra) Soprano Carla Caramujo". YouTube.
  2. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Pedro Macedo Camacho - Emotional Commercial - CGD". YouTube.
  • VASCONCELOS, André. Música em Portugal, Porto Editora.
  • Dicionário de História de Portugal, editado por Joel Serrão
  • Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa-Brasileira ed. de 1945

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