Tomas Luis De Victoria

About Tomas Luis De Victoria

Who is it?: Composer, Singer and Organist
Birth Place: Sanchidrián, Spanish
Died On: August 20, 1611

Tomas Luis De Victoria Net Worth

Tomas Luis De Victoria was born in Sanchidrián, Spanish, is Composer, Singer and Organist. Tomas Luis de Victoria, also known as the ‘Spanish Palestrina’, was a prominent music composer, singer and organist. He was a notable composer of the ‘Counter-Reformation Period’ in the sixteenth century. His works were often compared to the works of ‘Orlando di Lasso’ and ‘Giovanni da Palestrina’. His compositions were mainly religious hymns dedicated to the church. Victoria’s works had its own charm and one could pick out and appreciate the strong spiritual fervor in his music. This set him apart from the rest of the composers of his time, including his own master, Palestrina. Unlike his contemporaries, Victoria’s compositions were full of plain and monophonic textures. In one instance, during his life, he composed Venetian music for a set of singers who were in the service of St. Marks, Venice. It was here, Victoria received admiration from Padre Martini for his ingenuity and melodious music. He was renowned for his two best works namely ‘Requiem’ and ‘Tenebrae Responsories’, published in 1585 and 1605 respectively. Most of his works were revivified and re-published in the twentieth century.
Tomas Luis De Victoria is a member of Musicians

💰Tomas Luis De Victoria Net worth: $700,000

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Biography/Timeline

1548

Victoria was born in Sanchidrián in the province of Ávila, Castile around 1548 and died in 1611. Victoria's family can be traced back for generations. Not only are the names of the members in his immediate family known, but even the occupation of his grandfather. Victoria was the seventh of nine children born to Francisco Luis de Victoria and Francisca Suárez de la Concha. His mother was of converso descent. After his father's death in 1557, his uncle, Juan Luis, became his guardian. He was a choirboy in Ávila Cathedral. Cathedral records state that his uncle, Juan Luis, presented Victoria's Liber Primus to the Church while reminding them that Victoria had been brought up in the Ávila Cathedral. Because he was such an accomplished organist, many believe that he began studying the keyboard at an early age from a Teacher in Ávila. Victoria most likely began studying "the classics" at St. Giles's, a boys' school in Ávila. This school was praised by St.Teresa of Avila and other highly regarded people of music.

1565

After receiving a grant from Philip II in 1565, Victoria went to Rome and became cantor at the German College founded by St. Ignatius Loyola. He may have studied with Palestrina around this time, though the evidence is circumstantial; certainly he was influenced by the Italian's style. For some time, beginning in 1573, Victoria held two positions, one being at the German College and the other being at the Pontifical Roman Seminary. He held the positions of chapelmaster and instructor of plainsong. In 1571, he was hired at the German College as a Teacher and began earning his first steady income. After Palestrina left the Seminary, Victoria took over the position of Maestro. Victoria was ordained a priest in 1574 by bishop Thomas Goldwell. Before this he was made a deacon, but did not serve long in that capacity as typically deacons became Priests soon after. In 1575, Victoria was appointed Maestro di Capella at S. Apollinare. Church officials would often ask Victoria for his opinion on appointments to cathedral positions because of his fame and knowledge. He was faithful to his position as convent organist even after his professional debut as an organist. He did not stay in Italy, however.

1572

Victoria published his first book of motets in 1572. In 1585 he wrote his Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae, a collection which included 37 pieces that are part of the Holy Week celebrations in the Catholic liturgy, including the eighteen motets of the Tenebrae Responsories.

1587

In 1587 Philip II honoured his Desire to return to his native Spain, naming him chaplain to his sister, the Dowager Empress María, daughter of Charles V, who had been living in retirement with her daughter Princess Margarita at the Monasterio de las Descalzas de S Clara at Madrid from 1581. In 1591, Victoria became a godfather to his brother Juan Luis's daughter, Isabel de Victoria. Victoria worked for 24 years at Descalzas Reales, serving for 17 years as chaplain to the Empress until her death, and then as convent organist. Victoria was also being paid much more at the Descalzas Reales than he would have earned as a cathedral chapelmaster, receiving an annual income from absentee benefices from 1587–1611. When the Empress Maria died in 1603, she willed three chaplaincies in the convent, with one going to Victoria. According to Victoria, he never accepted any extra pay for being a chapelmaster, and became the organist rather than the chapelmaster. Such was the esteem in which he was held that his contract allowed him frequent travel away from the convent. He was able to visit Rome in 1593 for two years, attending Palestrina's funeral in 1594. He died in 1611 in the chaplain's residence and was buried at the convent, although his tomb has yet to be identified.

2011

Select recordings of music by Victoria are discussed in an article published in March 2011 by Gramophone

2016

Stylistically, his music shuns the elaborate counterpoint of many of his contemporaries, preferring simple line and homophonic textures, yet seeking rhythmic variety and sometimes including intense and surprising contrasts. His melodic writing and use of dissonance is more free than that of Palestrina; occasionally he uses intervals which are prohibited in the strict application of 16th century counterpoint, such as ascending major sixths, or even occasional diminished fourths (for Example, a melodic diminished fourth occurs in a passage representing grief in his motet Sancta Maria, succurre). Victoria sometimes uses dramatic word-painting, of a kind usually found only in madrigals. Some of his sacred music uses instruments (a practice which is not uncommon in Spanish sacred music of the 16th century), and he also wrote polychoral works for more than one spatially separated group of Singers, in the style of the composers of the Venetian school who were working at St. Mark's in Venice.