Ruperto Chapí
Ruperto Chapí y Lorenta was an important Spanish composer from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As a musician in his early years, he was associated with band music, but the primary focus of his compositional activity was the zarzuela. He wrote well over 100 zarzuelas but also composed many operas, songs, and instrumental music.
Chapí was born on March 27, 1851, in the small Spanish village of Villena, near Alicante. His father, a barber, was an amateur musician who gave his son his first music lessons. By the time young Ruperto was nine, he was not only an accomplished cornet player, but he had started to arrange music for bands and even composed his own works. At 14, he was conducting a local band; his rare musical gifts allowed him to enter the Madrid Conservatory at the age of 16. There, under the guidance of Emilio Arrieta (composition) and Miguel Galiana (harmony), he won first prize in harmony in a competition in 1869.
To support himself in his student years, he played cornet in the Circo de Price theater orchestra. During this period, he composed his first surviving zarzuela, Abel y Caín, which was premiered in 1873. An opera on commission quickly followed, arranged in part by Arrieta, Las naves de Cortés (1874). Its success brought Chapí government funding for three years of study abroad (Rome, Milan, Paris) and also prompted him to abandon his post of conductor of a military band, which he had held since 1871.
From 1874 until the end of his career, Chapí focused almost exclusively on composition. He wrote several operas while studying abroad, then returned to Madrid in 1878. His second zarzuela, Música clásica, premiered in 1880 and was followed by a steady string of zarzuelas over the next three decades. They generally achieved success, with a fair number receiving 100 or more performances. In 1889, Chapí, increasingly aware of artists' lack of rights in regard to copyright issues, rebuffed an offer to join the Academia de Bellas Artes because of its insensitivity to artists' rights. Ten years later, he founded the Society of Authors to champion the issue in Spain. In 1905, Chapí's four string quartets appeared, signaling his suddenly more serious approach to composition. In 1909, Chapí became ill while leading a performance of his final opera, Margarita la tornera, and died a short while later.
© Robert Cummings /TiVo
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Discography
9 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller
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Ruperto Chapí: La Tempestad [Zarzuela en Tres Actos] (1954)
Orquesta De Cámara De Madrid, Ataulfo Argenta, Tony Rosado
Operettas - Released by Classical Moments on May 24, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruperto Chapí: El Puñao de Rosas [Zarzuela en Un Acto] (1953)
Gran Orquesta de Cámara de Madrid, Ataulfo Argenta, Ana María Iriarte
Operettas - Released by Classical Moments on May 24, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruperto Chapí: La Revoltosa [Zarzuela en Un Acto] (1954)
Orquesta Sinfónica, Rafael Ferrer, Marcos Redondo
Operettas - Released by Classical Moments on May 17, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Chapi, Palau, Asencio, String Quartets
Classical - Released by IVM on Jul 21, 2010
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruperto Chapí: Obra sinfónica
Orquestra De L'Acadèmia Del Gran Teatre Del Liceu
Opera - Released by Columna Música on Jan 1, 2007
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
La Filharmònica Alcudiana
Classical - Released by Àudiovisuals de Sarrià on Mar 20, 2017
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Ruperto Chapí: El Rey que Rabió [Zarzuela en Tres Actos] (1956)
Gran Orquesta Sinfónica, Ataulfo Argenta, Pilar Lorengar
Classical - Released by Classical Moments on May 16, 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
La Zarzuela: La Tempestad (Remastered)
Operettas - Released by Homokord on Jan 15, 1954
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
La Zarzuela: El Tambor de Granaderos / El Barquillero (Remastered)
Operettas - Released by Homokord on May 15, 2006
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo