Zubiaurre (y Urionabarrenechea), Valenti

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Zubiaurre (y Urionabarrenechea), Valenti

Zubiaurre (y Urionabarrenechea), Valenti, Spanish composer; b. Villa de Garay, Feb. 13, 1837; d. Madrid, Jan. 13,1914. He was a chorister at Bilbao, and at the age of 16 undertook a voyage to South America. He returned to Spain in 1866, and took music lessons with Hilarión Eslava at the Madrid Cons. He wrote a considerable number of sacred works, then turned to opera, receiving 1st national prize with his Fernando el Emplazado (Madrid, May 12, 1871). In 1875 he was named 2nd maestro at the Royal Chapel in Madrid, and in 1878 succeeded Eslava as 1st maestro; in the same year, he was appointed a prof, at the Madrid Cons. His 2nd opera, Ledia, was produced with considerable success in Madrid on April 22, 1877. He also composed several zarzuelas, a sym., a potpourri of Basque folksongs, and choruses.

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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Zubiaurre (y Urionabarrenechea), Valenti

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