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Works related to Federico García Lorca

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A number of works have been based on, have been inspired by, or have alluded to the works of Spanish poet, playwright, and theatre director Federico del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús García Lorca.

Poetry

Poet Language Year Work Description
Pablo Neruda Spanish 1934 "Oda a Federico García Lorca" ('Ode to Federico García Lorca')[1] A poem written before García Lorca's death by his friend Neruda.[2] Frederick Luis Aldama describes Neruda's narrator as exhibiting "more personalized, even stereotypically bourgeois, form of homosexuality" in his words to García Lorca.[3]
Antonio Machado Spanish 1936
"El crimen fue en Granada" ('The Crime Was in Grenada')
An elegy written almost immediately after García Lorca's murder and published two months later.[4]
Luis Cernuda Spanish 1937 "A un poeta muerto (F.G.L.)" ('To a Dead Poet (F.G.L.)') An elegy by a fellow member of the Generation of '27.[5]
Miklós Radnóti Hungarian 1937 "Federico García Lorca" A poem.[6]
Óscar Castro Zúñiga Spanish 1938 "Responso a García Lorca" ('Response to García Lorca') A poem memorialising García Lorca.[7] Set to music by Ariel Arancibia on the LP Homenaje a Óscar Castro.[8][9]
Nikos Kavvadias Greek 1945 "Federico García Lorca" A poem connecting García Lorca to contemporary events in both Spain and Greece.[10]
Edwin Rolfe Spanish 1948 "To Federico García Lorca" (Spanish: A Federico García Lorca) Spanish Civil War poem that characterizes Lorca as having ″recognized your [his] assassins,″ whom Rolfe derides as ″The men with the patent-leather hats and souls of patent-leather.″[11]
Robert Creeley English 1952 "After Lorca" A poem.[12]
Allen Ginsberg English 1955 "A Supermarket in California" A poem mentioning García Lorca, as well as Walt Whitman.[13]
Bob Kaufman English 1956–1963 "Lorca" Three poems about García Lorca, published together in the collection The Ancient Rain.[14] In the poem "The Ancient Rain", Kaufman compares Lorca to Crispus Attucks, a man of African and Native American descent who was the first person killed in the American Revolution.[15]
1973–1978 "The Ancient Rain"
"[THE NIGHT THAT LORCA COMES]"
Jack Spicer English 1957[16] After Lorca A book of poems containing 33 translations of García Lorca poems, 10 of them in fact by Spicer, as well as an introduction ostensibly by Lorca.[17]
Nikos Engonopoulos Greek 1957 "News on the death of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca on 19 August 1936 in the ditch of Camino de la Fuente"[a] (Greek: Νέα περί του θανάτου του Ισπανού ποιητού Φεντερίκο Γκαρθία Λόρκα στις 19 Αυγούστου του 1936 µέσα στο χαντάκι του Καµίνο ντε λα φουέντε) A poem described by Demetra Demetriou as showing "a highly ironic temper".[19]
Jerome Rothenberg
Robert Kelly
Robert Bly
English 1961 Deep image A poetic form inspired by García Lorca's "deep song".[20][21]
Yevgeni Yevtushenko Russian 1969 "When They Murdered Lorca" (Russian: Когда убили Лорку) An elegy that Lynn Purkey compares to "El Crimen Fue en Granada", highlighting its political overtones.[22] It portrays Lorca as being akin to Don Quixote—an immortal symbol of one's devotion to his ideals and perpetual struggle for them.[citation needed]
Harold Norse English 1973 "We Bumped Off Your Friend the Poet" Inspired by a review of Ian Gibson's Death of Lorca. The poem first appeared in Hotel Nirvana,[23] and later in In the Hub of the Fiery Force, Collected Poems of Harold Norse 1934–2003.[24]
Thanh Thảo Vietnamese 1985 "The Guitar of Lorca" (Vietnamese: Đàn ghi ta của Lor-ca) A poem expressing Thanh Thảo's admiration for García Lorca.[25] Set to music by Thanh Tùng.[26]

Novels

Author Language Year Work Description
Giannina Braschi English
Spanish
Spanglish
1998 Yo-Yo Boing! A novel featuring a dinner party debate among Latin American poets and artists about Lorca's genius compared to other Spanish language poets.[27][verification needed]
Nicole Krauss English 2010 Great House A novel about four owners of a desk allegedly once owned by García Lorca.[28]
Ben Pastor English 2019 The Horseman's Song A novel centered on the investigation into Garcia Lorca's murder.[29]

Musical works

Author Language Year Work Description
Francis Poulenc (instrumental)
(program notes in French)
1943 Violin Sonata (French: Sonate pour violon et piano) Dedicated to Lorca's memory, and programmatically quoting (in French) the first line of his poem "The Six Strings" (Spanish: Las Seis Cuerdas): "The guitar makes dreams cry"[b] at the start of the second movement, Intermezzo.[30]
Spanish 1947[31][32] "Trois chansons de F. García Lorca" (English: Three songs of F. García Lorca) Three vocal pieces. Poulenc expressed frustration at what he felt was an inability to channel García Lorca in both the chansons and the Sonata.[30][32]
Heitor Villa-Lobos Spanish[33] 1956 Yerma Opera based on the original Spanish text of Lorca's play. The opera was premiered at the Santa Fe Opera in 1971.[34]
Camarón de la Isla Spanish 1979 La Leyenda del Tiempo Album with lyrics written by or based on works by Lorca.[35]
Silvestre Revueltas (instrumental) 1937 Homenaje a Federico García Lorca Three-movement work for chamber orchestra composed shortly after García Lorca's death.[36]
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco Spanish 1951 Romencero Gitano for Mixed Choir and Guitar, Op. 152 Seven-movement piece for soloists, choir, and guitar, based on poems from Poema del Cante Jondo.[37][38]
Luigi Nono Spanish 1951–1953 Tre epitaffi per Federico García Lorca (English: Three Epitaphs for García Lorca)
  • "España en el corazón" (English: Spain in Our Hearts)
  • "Y su sangre ya viene cantando" (English: And His Blood Is Already Singing)
  • "La victoria de Guernica" (English: The Victory of Guernica)
The first piece is titled after Pablo Neruda's "España en el corazón" [es].[39]
(instrumental) 1954 Il mantello rosso A ballet based on a play by García Lorca.[40]
George Crumb Spanish 1965–1969 Madrigals Four books for soprano and various instruments including piccolo, flute, alto flute, harp, vibraphone, percussion, and contrabass,[citation needed] containing twelve pastoral songs based on short segments of García Lorca's poetry, a plurality drawing from his Diván del Tamarit.[41]
1969 Night of the Four Moons Commissioned by the Philadelphia Chamber Players for alto voice, alto flute (doubling piccolo), banjo, electric violoncello and percussion. Excerpts from García Lorca's poetry are sung by the alto.
1970 Ancient Voices of Children Piece for soprano, boy soprano, and instruments including a musical saw with cello bow and a "chisel piano" (piano with its strings struck by a chisel).[41]
Osvaldo Golijov (composer, libretto translator)
David Henry Hwang (librettist)[42]
Spanish[43] 2003 Ainadamar ('Fountain of Tears'[44]) One-act opera about the death of García Lorca, recalled years later by his muse, actress Margarita Xirgu. Casts García Lorca as a breeches role (i.e. played by a woman).[45]
Einojuhani Rautavaara 1972 "Lorca Suite" (Estonian: Lorca-sarja) Works for a mixed choir with lyrics of García Lorca's various poems.[citation needed]
1993 "Song of our time" (Spanish: Canción de nuestro tiempo)
The Pogues English 1990 "Lorca's Novena" A song on the album Hell's Ditch dramatically retelling the story of García Lorca's murder.[46][47]
Ananda Sukarlan Two of the "Four Spanish Songs" Based on the poems "Oda a Salvador Dali" and "Las Seis Cuerdas", premiered by soprano Mariska Setiawan in 2016 accompanied on the piano by the composer.
Dave Soldier English Portents of Love Adapted multiple Lorca poems to country blues songs in idiomatic English in the Kropotkins' album, which features a hand drawing of Lorca's face on the cover.
Reginald Smith Brindle 1975 "Four Poems of Garcia Lorca" Two songs, the latter for guitar, based on two Lorca poems Adivinanza de la Guitarra and Las Seis Cuerdas[48]
1982 "El Polifemo de Oro"
Dmitri Shostakovich First two movements of Symphony No. 14 Based around García Lorca poems.
Maurice Ohana 1950s "Lament for the death of a Bullfighter" (Spanish: Llanto por Ignacio Sánchez Mejías) García Lorca poem set to music, recorded by the conductor Ataúlfo Argenta.
Marea "Ciudad de los Gitanos" A rock version of the poem "Romance de la Guardia Civil española".
Wilhelm Killmayer 1954 Romanzen Song cycle using five García Lorca poems.[49]
Wolfgang Fortner German 1957 Bluthochzeit An opera adapted from García Lorca's Blood Wedding, using a translation by Enrique Beck
Iván Erőd 1960 La doncella, el marinero y el estudiante A short opera of 15 minutes based almost exclusively on serial techniques, premiered in Innsbruck
Sándor Szokolay 1964 Vérnász Another opera adapted from Blood Wedding, first produced in Budapest.
Joan Baez English 1968 Baptism: A Journey Through Our Time A spoken-word poetry album featuring translated renditions of García Lorca's poems "Gacela of the Dark Death" and "Casida of the Lament".
Ann Loomis Silsbee 1976 "Huit Chants en Brun" Several of García Lorca’s poems set to music.
Tim Buckley Lorca Experimental album including a song of the same name.
Conrad Susa (composer, co-librettist)
Richard Street (co-librettist)
1984 "The Love of Don Perlimplin" One-act opera based on Lorca's play The Love of Don Perlimplín and Belisa in the Garden. It was commissioned by the Pepsico Summerfare and premiered at the State University of New York at Purchase.[50] The music is published by E.C. Schirmer Music Company.[51] In 1987, Susa completed "Landscapes and Silly Songs" for SATB unaccompanied chorus. The work was commissioned by the Concert Chorale of Houston and is published by E.C. Schirmer Music Company.[52]
Leonard Cohen
Paco de Lucía
and others
1986 Poetas En Nueva York (Poets in New York) Tribute album.[53]
Leonard Cohen English 1986 "Take This Waltz" English translation of García Lorca's poem "Pequeño vals vienés". It reached number one on the Spanish single charts. Cohen has described García Lorca as being his idol in his youth, and named his daughter Lorca Cohen for that reason.[54]
Mikis Theodorakis Greek 1967 Romancero Gitano Odysseas Elytis's 1945 Greek translation of seven poems from García Lorca's poetry collection of the same name, set to music by Theodorakis. This work was premiered in Rome in 1970 under the same title. In 1981, under commission of the Komische Oper Berlin, the composition was orchestrated as a symphonic work entitled Lorca. In the mid-1990s, Theodorakis rearranged the work as an instrumental piece for guitar and symphony orchestra.[55][56][57]
Zülfü Livaneli Turkish 1986 "Atlı" Song from the album Zor Yıllar, using a Turkish translation of Lorca's "Canción del Jinete" by Melih Cevdet Anday and Sabahattin Eyüboğlu.
Ben Sidran (instrumental) 1998 The Concert for García Lorca Performed on piano at García Lorca's home, Huerta de San Vicente, on the 100th anniversary of his birth.
Geoffrey Gordon (instrumental) 2000 Lorca Musica per cello solo Piece using themes from Gordon's 1995 three-act ballet The House of Bernarda Alba, for American cellist Elizabeth Morrow.[58] The work was recorded on Morrow's Soliloquy CD on the Centaur label and was featured at the 2000 World Cello Congress. Three suites from the ballet, for chamber orchestra, have also been extracted from the ballet score by the composer.
The Clash English 1979 "Spanish Bombs" Song from the album London Calling, referencing García Lorca.
José María Gallardo Del Rey 2003 Lorca Suite Suite in tribute to the poet. Taking Lorca's folksong compilations Canciones Españolas Antiguas as his starting point, Gallardo Del Rey incorporates new harmonisations and freely composed link passages that fuse classical and flamenco techniques.
Joan Albert Amargós (instrumental) Homenatje a Lorca Piece for alto saxophone and piano. Its three movements are based on three Lorca poems: "Los cuatro muleros, Zorongo, and Anda jaleo".
Thanasis Papakonstantinou Greek Άυπνη Πόλη Based partly on Lorca's "Poeta en Nueva York", translated to Greek by Maria Efstathiadi.
Roberto García Morillo 1988–1989 Cantata No. 11 (Homenaje a García Lorca)
ONAR 2000 Song based on Lorca's poem "La balada del agua del mar". Teresa Salgueiro from Portuguese musical ensemble Madredeus participates reading the poem during the song.
Tamara Maliukova Sidorenko Set several of Garcia Lorca’s poems to music.
Simon Holt Ballad of the Black Sorrow Piece for five solo singers and instrumental ensemble, setting García Lorca's words to music.
Canciones Piece for mezzo-soprano and instrumental ensemble, setting García Lorca's words to music
The Nightingale's to Blame Opera based on Lorca's Amor de don Perlimplín con Belisa en su jardín.
Laura Veirs English 2023 The Archers Song based on García Lorca's poem Before the Dawn.

Theatre, film and television

  • Federico García Lorca: A Murder in Granada (1976) directed by Humberto López y Guerra and produced by the Swedish Television. In October 1980 the New York Times described the transmission of the film by Spanish Television in June that same year as attracting "one of the largest audiences in the history of Spanish Television".[59]
  • Playwright Nilo Cruz wrote the surrealistic drama Lorca in a Green Dress about the life, death, and imagined afterlife of García Lorca. The play was first performed in 2003 at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. The Cruz play Beauty of the Father (2010) also features Lorca's ghost as a key character.[60]
  • British playwright Peter Straughan wrote a play (later adapted as a radio play) based on García Lorca's life, The Ghost of Federico Garcia Lorca Which Can Also Be Used as a Table.
  • TVE broadcast a six-hour mini-series based on key episodes on García Lorca's life in 1987. British actor Nickolas Grace played the poet, although he was dubbed by a Spanish actor.
  • Rukmavati Ki Haveli (1991) an Indian feature film directed by Govind Nihalani is based on Lorca's The House of Bernarda Alba.
  • There is a 1997 film called The Disappearance of Garcia Lorca, also known as Death in Granada, based on a biography by Ian Gibson. The film earned an Imagen Award for best film.
  • Miguel Hermoso's La luz prodigiosa (The End of a Mystery) is a Spanish film based on Fernando Macías' novel with the same name, which examines what might have happened if García Lorca had survived his execution at the outset of the Spanish Civil War.
  • British Screenwriter Philippa Goslett was inspired by García Lorca's close friendship with Salvador Dalí. The resulting biographical film Little Ashes (2009) depicts the relationship in the 1920s and 1930s between García Lorca, Dalí, and Luis Buñuel.[61]
  • American playwright Michael Bradford drama, Olives and Blood, produced by Neighborhood Productions at The HERE Art Center/Theatre, June 2012, focuses on the present day trouble one of the supposed murderers of Lorca.
  • Blood Wedding is the first part of a ballet / flamenco film trilogy directed by Carlos Saura and starring Antonio Gades and Cristina Hoyos (1981).
  • In a segment of the 2001 animated avant-garde film Waking Life, Timothy Levitch extemporizes on Lorca's poem Sleepless City (Brooklyn Bridge Nocturne).

Notes

  1. ^ Title originally misprinted as "News about the Death of the Spanish Poet Federico Garcia Lorca on the 19th of August 1936 in a Ditch of Caminonte La Fuente"[18]
  2. ^ French: La guitare / fait pleurer les songes; Spanish: La guitarra, / hace llorar a los sueños

References

  1. ^ Neruda, Pablo (1946). Residence on Earth and Other Poems (in Spanish and English). Translated by Flores, Angel. New Directions Publishing. p. 94. ISBN 9780877522058. Retrieved 14 September 2022 – via Open Library.
  2. ^ Feinstein, Adam (3 July 2015). "All the Odes". Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas. 48 (2): 255–257. doi:10.1080/08905762.2015.1083305. ISSN 0890-5762. S2CID 147120564. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  3. ^ Aldama, Frederick Luis (1997). "Homographic Translational Poetics: The Outlawed Subject's Resistance and Dependance on the Heterosexist Codification of Nation and Body". Lucero. University of California at Berkeley. 8 (1): 57–66. ISSN 1098-2892. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  4. ^ Poeta, Salvatore J. (1983). "Tradición, arte e invención poética en 'El crimen fue en Granada'" [Tradition, art, and poetic invention in 'El crimen fue en Granada'] (PDF). Boletín de la Institución Fernán González [Bullet of the Fernán González Institute] (in Spanish). 62 (200): 25–33. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  5. ^ Nievas Rojas, Adalid (10 December 2018). "La elegía de Cernuda a Lorca en su tradición: notas para un estudio de las fuentes de A un poeta muerto (F.G.L.)" [Cernuda's elegy for Lorca in his tradition: notes for a study of the sources of A un poeta muerto (F.G.L.)]. Bulletin Hispanique [Hispanic Bulletin] (in Spanish) (120–2): 505–528. doi:10.4000/bulletinhispanique.6643. S2CID 239579718. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Radnóti Miklós: Erőltetett Menet (Válogatott Versek)". oszk.hu.
  7. ^ Olmedo, Jacqueline Espinoza (29 September 2018). "Poesía de Oscar Castro: influencia de García Lorca y repudio a la Guerra Civil Española" [The Poetry of Oscar Castro: The Influence of García Lorca and Repudiation of the Spanish Civil War]. Palimpsesto [Palimpsest] (in Spanish). 8 (14): 60–69. ISSN 0718-5898. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  8. ^ Burón, Nicolás (2018). La Literatura de la Región de O'Higgins: Orígenes, Evolución e Identidad. Copequén: Autoedición. ISBN 9789563984583.
  9. ^ Los Cuatro de Chile, Héctor y Humberto Duvauchelle (1970). Homenaje a Óscar Castro Zúñiga: Los Cuatro de Chile, Héctor y Humberto Duvauchelle. Santiago de Chile: ASFONA M.R. Cat Nº VBP-312
  10. ^ Rosenberg, Anna (January 2014). "The Greek Lorca: Translation, Homage, Image" (PDF). Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 91 (1): 33–52. doi:10.3828/bhs.2014.3. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  11. ^ Rolfe, Edwin, Cary Nelson, and Jefferson Hendricks. Trees Became Torches: Selected Poems. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995.
  12. ^ Godoy Marquet, Juan M. (March 2010). "Apocryphal Lorca: Translation, Parody, Kitsch". Revista de Estudios Hispánicos [Magazine of Hispanic Studies]. 44 (1): 278–280. Retrieved 14 September 2022 – via ProQuest.
  13. ^ Ginsberg, Allen (2011) [1955]. "A Supermarket in California". Collected Poems 1947–1980. HarperCollins Publishers. Retrieved 13 September 2022 – via Poetry Foundation.
  14. ^ Kaufman, Bob (1981). The Ancient Rain: Poems 1956–1978. New Directions Publishing. ISBN 9780811207904. Retrieved 13 September 2022 – via Open Library.
  15. ^ Nielsen, Aldon Lynn (2002). "'A Hard Rain': Looking to Bob Kaufman". Callaloo. 25 (1): 135–145. doi:10.1353/cal.2002.0038. ISSN 0161-2492. JSTOR 3300403. S2CID 162385917. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  16. ^ "After Lorca". New York Review Books. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  17. ^ Katz, Daniel (January 2004). "Jack Spicer's After Lorca: translation as decomposition". Textual Practice. 18 (1): 83–103. doi:10.1080/0950236042000183287. ISSN 0950-236X. S2CID 170701767. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  18. ^ "'Flight Model' | 'News about the Death of the Spanish Poet Federico Garcia Lorca on the 19th of August 1936 in a Ditch of Camino de La Fuente'". CENSUS of Modern Greek Literature. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  19. ^ Demetriou, Demetra (2021). "The Myth of Lorca: International Lorquismo and Lorca's Reception in Cyprus and the Hellenic World". Comparative Literature Studies. 58 (1): 176–206. doi:10.5325/complitstudies.58.1.0176. ISSN 1528-4212. S2CID 232040466. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  20. ^ Bushell, Kevin. "Leaping Into the Unknown: The Poetics of Robert Bly's Deep Image". Modern American Poetry. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  21. ^ "Glossary of Poetic Terms § 'Deep Image'". Poetry Foundation. 13 September 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  22. ^ Purkey, Lynn (2017). "A Popular Death: Russia's Reception of Federico Garcia Lorca". Anales de la literatura española contemporánea [Annals of Contemporary Spanish Literature]. 42 (4): 1151–1170. ISSN 0272-1635. JSTOR 26637154. Retrieved 14 September 2022 – via JSTOR.
  23. ^ Hotel Nirvana, San Francisco, City Lights (1974) ISBN 0-87286-078-7
  24. ^ In the Hub of the Fiery Force, Collected Poems of Harold Norse 1934–2003, New York: Thunder's Mouth Press (2003) ISBN 1-56025-520-X
  25. ^ "Nhà thơ Thanh Thảo: Không nghĩ Đàn ghi-ta của Lorca được vào SGK" [Poet Thanh Thảo: Didn't think 'Lorca's Guitar' could be in the textbook]. Thể thao & Văn hoá [Sports & Culture] (in Vietnamese). 5 April 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  26. ^ Nguyễn, Thụy Kha (17 March 2016). "Nhạc sĩ Thanh Tùng đã về lối cũ" [Composer Thanh Tùng has died]. Nhân Dân. Archived from the original on 14 September 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  27. ^ Braschi, Giannina (1998). Yo-Yo Boing! (in English and Spanish). Pittsburgh, PA: Latin American Literary Review Press. ISBN 978-0-935480-97-9.
  28. ^ Starr, Karla (30 October 2010). "Fiction review: 'Great House' by Nicole Krauss". The Oregonian. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  29. ^ Hammond, Kathleen R. (16 May 2019). "Fiction review: 'The Horsemen's Song' by Ben Pastor". Washington Independent Review of Books. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  30. ^ a b Smith, Oliver Charles Edward (31 December 2016). "Les songes pleureurs de Poulenc: Lorca, a queer Jondo and le Surréalisme in the 'Intermezzo' of Francis Poulenc's Sonate pour violon et piano". Cogent Arts & Humanities. Taylor & Francis. 3 (1). doi:10.1080/23311983.2016.1187242. S2CID 55499172. 1187242. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  31. ^ "Trois chansons de F García Lorca, FP136 (Poulenc) - from CDA68021/4". Hyperion Records. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  32. ^ a b Musselman, Susan Joanne (2007). Cohesion of Composer and Singer: The Female Singers of Polenc (DMA thesis). Ohio State University. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  33. ^ Peppercorn, Lisa M. (1982–1984). "Villa-Lobos's Stage Works". Revue belge de Musicologie / Belgisch Tijdschrift voor Muziekwetenschap. Société belge de musicologie / Belgische Vereniging voor Muziekwetenschap. 36/38: 175–184. doi:10.2307/3687161. JSTOR 3687161.
  34. ^ Peppercorn, Lisa M. (December 1984). "Villa-Lobos's Commissioned Compositions". Tempo. Cambridge University Press (151): 28–31. doi:10.1017/S0040298200058988. JSTOR 946216. S2CID 144527649.
  35. ^ Barrera Ramírez, Fernando (2018). "From La leyenda del tiempo to La leyenda del espacio. Three Decades of Rock and Flamenco Hibridisation in Andalusian Music". Diagonal: An Ibero-American Music Review. 3 (1). doi:10.5070/D83139507. S2CID 240369024. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  36. ^ "Program Notes at the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra". Archived from the original on 7 September 2009.
  37. ^ Ramírez-Hacker, Elsa Patricia (1 May 2012). A Conductor's Guide to the Poetic and Musical Style of the Cante Jondo Based on the Work of Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco's Romancero Gitano, Op.152, for Choir and Guitar with Selected Poems of Federico Garcia Lorca's Poema del Cante Jondo (DMA thesis). University of Southern Mississippi. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  38. ^ Hiney, Aoife (July 2022). "Reading the Romancero: A journey from the score to the sound with a non-professional choir". Psychology of Music. 50 (4): 1238–1253. doi:10.1177/03057356211042081. S2CID 250117981. Retrieved 17 September 2022 – via EBSCOhost.
  39. ^ Soria Olmedo, Andrés (June 2017). "Don Perlimplín en Venecia: Nono y Maderna" [Don Perlimplín in Venice: Nono and Maderna]. Rassegna Iberistica (in Spanish). 40 (107): 23–40. doi:10.14277/2037-6588/Ri-40-107-17-2. ISSN 2037-6588. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
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