Francisco De Salinas
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Francisco de Salinas (1513,
Burgos Burgos () is a city in Spain located in the autonomous community of Castile and León. It is the capital and most populous municipality of the province of Burgos. Burgos is situated in the north of the Iberian Peninsula, on the confluence of th ...
– 1590, Salamanca) was a Spanish music theorist and organist, noted as among the first to describe
meantone temperament Meantone temperaments are musical temperaments; that is, a variety of Musical tuning#Tuning systems, tuning systems constructed, similarly to Pythagorean tuning, as a sequence of equal fifths, both rising and descending, scaled to remain within th ...
in mathematically precise terms, and one of the first (along with Guillaume Costeley) to describe, in effect,
19 equal temperament In music, 19 equal temperament, called 19 TET, 19 EDO ("Equal Division of the Octave"), 19-ED2 ("Equal Division of 2:1) or 19 Equal temperament, ET, is the musical temperament, tempered scale derived by dividing the octave into 19 equal steps ...
. In his ''De musica libri septem'' of 1577 he discusses 1/3-, 1/4- and 2/7-comma meantone tunings. Of 1/3-comma meantone, which is essentially identical to the meantone of 19-et, he remarks that it is "languid" but not "offensive to the ear", and he notes that a keyboard of 19 tones to the octave suffices to give a circulating version of meantone. The 19th-century musicologist
Alexander John Ellis Alexander John Ellis (14 June 1814 – 28 October 1890) was an English mathematician, philologist and early phonetician who also influenced the field of musicology. He changed his name from his father's name, Sharpe, to his mother's maiden nam ...
maintained that Salinas really meant to characterize 1/6-comma meantone, and made a mistake due to his blindness. Others point out that Salinas's descriptions of his tuning as "languid" but not "offensive to the ear" seem to apply to 1/3-comma meantone, not to 1/6-comma meantone, which in any case has a much sharper fifth than musicians of Salinas's own time preferred. Salinas was also interested in just intonation, and advocated a 5-limit just intonation scale of 24 notes he called ''instrumentum perfectum''.


Biography

Salinas was born in
Burgos Burgos () is a city in Spain located in the autonomous community of Castile and León. It is the capital and most populous municipality of the province of Burgos. Burgos is situated in the north of the Iberian Peninsula, on the confluence of th ...
in 1513, the son of the treasurer to emperor Charles I. He was blind from the age of eleven. He studied humanities, singing and organ at the
University of Salamanca The University of Salamanca () is a public university, public research university in Salamanca, Spain. Founded in 1218 by Alfonso IX of León, King Alfonso IX, it is the oldest university in the Hispanic world and the fourth oldest in the ...
. He then entered the service of a relative, archbishop Pedro Sarmiento de Salinas, and accompanied him when Sarmiento followed emperor Charles to Rome in 1538. Sarmiento was elevated to the cardinalate that year, and Salinas took the holy orders and was granted an annual pension by Pope Paul III. Salinas lived in Rome for the next 23 years. In 1553, he became the organist at the court of Naples, where he was under the patronage of the then Viceroy of Naples, the Duke of Alba. While in Naples, he befriended Diego Ortiz, who served there as
Kapellmeister ( , , ), from German (chapel) and (master), literally "master of the chapel choir", designates the leader of an ensemble of musicians. Originally used to refer to somebody in charge of music in a chapel, the term has evolved considerably in i ...
; he also became acquainted with Orlando di Lasso and
Tomás Luis de Victoria Tomás Luis de Victoria (sometimes Italianised as ''da Vittoria''; ) was the most famous Spanish composer of the Renaissance. He stands with Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and Orlande de Lassus as among the principal composers of the late Re ...
. In 1559, he returned to Spain and took up a position as organist at the Cathedral of Sigüenza, where he worked until moving to a similar position at the Cathedral of León in 1561. In 1567 he took up the professorship of music at the
University of Salamanca The University of Salamanca () is a public university, public research university in Salamanca, Spain. Founded in 1218 by Alfonso IX of León, King Alfonso IX, it is the oldest university in the Hispanic world and the fourth oldest in the ...
, where he met the celebrated poet Fray Luis de León, also a professor at the university. In 1571, alongside Fray Luis de León and Diego de Castilla (then the rector of the University of Salamanca), he formed part of the jury for the literary prize that had been organised to celebrate the Spanish victory at the
Battle of Lepanto The Battle of Lepanto was a naval warfare, naval engagement that took place on 7 October 1571 when a fleet of the Holy League (1571), Holy League, a coalition of Catholic states arranged by Pope Pius V, inflicted a major defeat on the fleet of t ...
and the birth of prince Ferdinand. Fray Luis de Leon admired Salinas greatly, and in 1577 wrote a famous ode, the ''Oda a Francisco Salinas'', in homage to the musician. Most of Salinas' work was published while he worked at Salamanca. In 1577 he authored his treatise ''De Musica libri septem'', where he described
meantone temperament Meantone temperaments are musical temperaments; that is, a variety of Musical tuning#Tuning systems, tuning systems constructed, similarly to Pythagorean tuning, as a sequence of equal fifths, both rising and descending, scaled to remain within th ...
for the first time. He taught Vicente Espinel, who later said of Salinas that he was ''"the most learned man in speculative music that the world has known since antiquity."''Conant, Isabel Pope. "Vicente Espinel as a Musician." Studies in the Renaissance 5 (1958): 133-144. Although by all accounts a highly reputed organist, all of his own compositions have been lost. He died at Salamanca in 1590.


References

*Salinas, Francisco de, ''De musica libri septem'', Mathias Gastius, Salamanca, 1577, 1592. Reprint M.S. Kastner (ed.), Documenta Musicologica I no. 13 (Kassel: Bärenreiter, 1958). *León Tello, Francisco José. "Francisco de Salinas" ''Estudios de historia de teoría musical'' (Madrid: IEM, CSIC, 1962), pp. 539–642. *García Matos, Manuel, “Pervivencia en la tradición actual de canciones populares recogidas en el siglo XVI por Salinas en su tratado De musica libri septem,” ''Anuario Musical'', XVIII (Barcelona, 1963), 67–84. *"Salinas", in ''New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'', (London: Macmillan, 1980). *Fernández de la Cuesta, Ismael, (transl.) ''Siete Libros sobre la Música. Primera versión castellana'' (Madrid: Editorial Alpuerto, 1983). *Garcia Fraile, Dámaso. "Salinas, catedrático de la Universidad de Salamanca," in ''Livro de homenagem a Macario Santiago Kastner'' (Lisbon: Fund. Calouste Gulbenkian, 1992), pp. 431–62. *Otaola González, Paloma, "Francisco Salinas y la teoría modal en el siglo XVI," ''Nassare,'' XI (1995), 367–85. *Alin, José Maria, "Francisco Salinas y la canción popular del siglo XVI," in P.M.PiNnero Ramírez, (coord.) ''Lírica popular, lírica tradicional: lecciones en homenaje a Don Emilio García Gómez'' (Seville: Univ. de Sevilla, 1998), I, págs. 137-58. *Otoala González, Paloma, “Las fuentes en el De musica libri septem de Francisco Salinas,” in M. de C. Gómez and M. Bernado (eds.), ''Fuentes musicales en la Peninsula Ibérica (ca. 1250-ca. 1550). Fonts musicals a la Peninsula Ibérica'' (Lerida: Inst. d’Estudis Ilerdencs, Univ. de Lerida, 2001), pp. 359-83. *Katz. Israel J. "Francisco de Salinas and 'Conde Claros fraile', in ''Judeo-Spanish Ballads from Oral Tradition. Carolingian Ballads (2): Conde Claros'' (Newark, DE: Juan de la Cuesta, 2008), pp. 293-379. *Rubio de la Iglesia, Fernando, "Las melodías populares en 'De Música libri septem' de Francisco de Salinas: Estudio comparado de algunos ejemplos," in A.S. García Pérez and P. Otaola González (coords.) ''Francisco de Salinas: Música, teoría y matemática en el Renacimiento'' (Salamanca: Univ. de Salamanca, 2014), pp. 219–53.


External links


Francisco de Salinas on the Huygens-Fokker Foundation site
{{DEFAULTSORT:Salinas, Francisco de 1513 births 1590 deaths People from Burgos Musicians from Castile and León Spanish musicians Spanish music theorists Spanish classical organists Spanish male classical organists University of Salamanca alumni Academic staff of the University of Salamanca 16th-century male musicians Spanish Renaissance composers Spanish male classical composers 16th-century Spanish people Blind classical musicians Spanish blind people Blind musicians