José Maurício Nunes Garcia
Was he already teaching at the age of twelve? Did he ever correspond  with Haydn as has been traditionally claimed? — which we will see  further on is not entirely unfounded. In fact this does not matter. The  bibliography of Nunes Garcia resulting from the admirable work of the  musicologist Cleofe Person de Mattos has other surprises in store: she  has produced the critical edition of the works presented in this  recording. He was certainly precocious, since he composed his first  antiphony 
Tota Pulcra Es at the age of sixteen. Nunes Garcia  quickly realized that in Rio a mulatto from a simple background had to  prove himself by working hard to be accepted by the aristocracy. While  forging his arms as a composer, an organist, a pianist and a music  teacher, he invested an equal passion in Philosophy, Latin, and language  studies, making him a remarkable interpreter of Liturgy. This was  enough for him to be noticed and at the age of 24 he joined the Sao  Pedro dos Clerigos Brotherhood whose members performed his 
Te Deum  a few months on May 10th 1791. The following year Nunes Garcia was  ordained priest. This did not prevent him from giving birth to other  musical creations while being watched over by a tolerant church. From  then on nothing could stop his steady creative activity which occurred  at his house in Rua das Marrecas from1795, where he also opened a Music  School. ln 1798 his reputation was first established by his appointment  as director of the Rio de Janeiro Cathedral’s choir. It was true that it  was a rather poor chapel, and its predecessors José de Oliveira e  Amaral and João Lopes Ferreira found it difficult to maintain. But that  did not matter, a good reputation would finally be replaced by glory,  destiny would see to that.

Destiny bore the name of Napoleon Bonapart and his hired assassins.  It was to put an ocean between them and himself that the King of  Portugal, dom Joao VI, set sail the 29th November 1807. An exile not  without misanthropy. The twenty ships carrying the court estimated at  10,000 to 15,000 people, were surrounded by as many merchant ships as  English warships. The Sovereign landed at Bahia the 24th January 1808.  An enormous event, as it was the first time in the New World’s colonial  history that an European king had set foot on American soil. Bahia had  not been the capital of Brazil since 1763 and for two months dreamed  that it had recovered its former status. In fact this was not the case,  after some hesitation, dom Joao VI left Bahia to settle in Rio where he  arrived on the 7th March 1808 with undescribable enthusiasm. He very  quickly encouraged the development of an intensive artistic activity  which he endowed with his personal library containing as many as 60,000  volumes, which was immediately made available to the public.

All this was doubly important for Nunes Garcia. Firstly because the  King, who, due to an ancient prerogative attached to the House of  Bragance, had supreme control over musical activities of the court and  its chapel, would recognize his talent. The child who had learned music  in a humble Jesuit school just outside Rio would be covered with honours  and responsibilities, becoming the official court preacher and then the  Inspector of the Royal Chapel. Above all, the arrival of dom Joao VI  would generate important movement and enable Nunes to make some  exceptional encounters. Among these, the strange, fascinating and too  little known Sigismund Neukomm, who would remain in Rio from 1816 to  1821. Along with him, both Mozart and Haydn in person made their entry  into America. Neukomm was another precocious musician. He sang at  Salzburg Cathedral at the age of seven, nothing out of the ordinary  except that he would study music theory under Michael Haydn, one of  Wolfgang Amadeus’s most genuine friendships. As for the other Haydn,  Joseph, Neukomm would be his pupil for seven years, receiving his  benediction for his arrangements of The Creation, the Return of Tobie,  the Seasons and Arianna a Naxos. At that time the names of his students  were, Anna Milder, and… Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart the Younger.
That such a connoisseur had actually said and written of Nunes Garcia  that he was “the world’s first improviser” after hearing one of his  concerts, really makes you wonder! Here is an admirer who arrives just  at the right moment. For at the time of their encounter and friendship,  the star of the brilliant mulatto was on the decline, being replaced by  the rising one of Marcos Portugal who was considered as the best  Portuguese composer of his time.
Lightning streaked the skies of those years during which Nunes Garcia  would experience the bitter lesson of the gradual withdrawal of the  “great”. They were strangely similar to the life of Mozart whom he  cherished so deeply having been introduced to his greatest works by  Neukomm. The 19th December 1819 whereas all over Europe the fallen  favourite of Vienna had sunk into oblivion, who would have expected hear  resounding for the first time in America the sublime strains of the  Requiem under the vaults of a sanctuary in Rio? Two years later the  public of the capital Brazil would discover the Creation lead by Nunes  Garcia. This would be a definite period of decline. It is also the year  of Joao VIth’s return to Portugal, he would leave Brazil in the hands of  another sovereign, also a musician, but with other preoccupations. A  year later Brazil would be independent. Above all it was the year that  marked the separation with Neukomm also leaving for Europe. The end of  the story is sad-Mozart, Nunes Garcia’s existence would be filled with  financial worries and health problems, but not completely, in 1826 in a  final creative ‘tour de force’ he gives us the gigantic 
Missa de  Santa Cecilia. It is a masterpiece of universal music; like a  mirror or a synthesis of the 43 years of his life spent in the service  of music. The final joy of a man who at the age of 58, tired, and worn  out succeeds in snatching his final creative force from exhaustion. Jose  Mauricio Nunes Garcia died the 18th April 1830 in extreme poverty.
The Missa Pastoril
How can this work be classified and what position does it hold  generally in Nunes Garcia’s creative life? As is often the case, the  Missa Pastoril appears on several occasions in the catalogue of his  works. The first version was composed in 1808 and intended only for  voices accompanied by organ. Possible proof of the poor quality of the  instrumental formations available in Rio at the time of dom Joao VIth’s  arrival. It reappears in 1811 (the version in this recording), enriched  with an orchestra which must have been made of musicians from the Royal  Chapel of Lisbon also in exile. Through the two versions one can observe  how the means for musical creation developed in Rio de Janeiro. Again  Nunes Garcia even in the second version which is richer and more  elaborate would not use the violins, leaving the altos in divided parts  the role of proving that, at this period, at least between Portugal and  Brazil this section was held in great esteem which is no longer the case  nowadays. We are not that far behind Cherubini nor opera which peeps  through with its artifices in the first three bars of the Gloria. The  ornate and highly skillful arias are typical of the period. But at a  closer look they are already preparing the vocal soloist periods in the 
Missa  de Santa Cecilia who open the way to the future of vocal art.  “Para a noite de Natal” (for a Christmas Night), according to the  manuscript, and that’s what it’s all about. The entire work is bathed in  a soft and tender light of popular art which nothing can overshadow.
Psalms and Graduals
The two psalms, 
Laudate Dominum omnes gentes and 
Laudate  Pueri are dated 1813. This is not the only similitude, as they  appear to have a common unity of conception. The same tonality, the same  orchestration, even to similar rhythmical structures, although the 
Laudate  Pueri, which is more developed, leaves more room for tenderness  and exultation.
With the 
Gradual Dies Sanctificatus (1793) “Gradual para dia  de Natal” we find little of the atmosphere of the Missa Pastoril.  Similarly we have two versions; the present, and the arrangement for  choir and organ. This piece intended to be performed on Christmas Day, “
Dies  Santificatus” belongs to quiet a long series of graduals that  Nunes Garcia, the liturgical musician, would compose throughout his  life. Perhaps he paid special attention however to the one composed in  honour of Saint Sebastian in 1799. The festival of the Patron Saint of  the town of Sao Sebastiao do Rio de Janeiro was and still is extremely  popular and at the time of Nunes Garcia, the music usually accompanied  the procession and ceremonies on the 20th January. In fact the survival  of this tradition would be found in a mass by Villa Lobos.
(Alain Pacquier)
Pe. José Maurício Nunes Garcia (1767-1830, Rio de Janeiro, RJ)
01. Missa Pastoril para Noite  de Natal - 1. Kyrie
02. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 2. Gloria
03. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 3. Laudamus Te
04. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 4. Gratias
05. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 5. Qui Tollis
06. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 6. Qui Sedes
07. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 7. Cum Sancto Spiritu
08. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 8. Credo
09. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 9. Et Incarnatus
10. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 10. Crucifixus
11. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 11. Et Resurrexit
12. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 12. Sanctus
13. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 13. Benedictus
14. Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 14. Agnus Dei
15. Tarambote para as duas Charamelinhas
16. Laudate Dominum - Salmo 116 1. Laudate Dominum
17. Laudate Dominum - Salmo 116 2. Sicut Erat
18. Dies Sanctificatus - Gradual
19. Justus Cum Ceciderit - Gradual para São Sebastião
20. Laudate Pueri - Salmo 112 1. Laudate Pueri
21. Laudate Pueri - Salmo 112 2. Sicut Erat
Missa Pastoril para Noite de Natal - 1999
Ensemble Turicum
Direction: Luiz Alves da Silva & Mathias Weibl
Recorded for the commemoration of the Fifth Century of the Discovery of  Brazil by the Portuguese navigator Alvares Cabral
BAIXA AQUI 
FONTE: 
http://pqpbach.opensadorselvagem.org/