e/El Salon Mexico

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has glosseng: El Salón México is a symphonic composition in one movement by Aaron Copland, which uses Mexican folk music extensively. The work is a musical depiction of an eponymous dance hall in Mexico City and even carries the subtitle, "A Popular Type Dance Hall in Mexico City." Copland began the work in 1932 and completed it in 1936. The Mexico Symphony Orchestra gave the first performance under the direction of Carlos Chávez (1937). The piece was premiered in the U.S. in 1938. Although Copland visited Mexico early in the 1930s, he based this tone poem not on songs he heard there, but rather on written sheet music for at least four Mexican folk songs that he had obtained: "El Palo Verde," "La Jesusita," "El Mosco," and "El Malacate." The powerful refrain that appears in the piece three times stems from "El Palo Verde." Critics have variously described the piece as containing two, three, or four parts, but many listeners find that it moves seamlessly from one theme to another with no clear internal boundaries.
lexicalizationeng: El Salon Mexico
lexicalizationeng: El Salón México
instance of(noun) United States composer who developed a distinctly American music (1900-1990)
Copland, Aaron Copland
Meaning
Japanese
has glossjpn: エル・サロン・メヒコ(西語:El Salón México)は、アメリカ合衆国の作曲家アーロン・コープランドが作曲した単一楽章の管弦楽曲。メキシコの民謡を素材としている。メキシコ・シティにある同名のダンスホールの描写であり、副題に「メキシコ・シティで人気のダンスホール "A Popular Type Dance Hall in Mexico City" 」とわざわざ掲げている。1932年に着手されたが、1936年になって完成された。世界初演は1937年に、カルロス・チャベスの指揮により、メキシコ交響楽団が行なった。アメリカ初演は1938年であった。
lexicalizationjpn: エル・サロン・メヒコ

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