Historic Guitar Luthier Antonio De Torres Documentary

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Antonio De Torres Father of the Spanish Guitar Documentary

Produced by luthier John Vergara with the Heritage Soundcraft Institute.

Guitarist Dan Garcia performing Sor Etude in E minor Op. 6, No. 11 on Vergara guitar.
Transcript
00:30Who was Antonio de Torres?
00:40What were his contributions to the instrument?
00:53When you think of the guitar, what do you picture?
00:56Are the images of your favourite guitar players conjured in your mind?
01:02Chuck Berry?
01:05The Beatles?
01:08Bob Dylan?
01:11Andrea Segovia?
01:14Jimi Hendrix?
01:18How about Metallica?
01:25The etymology for the word guitar is one that should be looked into.
01:29In Farsi or Persian language, the word for the number four is chaha and string is ta.
01:36Combined, it's chata or chatara.
01:40Certainly there is a plethora of early instruments in the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa
01:45containing very similar names for various instruments, many with four strings.
01:51We will be more focused on the development of the guitar in Spain, as the most meaningful
01:55changes occurred there in the Iberian Peninsula.
01:59It was in Spain that the guitar had a slow evolution over the years to get to what is
02:03recognisable to us today and where the instrument is innately intertwined with the culture.
02:09The guitar as we know today was largely developed in Spain, spanning over several periods.
02:16More specifically, we will be focused on the developments of one maker in particular,
02:21a renowned guitar maker named Antonio de Torres Jurado, who had a profound impact on the modern
02:27guitar as we know it.
02:29Although the guitar has also been developed by various makers in Europe and beyond, the
02:33instrument has become a symbol of Spanish culture.
02:37The Spanish poet and Nobel Vicente Alesandra remarked, the guitar is the soul of Spain.
02:44Flamenco guitar maestro Paco de Lucia said, the soul of Spain sings through every strum
02:50of the guitar.
02:52Federico GarcĂ­a Lorca mentions the guitar in several of his poems.
02:58Having a long deep history, the guitar had many stages of evolution through many luthiers
03:03to arrive at the point where it is today.
03:07During the 16th century, the Portuguese craftsman Belchior Dias, working within the Spanish
03:12borders, set the stage for the guitar's intrinsic connection to the Iberian Peninsula.
03:18His innovations in shaping the vihuela, a precursor to the guitar, laid the foundation
03:24for an instrument that would become synonymous with the rich musical heritage of Spain.
03:30This instrument was made in 1590 and contained five double strings, which was the standard
03:35in that period.
03:37Thomas Duran of Seville, so far, is the only known luthier to have made a guitar in the
03:43Baroque period, to include the maker's information, name, location and date of 1684.
03:51Francisco Sanguino of Seville seems to be an early pioneer of adding a sixth string
03:56to the instrument, as shown here on a 1770 guitar.
04:01Perhaps he was one of the first to standardise this configuration.
04:06The Guerra family should be considered in the study of guitars, for apart from making
04:10beautiful six-course guitars in 1798 in this example, they also were involved in the export
04:17business of these instruments to Spain's colonies, such as Cuba in the New World.
04:23The Pagès dynasty, started by Juan Sr. and later by his son, José, made some interesting
04:29developments in the guitar's evolution.
04:32They were a part of the Cadiz school of making.
04:35Juan Pagès had enlarged the body to a more modern size, also some experimentation with
04:41internal bracings resembling our modern bracing system today.
04:46Their guitars were favoured by the best guitarists in that period, such as Fernando Sor and Dionisio
04:51Aguado.
04:53José Pernas is of the Granada school of making.
04:57In the Granada fashion, the headstock is a carved scroll, narrow body and other features
05:02tying it to that local tradition.
05:05José Pernas is important in the scene because it is believed that he might have taught Torres.
05:11Interestingly, in 1860, a guitar by Pernas seems to have taken a page from Torres' book,
05:17showing many of the designs Torres would become famous for in an interesting exchange between
05:22the two masters.
05:26Antonio de Torres Jurado
05:29Antonio de Torres Jurado was born on June 13th, 1817, in La Cañada de San Urbano, Almería, Spain.
05:39Torres was a true innovator, a pioneer in his craft.
05:43His work reshaped the very essence of the guitar.
05:46He is the maker who invented the modern Spanish guitar that we still use today.
05:50Having drawn from his predecessors before him, he played a critical role in the guitar's
05:55development, arguably even affecting the outcome of the modern-day steel-string acoustic
06:00guitar and even the electric guitar.
06:06From his humble beginnings, his journey would lead him down a path of artistry and innovation,
06:11a path that would forever change the world of music.
06:15The town of AlmerĂ­a, with its whitewashed buildings and winding cobbled streets, provided
06:20a vibrant backdrop for young Antonio's early years.
06:25As a young boy, he was surrounded by the sights and sounds of his Andalusian heritage,
06:30a place where music and art were woven into the fabric of daily life.
06:35This exposure ignited a spark in him, a fascination with the instrument's intricate details and
06:41the sound it could produce.
06:43Little did he know that this fascination would transform into a lifelong passion and a profound
06:48impact on the world of music.
06:51In the charming streets of his youth, a young boy's fascination with guitars began to shape
06:56his destiny.
06:57Torres's early life was modest, filled with the simple pleasures of Andalusian culture.
07:03His family, though not involved in guitar-making, fostered an environment rich in the traditions
07:09of their region.
07:10The lively melodies of local musicians filled their home, and young Antonio was entranced
07:16by the music of his heritage.
07:19Though an ideal picturesque setting for a luthier, his early adulthood was postmarked
07:23with a series of hardships.
07:31The year 1834 at 17, he was drafted into the army to fight in the Carlist's wars, but
07:37discharged due to health reasons.
07:40A year later, at 18 years old, he hastily wedded his first wife, Juana MarĂ­a LĂłpez,
07:47perhaps in a stint to avoid being drafted again due to the fact that single men and
07:52widowers without dependents were vulnerable for military duty.
07:56The following year saw the birth of his first child, a daughter, MarĂ­a Dolores.
08:02By this time, he is already a member of the Carpenter's Guild, and suffers a humiliating
08:07experience when debt collectors confiscate from him some fine chairs, a table, and even
08:13his best quality saw due to inability to pay.
08:18Not long after this episode, his second daughter is born, but dies the very next year.
08:24Only three years after the passing of his second daughter, tragically, he also experiences
08:29the death of his wife to tuberculosis.
08:32She was just twenty-three years of age when she passed.
08:35These succession of traumatic experiences became the motivation for Torres to relocate,
08:41for at the time of his wife's death, he resided in the provincial town of Vera due
08:45to perhaps a temporary investment venture, which he did see profit from in the silver
08:50mining business.
08:52Apart from the recent tragedies that befallen him, Vera is a town with limited resources
08:57and opportunities, as his business there also seemed to dry up.
09:02Shortly after his wife's death, he relocated to Seville.
09:11Seville is the capital of Andalusia, and one of the most populated cities in Spain.
09:16While providing more opportunities for Torres, it would have also been an important and stimulating
09:21location for a curious craftsman wanting to hone skills in the luthiery department.
09:29Seville was a town that was made rich from the New World exhibitions.
09:33It was also a hub of culture.
09:35There would have been a plethora of poets, artists, artisans, musicians, luthiers, and
09:41more importantly, wood merchants active in the city.
09:45Torres likely also shared a shop with other makers such as Manuel Gutierrez and or Soto
09:51Isolares.
09:53It would be the atmosphere of collective innovation mainly in Seville that would propel Torres's
09:58work to the next level.
10:01We are not certain exactly when and where he constructed his first guitar.
10:06When trying to discover the works of Antonio de Torres, there are some issues.
10:11One great source is from luthier José Romanillos himself, who authored an invaluable book entitled
10:17Antonio de Torres Guitar Maker, His Life and Works.
10:21It also should be noted that there had been a few attempts of counterfeiting Torres guitars.
10:27One example is from a famous Barcelona maker, Enrique Garcia, whom himself did not counterfeit
10:34guitars.
10:35Guitar shops in France at the turn of the century advertised Torres guitars in limited
10:40quantities and took the work of Enrique Garcia himself and swapped labels using a counterfeit
10:46Torres label.
10:47José Ramírez, founder of the Ramírez dynasty himself, also was known to forge a mock Torres
10:53label but perhaps for the purpose to prove that the work was his.
10:59Players often boasted of the Torres mystique to try a Torres guitar in the shop of RamĂ­rez
11:04to then praise the instrument.
11:06RamĂ­rez would then take the guitar and remove the label, showing them it was in fact his
11:12guitar.
11:14This was done to prove a point that he was as capable or more than the great master which
11:18preceded him.
11:20Antonio de Torres' earliest known surviving work was made in the year 1852.
11:26This instrument demonstrated some features of that style.
11:30Here he fashions the scroll-shaped headstock and proportions of the body, all of which
11:36are characteristics of the Granada school.
11:39Clearly this instrument doesn't represent the maturity that would come in Torres'
11:43later years but still shows remarkable aptitude and promise in his craftsmanship.
11:49A noteworthy guitar of Torres is known as La Leona or the Lioness, F-E-0-4, is a very
11:56important work.
11:58He uses Spanish cypress for the sides and back.
12:01The guitar also features the fan bracing which he will remain loyal to throughout his life.
12:06Torres installs a tournevoz in this instrument.
12:09Tournevoz might be the one thing that Torres actually invented.
12:13Tournevoz, literally meaning turn voice, is a cone-shaped Helmholtz resonator fixed to
12:19the inside rim of the sound hole.
12:22The intention behind this part is to enhance the projection of the sound.
12:26The bridge lacks a movable saddle on this particular instrument, however, here he uses
12:31a now standard 650mm scale length and the body also has modern dimensions.
12:38It is known that Torres lent this instrument to maestro guitarist Julian Arcas but never
12:44sold it to anyone and remained in his possession until his death.
12:49After his death there were various inquiries for this instrument, however, it was not known
12:54to his daughter as La Leona and in fact she hadn't known any guitar by this name.
13:00The name they were familiar with in regards to this guitar was La Fea or the Ugly.
13:06This might be due to the fact that it was relatively plain in regards to ornamentations.
13:12The Duke of Montpensier who resided in the Palace of San Telmo in Seville was an important
13:17patron to the arts, particularly in music, holding many concerts in the city.
13:23In the year 1858 there was an exhibition in Seville hosted by the Royal Duke.
13:28In this competition Torres was awarded a bronze medal for his efforts in a particularly ornate
13:34guitar known as Fe08 or by name given by some notable players at the time as La Guitara
13:41Cumbre or the Supreme Guitar.
13:45The outcome of this competition would have also likely solidified his place as a guitar
13:49maker and offered a prestige status as this afforded him the title Don before his first
13:55name.
13:57The guitar had a considerable amount of intricate marquetry of the meander pattern and herringbone
14:02running through the back, sides and headstock of the instrument showing his level of mastery
14:07and skill.
14:09It also featured birdseye maple or Ojo de Pajaro, a tournevoz and modern dimensions.
14:16The 1859 Fe09 guitar is important due to the fact that it belonged to prestigious guitarist
14:23Miguel Jobet.
14:25More simple in design, not having any special inlays and having imported Brazilian rosewood
14:30back and sides, it also featured a tournevoz.
14:34Another feature on this guitar worth mentioning is the fact that the outer two fan braces
14:39pass under an opening carved from the lower harmonic bar, extending further into the soundboard,
14:46perhaps a true experimental innovation by Torres himself.
14:50Miguel Jobet used this instrument extensively through his career and more interestingly
14:55even recorded with it.
14:57German luthier Hermann Hauser seems to have used the rosette on this guitar in many of
15:02his works.
15:05The papier-mâché guitar 1862 Fe14 is a fascinating study into the acoustic aspect of the guitar
15:14as well as the function of the soundboard.
15:17Torres built this guitar with papier-mâché sides and back, while the soundboard being
15:22of his standard 7-fan braced design.
15:26The purpose of this was to demonstrate how important the soundboard is for acoustic output
15:31and how cheap or inferior materials for the back and sides play less of a role acoustically.
15:37Having been repaired multiple times due to the soft nature of the papier-mâché, the
15:42guitar today is not in a playable state but resides in the Museum of Barcelona.
15:49In 1868 Torres would wed his second wife, Josefa Martin, at the El Salvador church close
15:56to his home.
15:57Piano guitarist Julian Arcas was his best man at the wedding.
16:02To Josefa, his first son Teodoro, Isabel and Antonio, his second son, were born out of
16:07wedlock.
16:08In 1872 another daughter Matilda would be born and in 1876 his youngest daughter Ana
16:15would be born to Josefa.
16:18Arguably one of the most important moments in Torres' career would be that related
16:23to Francisco Tarrega's first visit to his shop in 1868.
16:28This could also be marked as one of the most important things to happen to Spanish guitar
16:32music.
16:33Already an incredible talent, the relatively unknown Tarrega was just seventeen when he
16:38travelled from Barcelona to Torres' shop in Seville looking for a worthy guitar to
16:43suit his growing abilities.
16:46Ironically, the first guitar handed to Tarrega was not a particularly worthy one because
16:51shortly upon hearing Tarrega play, Torres stops him and hands him a more significant
16:57instrument.
16:58This would be a 1864 instrument known as F.E. 17 which was Torres' personal guitar.
17:07Tarrega would play this instrument for twenty years and would shape the music he wrote and
17:12even how he played the guitar.
17:15Tarrega, being a habitual chain smoker, left his mark in the form of cigarette burns on
17:20the sides of the guitar after many years of use.
17:24Guitarist Emilio Pujol regarded this instrument as the greatest sound he heard, the basses
17:29and trebles matching.
17:31Even virtuoso Miguel Llobé remarked that his and Tarrega's guitar are the best sounds
17:36available, but he preferred Tarrega's guitar over his own.
17:42The late 1860s was a particularly challenging time for Spain.
17:46An agricultural crisis, as well as a war for Cuban independence in 1868, followed by
17:52a revolution in the same year ensured a depression for the economy.
17:57It might be for these reasons that compelled Torres to leave Seville for Almeria in 1869.
18:04It's likely that due to the inability to produce sufficient income from the guitar-making business
18:08in this climate led to the Torres family to establish a more stable income via a retail
18:15china business with his wife.
18:18He does however continue to make some guitars in this period.
18:24However after 15 years of marriage, Josefa's life is tragically claimed by cancer.
18:45The loss of his wife was not a defeat for Torres.
18:52In fact, this event strangely led to Torres nearly doubling his output of guitars per
18:57year from roughly 6 to 12.
19:00It seems that in the flamenco guitar world, Torres might have also sparked the development
19:05of the art form for having made more affordable guitars for gypsies or for those who couldn't
19:10afford his more superior work.
19:13These guitars were made from locally sourced wood such as Spanish cypress sides and back
19:18often with knots, sometimes unmatching pieces of spruce.
19:23Five internal fan bracings instead of seven, cedar neck, traditional style friction pegs
19:29for tuning instead of tuning machines which were more expensive.
19:34This style of guitar is now known as flamenca blanca or white flamenco due to the light
19:40colour of the cypress sides and back compared to rosewood or mahogany.
19:45Although Torres did produce many guitars in this fashion, one such instrument was made
19:50in 1889 known as SE-126.
19:55An important business trip to Barcelona 1884 to 1885 was one of networking and promotion.
20:02This trip did in fact yield to him some new orders from Catalan guitarists.
20:07Carrega and Jobet were in fact Catalan artists and by this time Torres would have had a name
20:14there as a prestigious Andalusian guitar maker, perhaps more capable than makers in the north
20:19at that time.
20:21Here in Barcelona Torres did construct some instruments having stayed within the house
20:26of Federico Cano, a friend and guitarist whose son was a pupil of Dionisio Aguado.
20:34Torres might have been deterred from returning to Almeria for some time due to an outbreak
20:38of cholera in Almeria and other areas nearby in Andalusia.
20:43It is here Torres might have constructed a guitar with eleven strings, to which he made
20:48about four that we are aware of throughout his career.
20:52Known as SE-83 from 1885, this guitar has seven fan bracings, including two diagonal
20:59braces.
21:00The first seven strings are frettable and the remaining four strings overhang the fretboard
21:05much like that of Baroque lutes with particular configurations and definitely like that of
21:10theorbos.
21:12Facing his twilight years and decay, Torres befriended a local priest around 1887.
21:19Juan Martinez Cervent was someone whom Torres would utilise to help fulfil guitar orders,
21:24for in this period he lost much of the steadiness in his hands necessary to carry out delicate
21:30work.
21:31Sadly, it came to a point where he wasn't even able to sign his own signature.
21:36It is little known what kind of woodworking background this priest had, but it must have
21:41been sufficient to help Torres carry out the precision work needed to assemble a guitar
21:46for he still had to provide for at least one or two of his daughters, and of course, himself.
21:52It is in 1892, at 75 years of age, that Torres finally succumbs to intestinal catarrh as
21:59stated on his death certificate.
22:01His death was lamented in his town, a thoughtful tribute was written on Torres by a local paper.
22:07Torres, having more debts than assets, had the remaining guitars of Torres at the end
22:12of his second epoch show some discrepancies that are a mystery and remain unexplained,
22:18possibly due to the fact that he left many instruments unfinished and either the priest
22:23Juan Martinez Cervent or someone else completed them.
22:27There seems to be issues with many labels either not having the correct location or
22:32the correct street or the correct number written in them.
22:35Some of the bracing schemes are different from Torres.
22:39Although Torres didn't seem to invent much other than the tournevos and the bracing method
22:43of struts passing under the harmonic bar, his understanding of combining all the important
22:49design elements of the seven-strut fan bracing system, wider and longer body dimensions,
22:55650mm scale string length, and the movable saddling on the bridge was the winning recipe
23:01for his success.
23:04And for that we have our modern classical guitar, and even our modern flamenco guitar.
23:10Antonio de Torres' profound influence extended beyond the realm of guitar craftsmanship,
23:16setting the stage for a transformative era in the classical guitar's journey.
23:21His groundbreaking work not only revolutionised the design of the instrument but also paved
23:26the way for subsequent generations of guitarists and composers to navigate the musical landscape
23:32of the 20th century and beyond.
23:35Notably, Torres' innovative contributions played a crucial role in empowering guitarists
23:41like Miguel Llobet and Francisco Tárrega, enabling them to carry the torch of classical
23:46guitar artistry into a new century.
23:50The enduring legacy of Torres resonates not only in the timeless beauty of his instruments
23:55but also the future generations of guitar makers and players alike.
24:02So what is the guitar?
24:04What has it become?
24:06As a result of the artisan's contributing to its development, the guitar became one
24:11of the most versatile instruments.
24:13For the Spanish and classical guitar, it became a small instrument, capable of mimicking the
24:19piano and even orchestras due to polyphonic abilities, sometimes being the preferred version
24:24of a piece written for piano.
24:27The guitar became a suitable means of expression for Spanish music, classical, country music,
24:33jazz, blues, rock and roll, heavy metal and much more.
24:37The guitar is a symbol of Western culture.
24:41Without it, we lose a large portion of our identity.
24:44Without it, we would be a different people.

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