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-Historic Guitar Makers of the
Madrid School
These biographies of historic
Spanish luthiers in Madrid are works in progress. If you have additional
materials, information, sources, photographs, or corrections you wish to share,
please contact me. (Reference Works)
Alonso (Madrid, active c.
1830s)
Alonso was a guitar maker in
Madrid circa the 1830s.
Alfonso Benito (Madrid, active c.
1930s-1940s)
Alfonso Benito was a master
builder in the shop of José Ramirez II, and according to José Ramirez III,
Alfonso and his father were his principle teachers.
Lorenzo Alonso (Madrid,
active c. 1758-1796)
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Although we do not
have a birth date for Lorenzo Alonso, in 1758 he opened a shop on the calle
Carmen in Madrid. In 1761, he was appointed as head of the guitar makers guild
in Madrid, and granted examination papers to his son, Pedro Alonso, then three
and half years old. As a luthier, he also made violins, cellos, etc. He seems to
have closed his workshop on the calle Carmen in 1788, and died in 1796. He seems
to have risen to prominence and is mentioned in Fernando Sor's Method
pour la Guitare.
(Photo courtesy of Felix
Manzanero) |
Pedro Alonso (Madrid,
1758- ?)
Pedro Alonso was a luthier active
in Madrid around the middle of the eighteenth century.
Agustín de Andrés (Madrid b. 1870
active c. 1900)
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Agustín de Andrés
was active in Madrid until the beginning of the 20th century. Between 1903
and 1905 he had a workshop in Madrid on D. Manuel Fernández y Gonzalez.
According to Romanillos (2002:18-19) in 1905 he was working with Manuel
Rodríguez Pérez and Julián Gómez Ramírez. By 1908, like Julián Gómez Ramírez, he
had moved to Paris where he had his shop on the Rue de Pateaux, No. 7.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Vicente Arias, (Madrid
b. 1833 - d.1914)
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Vicente Arias was
born in Alcazar de San Juan, Ciudad Real in 1833. He seems to have begun
building guitars around 1860. Emilio Pujol relates that around 1878-1879,
Arias was commissioned by Francisco Tarrega to make a small guitar for him that
he could carry under his cape to use to strengthen his fingers out of sight. He
continued making guitars right up until his death in 1912. He is generally
credited with being the only luthier in the 19th century whose instruments
rivaled those of Antonio de Torres in the elegance and constructional quality.
Like many makers he had a series of shops. In 1889, he is recorded at Paloma 12.
In trade guides 1898-1990, he is listed at Paloma 14. In 1903, we find him at
Alamo 3, Madrid. Between 1908-09, his shop is listed on the calle Santa Isabel,
no. 20. He 1910, we find him again at Alamo 3; in 1912 at Alamo 10. He died in
1914. |
Marcelo Barbero (Madrid,
b. 1904-d. 1956)
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Marcelo Barbero was born in Madrid in 1904. Marcelo was trained by José Ramirez
II, and gave José Ramirez III his initial lessons in guitar building. When
Santos Hernandez died in 1943, Marcelo went to his widow to see about taking
over her husband's old shop. She employed Marcelo Barbero first to finish some
guitars that Santos was unable to complete, and then to build for her. Marcelo
Barbero trained Arcángel Fernández. When Barbero died, his son Marcelo Jr. began
an apprenticeship with José Ramirez, however, he left after a couple of years.
Marcelo's widow, then asked Arcángel Fernández to train her son. Marcelo
Jr. continues to work with Arcángel Fernández
Castro Marin
Sound
Gallery Sample 1947 Marcelo Barbero flamenco guitar
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
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Modesto Borreguero
(Madrid active c.1910s-1960s)
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Modesto Borreguero
was trained in Manuel Ramirez's shop, and following his death in 1916,
took over its management, continuing to work for Manuel's widow until her death.
Even after, his labels touted the fact the had worked for Manuel Ramirez,
Antiguo oficial de M. Ramirez. He later opened his own workshop on the calle
Atocha. In the early 1920s, his workshop was on Zurita 27. In the mid-1920s he
moved to Fernan Nuñez, No. 5. He also taught Hernandez and Aguado guitar
making and also trained the noted Madrid luthier Vicente Camacho. He was a
generous man, who enjoyed drinking, and so was often broke. He seems to
have died some time after 1960.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Agustín Campo (Madrid active
c.1840)
Agustín Campo was an important
luthier in Madrid circa 1840. He collaborated with the guitarist/composer
Dionisio Aguado in making improvements to the design of his guitars that were
taken up by other members of the Madrid school.
Benito Campo (Madrid,
b.1798-d.1857)
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Benito Campo was born in Logroñom
La Rioja in 1798. He seems to have worked sometimes as a carpenter, but was also guitar maker with a shop on Majaderitos, 16.
He married the daughter of Manuel Muñoa
in 1827. He was a trusted friend of
Dionisio Aguado, who named him in 1849 to be the executor of his will. He
trained one son José Toribio Campo.
Photo courtesy of
Spanish Guitar
Shop
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Antonio Carracedo
(Madrid, active c. 1860)
Antonio Carracedo was a luthier
in Madrid active circa 1860, he produced a guitar with a modern plantilla; that
is wider in the lower bout, fan braced, raised finger board, and a modern
bridge.
Rafael Casana (Madrid,
active c. 1900s)
Rafael Casana apprenticed under
José Ramirez I. He latter settled in Córdoba where he seems to have trained
Miguel Rodriguez. Rafael, however, was apparently an unstable man, and according
to Ivor Mairants, ended up committing suicide in 1905.
Faustino Conde (Madrid,
1913-1988)
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Faustino Conde
Salamana was born in Villalba de los Alcores in 1913. He began his
apprenticeship with his uncle, Domingo Esteso Lopez (1882-1937), when he
was only 13. When Domingo Esteso died in 1937, Faustino and his brothers Mariano
and Julio Conde took over their uncle's workshop in Madrid, continuing to work
for their uncle's widow until her death in 1960 building under the label Vda
Sobrinos de Esteso (Widow and nephews of Domingo Esteso). The Conde brothers
continued building under the label Sobrinos de Domingo Esteso into the 1970s
when they took the name Hermanos Conde (the Conde Brothers). Faustino died in
1988. The original Esteso-Conde shop currently is run by Faustino's widow, Julia
Conde Pastor.
Castro Marin
Sound Gallery Sample -- 1955 Vda. de Domingo Esteso (Hermanos Conde).
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Julio Conde
(Madrid, b. 19?? - d. 1995)
Julio Conde was one of the Conde
brothers, and nephews and successors of Domingo Esteso. He died in 1995.
Mariano Conde (Madrid,
b.191? - d. 1989)
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Mariano Conde, a
nephew of Domingo Esteso, and one of the Conde brothers who worked for Domingo's
widow, and after her death in 1960, inherited the Esteso workshop. He later left
and set up his own workshop. He died in 1989. |
Manuel Contreras (Madrid,
1926-1995).
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Born in
Madrid in 1926, Contreras began his working life as a cabinet maker, and
reportedly even tried his hand as a bullfighter. In 1959, he joined the Ramirez
workshop as a senior journeyman. It was Contreras who made the first José
Ramirez guitar Andrés Segovia bought in 1960. After three years with Ramirez,
Manuel opened his own guitar workshop in the center of Madrid. He soon
earned a reputation as one of the finest and most innovative luthiers in Spain.
Among his innovations is the “double top,” a guitar in which a second top is
mounted between the braces of the back, improving both the tone and the
volume of the guitar. In 1983, Contreras designed a radically different guitar
without an upper waist or sound hole for the Uruguayan guitarist, Abel
Carlevaro. The assumption being that by enlarging the surface area of the top,
the volume and tone would improve. The guitar has also an extra back and sides
inside body to isolate the box from the damping effect of the player's body.
Instead of a sound hole, there are slits that around the edge of the top,
between the sets of sides through which the sound emerges. I have played this
model in his shop, and indeed it has better volume and tone, but is a very heavy
instrument. His most popular models, however, are built in the Spanish
tradition. They are large, long scale instruments, with fan braced tops, based
on the successful Ramirez formula. Contreras died in 1994 of cancer, but his
shop continues to build the same models under the direction of his son, Pablo
Contreras.
Sound Sample Gallery -- 1968 Contreras Concert Classical |
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Juan de Carrión (Madrid, active c.
1600-1620)
Juan de Carrión was a luthier to
the Spanish Crown in Madrid at the beginning of the 17th century.
Domingo Esteso
Lopez (Madrid, 1882-1937)
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Domingo Esteso
Lopez was born in San Clemente in the province of Cuenca in 1882. He was one the
guitar great makers of the early 20th century based in Madrid. In the 1890s, he
began as an apprentice in the shop of Manuel Ramirez, working along side such
greats as Santos Hernandez and Modesto Borreguero. When Manuel Ramirez died in
1916, he continued to work for Manuel's widow for about a year. In 1917 he
opened his own shop on the calle Gravina, where he was joined by his nephew,
Faustino Conde in 1926. After his death in 1937, Faustino and his two brothers,
Mariano and Julio, took over the shop, building under Vda y Sobrinos de Domingo
Esteso (Widow and nephews of Domingo Esteso. Following the widow's death in the
1960s, they became
Hermanos Conde, sobrinos (nephews) of Domingo Esteso.
Castro Marin
Sound Gallery Sample 1920 Domingo Esteso Flamenco Guitar
Sound Sample
1933 Domingo Esteso Classical Guitar |
Antonio Carlos Garcia (Madrid,
active c. 1860)
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Antonio Carlos
Garcia was a maker of guitars and bandurrias active in Madrid circa 1860. The
parlor guitar shown was made for the English market where according to its label
the Alban Voigt & Co. was Garcia's exclusive distributor in Great Britain and
the colonies. This guitar has a three piece top, back and sides of Rosewood from Brazil. Mother-of-pearl is inlayed into ebony of the rosette. The
construction of this small instrument (590mm scale), is unusual in that it makes
no use of fan bracing. Despite this, its tone and volume are surprisingly big.
Randall Avers MP3Sound
Sample
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Enrique Garcia Castillo
(Madrid, 1868-Barcelona 1922)
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Enrique Garcia was
born in Madrid in 1868. Although he was the son of a guitar maker, Juan Garcia,
in 1883 he began an apprenticeship with Manuel Ramirez, and continued to work
for him for many years. In 1893, his guitars won first prize at the Chicago
World Fair. In 1895, he left the Ramirez shop and moved to Barcelona where he
opened a workshop on the calle Aragon No. 309. In 1899, he moved his shop to the
calle Aragon No. 455. In 1902, he again moved his shop to its ultimate location
on the Paseo de San Juan No 110. Enrique Garcia quickly gained an international
reputation, and his guitars were particularly in demand in Latin America. By
1912, he was shipping most of his guitars to Latin America. In Barcelona, he had
one disciple Francisco Simplicio. Garcia made some guitars that so closely
resembled those of Antonio de Torres that their labels have been removed and
passed off as Torres guitars. He died on October, 31, 1922. |
Juan Garcia (Madrid active c. 1860s
- 1910s.)
Juan Garcia was a luthier
active in Madrid in the later half of the 19th century, and father of Enrique
Garcia, and gave his son his initial training. He died in 1914.
Antonio Gómez Rodriguez (Madrid,
active. c. 1930)
Antonio Gómez Rodriguez was a
luthier in Madrid active circa 1930.
Julian Gómez Ramírez (b.
Madrid- 1879- d. Paris, ?)
Julian Gómez Ramirez, although
not related to Ramirez, was trained by José Ramirez I. In 1922 he moved to
Paris where he remained active into the 1940s. Robert Bouchet apprenticed with
Julian Gómez.
Francisco González
(Galicia, b. 1820 -d. 1879 )
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Francisco González
Estéve,
born in Córgomo, Orense in 1820, was an engineer who took up guitar making. In fact,
he is credited with making the first car in Spain. Made before the
internal combustion engine, it was a lever operated vehicle. He is also
generally given the honor of being the founder of the Madrid school, this
despite the fact that he was not a native of Madrid, but had moved there in 1835
or 1836. Nor was he the first, guitar maker in Madrid. There was already a
flourishing Madrid school developing. The honor certainly is appropriate
for being the most influential, for he trained José Ramirez I, who in turn
taught his brother, Manuel Ramirez, and it is two these two brothers that almost
every maker in Madrid traces his lineage. Francisco, however, was also
recognized in his own time as a fine maker. In 1867, at the Universal
Exposition in Paris, he was awarded a bronze metal for his guitars. He had a
series of shops. From around 1849-1855, he was at Calle de los Estudios de San
Isidro. He then moved to Calle Toledo, 40. In 1863, he was at Calle Latonerones,
1. By 1864, he on the calle Carrera de San Geronimo, No. 15, near the
Puerta de Sol, the shop he continued to occupy until his death in 1879. His
son-in-law, Enrique Romano Papell took over the shop when he died. Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero.
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Marcos Antonio González
(Madrid, b.c. 1736, active c. 1760s-1800s d.1809).
Marcos Antonio González was a
guitar maker who settled in Madrid in 1766 on the Calle Majaderistos. He trained
trained his son, Manuel Narciso González.
He also trained the brothers
Juan and Manuel Muñoa.
Manuel married his daughter and eventually took over the workshop. He had his
workshop on the Calle Angosta de Majaderitos.
Manuel Narciso González
(b. Madrid 1781, active c. 1800s-1840s, d. 1847)
Manuel Narciso González was
born in Madrid in 1781. He was trained by his father, Marcos Antonio González,
and was a brother-in-law of the Juan and Manuel Muñoa. When his father died,
Manuel took over his father's workshop on Calle de Majaderitos. He was appointed a the
guitar maker to the Royal Chamber in 1830-- a fact recorded on the label of his guitars
thereafter.
Hernández y Aguado
(Madrid, active 1950s-1970s)
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Manuel Hernández was born in 1895 in a village near Toledo, but his family moved
to Madrid when he was eight years old. At the age of 14 he began to work as an
apprentice in a piano workshop where soon after he was allowed to work in the
area where the main bodies of the piano were constructed, and the attendant
acoustic problems solved. Victoriano Aguado was born in 1897 in the city of
Madrid. He also grew up in Madrid and was employed as a French polisher at the
same piano workshop. There, the two became friends and when the business closed
in 1941, they decided to set up a workshop which would specialize in the
restoration of pianos and antique furniture. Aguado was an enthusiastic
guitarist and Hernández had a love for music combined with his skilled
craftsmanship which eventually led to collaboratively making a couple of
guitars. They were inspired by the guitar professor Sainz de la Mata at the
Conservatorio de Madrid and they learned much by watching Modesto Borreguero at
work - he was once a pupil of Manuel Ramirez. After favorable response to their
instruments they decided to convert the entire workshop over to guitar
production. By the end of their first year as full-time luthiers, they had a
waiting list of seventy customers. By 1975 when Hernández died, over 400 guitars
had been produced. Although Aguado retired from guitar-making in 1970, the post
1970 guitars were made by Hernández and his son-in-law, Jesus Belezar. The
tradition of guitar construction so firmly established in Spain during the last
100 years has been maintained there by a number of modern master makers
including Hernández y Aguado. Their partnership is considered one of the most
successful in guitar-making history. |
Santos Hernández Rodríguez
(Madrid, 1873-1943).
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Santos Hernández was born in Madrid in 1873. When he was ten he began an
apprenticeship making vestments and ornaments in a shop that made religious
paraphernalia. Unhappy with this vocation, he apprenticed to Valentin Viudes,
the son. After a short time, he left Viudes shop and went to work for José
Ortega in Granada. But, he soon returned to Madrid and worked for Saturnino
Rojas and in the
prestigious shop of Francisco Gonzalez, then being run by the son. In 1893,
Santos was drafted and was assigned to a artillery unit during the five years of
his military service. He was sent to Cuba to fight during the Spanish-American
war. On leaving the army in 1898, he seems to have set up his own workshop on
the Calle Nicolas Salmerón. About 1905 he was hired by Manuel Ramirez as his
foreman to replace Enrique Garcia, who had moved to Barcelona.
Santos seems to have been the luthier who was most involved in building the
guitar Manuel Ramirez gave Andrés Segovia in 1912. When Manuel Ramirez died
in 1916, Santos continued working for his widow until 1920. In 1921, Santos
opened his own shop in an alley, La Aduana, in the center of Madrid, building
both classical and flamenco guitars. Santos was secretive about his arts, and
refused to taken on disciples. Santos Hernández guitars were played by such
notable classical guitarists as Luis Sánchez Granada, Regino Sainz de la Maza,
Quintin Esquembre, and such flamenco players as Ramon Montoya, Niño Ricardo,
Sabicas, Esteban de Sanlúcar, Manolo de Huelva, Manolo de Badajoz etc. After his
death in 1943, his widow continued to run his shop, employing Marcelo Barbero to
make guitars.
Sound Gallery Sample
-- 1935 Santos Hernandez flamenco guitar
Sound Gallery Sample -- 1934 Santos Hernandez classical guitar
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Francisco Ibarrola (Madrid, active
c. 1900-1910s).
Francisco Ibarrola was a luthier
in Madrid active at the beginning of the twentieth century. In 1914, he had a
shop on the calle Santa Barbara.
Pedro Jiménez
(Madrid, active c. 1900-1920s)
Pedro Jiménez, a luthier in
Madrid in the early part of the twentieth century had a shop on the calle
General Ricardo. In 1918, he moved his shop to the calle Mayor.
Cleto López (Madrid,
active c. 1885)
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Cleto López was a
guitar maker active in Madrid in the late nineteenth century.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Josef Martinez (Madrid,
active c. 1800)
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Josef Martinez was a
luthier active in Madrid at the beginning of the 19th century. An example of his
work is in the collection of Felix Manzanero, and according to Manzanero is
among the best sounding guitars in his collection.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
J. Manuel Martinez de Milan (active
c. 1952)
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Juan Manuel Martinez de Milan
was active in Madrid in the 1950s. The guitar shown here was made in 1952. The
label which sports his picture reads J. Manuel Martinez de Milan / Constructor
de Guitarras / Rodas 11, Interior 13. Telefono 2810?? / Madrid / No. ?5
[handwritten] Año 1952 [penned in].
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Juan Moreno (Madrid,
b. 1792 active 1820s-1830s d. 1836).
Juan Moreno was born in Madrid in
1792, by the 1820s he had established himself as a guitar maker with a shop on
Calle Ancha de Majaderitos, 10. He escaped doing military service because he had
poor vision in his right eye. In 1829, Juan built a guitar which according to
Dionisio Aguado, led the movement which changed guitar construction in Madrid
from the French style transverse bracing and fingerboard flush with the top, to
a Spanish system using fan bracing and a raised fingerboard. He died, unmarried,
in 1836.
Antonio Muñoa (Madrid,
active c. 1820)
Antonio Muñoa was a luthier in
Madrid active circa 1820. The nephew of Juan Muñoa, Antonio was trained by his
uncle. Dionisio Aguado praised his work in his Method (1820) saying that the few
guitars he has made show promise of his developing his uncle's abilities.
Juan Muñoa (Madrid,
1783-1824)
Juan Muñoa was born in
Pradoluengo in 1783, and like his elder brother probably learned guitar making
with Marcos Antonio González. Manuel and Juan later moved to Madrid, and
they were active at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth
century in Madrid. Juan died in Madrid in 1824. Juan Muñoa made a guitar for
Dionisio Aguado that this guitarist and composer praises in his Colección de
Estudios (1820) as being the optimal guitar.
Juan Muñoa II, (Madrid
active mid-19th century)
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Juan Muñoa II
appears to be a son or grandson of Juan Muñoa active in Madrid in the mid-19th
century. An example of his work dated 1870 is in the collection of Felix
Manzanero.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Manuel Muñoa (Madrid,
1779-1815)
Manuel Muñoa was born in
Pradoluengo in 1779, and probably learned guitar making with Marcos Antonio
González. He move to Madrid with his brother, Juan Muñoa, and they were active
at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth century in Madrid.
Manuel died in Madrid in 1815. He had his shop on the calle Majaderitos.
José Nieto (Madrid,
active c. 1872)
José Nieto was a luthier active
in Madrid at the toward of the nineteenth century.
Asencio Ortega (Madrid, b.
1799 d. 1844)
Asencio Ortega was the son of
Silverio Ortega, a luthier. Although trained by his father, he wasn't the
luthier his father was. Asencio was best know for his violins, but also built
some guitars.
Mariano Ortega (Madrid, b.
1790 d. 1865).
Mariano Ortega was the son of
Silverio Ortega, a luthier. Mariano was trained by his father, but wasn't the
luthier his father was. Nevertheless, he built both violins and guitars, and had
a long active career in Madrid.
Silverio Ortega (Madrid,
b. 1765- d. 1846)
Silverio Ortega was a
luthier in Madrid in the second half of the eighteenth century. He was born in
Orusco in the province of Madrid in 1765 and apprenticed as a luthier with his
uncle Vicente Assensio, a priest. He built and repaired instruments for the
Royal household and Royal chapel from 1782 until his death in 1846.
He was the father of Mariano Ortega, and trained his son.
Serafín Pec (Madrid active
c. 1890)
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Serafín Pec was a
guitar maker in Madrid active at the end of the nineteenth century. An example
of his guitars is in the collection of Felix Manzanero.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
José Ramirez I
(Madrid, 1858-1923)
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José
Ramirez Planell was born in Madrid in 1858. His father was a master
carpenter who worked for a developer in the Salamanca district of Madrid. When
he was just 12, he was apprenticed to Francisco González (1818c-1880c). From all
accounts, it was a long and arduous apprenticeship that began with menial tasks,
but slowly as these were mastered progressed to more complex ones, until the
responsibility for complete instruments was given him. In 1882, José
opened his own workshop in the Rastro of Madrid, on Cava Baja-- a street
that runs along what was the moot around the old city, and in 1890 moved to
Concepcion Jerónimo 2 where the Ramirez shop remained for over a hundred
years. In 1897, José Ramirez was awarded a gold medal for his guitars at
the Logroño exposition. Like his teacher, José specialized in large,
shallow flamenco guitars with arched tops. José not only trained included
brother Manuel Ramirez Planell (1864-1916), but Julian Gomez Ramirez who later
practiced his art in Paris, Antonio Viudez who migrated to Buenos Aires, and
Rafael Casana. The Jose Ramirez III also claims that he taught Enrique Garcia.
José Ramirez, of course, also trained his son, José Ramirez II (1885-1957), who
took over the business after his father's death. He died in 1923.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero.
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José Ramirez II (Madrid,
1885-1957)
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José Ramirez
de Galarreta was born in 1885 in Madrid. At a tender age he began his
apprenticeship with his father, also learning to play the guitar. Against
his father's wishes, when he was twenty he joined a folk troop for a Latin
American tour as a guitarist, going by the name Simón Ramirez. After visiting
Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay, he decided not to return to Spain, but to remain
in Buenos Aires. There he married, and there his first son, José Ramirez III,
was born. It was not until two years after his father's death in 1923 that José
II returned to Spain to take over the family business. He soon established
himself as a master luthier. In 1929 his guitars were awarded a gold medal at
the Latin American Trade Fair in Seville-- a fact that he soon incorporated into
his label. During his long career, José Ramirez II trained not only and his own
son, José Ramirez III, but Marcelo Barbero (1904-1955). He died in 1957. |
José Ramirez III (Madrid,
1922-1995)
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José Ramirez III
was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1922, and was only three when his father
returned to Spain to take over the workshop on Concepción Jerónimo 2 in Madrid.
Apprenticing with his father, through the difficult times of the world
depression and Spain Civil War, José III soon proved to be a tireless
investigator of the instrument, and an able business man. Under his supervision,
the workshop grew not only into a major enterprise, but José III recruited
and trained a host of apprentices--many of whom worked in his shop for years,
and many of whom have since become famous luthiers in their own right: Paulino
Bernabé, Felix Manzanero, Manuel Contreras, Manuel Rodriguez, Ignacio M. Rozas,
Manuel Caceras, Miguel Malo Martinez, José Romero, and José Ramirez
IV to name but a few. José Ramirez III is also generally credited with the
introduction of cedar as a tone wood. During the 1960s, as high quality
German spruce became hard to find, and increasingly expensive, José III
discovered and promoted western red cedar by building his both his 1a and 2a
models with cedar tops, and by convincing great artists to use them. When
Segovia began playing a Ramirez in the 1960s, it became the guitar that every
aspiring guitarist wanted.
Sound Sample Gallery -- 1964 Ramirez Concert
Guitar |
Manuel Felipe Ramirez Planell
(Madrid, 1864-1916)
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Manuel Ramirez was born in Alhama de Aragón in the province of Zaragosa in 1864.
His father, Jose Ramirez de Galarreta, was a master carpenter who worked for a
developer in the Salamanca district of Madrid. His brother José apprenticed with
Francisco Gonzalez and then taught his younger brother, Manuel. Around 1890,
Manuel decided to go out on his own. Initially, he thought of emigrating to
Paris as had José's pupil, Julian Gomez Ramirez (no relation). His brother José
helped him make preparations, but instead he soon opened a workshop on the Plaza
de Santa Ana. José felt betrayed, and the rift this caused was so deep that they
never spoke again. Business, however, was slow and so Manuel always somewhat of
a restless Bohemian character, he also worked for a time as an electrician for
the Madrid Electric Company, leaving his shop in the hands of his disciple,
Enrique Garcia. In 1897, Manuel moved his shop to the Calle Arlabán, No. 10
where he remained until 1912, moving then to No. 11. Manuel who also made
violins became an official Luthier of the Royal Conservatory of Madrid. He
also won a medal at the Chicago Fair in 1893 for his work. Manuel trained a
generation of great luthiers: Enrique Garcia, Santos Hernandez, Modesto
Borreguero, and Domingo Esteso. Manuel is also remembered for his gift of a
fabulous guitar to a young Andrés Segovia in 1912. Manuel Ramirez died in 1916,
and his shop was taken over and run by his widow. Out loyalty to Manuel, Santos
Hernandez and Domingo Esteso continued to work for his widow her until her death
in 1921.
1900
Manuel Ramirez played by
Maya Rafajlovic
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Francisco Rey (Madrid, 19th
century)
Francisco Rey was a guitar maker
active in Madrid during the nineteenth century.
Alfredo Rodriguez (Madrid, c. 1900)
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Alfredo Rodriguez
was a guitar maker active in Madrid c. 1900.
Photo Courtesy of Felix Manzanero |
Saturnino Rojas (Madrid, b. 1859-d.
1937 active
1880-1935).
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Saturnino Rojas was a guitar maker in Madrid in the second half of the
nineteenth century and early part of the twentieth century. He was a
contemporary of F. Gonzalez, Ramirez, Santos Hernandez, and Domingo Esteso, and seems to have
been an accomplished luthier of guitars, bandurrias, and laúdes. According
to the Madrid guitar maker Manuel Rodriguez Sr, who was a good friend, Saturnino opened his shop on the
calle Atocha no. 115 well before 1890, and was the first teacher of Santos
Hernandez. He
never married, but instead lived in a flat above his workshop with his sister.
When he retired in 1936, Marcelo Barbero and Manuel Rodriguez negotiated with
him for his workshop, but nothing came of it, he died in 1937. Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
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Enrique Romans Papell
(Madrid, b. cerca 1850. - d. 1927)
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Enrique Romans
Papell was a guitar maker active in Madrid during the last quarter of the
nineteenth century and well into the twentieth century. He was the son-in-law of
Francisco Gonzalez, and managed the Casa González. Enrique Romans Papell built
some guitars under his mother-in-laws name as, Vda. e Hijos de Francisco
González, and some under the name of his brother-in-law's name, Francisco
González, Hijo. Between 1896-1901 he used the label "Hijos de Gonzales"
shown here. Finally, he adopted the label Casa González, and continued
building under this label into the 1940s.
Photo courtesy of
Spanish Guitar
Shop |
Benito Sánchez de Aguilera
(Madrid, active c. 1790-1800s)
Benito Sánchez de Aguilera was
a guitar maker active in Madrid and the end of the eighteenth and beginning of
the nineteenth century. He advertised he made guitars with "six strings."
Diego Sánchez (Madrid, active c.
1830s)
Diego Sánchez was a luthier
active in Madrid circa the 1830s. Although he was primarily earned his living
doing repairs, he also built some nicely made guitars.
Manuel Velasco (Madrid, active c.
1890)
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Manuel Velasco was a
guitar maker who was active in Madrid at the end of the nineteenth century. His
workshop was at calle Ancha, no. 118 |
Antonio
Emilio Pascual Viudes
Aznar (Madrid, b.1883- d. Buenos Aires, c. 1959)
Antonio Emilio Pascual Viudes was
born in Crevillente in the province of Alicante in 1883 into an old an
distinguished dynasty of luthiers. Although his father began his training,
at fourteen he was sent to Madrid to enter an apprenticeship with famous luthier
Manuel Ramirez that lasted from 1897 to 1902 after which he went to work for
Manuel's brother, José Ramirez. Antonio, however, only worked for José for a
year, and returned to the workshop of his teacher, Manuel for whom he continued
to work until 1909. In 1909, Antonio moved to Buenos Aires were he set up shop.
He remained in Argentina where the market for fine instruments was much better
in those days. Though he worked in Buenos Aires, he continued to use Madrid as
his address on his labels, perhaps because the Spanish makers were held in
higher esteem than the Latin American natives, and consequently commanded a
higher price for their instruments. He remained in Argentina the rest of his
life, building violins, violas, cellos, guitars, and other fine instruments well
into the late 1950s. In Argentina ,he trained José B. Romero. He died in Buenos
Aires around 1959.
Jose Viudes (Madrid,
active c. 1890)
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Jose Viudes was a
member of the Viudes family of luthiers, and was active in Madrid at the end of
the nineteenth century. The photo here is of a 1892 Jose Viudes guitar in the
Felix Manzanero collection.
Photograph courtesy of Felix
Manzanero. |
Valentín Viudes (Madrid, active c.
1850)
Valentín Viudes, a member of the
Viudes dynasty of luthiers was active in Madrid in the middle of the nineteenth
century. He trained his son Valentín junior.
Valentín Viudes II (Madrid, active
c. 1880-1900)
Valentín Viudes was the son of
Valentín Viudes Sr. and was trained by his father. He is best remembered as the
first teacher of Santos Hernandez.
© copyright 1999
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