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Historic Guitar Makers of the Almería School
These biographies are works in
progress. If you have additional materials, information, sources, photographs, or
corrections you wish to share, please contact me. (Reference
Works)
Joaquin Alonso (Almería, active
c.1876)
Joaquin Alonso was a guitar maker active in Almería towards the end of the
nineteenth century. He briefly apprenticed with Antonio de Torres sometime
between 1870 and 1873. His label proclaims that he is the disciple of Torres. He
had his shop on the Calle de la Alcazaba.
Juan Castillo
(Almería,
active c 1900).
Juan Castillo was a guitar
maker in Almería active at the turn of the century. He had his shop at Calle
Granada, no. 12.
José Pedro Damián Cruz Giménez
(Almería, b. 1912-d.1989).
José Pedro Damián Cruz Giménez
was born in Almería. He learned his craft from Juan Iglesias González, but
seems to have been only a part-time builder, and supplemented his income doing
other wood crafts.
Andrés García
(Almería, b. 1807, active c. 1840-1850s).
Andrés García was born in
Almería in 1807. He apparently was a carpenter who also built guitars.
Antonio Jiménez de Soto (Almería, active c. 1850s)
Antonio Jiménez de Soto was a luthier active in
Almería around the middle
of the nineteenth century.
José López Beltran
(Almería, b. c. 1847, active c. 1900-1910).
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Born around 1847, José López
Beltran was a native of San Sebastian, Almería. On the label of his guitars
from the turn of the century he proclaims he is the only disciple of Antonio
de Torres Evidence indicates he was a friend of the Torres family, and
perhaps like Joaquin Alonso may have had some instruction from Torres.
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Juan Moya Castillo
(Almería, b. c.1875- d. 1937).
Juan Moya Castillo was born in
Almería around 1875, and was the son of Miguel Moya Redondo,
and probably learned his craft from his father. He earned his living making
cabinets and guitars. He died sometime around 1937.
Andrés Moya Martinez (Almería, b.
1861 active c. 1880-1930)
Andrés Moya was born in Almería
in 1861. He was the son of Melchor
Moya Redondo. Like his brother Juan,
he was trained by his father and became a respected guitar maker. The Moya
Hermanos had their shop at Granada 25, and continued making guitars, bandurrias,
and laúdes till about 1930.
Juan Moya Martinez (Almería, b.
1859 active c. 1880-1930)
Juan Moya Martinez was born in Almería in 1859. The son of the luthier Melchor Moya
Redondo, a friend of Antonio de Torres. Juan was trained by his
father, and was active in Almería from 1880 to the 1930s. In 1895, his guitars
won a first prize medal in a regional exhibition. The Moya Hermanos had
their shop at Granada 25, and continued making guitars, bandurrias, and laúdes
till about 1930.
Melchor Moya Redondo (Almería,
b. 1827- d. 1891)
Melchor Moya Redondo was born in Almería in 1827.
Melchor was also the brother of Miguel Moya. In 1845,
Melchor opened a workshop in Almería. Like many guitar makers, he seems to have
started his working life as a carpenter. He had two sons, Andrés and Juan,
who he trained. He died in 1891. He was a friend of Antonio de Torres.
Miguel Moya Redondo (Almería,
b. c. 1846- d. c. 1915)
Miguel Moya Redondo was born in Almería in 1827.
Miguel was also the younger brother of Melchor Moya. In all likelihood, he
learned his craft from his elder brother. He seems to have died around 1915. He
was also a friend of Torres, and seems to have been chosen by the family to
finish a number of guitars left partially complete when he died.
Emilio Peralto (Almería, active c. 1930).
Emilio Peralto was a regionally renowned guitar maker in Almería circa 1930.
In addition to guitars, he built bandurrias, laúdes, and other plucked
instruments.
Joaquín Ruíz (Almería b.
1804 active 1840s)
Joaquín Ruíz was born in Almería
in 1804. Like many guitar makers, he also worked as a carpenter. He is
remembered as talented guitar maker active in Almería in the first
half of the nineteenth century.
Juan Ruíz,
(Almeria, active c. 1815).
Juan Ruíz was a guitar maker in
Almería active c. 1815. It seems likely that he may be the father of Joaquín.
Antonio De Torres Jurado (Almería 1817-1892)
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Antonio De Torres Jurado (1817-1892) is as revered among guitarists as Stradivarius is
revered among violinists. His work established the shape, design, and construction
of the modern guitar. Antonio de Torres was born in San Sebantian de Almería, June 18,
1817. He was the son of Juan Torres, a local tax collector, and Maria Jurado. As was
common, when he was 12 he started an apprenticeship as carpenter. In 1833, a dynastic war
broke out, and soon after Torres was conscripted into the army. Through his father's
machinations, young Antonio was dismissed as medically unfit for service. As only single
men and widower's without children were draftable, his family pushed Torres into a hastily
arranged marriage to the 13 year old daughter of a shopkeeper. And, in 1835 Antonio wed
Juana María López. Children soon followed: a daughter in 1836; and another in 1839, a
third in 1842 who died a few months later. His second daughter also died. And, in 1845 his
wife died at the age of 23 of tuberculosis. These were difficult years for Torres, he was
often in debt, and looking for more lucrative forms of employment.
Some time around 1842, Torres appears to have gone to work for José
Pernas in Granada, rapidly learning to build guitars. He soon returned to Sevilla, and
opened a shop on the calle Cerrageria No. 7 that he shared with Manuel Soto
y Solares. Although he made some guitars during the 1840s, it was not until the 1850s on
the advice of the renowned guitarist and composer Julían Arcas, that Torres made it his
profession, and he began building in earnest. Julían Arcas offered Torres advice on
building, and their turned collaboration Torres into an inveterate investigator of the
guitar construction. Torres reasoned that the soundboard was key. To increase its volume,
he made his guitars not only larger, but fitted them with thinner, hence lighter
soundboards that were arched in both directions, made possible by a system of fan-bracing
for strength. To prove that it was the top, and not the back and sides of the guitar that
gave the instrument its sound, in 1862 he built a guitar with back and sides of papier-mâché. (This guitar resides in the Museu de la Musica in Barcelona, unfortunately
it is no longer playable). Another of his experiments --perhaps a better description
would be a display of his craftsmanship-- was a guitar made like a Chinese puzzle that
could assembled without glue, and disassembled would fit in a shoe box.
Torres was a secretive man, and so had no disciples, but in a
letter to his friend Juan Martinez Sirvent explained: "my secret is one you have
witnessed many times, and one that I can't leave to posterity, because it must with my
body go to the grave, for it consists of the tactile senses in my finger pads, in my
thumb and index finger that tell the intelligent builder if the top is or is not well
made, and how it should be treated to obtain the best tone from the instrument."
In 1868, Torres married again, wedding Josefa Martín Rosada.
Shortly after, Torres met Tarrega for the first time. Tarrega then a kid of seventeen had
come to Sevilla from Barcelona to buy a Torres from the maker of Julían Arcas'
instrument. Torres offered him a modest guitar he had in stock, but on hearing him play,
offered him a guitar he had made for himself a few years before. About 1870, Don Antonio
then in his 50s closed his shop in Sevilla, and moved back to Almería where he and his
wife opened up a china and crystal shop on the calle Real. About five years latter, Don
Antonio began his "second epoch" as he refers to it on the labels of his
guitars, building part-time when not busy in the china shop. After the death of his wife,
Josefa, in 1883, Torres began to devote increasing amounts of time to building making some
12 guitars a year until his death.
Torres guitars are divided into two epochs. The first, belonging to Sevilla from
1852-1870; the second, being the years 1871-1893 in Almería. The guitars Torres made so
superior to those of his contemporaries that their example changed the way guitars were
built, first in Spain, and then in the rest of the world. Although they are not
particularly loud by modern standards, they have a clear, balanced, firm and rounded tone,
that projects very well. His guitars were not only widely imitated and copied, but as he
never signed his guitars, and only numbered those from his second epoch, over the years
many fakes Torres have been made, some made by well-know and expert makers.
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© copyright 1999
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