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GARCIA (DEL POPOLO VICENTO), MANOEL (...

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 457 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GARCIA (DEL POPOLO VICENTO), MANOEL (1775-1832)  ,
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Spanish singer and composer, was born in Seville on the 22nd of
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January 1775 . He became a chorister at the
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cathedral of Seville, and studied
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music under the best masters of that city . At seventeen he made his debut on the stage at Cadiz, in an operetta, in which were included songs of his own composition . Soon after-wards he appeared at
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Madrid in the twofold capacity of singer and composer . His reputation being established, he proceeded to Paris, where he appeared for the first time, in 18o8, in Paer's opera
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Griselda . Here also he was received with
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great applause, his style of singing being especially appreciated . This he further improved by careful study of the
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Italian method in Italy itself, where he continued his successes . His opera Il Califo di Bagdad was favourably received at Naples in 1812, but his chief successes were again due to his perfection as a vocalist . His opera La Morte di Tasso was produced in 1821 in Paris, where it was and thence proceeded to
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America (1825) with a
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company of artistes, amongst whom were his son Manoel and his daughter Maria, better known under her subsequent name of Malibran . In New York was produced his opera La Figlia dell' aria in 1827 . He extended his
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artistic tour as far as Mexico, and was on the point of returning to
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Europe in order to retire from public
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life when he was robbed of his well-earned
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wealth by brigands on his way to Vera Cruz . Settled again in Paris in 1829, he soon retired from the stage, and devoted himself exclusively to teaching .

He died in Paris on the 2nd of

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June 1832 . His method of teaching was famous, and some of the most celebrated singers of the early
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part of the century were amongst his pupils . He also wrote an excellent
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book on the
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art of singing called Metodo di canto, of which the essence was subsequently incorporated by his son Manoel in his admirable Traite complet de fart du chant (1847) . His operas have not survived their day . He wrote nearly
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forty in all, but with the exception of those quoted, and El Poeta calculista, produced when he was
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thirty, none are remarkable . Besides the children already mentioned, his daughter Paulina, Madame Viardot (1821–1910), worthily continued the tradition for the best singing with which his name' had become associated . His son, MANOEL GARCIA (1805–1906), who celebrated his hundredth birthday in
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London on the 17th of March 1905, was born at Madrid, and after his
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father's
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death devoted himself to teaching . He was a professor at the Paris Conservatoire from 183o to 1848, from that time to 1895 was a professor at the Royal Academy of Music in London . He became famous for his invention of the laryngoscope about 1850, apart from his position as the greatest representative of the old "
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bel canto " style of singing .

End of Article: GARCIA (DEL POPOLO VICENTO), MANOEL (1775-1832)
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